Showing posts with label graham wafer crumbs recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label graham wafer crumbs recipe. Show all posts

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Eaton’s Cheesecake / Crumb Crust Recipe / Shortcrust Recipe / Santa Claus Found Me

 


A huge thank you to each of my 1,000,000 visitors!!
I’m so glad that you visited and I really hope you returned frequently to try one of the recipes that were in the 1106 posts I've written for I’m Turning 60…
I hope that you found many recipes that you have enjoyed and have become favourites.

About those recipes…

Recently I was asked if I have the recipe for the Winnipeg Eaton's cheesecake.

It was tart and creamy, and, as near as I can tell, this recipe is it.
I sure hope that you agree.

Please, if you have been looking for a recipe, let me know. I’d love to help in the search.



Everyone in the world has been going through a very stressful year.

As I’ve said before and I really believe, a comfort food, such as cheesecake, can help.

If the Eaton’s recipe isn’t your cup of tea, maybe you’ll find a favourite in this post.

There should be a cheesecake for everyone's taste.



Thank you again for visiting and have a safe, healthy and happy 2021!

Hints:

If you’re in a rush, substitute a graham cracker or a vanilla cookie crust:
Grease a 9-inch pie pan or springform pan
Melt in a medium saucepan over low heat
1/4 Cup butter
Stir in
2 Cups finely crushed graham crackers or vanilla wafers
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon allspice
Press the cookie crumb mixture evenly over the pan.
Place in a refrigerator to chill.

Shortcrust can be used for either savoury or sweet dishes.
For a lighter pastry combine 1 Cup each of all-purpose flour and cake flour.
For a richer flavour use a beaten egg for some of the liquid to hold it together.

The main rules to remember are:
Run your hands under cold water before starting to mix the pastry.
Work quickly to prevent the dough from becoming warm.
If the fat becomes too warm, place it in the refrigerator.
Roll pastry on a cool surface (a marble slab is perfect) dusted with flour.
Keep the ingredients, the bowl and your hands as cool as possible. If the mixture becomes warm you’ll get a greasy or heavy pastry crust.

Be sure to let the pastry rest in the refrigerator. This allows the gluten to relax so that it will roll out easily. The resting after rolling prevents it from shrinking when it is baking.

To ensure your crust is crisp, place a heavy baking sheet in the oven while it is preheating, then place the tart or pie on the heated tray.

If using a Food Processor: Place the flour, butter and salt in the bowl of the processor.
Using only the pulse setting, pulse until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.
Through the funnel add water a little at a time until the mixture comes together.
Wrap the pastry in plastic wrap and chill.


                        Shortcrust

Place in a large clean bowl
2 Cups all purpose flour
pinch of salt
4 ounces butter, cubed, or an equal mix of butter and lard

Rub the butter into the flour until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs.
Add to the mixture
2 to 3 Tablespoons very cold water or a beaten egg

Using a cold knife stir until the dough binds together.
Add cold water, a teaspoon at a time, if the mixture is too dry.
Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and chill for 15 to 30 minutes.
Roll out, then let it rest at least 15 minutes.
Preheat oven to 425° F
Place the rolled out shortcrust in a pie plate or springform pan.
Bake for 12 to 15 minutes.
Remove pan from oven and allow to cool.


                        Eaton’s Cheesecake Filling

Place on a counter for at least an hour to soften
16 ounces or 500 grams cream cheese

Place in a medium mixer bowl
1 Cup heavy cream
Whip to the soft peak stage.
Set aside.

Place in a large mixer bowl
the softened cream cheese
1/4 Cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Beat until well blended.
Fold the whipped cream into the cream cheese.
Pour the filling into the cooled crust lined pan.
Refrigerate the cheesecake for several hours until firm.
Top with cherry pie filling.

~~~~
In 2004 I wrote this story for our CKUW radio show '2000 & Counting - Older & Wiser'. 
For a while it was our annual tradition. 
I got a few e mails asking if I could post the original story.
Here it is for Epiphany, the day when Befana visited us!


     
Change follows us from the cradle to the grave. When I was five years old I was hit with a megadose of change. I moved to another town, got a baby sister, got to go to kindergarten and got Santa Claus.
     
Five years earlier my parents and I had emigrated from Malta to New York and settled in Corona. We didn't have much choice. Five of Pop's brothers and sisters lived in Corona. So, we had to live in Corona, too.  
     
Corona was a little slice of Italy on Long Island. The store clerks were bilingual: English and Italian. The grocery stores in Corona were stocked with Italian necessities. Almost everything in all the other stores had been imported from Italy.  
Corona was where we learned how to be Americans.  
     
Nonni's children, Betty and Angelo, had married two of Pop's siblings, Joe and Helen. So, Nonni was a double Grandma in my family. Since all my grandparents were in Malta, Nonni treated me as a grandchild, too.      
     
Every Christmas Eve we gathered at Uncle Joe and Aunt Betty's home. A whole corner of their living room was filled with Nonni's manger scene. It was not just a shed with Mary, Joseph, three kings and one shepherd standing around Baby Jesus. Nonni had a complete village with houses, trees, hills, paths, ponds and animals. There were people walking around just minding their own business. Some of the figures were really old and we couldn't play with them. But each year Nonni added something new: a woman carrying a basket of eggs, a farmer carrying a head of cabbage, a man carrying a bundle of wood. Nonni’s manger scene was better than any store window on 5th Avenue in Manhattan.
     
Dinner was a feast. Fish was traditional: eel for the parents, bluefish for the children. There was also soup, pasta and vegetables, followed by ricotta pie, anise biscotti, pizzelle and cuccidati cookies, strufoli, creamy roasted chestnuts and torrone candy. My favourite was the huge golden mound of strufoli: tiny doughnut balls covered with honey and multi-coloured sprinkles. After dinner we played games and our parents talked until it was time to walk to the Midnight Mass at St. Leo's. After Mass we returned to Uncle Joe's for some panettone, a holiday bread made with butter, raisins, almonds and citron.

Then Nonni would tell us to look at the manger scene for the surprise. The blessed Bambino, Baby Jesus, had suddenly appeared!  


Christmas Eve was a wonderful night. But the big day for us children was January sixth. The night before we had hung our stockings and waited for La Befana to bring us toys.  
  

   
La Befana was a little old lady who had been sweeping her house when the Wise Men knocked on her door. They were looking for Baby Jesus and asked La Befana for directions. Then they invited La Befana to join them. The old woman refused, saying she had work to do.
     
When it was dark, a great light and angels appeared in the sky. La Befana realized that the Wise Men weren't kidding about somebody special being born that night. Broom in hand, La Befana tried to catch up with the Wise Men. She never found them or Baby Jesus. Every year she searches for Baby Jesus and leaves presents for good little boys and girls.  
  

  
La Befana took care of me for four years. Then we moved to College Point so we could live closer to Lily Tulip where Pop worked. Then it was time for my sister to be born. While Ma was in the hospital I stayed with Aunt Betty, Uncle Joe and their two daughters. It was nice living in Corona again. The next day, Nonni took me to the local 5 and 10 and gave me a quarter.  
     
"Buy for sister."       
I didn't know what a baby sister would want. I liked westerns, so I grabbed a toy gun.     
"No. Buy a rattle."      
A rattle? That sounded boring, but I bought a pink plastic rattle.  
     
In those days children were not allowed to visit anyone in the hospital. When Aunt Betty visited Ma, she gave the rattle to my new sister. I waited outside the hospital and waved to the window of Ma's room. When Aunt Betty returned she had a gift from my new sister for me. Three pieces of chocolate.  
     
Well, wasn't that nice of her. Not as nice as a toy gun, but maybe that was all she could get from where she'd been.    
     

After Rose was born we didn't go to Corona as often. It was easier to walk to the local church instead of driving to St. Leo's. I missed seeing my family.  
     
That September I started kindergarten in St. Fidelis School. Some of the good sisters had wanted to travel and meet exotic heathens in far away places. Well, they almost got their wish. I was the first Maltese child they'd ever seen. College Point had been settled by Irish and German families. It was time for me to learn about America through their eyes.  
     
As Christmas approached, the windows of the German bakeries were filled with the most beautiful cookies I'd ever seen. They were in all kinds of shapes: stars, angels, animals and wreaths. They were decorated with coconut, jam, icing and tiny silver balls. Some of my classmates brought in samples of their mothers' baking. I brought some biscotti. My friends were polite and tasted the dry, double-baked bread. Then we ate the lebkuchen, pfeffernuesse, zimtsterne, and jam filled spitzbuben. The stollen reminded me of panettone.  
     
I thought a German Christmas was delicious. I planned to eat German and Italian holiday food every Christmas for the rest of my life.
     
We helped Sister decorate the Christmas tree with sugar cookies which had been twisted into figure eights. Then Sister told us to gather around her. She was going to read us a story. Sister showed us the picture of Santa Claus and his eight reindeer. My friends were delighted.  
     
I was confused.  
     
I had never heard any of this before. Santa was supposed to slide down a chimney and land in a fireplace. We didn't have a fireplace. We had a huge, oil-burning furnace in the basement. Ma hung our stockings, along with all the other wet laundry, on a clothesline near the furnace. It made awful noises and had fire in it. If Santa landed in the furnace he'd fry like a strufoli. That would end Christmas forever. I didn't think Santa would take such a risk for a total stranger. The lovely cookies felt like lead in my stomach.
     
Sister talked about Santa checking his list of good little girls and boys. Santa had a list? I knew we were on the Registered Aliens list. Every January the TV reminded Ma to fill out green cards so we wouldn't go to jail or Malta. How could I get on Santa's list? Could Santa get my name from the Alien list? Did I need to fill out another card?  
     
The afternoon went from bad to worse. Sister told us we could put our letters to Santa in the special mailbox in the classroom. A letter? What language did Santa speak? He'd never heard from me. I wasn't on his list. What could I say?  
     
"Hi, you don't know me, but I'd like some toys." I'd never written a letter to La Befana. She just gave me toys. Would Santa shoot La Befana if she came to College Point? Oh, boy… I was in big trouble.     
     
In kindergarten we learned about God the Father, about how we should pray to Him and tell Him what we needed. I didn't need another Father. I figured if my Pop was always busy working, this guy who took care of everything in the whole wide world would really never have time for me.
     
I needed a Grandma.
     
The next time we went to Corona I told Nonni about Santa Claus and that he was in charge of Christmas in College Point. Nonni listened patiently as I explained the rules.    
She repeated the main points: "Santa Claus. A letter."     
I nodded.    
"I fix. I write letter to Befana. She give to Santa. No hard feelings. Christmas come."
     
I had my doubts. Nonni had never been to College Point. Maybe nobody ever had to change from La Befana to Santa Claus. Maybe Christmas was lost forever, like some of the packages we never got from Malta.
     
On Christmas Eve we all gathered at Uncle Joe and Aunt Betty's home in Corona. We had the Christmas Eve dinner. Then we went to St. Leo's for the Midnight Mass. Everything was familiar. Latin and Italian. Why couldn't we have stayed there?  
     
When we were leaving the church I saw a pale cloud in the sky. It looked long and thin, with a sort of lump on one end. For a moment I thought it looked like Santa and his sleigh with eight tiny reindeer. I kept looking at that cloud. It followed us from the church to Uncle Joe's house, where we had panettone. When we left, the cloud was still there. I watched from the car. The cloud followed us from Corona to College Point.  
     
I never noticed clouds before. Did clouds always follow people from one town to another? Was it really a cloud? Sister had told us that Santa had millions of helpers, tiny people called elves. Could it have been an elf picking up the letter from La Befana?
     
Christmas morning, Pop was eating breakfast while Ma was cleaning Rose. Ma sent me to the basement to get some dry diapers that were hanging by the furnace. Being a big sister wasn't much fun. I pulled down two diapers. Then I noticed some lumps by the furnace. I thought some clothes had fallen off the line. I walked toward the furnace.  
     
But the lumps weren't clothes.  
They were boxes.  
They were wrapped.  
They were presents!  
They were for me!!

Santa had found me.

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake & Strawberry Cream Cheese Icebox Cake / Comet NEOWISE

Thanks to the COVID-19 virus we’ve been staying home for the past four months.
Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home.
Staying home is always better than having to stay in a hospital.
For one thing, the food is always better.

Ah… the food.
Since the virus started there's been a growing interest in home baking, especially in baking bread, particularly sourdough.

The only problem is, since we’ve been staying home eating all that bread and not going out for walks or errands unless absolutely necessary, the calories have been staying on our hips, as well as on other places.

It’s time to get back to normal and to start getting back into shape.
But we’re still in a stressful time, and occasionally need a bit of comfort food,

If you’ve been a regular reader of this blog, you know that cheesecake is my idea of the ultimate non-pasta comfort food.
Well, there are cheesecakes, and then there are cheesecakes.
Some are rich and thick and loaded with calories.
But there are cheesecake recipes that are more diet-friendly.
And many are easy to make.

The Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake is a delicate lemony dessert.
The Strawberry Cream Cheese Icebox Cake is a light and creamy dessert.
Neither recipe requires using an oven.
Looking for something for the kiddies to do? These recipes could be fun projects.

Stay safe and well, everyone!


Here are more cheesecake recipes. Enjoy!!



Cheesecake with Strawberry Glaze from the 1960’s Argo® Cornstarch Box




                        Woolworth Icebox Cheesecake

Shake well
12 ounce can evaporated milk
Place it, along with a large mixing bowl and beaters, in the freezer.
Chill for at least 1 hour.

For the crust, combine in a medium bowl
1 2/3 Cups graham cracker crumbs
1/4 Cup confectioners' sugar
6 Tablespoons butter, melted 
Reserving 1/3 Cup, press the remaining mixture in the bottom of a 9x13 inch pan.
Refrigerate until needed.

Place in a small mixing bowl
1/2 Cup boiling water
Stir in until completely blended
3 ounce package lemon jello
Stir in
1/2 Cup cold water
Place the bowl in the refrigerator. 
Leave it there until the jello is slightly thickened, about 30 minutes. 

Place in a large mixer bowl
8 ounces cream cheese
1 Cup granulated sugar
5 Tablespoons lemon juice 
Beat with mixer at medium speed until smooth. 
Add 
cooled thickened jello 
Beat until well blended. Refrigerate.

Take from the freezer the can of milk, the mixing bowl and beaters.
Pour into the bowl the cold can of evaporated milk
Beat on high speed until fluffy, about 3 minutes. 
It should be similar to the consistency of stiffly beaten egg whites.
Beat in the cream cheese/jello mixture.

Gently spread the filling over the chilled crumb crust.
Top with the remaining crumbs.
Refrigerate at least 4 hours. (It's better to refrigerate it overnight.)
Cut into squares and serve.


                        Strawberry Cream Cheese Icebox Cake

Spread over bottom of a 9x13 inch pan
1 1/4 Cups graham cracker crumbs
Set aside. 

Wash
2 pounds strawberries
Cut the tops off of the strawberries and slice them 1/4 inch thick.
Set aside. 

Place in a large mixer bowl
8 ounces cream cheese, room temperature
14 ounces sweetened condensed milk
Beat with mixer until smooth and creamy. 
Add 
2 3.4 ounce packages instant cheesecake-flavoured pudding (or vanilla)
3 Cups milk
Mix at low speed for 4 to 5 minutes, or until the mixture starts to thicken. 
Fold in
2 cups whipped topping
Blend until smooth. 

Pour half of the cream cheese mixture into the prepared pan.
Arrange half of the strawberry slices in a single layer over the cream cheese mixture. 
Cover the strawberries with 
1 Cup graham cracker crumbs
Cover with the remaining cream cheese mixture. 
Top with the remaining strawberry slices.
Cover and refrigerate for 6 to 8 hours. 

When serving, top with whipped topping and a sprinkling of graham cracker crumbs. 


According to the Farmers’ Almanac:

There’ll be quite a few interesting and bright spots in the sky this month!

Along with Comet NEOWISE you’ll see the bright blue star, Vega, which will be the North Star 12,000 years from now.

If you look tonight or tomorrow, some time after midnight but before dawn, Mars will be near the Moon. Rising in the East after midnight, Mars is not as bright as Jupiter or Venus, and it’s found midway between them. 
At midnight, you’ll see the brightest "star" in the sky, the yellow-white planet Jupiter. The bright "star" to its left is Saturn. 

On July 14 Jupiter is at opposition to the Sun. 
Look in that same eastward direction before 5 AM to see the Morning Star, Venus.

On July 17 Venus will be joined by the crescent Moon and Taurus’s orange star, Aldebaran. Enjoy it at pre-dawn when it outshines Mars in the south, and Jupiter setting in the west.

On July 20 Saturn has its own opposition. It is also at its closest and brightest for the year. With the new Moon on the same night, Saturn viewing should be perfect.

Monday, August 20, 2018

Anna Sultana’s Lemon Ricotta Cheesecake (Old-Fashioned & Light), the Full Sturgeon Moon and Orion

In less than two weeks it will be September.
September… Autumn… heavier meals, holiday dinners, family get-togethers.
And then there’s getting ready for the mother of all holidays - Christmas.
Yes, it feels like it was Christmas a month ago.

Time may fly when you’re having fun, but when you’re past 60, both fun and misery whiz by at warp speed.

Just the thought of the upcoming ‘festivities’ is making me nervous.
Time to follow The Golden Girls’ example and have a slice of cheesecake.

About a week ago I posted the recipe for Ma’s Quiche Lorraine.
Not a cheesecake, but a nice dairy dish.
It’s been a few months since I posted Ma’s Ricotta Cheesecake recipe.
That was back in April, and I posted it to get us through preparing our taxes.
I know, tax season feels like it was just a couple of days ago.
At this rate we’ll be doing taxes again next month.

I digress. Back to the cheesecake…
Ricotta cheesecakes give you that comforting texture with a bit less fat and calories.
For more ways to use ricotta check this post.

For us seniors time has speeded up, while our metabolism has slowed down, so we have to keep an eye on what we eat.
No problem… some of the lighter calorie foods, like ricotta, have charms of their own.
Ricotta makes a lovely cheesecake, with or without the lemon.
Be good to yourself and bake a cheesecake.
And remember to stop at one serving.


Hints:

If you’d like to make this recipe a little healthier, use 6 ounces oil instead of 1 Cup butter - or 3 ounces oil and 1/2 Cup butter - in the cake layer.

Don’t have grated lemon rind? A teaspoon of lemon extract is just as good.


                                   Old-Fashioned Lemon Ricotta Cheesecake

Serves 16 to 20 

Grease a 9 x 13 inch baking pan

Cake Layer
Combine in a medium bowl
2 Cups flour
1/2 Cup confectioners’ sugar
Cut in
1 Cup butter
Pat the mixture into the greased baking pan.

Place the oven rack in the middle of the oven.
Preheat the oven to 350º F

Place in a large bowl 
3 eggs, lightly beaten
30 ounces ricotta cheese
3/4 Cup sugar
2 teaspoons grated lemon rind
Beat until well blended.
Spoon the ricotta mixture on top of the cake layer.

Bake for 60 minutes, or until lightly browned and a knife inserted 2 inches
from the centre should come out clean.
LEAVE THE CHEESECAKE IN THE OVEN.
Turn off the oven and leave the door open a crack - prop it with a spoon.
Cool the cake for 30 minutes in the oven.
Remove from oven and cool on a wire rack for one hour. 
Refrigerate overnight. 

Before serving dust with 
confectioners’ sugar
Cut into squares. 

The leftover squares can be stored, covered, in the refrigerator.


                                   Light Lemon Ricotta Cheesecake

Serves 10 to 12

Combine in a medium bowl
1 cup graham cracker crumbs 
3 Tablespoons melted butter
Press into bottom of 9-inch springform pan and chill. 

Place the oven rack in the middle of the oven.
Preheat the oven to 325º F

Place in a medium bowl 
15 ounces light ricotta cheese 
1/2 Cup light sour cream 
1/2 Cup sugar 
3 large egg yolks
2 Tablespoons flour 
1 1/2 teaspoons grated lemon rind 
Beat until well blended.

Place in a large mixer bowl 
3 large egg whites
Beat egg whites until stiff.
Using a spatula, push the beaten whites to one side.
Pour the cheese mixture into the empty space next to the beaten whites.
Fold in the beaten whites just enough to combine. DO NOT OVERMIX.
Pour into prepared springform pan and bake for 50 to 60 minutes.
A knife inserted between edge and middle should come out clean, while the middle will quiver a tiny bit.

Remove from oven and run a knife all around the inside edge of the pan. 
Place pan on a rack and let cool to room temperature. 
Cover and refrigerate 6 hours or overnight.
Serve garnished with, or without, fresh fruit

The leftover cheesecake can be stored, covered, in the refrigerator.


Here are a few more cheesecake recipes:


Carmela Soprano's Cassata / Iced Sponge Cake with Ricotta Filling

Carmela Soprano's La Pastiera - Easter Ricotta Pie, Italian Style


Carmela Soprano's Pasticiotti / Tartlets with Vanilla Cream Filling







Anna Sultana's Qassatat ta I-Irkotta (Small ricotta pie, Maltese Style)


About the sky, thanks to the folks at The Farmers' Almanac

August 23 – The Moon is at apogee at 7:11 a.m., meaning it’s farthest away from Earth in its orbit. An easy way to remember: Apogee “A” = Away

August 24 – Set your alarms for 90 minutes before sunrise to see an unobstructed view of Mercury along the horizon.

August 26 – August’s full Sturgeon Moon at 7:56 a.m.  In this phase the visible Moon is fully illuminated by direct sunlight. Although the Moon is only technically in this phase for a few seconds, it is considered full for the entire day of the event and appears full for three days.

August 27 & 28 – The Moon is now in a waning gibbous phase following a full Moon, so a daytime view is visible after sunrise the 27th in the eastern sky, and in the western sky on the 28th.

August 29 – Orion the Hunter rises before dawn and can be seen by the three stars that make up Orion’s belt. See if you can also spot the brightest star in the sky, Sirius, a.k.a., the Dog Star.

Friday, April 13, 2018

Cheesecake with Strawberry Glaze from the 1960’s Argo® Cornstarch Box and Mercury Retrograde

Tax time AND Friday the 13th? Sheesh!!
I don’t know if today’s being Friday the 13th is as bad as when Mercury is in retrograde, but it does spook some people.
Some people do stress out for one or for the other or for both.
And wouldn’t you know it, Mercury is in retrograde until April 15th this year.
So, when they come together during tax time it seems to me that it’s time to do whatever you need to do to calm yourself.

A slice of cheesecake works for me.

I recently posted a recipe for a ricotta cheesecake - Ricotta and Cream Cheese Pie.
A reader asked if I had the recipe for the cheesecake recipe that used to be printed on the Argo® cornstarch box, from back in the 60s when it came in a cardboard box. 
Of course I do. Ma made it, so it’s an old favourite.

It’s amazing how many different cheesecake recipes there are in the world.
This recipe uses small curd cottage cheese instead of ricotta.
The texture is a little different since the curds add a bit of bite to the filling.
That can be fixed (see Hints), if the lumps bother you.
If they don’t, make a cheesecake, have a slice and relax a bit.

After eating a slice please get back to your taxes.
Mercury retrograde doesn’t work as an excuse with the tax folks.
Trust me.


Hints:

On the box it said about the cottager cheese: 
“Use as dry a cream style variety as possible.” 
It also said: “Sieve cottage cheese into large mixing bowl.”
You can also put the cottage cheese in a blender and blend until it is as smooth as you want it to be.

This recipe can also be made in an angel food cake pan, preferable with a springform pan bottom.

The cake will rise above the pan, then settle back down. 

This cake has been known to get cracks on top.
Some people put a pan of water next to, or on the rack below, the cheesecake. Others wrap the springform pan with foil and then put the cheesecake pan in the pan of water.
But sometimes the cake will crack on top, even with a pan of water placed in the oven.
No big problem. It’s still delicious.

About slicing cheesecake…
I’ve heard of people slicing the cake with unflavoured dental floss. Really. 
They just stretch a longish piece of floss across the cake, hold it tight, and bring it down. Then they let go of one end and pull the floss through to cut the cake in half.
Then they turn the cake, and repeat as needed for the number of slices they want.
I think most folks just use a big knife or pie server. 
I know I do.

The cheesecake can be frozen whole or in slices. 


                        Cheesecake

Serves 12

Preheat oven to 325º F

Grease a 9 inch springform pan
Dust with 
2 Tablespoons graham cracker crumbs
Set aside.

Sieve in large mixing bowl
2 Cups small curd cottage cheese
Add
2 packages (8 ounces each) cream cheese, softened
Beat at high speed until well blended and creamy. 
Beating at high speed, blend in
1 1/2 Cups sugar
4 eggs, slightly beaten
Reduce speed to low.
Add 
1/3 Cup Argo® corn starch
2 Tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon vanilla
Beat until blended. 
Add 
1/2 Cup margarine, melted
2 Cups sour cream 
Blend with low speed.

Pour mixture into prepared pan. 
Bake for 1 hour and 10 minutes, until firm around edges. 
Turn the oven off. Let the cake stand in the oven for 2 hours. 
Remove the pan from the oven, and cool completely on a wire rack. 
Chill overnight for best results. 
Remove sides of pan and serve plain, or with your favourite fruit topping.


While you have the box of Argo® Corn Starch out you can make

                        Strawberry Glaze

Place in a saucepan
1 Tablespoon Argo® Corn Starch
1/4 Cup water
1/3 Cup Karo® Light Corn Syrup
Stir together.
Add 
1/4 Cup crushed fresh or frozen strawberries, peaches or blueberries
Stirring constantly, bring to a boil over medium heat. Boil 1 minute. Strain. 
Stir in 
1 teaspoon lemon juice
Cool slightly.
Drizzle glaze over cake and top with fresh fruit just before serving.

Saturday, April 7, 2018

Anna Sultana’s Ricotta and Cream Cheese Pie / The Hyades Star Cluster


Easter is over.
All that holiday work and the drowsiness from the tryptophan in the turkey distracted us from the monster in the room.
Income Tax is due this month.
Yeah, Big Brother wants his share of your money.

Worse, you have to read through a bunch of government papers, filled with tons and tons of legalese gobbledygook.
No other word for it than gobbledygook - that’s language that is meaningless or is made unintelligible by excessive use of technical terms.

I mean who writes this stuff? 
Why don’t they turn their talents to writing science fiction. That makes just as much sense, right?
And there’s also pages of math to do. Sheesh!

Okay… you’ve done this before and you can do it again.
You’ve got your bits of papers in a nice box… or two… or three.
Anyway, they all somewhere in the house, and that’s a start.
Take this in baby steps.
Gather the papers, then eat some cheesecake. Really.
This is no time to pretend to be a hero.

You’re still weighed down from an Easter dinner that totally wiped out all the good you did during Lent.
Not to worry. Make your cheesecake with ricotta.
Combined with eggs and cooked grains, ricotta is in La Pastiera and Pizza Rustica, which are traditional Easter dishes.
So there’s a good chance you have a tub or two leftover in the fridge.

Ricotta is low in fat and is similar in texture to cottage cheese, but lighter.
And, like cottage cheese, it is a dieter's friend.
Ricotta can be a substitute for mayonnaise in egg or tuna salad.
It can also be used as a sauce thickener.
Add cinnamon sugar or chocolate shavings, and serve it as a quickie dessert. 
Ricotta, combined with chopped pistachios and candied citron, is the filling of the Sicilian dessert cannoli.
Ricotta is also used in main dishes: pasta, calzone, manicotti, lasagne, stuffed shells, and ravioli.


Ricotta and Cream Cheese Pie isn’t as sweet as a regular cheesecake.
But it will get you through the Tax Guide at the very least.


Hints:

You can use whole milk or part skim ricotta.
Use crushed ginger snaps or graham crackers, or regular pie dough, for the crust.
You can also leave the crust out.

Instead of almond extract, you can try using 1/4 Cup Amaretto liqueur.

Do not use a springform pan. The filling needs the support of the pan. Trust me.
You can also pour the filling into six 4-inch diameter individual ramekins without adding a crust. It’ll be more like having a bowl of dairy-free custard, which also feels comforting. Win-win!

If your pie plate isn’t deep, or you went heavy on the crust, you can put the excess filling in a ramekin or two and bake along with the pie.

Allow the pie to cool for at least an hour before serving. Two hours is better.

The leftover cheesecake can be stored, wrapped, in the refrigerator.


                                                Ricotta and Cream Cheese Pie

Place the oven rack in the middle of the oven.

Spread over the bottom and sides of a 9-inch pie plate or a 9-inch square pan
2 Tablespoons butter, softened

Place in a bowl
1 to 2 Cups ginger snaps
Crush to medium-sized crumbs and stir in
4 to 6 Tablespoons butter, melted
Press the mixture over the bottom of the plate or pan and halfway up the sides. 
Set aside.

In a large mixer bowl place
8 ounces ricotta cheese
16 ounces cream cheese
3/4 Cup sugar
Beat until creamy. 
Beat in 
6 large eggs
Add 
3/4 teaspoon almond extract
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/8 teaspoon salt 
2 teaspoons grated lemon or orange zest (or 1 teaspoon of each)
Mix until well combined.

Preheat the oven to 350º F. 

Pour the filling into the prepared pan. 
Bake for 45 to 50 minutes, until it is lightly browned around the edges. A thermometer inserted into the centre should read about 160º F. The pie will still be soft in the centre, but will become firmer as it cools. Do not over bake.
Remove the pie from the oven and cool the cheesecake on a wire rack.
Serve at room temperature or refrigerate to chill.


About the sky, thanks to the folks at The Farmers' Almanac…

This month, be sure to check out Jupiter, which starts rising about 90 minutes evening twilight, but it comes up earlier and earlier each week. As soon as it clears horizon obstructions in the east-southeast, it grabs the attention of any sky watcher. Telescopic views of Jupiter during April are best in the middle of the night, when the planet has gotten at least moderately high. April is also a good month to locate the Big Dipper, even though this month, it’s upside down!

April 8 - Last quarter Moon, 3:18 a.m. In this phase, the Moon appears as a half Moon in the sky. The half-Moon will also be at apogee, its farthest to Earth in its orbit. Lunar apogee will happen less than 2 hours before the Moon reaches its last quarter phase.

April 15 - New Moon, 9:57 p.m. At this stage, the Moon is not illuminated by direct sunlight and is completely invisible to the naked eye.

April 16 - Right after sunset, look low toward the west-northwest for a view of a slender 2-day old crescent Moon, just 5 percent illuminated. And situated about a half-dozen degrees to its upper right is the steady, dazzling light of the planet Venus. Earth’s “sister planet” gets a little higher each week during April. It remains small and roundish in telescopes this month, but from early April until early September, Venus will be at least 10° above the horizon 45 minutes after sunset (though never very high), and during that period we will see its disk grow and enter its crescent phase.

April 18 – Look for the crescent Moon as it appears to float near the bottom of the beautiful V-shaped Hyades Star Cluster, marking the face of Taurus, the Bull. Initially, in the bright evening twilight, only the Moon will be visible, though once the sky has become completely dark soon after 9 p.m., the Hyades stars should be readily evident with the unaided eye.