
1 1/4 c. milk
1 Tbsp sugar
3/4 c. flour and

http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dg2vfjqm_29cvvkbvf8
This is a recipe my sister Marcia contributed to our family cookbook. She said she got the recipe when she was on her mission in St. Louis, Missouri and the lady she got it from was the best cook she knows. (ouch! I thought I was, sister?) Oh. She said the best cook she knew on her MISSION. Whew. Close one there. She almost made it to my black list.
This is Marcia with Perry. Aren't they cute together? Perry loves her Marci.
Anyway... I used this recipe at the bakery and sold TONS of banana bread. My good friends, Anne and Julie, told me whenever I made some, to call them and they'd come buy a loaf or two. Now *that's* devotion.
You want to mash some bananas first. The recipe calls for 1 1/4 cups mashed banana which equates to about 3 or 4 bananas.
If you have overripe bananas but don't have the time to make the bread, peel and mash and put in a ziploc then in the freezer. All you'll have to do is thaw, drain of any liquid, and put in your batter.
In a large bowl, mix together:
2 1/4 c. flour
1 1/4 tsp baking powder
1 2/3 c. sugar
1 1/4 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2/3 c. oil
1 tsp vanilla
3 eggs
2/3 c. buttermilk
Mix the wet ingredients together.
Pour the wet ingredients into the dry and mix with a fork until combined. Do not overmix. Add the banana and fold in.
Add 1 cup chopped walnuts. Fold in.
Marcia personally doesn't like walnuts in her fruit bread, but she said this was pretty darn tasty. Well DUH! It's your recipe! Of course it's pretty darn tasty! Man I'm going to miss her when she leaves on Wednesday. :(
Spray a loaf pan with PAM and dump your batter in. You really only want to have the batter go up 3/4 of the way. If it's too full, you're going to have spillage in your oven and the potential for burned bread on your element and possible fire. Been there. Done that. You don't want to deal with that kind of mess. LOL So if you want, divide the batter into two loaf pans. *just* to be safe.
Bake in a preheated 425* oven for 15 minutes then turn the temp down to 350* and bake until toothpick inserted comes out clean. The high heat forces the batter to push upward and bake in a peak-like fashion. Then you turn it down to let it bake through without burning.
Personal preference here, but serve warm with lots of butter.
Printable version:
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dg2vfjqm_28fhwzzxjs
Here are the 7 random people I'm tagging!
Kami
Kara Henry
Lori
Steph
Angela Daniels
Magz
TanyaB
First we need to make the clarified butter. Clarified butter is butter with the milk fat removed. That's the cloudy film you get when you melt butter.
Put some sticks of butter in a small saucepan. Melt on LOW heat. You don't want to boil the butter because that will keep the milk fat from floating to the top.
Once it's melted, use a spoon and carefully skim the foam off the top. That there folks is the milk fat. We don't want that.
Once that has been skimmed from the top, you'll be left with beautiful clear butter. CLARIFIED butter.
Cut up some red potatoes and set aside.
Cut up your keilbasa and set aside.
Measure out 4 Tbsp Old Bay seasoning and get your crab boil in a bag ready to go.
Add your potatoes and spices (Zatarain's and Old Bay) to the pot. Bring to boil and let boil for 5 minutes. At that time, add the kielbasa and boil for another 10 minutes.
When the 10 minutes are up, add as much crab, shrimp and corn on the cob to the pot. Cook only 4 minutes and then remove the pot from the stove and drain.
Put in a big bowl and serve.
The fun thing about LCB is that it's basically a free-for-all. Just dig on in and eat til your heart's content.
If you notice in the picture below, I used paper sacks for placemats. Just cut off the bottom of a paper grocery bag, and cut down the sides, folding the flaps over. As you eat, you can put all your shells on the paper and when you're all done, just remove your dishes and carefully wrap up the shells and toss in the trash. EASY CLEANUP!
Oh and that clarified butter we made? Put some in little bowls for dipping shrimp and crab in. We also like to have some tartar sauce and cocktail sauces on the table. Enjoy!
Printable version:
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dg2vfjqm_24crxj6mc6