Monday, February 20, 2012

Banana Pudding

So... I got up this morning with a "hankering" (yes, that is a word. At least in the South) for my Nanny's banana pudding. You have to understand that THIS is THE ONE recipe I never got specifics on when watching her make it. I've been scouring websites to find something that seems similar to Nanny's 'Nanner Puddin'. This is close. I will keep playing with it until it's right. In the meantime, here is playing with food for today...


Make sure you are prepared. I obviously was not, so these chocolate graham crackers are my substitute for vanilla wafers. You gotta love me!

Here is Plan-B in case this pudding was a flop:

Triple Chocolate cake eventually covered in chocolate whipped icing. I'm sure we will figure out something to do with it....

Anyway.

Banana Pudding

1/2 c sugar
1/3 c flour (scant measure, mine got too thick too fast; may reduce to 2 tbsp on the do-over)
3 egg yolks (save the white for the top!)
2 c milk
1/2 tsp vanilla

2 ripe bananas
vanilla wafers (I prefer Nilla wafers. Use what floats your boat. Or what you have on hand!)

3 reserved egg whites
dash of vanilla
1/2 c sugar (scant measure)

Whisk sugar and flour together in a saucepan. Add egg yolks, milk, and vanilla. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly (important!!! keep stirring!) to prevent lumps. When sauce begins to thicken, remove from heat and set aside.

Place vanilla wafers (or graham crackers) in the bottom of a round casserole dish. Layer 1 sliced banana on top. Add or reduce bananas as you wish. I prefer fewer bananas, but added more for this experiment. Pour half of the sauce over the wafers and bananas, then repeat; wafers, banana, sauce.

Set aside. Now to the topping.

In a very clean (read zero oil residue) dry bowl, beat the reserved egg whites until slightly stiff. Add the vanilla, continue beating. Add half the sugar and beat some more. Add the last half of the sugar and beat until blended and the egg whites form very soft peaks. I realize that most meringue recipes call for cream of tartar. Not going there. My Nanny never used it and hers is what I am looking to recreate. If you want to use it, please do - all food creations belong to the creator and can be adapted as one sees fit. Dollop meringue on top of pudding - all the way to the edges of the bowl. Sprinkle with sugar before popping it in the oven to brown to meringue. 350 degree oven - DO NOT LEAVE UNATTENDED. When it decides to brown, it will brown VERY quickly.

This is wonderful freshly made warm, but also very good straight from the fridge.
Enjoy!


Thursday, February 2, 2012

Easy Peach Cobbler


Easiest cobbler recipe ever! I think this recipe came from my mom - I remember having it when I was young(er) and loved it then too! This is the only cobbler recipe I ever use.

This takes literally less than 10 minutes to get into the oven. Doesn't get much easier!



1 cup self-rising flour
1 cup sugar
1 cup milk
1 140z can of sliced peaches
1 stick of butter (not margarine)

Preheat over to 350 degrees. Melt the butter in your baking dish. The easiest way is to place the butter in the baking dish and put it in the oven while preheating is happening.

Mix together the flour and sugar with a whisk. Slowly add the milk 1/4 cup at a time, mixing well between additions.
Once the oven is preheated, pour the batter in the baking dish. Spoon sliced peaches on top, then drizzle the juice over the whole thing.

Bake until golden brown (approximately 1 hour). Careful! It's awesome, but very hot for a very long time!