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Pizza from (Semi) Scratch

It can be a challenge to find a great pizza place that is tasty, affordable, conveniently located, and that guarantees quality ingredients.  Even if you do find such a culinary gem in your neighborhood, it’s probably so crowded that you’re ready to eat the menu by the time you get your pizza!  Not to worry, I’m here to offer a simple solution to your pizza predicament.  Make it at home!

I’ve refined my pizza-making technique over the last year or so, and I encourage you to do the same!  Test a few recipes, mix up the toppings, and see what you like.  And for starters, try out this winning recipe:

Click here to see the recipe and pictures!

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Final 4 Snacks from Scratch

It’s that time of year again!  For the next few days most of you will be donning your favorite team colors, picking your primo game viewing spot, locating your favorite coozie, and chomping down on lots of sweet, salty, crunchy, yummy snacks.  As for myself, I prefer a nice comfy couch corner, a cold bottleneck, and any snack food that contains one or many of the following:

Butter, sugar, salt, hot sauce, potatoes, cheese, nuts, chocolate, key lime, anything deep fried, and butter.  Or did I already mention butter?

Bowl o' Snack Mix

I got this fantastic snack mix recipe years ago, from the mom of one of my high school friends. She used to make this for anything from movie nights to road trips.  Luckily, it is one recipe that makes a TON! I say luckily because between just a few of us teenagers, we took down the entire batch within a few hours.  I made sure to get the recipe from her, and now I’d like to bestow it upon you, in hopes that you might add it to your game-day nosh buffet! Click to see the Recipe!

Pumpkin Spice Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting

I just love when you can take a classic recipe – in this instance, a spice bundt cake – and turn it into something unique and showstopping! Spice cake is a fairly traditional holiday dessert, often dressed up with cinnamon whipped cream or an orange glaze, but I found this little gem of an idea through Pinterest (my new obsession).  All you need is a delicious cake recipe, one or two bundt pans, and a little imagination.

I chose to make a pumpkin spice cake with cream cheese frosting, dyed orange to resemble the skin of the squash, and not only was it delicious- it was SO EASY!  By baking two bundt cakes and inverting one on top of the other, you create the perfect pumpkin shape.

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BEST Mashed Potatoes for Thanksgiving

I realize that I am cutting it a bit close with the whole Thanksgiving side dish recipe just two days before the holiday, but if you are already planning on making mashed potatoes this year then I must insist that you try this delicious recipe.  I found it in the Kansas City Star years ago, and as family Christmas takes place at my parents’ place I have made this every single year.  My family has dubbed them “heart attack potatoes,” and claims that if you indulge in a second helping you had better keep a defribrillator close by.  I always thought that was overdoing it a bit.  True, there is a healthy amount of butter, sour cream and cheese in the dish, I like to think that the spinach and pimentos add some vital nutrition as compensation.

Hmm… Maybe it just feels better to think it’s healthy when I cover half my plate in potatoes.  It’s the holidays, right?  You’re supposed to pig out!

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Hire a Rock Star

I have been featured on Kansas City Job Seekers’ blog!  Check it out:

Featured Job Seekers

Scroll down the list to Sara Theurer, and take a look.  I would welcome any employment opportunities in the Kansas City area!  Thanks, and keep checking in for new recipes, crafts and ideas.

Sara

Balsamic Strawberries

mac·er·ate [mas-uh-reyt]
verb (used with object)

1. to soften or separate into parts by steeping in a liquid.
2. to soften or decompose (food) by the action of a solvent.

I learned the technique of macerating strawberries my senior year of high school, and am deemed crazy every time I tell someone about it.  Granted, it sounds more like a form of torture than a cooking technique, it is actually simple and pain-free!  It just means adding an acid to something to break it down (similar to adding heat).  If you don’t think you’ll like the combination of vinegar and fruit, just try it!  Trust me, I’ve converted many skeptics.

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Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal From Scratch

For those who grew up on instant, microwavable oatmeal packets, I feel obliged to tell you that you’re missing out! Oatmeal was one of my favorite breakfast foods as a kid, and my mother always used the real Quaker oats, butter, a splash of milk, sugar and cinnamon.  Now that I’m older, I love to mix up my oatmeal to see what delicious variations I can create.  This recipe is one that I came up with on a Sunday morning when I had a big bowl of Honeycrisp apples and felt like doing something different.  I have made it a few times since then, and I promise you that it is one of the tastiest and most satisfying bowls of oatmeal you have ever had!

Apple Cinnamon Oatmeal with Brown Sugar

(This recipe makes 1 serving, but can be multiplied easily for the whole family)

  • 1/2 Honeycrisp apple, diced into 1/2″ cubes*
  • 1 Tbs unsalted butter
  • Pinch salt
  • 1 tsp ground cinnamon
  • Pinch ground cloves
  • 2 Tbs, packed, brown sugar
  • 1/2 C Oatmeal**
  • 1 C water

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Butternut Squash Many Ways

I absolutely LOVE butternut squash!  It is one of those ingredients that you can use in so many different ways– roasted, mashed, in lasagna, in soup, savory or sweet.  You can find butternut squash year-round, but I especially love seeing it in giant bins of colorful squashes every fall at the grocery store.  It is one of the most affordable vegetables right now, and lasts a lot longer than other fresh produce.  I keep a few extra in my kitchen for an easy vegetable side dish when I am running low on groceries.

Why should you eat more butternut squash? In addition to being delicious, this fruit (yes fruit, it contains seeds) is highly nutritious. Butternut squash is rich in phytonutrients and antioxidants, low in fat, and is a good source of fiber.  It contains significant amounts of potassium, vitamin B6 and nutrients known as carotenoids, which have been shown to protect against heart disease. It also contains beta-carotene, which your body converts to vitamin A, and one cup gives you nearly half your recommended daily dose of vitamin C. What are you waiting for?! Get roasting! More…

Black Bean Soup with Cilantro-Lime Sour Cream

This recipe is a delicious way to sneak lots of vegetables into one big pot.  In addition to a few strips of bacon (which just makes everything better, right?) this soup is chock full of veggies, beans, a hint of spice and tons of flavor!  I have seen quicker versions of black beans soup that call for canned beans and ham, but I find that those ingredients can impart quite a bit of sodium.  By soaking dried beans, using low sodium chicken stock, and seasoning your soup at the very end, you can control the salt content based on your own taste. More…

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Roasted Autumn Vegetables

This delicious and plentiful dish is perfect for hearty Fall suppers, and would be a healthy alternative to some of those traditional Thanksgiving side dishes that are made with cream, butter or condensed mushroom soup.  You’ve probably noticed the large bins of colorful and oddly-shaped squash in the produce section at the grocery store, but maybe you don’t know how to prepare them.  My goal every Fall is to find out how to take advantage of these fresh and (dare I say it) cheap vegetables!  Here is a great recipe for roasted vegetables that includes acorn squash– the dark green squash that looks, well, like an acorn!  The peel of this squash is fine to eat when it’s cooked, but in my pictures you will see that I peeled the protruding edges to see if it made a difference.  In the future I won’t bother peeling them at all.

Although the recipe calls for acorn squash, sweet potatoes, Brussels sprouts and beets, you could certainly substitute vegetables like butternut squash, turnips, carrots, or other root vegetables.  If you’re nervous about trying Brussels sprouts or beets for the first time, I’ll tell you that everyone I offered this dish to enjoyed it!  Roasting vegetables brings out their natural flavor while giving them tasty, brown caramelized edges, and adding a vinaigrette to the veggies when they’re warm allows them to absorb the liquid, adding another dimension of flavor.  I hope you enjoy this recipe as much as I did!

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