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Trish Southard

Trish Southard

Tag Archives: Food on Fridays

Mother’s Day Chocolate Chip Cookies

28 Saturday Apr 2012

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Beautiful Women, Food on Fridays, Homemaking

Mother’s Day is just around the corner and I made sure my gift arrived first to my Mom’s.

( first of my brothers and sisters… haha).                                                   

Mom needs not a thing, but she did mention after opening her gifts, she’d love some chocolate chip cookies! I made this recipe today with very little sugar and used teaspoons to measure out the dough so each one will be just sweet enough, but not too much for my Mom.

When we focus on what is good and beautiful in someone, whether or not we think that they “deserve it”, the good and beautiful are strengthened merely by the light of our attention. When we choose to see and appreciate what is good and beautiful in our children, that goodness can’t help but grow, and their beauty blossoms forth.                      Katrina Kenison

Thank you Mom for appreciating the good and beautiful in your children.  Blessing us with love as we flowered before you.

Mom Southard’s recipe is my base …page 161 of her cookbook “Taste and See” Southard Family Favorites

1 12 ounce bag of semi sweet chocolate chips
2 c flour
1 tsp, salt
1 stick of unsalted butter
1 stick of margarine
1/2 – 3/4 c sugar crystals – the larger crystal will fool your taste buds
(depending on how daring you are!)
1 tsp. vanilla
2 eggs

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Combine all the ingredients stirring in the chocolate chips.  Bake for 8-9 minutes and remove from baking pan speedy quick or the bottom of the cookie will darken!

Kenison, Katrina “The Gift of an Ordinary Day” Grand Central Publishing N.Y., New York pg. 169

Aunt Pitty Pat’s Cherry Cobbler

20 Friday Apr 2012

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Beautiful Women, Food on Fridays, Homemaking, Texas Recipe's

1 c sugar
1 c flour
1 c milk
1 stick butter
3 tsp. baking powder
1 can of unsweetened cherries,

(Fresh cherries  in season are best)

Sweetened to taste with agave nectar.

Preheat oven to 375. Melt butter in glass Pyrex. Pour on top of the melted butter, the batter made with the sugar, flour, milk and baking powder. Have ready the fruit heated with extra agave or sugar to taste. Pour the hot fruit over the batter. Swirl the top with a spatula and sprinkle brown sugar to cover the top.  Bake for 25 minutes.

Aunt Pat was Marilyn’s cousin I used her recipe for the base and added a few twists…hence the name. She developed the base and deserves the credit.

Aunt Pat was a beautiful lady who loved Jesus and served as a devoted mother and wife traveling the world as an Air Force wife sharing Jesus with everyone she met.

She was born in Virginia but lived out her days in the great state of Texas.

Aunt Pat lived in New Braunfels and was a great hostess.  My first visit to Texas 28 years ago was in her lovely home.  She ironed Todd’s shirt his first day in the Air Force. I never did get the hang of it so by the time we moved to California I became very grateful for the base dry cleaners.

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Peachy Tossed Salad

03 Tuesday Apr 2012

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Beach Recipes, Food on Fridays, Recipes of Dolphin's Watch

8 cups torn fresh spinach

(Todd is growing a whole garden full of spinach and we have already enjoyed it twice!)

8 cups Boston lettuce (or other)

4 medium fresh peaches (peeled and sliced)fof

4 bacon strips, crumbled

1/4 cup orange juice

2 Tbsp. cider vinegar

2 Tbsp. plain yogurt

1 Tbsp. grated orange peel

2 tsp. sugar

1/2 tsp. garlic powder

1/2 tsp. salt

1/4 tsp. pepper

1/2 – 3/4 cup olive oil

Combine in blender first eight ingredients. Gradually add oil in steady stream until sugar dissolves. Pour over salad and serve immediately.

16 servings

Marilyn Southard

P.S. Easy hostess tip…always wash, dry and chill lettuce or spinach ahead of time for extra crunchy salads.

Never cut lettuce or spinach, always tear gently.

Trish

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Chocolate Torte

30 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Chocolate, Food on Fridays

1 3/4 c sugar

1 3/4 c flour

3/4 c Hershey’s Cocoa

1 1/2 ts baking powder

1 tsp salt

2 eggs

2 tsp. of squeezed orange juice

1 c vanilla soy milk

1/2 c canned pumpkin

1 c boiling water

The basis for my recipe came from the back of the Hershey’s Cocoa container.

Heat oven to 350 degrees.  Spray Pam on two round cake pans and lightly flour. Combine all ingredients in order, blending well and boiling water in for the last couple minutes. Bake 30 minutes.

Frost with 4 c confectioner’s sugar, 5 Tbsp. vanilla soy milk,

3-4 ts. of fresh squeezed orange juice.  Blend till smooth and fill between layers generously and over the top.

Oh Kale it’s a Wrap

28 Saturday Jan 2012

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Comedy, eco-fashionable food prep, Food on Fridays, Girlfriends

My friend Becky was joining me for lunch yesterday and with only a quick fifteen minutes to relax I told her I would bring our lunches. The City of Austin is encouraging us to cut plastic from our lives, so in lieu of water bottles, I filled 2 small mason jars with filtered water for our beverage.  Classy.  In a hurry, I slapped together the strangest combination of ingredients and produced a most delicious Kale, hummus and roast beef egg roll wrap.  OK, it doesn’t sound great, but what joy it brought me when I took my first bite.  Turns out Becky couldn’t make it, so I doubled down on this delightful surprise with little worry of consuming too many calories.  Yum!  here’s what I did:

Lay kale leaf flat tearing off stemfof
Place generous dollop of roasted garlic hummus in the center
4-5 slices of roast beef
2 slices of tomato
2 slices of hot pepper jack cheddar
1 tsp. of horseradish (optional)
Wrap contents in wax paper tightly and weight a heavy book or marble if you have it for just a minute or two.
Place contents in egg roll wrap (wheat)and brown slightly in pan with just a drop of vegetable oil.  Substitue any meat, vegetable, evoo, or spring roll wrap (rice) would do nicely also.

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Chik fil a without the drive thru

18 Friday Nov 2011

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Food on Fridays, Homemaking

Chik fil a is one of our favorite places in town, and I enjoy studying and writing there before work.  My favorite breakfast item is the chicken biscuit.  Your mouth will water as you enter the restaurant and take your first bite.  It is  delicious and not duplicated.  This is my attempt.

Morning came early today at the Southard household. My small claim to fame with my family are my hot breakfasts. Our daughter’s tennis tournament meant leaving the house at 6:45 this morning.

This fast, easy, and protein and carbohydrate packing breakfast recipe calls for a package of Sr. Schubert’ s rolls from the frozen food dept. and two frozen chicken breasts.
Heat frying pan with one tablespoon of oil. Grapeseed is best for flash-fry, but Wesson or evoo will work.fof

Microwave breasts for five minutes or less I cover mine with Saran wrap. Slice while hot and toss into hot pan and brown slightly. Rolls cook five minutes at 350 degrees. Slice roll in half, place a small pat of butter, salt and pepper chicken and serve as a sandwich.

Leftovers are perfect to wrap in foil and take to work for lunch.

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Huguenot Torte

05 Friday Aug 2011

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Faith, Food on Fridays, Outer Banks, Recipes of Dolphin's Watch, Religious Freedom

Our daughter returned from spending most of June in Europe, seeing a few cathedrals along the way.  When she returned we headed straight for the beach for time with family.  Each of the cousins took turns sharing their summer adventures on designated nights, and for our daughter’s special evening I whipped up a light, sweet, summer dessert called a Huguenot Torte, inspired by her visit to France, and with consideration of another cousin’s Huguenot heritage (French Huguenots of the 1700s were a severely persecuted Protestant people under Catholic  France for thefoftheir Reformation theology, an irony not lost on this Iowa raised Catholic).

Enjoy this Midwestern twist on an old Southern favorite, and while you do, remember that the religious freedoms we now enjoy were paid for by people of faith who came before us.

Tread carefully…

Step one:

Candied Pecans

Heat skillet to very hot, place two handfuls of pecans and one cup of sugar.  Keep a wooden spoon stirring and start lightly spraying with water.  Watch closely as the pecans carmelize and lower the heat slowly.  The whole process is very quick keep watching closely and stirring.  Place candied pecans on marble to cool.

4 eggs

3 cups of Splenda  ( A couple of people at the beach house were watching sugars and this substitution was not noticed by anyone to my great surprise)

8 -10 tbsp. flour

5 tsp. baking powder    ( you may also use 1/4 tsp. of baking soda and 5/8 tsp. creme of tartar for each tsp.) for leavening agent

1/2 teaspoon of salt

1 cups of chopped apples/ 1 cup of chopped pears

1 tsp. vanilla

Combine everything in blender, but fold in apples and pears,  pour into a 9 * 13 pan.

Place candied pecans in a bag and hammer into broken pieces.  Toss pieces gently on top the batter.  Place in oven for 35-40 minutes at 350 degrees.

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Marilyn’s Barbecued Brisket

09 Friday Jul 2010

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Food on Fridays, Outer Banks, Recipes of Dolphin's Watch

1 4 to  6 lb. beef brisket

1 large envelope dry onion soup mixfof

pepper to taste

dashes of liquid smoke

2 to 3 c. prepared barbecue sauce

3/4 can beer, room temperature

Place brisket, fat side down, in foil lined shallow baking pan  covered tightly with foil, which I prefer. Rub liquid smoke over the top, then sprinkle with onion soup mix and a little pepper. Pour on barbecue sauce. Wrap securely with foil. Bake 300 degrees for 3 hours ( 6-7 hours at 250 degrees). Remove from oven, open up and turn brisket. Pour beer on brisket. Wrap with foil and continue baking another hour. When done, unwrap and cool meat and slice as thinly as possible against the grain with electric knife. place meat slices back in sauce and wrapped. Store in refrigerator for another day. Heat and serve.

Note: This is a favorite of mine when company is flying in for a visit, or family coming for dinner. I put it on to cook in the morning, lower heat a little and cook all day. Comes out perfect every time!  Shred, put in sauce, and served on sandwich buns the next day.

Marilyn (Mom) Southard

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Nancy Dytrich’s Cake Balls

18 Friday Jun 2010

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Food on Fridays, Girlfriends, More time with Jesus, Recipes of Hope, Restful enviroments, simplify

 fof

Nancy Dytrich is the Director of Women’s Ministries at Hope.  She is a woman of God that is so fired up about her faith it fires up everyone in her presence.   We traveled to the  retreat titled “Journey into Rest”  and sat as our speaker, Kathy White led a very special weekend deepening our intimacy not just in our friendship but a deepening delight in the Lord.  We arrived a day early for a leadership retreat that was expectantly canceled and enjoyed the entire ranch to ourselves.  She hiked and read and I slept.  We were canoeing one afternoon on a magnificent fall afternoon, birds chirping water lapping peacefully on the aluminum sides and all we could hear is a gal chatting on her blue tooth a million miles a minute alone in her canoe at a decibel level which included all in the river in her conversation. We will never forget the gal we paddled by in the other canoe.  The retreat title “Journey into Rest” I took literally and slept my way through the weekend and left with a strong visual picture of being in the canoe with my girlfriend Nancy experiencing God’s Glory in His Creation and being transformed in the clear cool autumn air.  Troubled deeply by seeing someone miss it,  I changed after that weekend and delay speaking or even checking messages on my cell anytime I’m in anyone’s presence even my family.   I don’t know the situation the young woman was in, perhaps checking in with her work.

1 cake mix, any flavor (probably best if it’s not “extra moist” variety

1 can frosting, any coordinating flavor lollipop or cookie sticks

White or chocolate candy coating or “almond bark”

Styrofoam blocks

Decorations and edible ink

Bake cake according to directions. Let cool entirely. (Make up to two days in advance as long as you cover it with aluminum foil.) When completely cool, break into pieces in a large bowl until cake is very crumbly. Mix in can of frosting, either by hand or with stand up mixer. If cake is very moist, may not need entire can of frosting. Using your hands or a melon baller, make small evenly sized balls( at Easter time,  slightly egg-shaped). size depends on size of sticks you will be using. For thin paper lollipop sticks, create balls  the diameter of a quarter. For cookie sticks of plastic and are thicker, the balls formed larger. Place balls on a cookie sheet lined with waxed paper and refrigerate for at least an hour. Prepare candy coating, heat pieces in a small dish or ceramic dipping pot in the microwave at fifty percent heat, stirring every thirty seconds until completely melted. A double boiler will also work.  Texture is slightly thinner than yogurt or pudding. May add just a “hint” of shortening if needed for thinning, but do not overdo.  Once cake balls cool , and candy coating melts, dip 1/2 of stick in the coating and push about halfway into the ball.  This helps the ball stay on the stick.  Return to a cookie sheet and refrigerate for at least thirty minutes.  When well set, hold  the stick and swirl the cake ball in the coating, covering the entire surface (may take a little “practice” to get the technique down).  If coatings too thin, try heating a little longer.  To let cake pops dry upright, push the stick of the pop into a Styrofoam block.  Color white candy coating  (tint yellow for Easter chicks and pull up a little point at the top for the head; swirl colors into white for Easter eggs).  Be creative.  Decorate with sprinkles, sugar crystals, teeny-tiny colored chocolate chips, coconut, etc. dipping/ lightly rolling still-wet pops.  Use pieces of candy for feet, eyes, beaks, etc.  Make parts like ears with melted coating formed into shapes on wax paper and then cooled before attaching with another dab of coating.  Draw on dried coating with edible ink to make faces and  swirls.

Have a little summer fun with Cake!

Trish

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The Fried Egg

05 Saturday Jun 2010

Posted by trishsouthard in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Food on Fridays, Homemaking, Simple

 

fof

Ann asked us to share simple comfort food this week, so here is mine.

Saute sliced garlic in a little oil and butter.  When garlic is golden add a couple of eggs and thyme. Todd created this simple recipe and prefers to finely chop his garlic clove.

My perfect egg,

Trish

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