Tag: bread

  • Easy Dinner Rolls Recipe – 5 Minutes Prep!

    Easy Dinner Rolls Recipe – 5 Minutes Prep!

    This easy dinner rolls recipe is our family’s favorite! Are you looking for an easy and inexpensive homemade dinner rolls that your family will love? You can make these dinner rolls for less than $1.00 per batch. They are commonly called 90 Minute Rolls, but they really only take about 5 minutes’ preparation time and then you occasionally check in on them!

    Here's an easy dinner rolls recipe you can use to make delicious homemade dinner rolls. With just 5 minutes prep time and less than $1.00 per batch, your family will love them!

    This easy dinner rolls recipe makes tasty fresh dinner rolls perfect as a bread with virtually any meal. It is a classic family recipe sometimes called 90 minute Rolls. Don’t let the “90 minutes” in the name scare you. This dinner rolls recipe is called that because 90 minutes is the total time from getting the idea to having freshly baked dinner rolls ready to serve your family.

    It actually only takes about 5 minutes to prepare this super easy dinner rolls recipe and then every so often, you have to check it and spend a moment on the next step.

    This recipe is sooo worth it! If you have never made fresh homemade dinner rolls, you’ll never want to go back to the store bought ones! They’re perfect served with chicken, beef or pork and a vegetable for an easy meal. If you serve a meal with gravy, there is nothing quite as wonderful as soaking up the leftover gravy with one of these 90 minute rolls! Oh YUM!! They also taste great with soup, stew and chili.

    In addition to serving them for family dinners, these rolls are also great for holiday meals, and kids absolutely love them. Try them today and you won’t regret it!

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    Easy Dinner Rolls Recipe

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    Here’s an easy dinner rolls recipe you can use to make delicious homemade dinner rolls or cinnamon rolls. With just 5 minutes prep time and less than $1.00 per batch, your family will love them!

    • Author: Tawra Kellam
    • Yield: 12 dinner rolls

    Ingredients

    Units

    22 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
    2 Tbsp. sugar
    1 pkg. or 1 Tbsp. yeast
    1/2 tsp. salt
    1/2 cup milk
    1/4 cup water
    2 Tbsp. butter or margarine

    Instructions

    1. Mix 3/4 cup flour with sugar, yeast, and salt.
    2. Heat milk, water and butter until very warm (120°-130°).
    3. Add to dry ingredients and beat 2 minutes on medium speed.
    4. Add 1/4 cup flour.
    5. Beat 2 minutes on high. Stir in enough flour to make a stiff dough.
    6. Knead 2-3 minutes.
    7. Place in a greased bowl and let rise 15 minutes.
    8. Divide dough into 12 pieces and shape into balls.
    9. Place in an 8-inch round cake pan. Let rise 15 minutes.
    10. Bake at 375° for 20-25 minutes.

    90 Minute Cinnamon Rolls Recipe

    1. Roll out the dough after rising the first time.
    2. Spread with 2 tablespoons softened butter or margarine.
    3. Combine 1 teaspoon cinnamon and 1/4 cup sugar and sprinkle on dough.
    4. Roll jelly-roll style.
    5. Cut into 1 inch pieces.
    6. Place in the pan and bake as above.

    This easy dinner rolls recipe is from volume 1 of our cookbook, where it is called 90 minute rolls:

    [dining]

  • Apple Cinnamon Muffins Recipe – Quick, Easy And Delicious Snack!

    Apple Cinnamon Muffins Recipe – Quick, Easy And Delicious Snack!

    This easy apple cinnamon muffins recipe makes delicious muffins that everyone loves! These muffins only take 5 minutes to prepare. I make them frequently because they are a favorite in my family! Even picky eaters and teenagers can’t resist their mouth-watering taste.

    Whether you’re looking for a quick snack or something to bring to a potluck, these muffins are the perfect option. They complement almost any meal and their sweet and savory flavor is sure to please your taste buds.

    This apple cinnamon muffins recipe makes super yummy muffins that are great for all kinds of occasions. These muffins are easy to make with just 5 minutes prep time. They're great for breakfast, after school snacks, as an addition to a family meal and more! Our family loves them and you will, too!

    This apple cinnamon muffins recipe makes super yummy muffins that are great for all kinds of occasions. These muffins are easy to make with just 5 minutes prep time. They’re great for breakfast, after school snacks, as an addition to a family meal and more! Our family loves them and you will, too!

    These muffins also make a great gift in a jar mix for holidays and special occasions. If you would like to make it as a jar mix recipe, you will find that version of the recipe below!

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    Easy Apple Cinnamon Muffins Recipe

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    This apple cinnamon muffins recipe makes super yummy muffins that are great for all kinds of occasions. These muffins are easy to make with just 5 minutes prep time. They’re great for breakfast, after school snacks, as an addition to a family meal and more! Our family loves them and you will, too!

    • Author: Tawra Kellam
    • Yield: 12-15 muffins

    Ingredients

    2 cups all-purpose flour
    1 tsp. cinnamon
    1 tsp. baking powder
    1/2 tsp. baking soda
    1/4 tsp. salt
    1/2 cup raisins and/or nuts (optional)
    1 cup apple juice
    1/2 cup applesauce

    Topping Ingredients

    2 Tbsp. butter, oil or margarine, melted
    3 Tbsp. sugar
    1/4 tsp. cinnamon
    1/4 tsp. nutmeg

    Instructions

    1. Preheat oven to 350°.
    2. In a bowl, mix together the first 5 ingredients.
    3. Add raisins and/or nuts, if desired. Stir to mix.
    4. Add apple juice, applesauce and oil. Mix well.
    5. Spoon into lightly greased muffin tins.
    6. Bake for 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
    7. To make the topping, place the melted butter in a bowl.
    8. Then mix the cinnamon, sugar and nutmeg in a nother bowl.
    9. While the muffins are still warm, dip each muffin into the melted butter and then the cinnamon and sugar mixture. If you like, you can also spoon the cinnamon and sugar mixture over the muffins.

    Notes

    • I like to line my muffin pan with muffin liners to make it easier to clean up.
    • I usually make my muffins “rustic”, where I just pour the batter in and bake, but if you’re trying to make them extra pretty, you can smooth out the tops before baking. My boys snarf them down so quickly, I hate to spend too much time being OCD!

    This apple cinnamon muffins recipe is in volume 1 of our cookbook, where it is called Apple Cinnamon Muffin Mix.

    [dining]

    This homemade apple cinnamon muffin mix makes super yummy muffins which are great for all kinds of occasions and make easy gifts in a jar!

    This homemade apple cinnamon muffin mix makes super yummy muffins which are great for all kinds of occasions and make great easy gifts in a jar! They’re great for breakfast, after school snacks, as an addition to a family meal and more! Our family loves them and you will, too!

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    Apple Cinnamon Muffin Recipe And Gift Mix

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    This homemade apple cinnamon muffin mix makes super yummy muffins which are great for all kinds of occasions and make great easy gifts in a jar!

    • Author: Tawra Kellam
    • Yield: 12-15 muffins

    Ingredients

    Muffin Ingredients

    2 cups all-purpose flour
    1/2 tsp. baking soda
    1/4 tsp. salt
    1 tsp. baking powder
    1 tsp. cinnamon
    1/2 cup raisins and/or nuts

    Topping Ingredients

    3 Tbsp. sugar
    1/4 tsp. cinnamon
    1/4 tsp. nutmeg

    Instructions

    1. In a bowl, mix together the first 5 ingredients.
    2. Place in an airtight container. Package raisins and nuts separately.
    3. Mix topping ingredients in a bowl. Package in a small cellophane bag.

    To Make Into A Jar Mix:

    Attach this note to the jar:

    Apple Cinnamon Muffin Mix

    To prepare, preheat oven to 350°.
    Mix together:
    Apple Cinnamon Muffin Mix raisins and/or nuts
    1 cup apple juice
    2 Tbsp. butter, oil or margarine, melted
    1/2 cup applesauce
    Stir just until combined. Spoon into lightly greased muffin tins and bake for 20-25 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. While still warm, dip each muffin into the melted butter and then the topping. Makes 12-15 muffins.
  • How To Make Homemade Biscuits – Easy Super Delicious Recipe!

    How To Make Homemade Biscuits – Easy Super Delicious Recipe!

    How to make homemade biscuits! This easy homemade baking powder biscuits recipe makes the most delicious biscuits that are super yummy and easy to make!

    This easy homemade baking powder biscuits recipe makes the most delicious biscuits that are super yummy and easy to make! It has been a favorite in our family and has the perfect taste and texture! Try it any time you need an easy bread side dish!

    This easy homemade biscuits recipe has been a favorite in our family. Mike spent a lot of time making and re-making the recipe to figure out the perfect taste and texture. We prefer the biscuits just as they are but the recipe is easily adaptable, so if you want to try adding garlic, cheese or some other favorite ingredient, feel free to experiment!

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    Mike’s Baking Powder Biscuits Recipe

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    • Author: Michael Kellam
    • Yield: 10-12 biscuits

    Ingredients

    2 cups all-purpose flour
    3 tsp. baking powder
    1 tsp. salt
    5 Tbsp. butter or margarine
    1 scant cup milk

    Instructions

    1. Mix flour, baking powder and salt in a bowl.
    2. Cut in butter with a fork or pastry blender until it resembles cornmeal.
    3. Add milk, stirring enough to combine ingredients. Do not over stir.
    4. Put dough on a lightly floured surface and gather into a ball. If the dough is sticky add a little flour to help form the ball.
    5. Knead lightly 5-10 times.
    6. Roll out 1/2 inch thick and cut with a biscuit cutter or a glass rim that has been dipped in flour.
    7. Put onto an ungreased cookie sheet and bake at 425° for 15-20 minutes or until golden brown. Makes 10-12 baking powder biscuits.

    These biscuits are a great part of a big breakfast, but they also work well with virtually any dinner menu! They only take a few minutes to prepare, so you can make a batch and let them bake while you get the rest of your meal on the table! We usually set them in a basket with a clean kitchen towel laid inside and then fold the top of the towel over the biscuits to keep them warm when they’re on the table.

    If you’d like to have biscuits and sausage gravy, you can get the gravy recipe here! Just add sausage and you’ll have a super yummy meal!

    This homemade biscuits recipe is from volume 1 of our cookbook. For more quick and easy recipes your family will love, check it out here!

    [dining]

  • Save Money In The Kitchen – Easy Ways To Save on Groceries

    Save Money In The Kitchen – Easy Ways To Save on Groceries

    If you’re spending too much on your food bill, here are some easy ways to save money on groceries! Most people spend too much because they don’t know these simple tips!

    If you're spending too much on your food bill, here are some easy ways to save money on groceries! Most people spend too much because they don't know these simple tips!

    Save Money in the Kitchen

    If your grocery bill feels out of control, you’re not alone. For many people, cutting back on grocery budgets can be overwhelming. They know they’re spending too much, but don’t know where to begin to cut. Often, they fear that they will deprive themselves and their children if they become frugal.

    The good news is that there are ways to have your cake, eat it and save money in the kitchen at the same time. The whole secret is to start slowly.

    There are countless ways you can cut your food bill, but if you need to, target just one thing at a time. You won’t get overwhelmed, but you will still be saving money if you do only one thing.

    If you are a frugal beginner, try these simple suggestions for saving on your food bill:

    • Cooking frugally is like changing your diet. You need to learn gradually how to save money and cook frugally. Don’t expect that you will get your food bill down to $300 for four people in the first month if you are spending $600 a month right now.
    • Try cutting just $25.00 or $50.00 a month. Even if you cut back only $50.00 a month, you will save $600.00 a year. If you save just $1.00 a day that is $365.00 a year. You can then apply that $365.00 a year to paying off your credit cards. At 21 percent interest, you will save over $70 a year. This will eventually cause a snowball effect since the more you pay off, the less you pay to interest. When you pay less to interest, you have more each month to apply to paying off your overall debt. This means that as you pay off the debt, the rate that you can pay it off increases.
    • Before you shop, take a tour through your pantry and your refrigerator. Be organized! Don’t buy what’s already hiding in your kitchen.
    • If you’re a fan of coupons, remember this: It’s not what you save, it’s what you spend. If you save 30 cents on something you wouldn’t ordinarily buy anyway, you haven’t really saved anything.
    • A typical fruit item is significantly larger than one serving. Most people would be just as happy eating a small apple as eating a large one — so buy smaller fruits! You will save money by the pound.
    • This month, try two meatless meals a week (or one, if you’re a die hard meat fan).
    • Make simple meals. One-dish meals can contain your meat, your vegetable and your bread.
    • Drink water for your meals.
      • If your family is used to drinking milk, juice or pop for every meal then start by cutting juice from one meal or snack a day and drinking only water. After you get used to this, cut from another meal until you drink only water for meals and a glass of juice or milk at snack time.
      • You can also try allowing one glass of juice at meal times. Then serve water after the juice is gone.
      • You save over $500.00 a year by cutting just one glass of juice per person per day for a family of four.
    • Don’t assume that homemade is cheaper. If you get a VERY GOOD deal on chocolate chips and ingredients for candies, it is cheaper to make them than buying them pre-made. Make sure you do the calculations, though! If you don’t purchase them on sale, homemade candies can be more expensive than candies purchased at the store.
    • Stop wasting food. Give young children small portions. They can always have more if they are still hungry. Give them a half glass of juice and a half sandwich so you don’t waste uneaten food. Put food in the refrigerator right after the meal so it doesn’t spoil. Use leftovers for lunches, in other dishes or frozen in one portion sizes for a quick meal.
    • Don’t buy everything at one store. Prices vary greatly from one store to the next. Go to different stores to buy only their sale items. You will save more than the cost of your gas. It usually only takes half an hour to 45 minutes per store to get the items that are on sale including driving time. If you save a minimum of $20-$30 per trip, it is like “earning” $40-$60 an hour. If you save $60 spending one hour going to two different stores, it is four extra hours you might not have to work to pay for that same food purchased at the regular price.

    Most people don’t think they can live the frugal life and still be comfortable. I feed my family for $100 per person per month. Early in our marriage, when our household income averaged $22,000 a year, we paid off $20,000 in debt in five years—essentially an entire year’s income.

    That same principle still applies today.

    Even if you earn significantly more now, the math doesn’t change. Paying off one year’s income over five years is very achievable when you control everyday expenses—especially groceries. The higher your income, the easier it becomes if you avoid lifestyle creep and put those dollars to work intentionally.

    Keeping our grocery budget low was one of the key ways we made it happen. Small, consistent savings added up month after month—and they can for you, too. When cutting your grocery bill, it’s the little things that add up.

    [dining]

  • 10 Meals in 30 Minutes or Less

    10 Meals in 30 Minutes or Less

    It is possible to prepare tasty and nutritious meals in 30 minutes or less without spending a fortune eating out! Grandma knew the secret and you can, too!

    It is possible to prepare tasty and nutritious meals in 30 minutes or less without spending a fortune eating out! Grandma knew the secret and you can, too! In this post we share how to make quick and easy meals, along with recipes for meals you can make in 30 minutes or less!

    10 Meals in 30 Minutes or Less

    I was having dinner at my son’s house the other night and my daughter-in-law had made “old fashioned” baked potatoes. You know– in the oven and not the microwave. Boy, they were good. It seems so many things taste better slow cooked in the oven.

    The funny thing is that it is still possible to prepare these meals in 30 minutes.

    We started talking about how much longer it took to cook them in the oven compared to the microwave. That started me thinking. Yes, it does take longer in actual cooking time but it is often easier to cook in the oven and it is usually possible to prepare meals with 20 minutes or less prep time.

    How Cooking In The Oven Can Actually Be Easier

    When I bake potatoes in the oven, I work for just 5 minutes to get them ready and in the oven an hour before dinner. Then I just forget about them until dinner is ready. When they are finished, all I have to do is set them on the table and dinner is served.

    When I microwave baked potatoes, I tend to start cleaning them and preparing them at the same time that I’m trying to make a salad and heat up the veggies. While I’m doing all of that, I have to remember to keep checking on the potatoes and turning them. If I am cooking several potatoes, I have to put a few in the microwave at a time. When each batch is done, I have to pull them out and add more, all of this at the same time that I am trying to prepare the rest of the meal.

    Even though we have faster methods of cooking our meals, meal preparation has become more frenzied and hurried than years ago. With the introduction of the microwave and the idea that you can prepare meals in 30 minutes, most people do nothing to prepare or plan their meals at all until 30 minutes before they are planning to actually eat, which makes the cooking take. long longer.

    So 30 minutes before dinner you find yourself trying to thaw something, cook it, and slap it on the table and at the same time talk and deal with tired, hungry, cranky kids. Let’s not forget how exhausted you are at this time of day, too.

    We need to warm up our ovens and start using them again the way our grandmothers used to do. Here are some tips and ideas that prove that cooking meals in a conventional oven instead of a microwave can be just as quick and easy, not to mention how much more delicious they taste and smell. You might be surprised to find out how easy it is to make meals in 30 minutes or less.

    I think we underestimate the power of coming home and smelling something yummy cooking. We automatically seem to relax, feeling that “all is well with the world”. I really think it can change the whole atmosphere of your home for the evening.

    Old Kitchen Pantry

    I am not living in a dream world. You can prepare meals in 30 minutes the way our grandmothers did. I hear some readers saying, “Our grandmothers weren’t ever as busy as we are so they had time to cook large meals.” I can hear our grandmothers chuckling at that statement. My husband’s grandmother had to help on the farm from early in the morning until evening. She took care of a large home garden, canned, cleaned house every day, did laundry without a washer or dryer and still provided meals not only for her family, but up to 20 farm hands as well. She had to do it all without a refrigerator, microwave, or a grocery store and the nearest water was a mile away from her house.

    My mother-in-law would go to work as early as 7 am and work until 9 pm 6 days a week, but she still managed to make three large meals each day. If you’re thinking, “That’s great if you want to spend all your spare time in the kitchen,” consider that they spent less time in the kitchen than we do with less of the conveniences and still managed to have well balanced delicious meals each day.

    What was their secret? They had never heard of 30 minute meals. Even if they had they would probably have laughed and wondered who would spend so much time preparing a meal? They knew that the key to preparing a meal in 30 minutes or less wasn’t how fast you could cook, but how organized you were. You can easily have a meal on the table in 15 minutes if you are organized and plan ahead.

    Making quick and easy meals the old fashioned doesn’t mean microwaving and frying everything to have a quick meal either. Slow cooking something in the oven not only makes things taste better but is quicker with less prep time.

    Our grandmothers’ secret to meals in 30 minutes:

    Easy Dinner Ideas And Recipes

    Here are some ideas about what to prepare. These aren’t elaborate gourmet meals. If you are too busy to cook dinner, then you are to busy to make gourmet dinners. Stick with the basics and keep it simple like our grandmothers did and you will be able to make meals in 30 minutes.

    Slow cooked roast: Place a roast in a crockpot or pan. Peel five potatoes and carrots and drop them in with it and turn on the oven. This takes five minutes. Clean and cut broccoli, celery and cucumbers for a salad — five minutes. At dinner time, chop lettuce and tomato for the salad, adding the already prepared veggies. Then put the meat and the fixings on a platter — five more minutes. Voila! Dinner in 15 minutes.

    Stew: It takes me seven minutes to cube meat*, peel five potatoes, carrots and onions, toss it into a pot and to season it. At dinner time, I put bread or dinner rolls on the table — one to two minutes and I have dinner in nine minutes.

    *Ask your butcher to cube or slice all your meat for you. They usually charge nothing or just a few cents per pound. It saves not only time in cutting but in clean up too.

    Chicken: Toss a chicken in a pan or crockpot — two minutes. Clean potatoes to put in with chicken or to bake in the oven — three minutes. At dinner time, warm a veggie — two minutes. Slice some fruit — three minutes. Dinner in 10 minutes.

    Lasagna: Put noodles in a pot to boil — one minute. Brown the hamburger. Get out the cheese, tomato sauce, and the rest of the fixings; Mix the sauce while the noodles boil, 7-8 minutes. Layer everything — two minutes. Cover and put it in the fridge for dinner the next day or that evening.

    Put the lasagna in the oven to heat while you get out of your work clothes, check the mail, etc. Set the table and cut a salad — five minutes. Dinner is served; 15 minutes.

    Beef stroganoff: Make your beef stroganoff in your crockpot. (If you don’t want to use a crockpot, this recipe usually takes very little time, even when you’re just stirring it up in a pan.) Dump everything but sour cream and noodles into the crockpot. This takes three minutes’ work and then you can simmer all day on low.

    Clean carrots, celery sticks, and broccoli for a relish dish (five minutes) and put it in the fridge. At dinner time, boil egg noodles (5-7 minutes). While they are boiling, add sour cream to the sauce and set the table. Total time: 15 minutes.

    Chili: Mix everything in a pot the night before. Depending on what you put in, it should take 5-10 minutes. Simmer throughout the next day.

    Soup: Do the same as with the chili.

    Mexican Food- Almost all Mexican foods take less than 30 minutes to prepare. Enchiladas and tacos are super easy.

    Casseroles– You can make so many varieties of casseroles. You can always find several that your family will love.

    Breakfast Throw some pancakes or waffles on and add some sausage or scrambled eggs and breakfast is ready for dinner in minutes.

    These are just general examples of ways to prepare quick and easy meals in 30 minutes or less. It isn’t really a matter of time as much as it is a matter of being organized and getting things done before you are too exhausted to think.

    If you have meats thawed and the ingredients on hand, most things can be tossed together in about the same amount of time it takes to order and wait to get your food at a fast food place.

    Also, remember when you have your oven going, try to cook more than one thing in it. For example, if you are going to be baking a casserole, bake a pan of brownies, muffins or baked apples at the same time.

    -Jill

    For lots of quick and easy meals that you can make ahead of time, check out Quick and Easy Menus On A Dime, which is full of pre-made menus and recipes for meals in 30 minutes or less. Make it easier to put dinner on the table and get out of the kitchen faster!

    [dining]

  • Difference Between Baking Flours – All Purpose, Self-Rising, Cake Flour

    Difference Between Baking Flours – All Purpose, Self-Rising, Cake Flour

    What is the difference between all purpose flours, self rising flours and bleached and unbleached flours? Get the quick and simple answers here!

    What is the difference between all purpose flours, self rising flours and bleached and unbleached flours? Get the quick and simple answers here!

    What’s The Difference Between Baking Flours?

    Rose Asks:

    What is the difference between all purpose flours, self rising flours and bleached and unbleached flours? Sometimes the bag just says flour… I want to start cooking from scratch but I am not sure of what flours I need to use. Thanks…

    I’m glad you want to start cooking and baking from scratch. The good news is that it is really pretty easy to know the difference between baking flours and when to use each of them. I will include a brief description of each of them here.

    I don’t go into the super scientific details, but rather the practical information you need to get cooking and baking fast! I hope this helps you understand the difference between all purpose flour, self-rising four and the other names you may see on flour bags!

    All Purpose Flour, Bleached And Unbleached Flour

    All purpose, bleached and unbleached flour can all be used interchangeably. The main difference is that unbleached flour has slightly more nutrients in it than the others. All purpose flour is what is used mostly in baking. For a beginning cook, I suggest you always use all purpose flour unless the recipe states otherwise.

     Cake Flour

    There are some differences in the type of wheat between cake flour and other flours, but the most important thing for you to know is that cake flour is ground more finely than other flour. Cake flour is also made of a particular type of flour that produces a softer texture, so it is often preferred by professionals for making baked goods with a super light and fluffy texture.

    If a recipe calls for cake flour and you don’t have cake flour on hand, it is perfectly OK to substitute 2 tablespoons less of the cake flour per cup of all purpose flour. In other words if the recipe calls for 1 cup of cake flour then you can use 1 cup minus 2 Tbsp. of all purpose flour.

    Self Rising Flour

    Self rising flour already has the salt and leavening mixed into it. A lot of bakers don’t like to use self-rising flour because it can lose its potency. It is usually not recommended for bread. If you have a recipe that calls for self rising flour but you don’t have self rising flour on hand,

    I could go into all the scientific details about protein percent, varieties of wheat and a lot of other details but it’s easy to get into information overload so I won’t. I have included the details you need to make most recipes. Too many details just discourages us from trying something because we are afraid to get mired in irrelevant details.

    When A Package Just Says Flour

    If you find a package of flour in the store that just says “flour”, it is generally all purpose flour. I hope your scratch cooking goes well!

    Jill

    [dining]

  • Homemade Breakfast Puffs Recipe

    Homemade Breakfast Puffs Recipe

    This homemade French breakfast puffs recipe makes an extra tasty muffin like breakfast item. They’re light, tender and delicious and they’re oh so easy to make! The butter and cinnamon make them so yummy!

    My kids and family love them and we serve them for holidays and other special occasions! Try them next time you’re looking for a yummy breakfast or snack item! (more…)

  • Baking Mix Muffins Recipe

    Baking Mix Muffins Recipe

    This easy baking mix muffins recipe makes delicious muffins in just minutes with our homemade baking mix, bisquick or your favorite baking mix recipe.

    This easy baking mix muffins recipe makes delicious muffins in just minutes with our homemade baking mix, bisquick or your favorite baking mix recipe.
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    Baking Mix Muffins Recipe

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    This easy baking mix muffin recipe makes delicious muffins in just minutes with our homemade baking mix, Bisquick or your favorite baking mix recipe.

    • Author: Tawra Kellam
    • Yield: 12-15 muffins

    Ingredients

    2 1/4 cup baking mix
    1/4 cup sugar
    1 egg
    3/4 cup water
    1/3 cup vegetable oil

    Instructions

    1. Preheat oven to 400°.
    2. Mix dry baking mix and sugar.
    3. Add egg, water and vegetable oil to dry ingredients.
    4. Mix only enough to moisten the flour. The batter will be lumpy.
    5. Fill greased muffin tins two-thirds full.
    6. Bake for 20 minutes.

    Notes

    • For an added surprise fill each muffin cup halfway and then add a spoonful of jelly. Top with more batter.
    • Add raisins, cinnamon or nuts for gourmet muffins.

    This Baking Mix Muffins Recipe recipe is from our cookbook:

    [dining]

  • Baking Mix Pancakes Recipe

    Baking Mix Pancakes Recipe

    This easy baking mix pancakes recipe makes delicious pancakes in just minutes with our baking mix, bisquick or your favorite baking mix recipe. (more…)

  • Baking Mix Biscuits Recipe

    Baking Mix Biscuits Recipe

    This easy baking mix biscuits recipe makes delicious biscuits in just minutes with our homemade baking mix, bisquick or your favorite baking mix recipe. (more…)

  • How To Save Money On Milk

    How To Save Money On Milk

    How To Save Money On Milk

    Even with rising prices, you can learn how to save money on milk. Using these easy tips, you can cut your costs and start paying off debt! (more…)

  • Using Leftover Crumbs

    Using Leftover Crumbs

    using leftover crumbs

    Here’s how to use all those leftover crumbs!

    How often do you toss leftover crumbs, whether they are in the bread bag, cake or dessert leftovers or something else? Which if us hasn’t cringed at throwing away that last piece of cake? You can usually use these leftovers for something else, saving money and often adding something special to another food item! Try these tips for using leftover crumbs:

    Leftover cookie crumbs – use leftover in place of graham cracker crumbs when making a graham cracker crust.

    Leftover bread crumbs – save in a bag in the freezer. When you have enough, toss leftover crumbs with oil and seasoning. Toast until golden brown. Use in place of Parmesan cheese or us in stuffing, casseroles or bread pudding (without the oil and seasonings)

    Save and use cake crumbs, cookie crumbs and brownie crumbs as a ice cream topping

    Use cereal leftover crumbs for topping on muffins, yogurt, pudding, oatmeal, fresh fruit or use 2 cups with 1/2 cup margarine and your favorite herb, broil on a flat pan until browned. Use on top of hot vegetables, macaroni and cheese or casseroles. Store unused portion in an airtight jar.

    Leftover Jelly or Jam?use for popsicles or add more water, boil and make syrup

    One serving of leftovers? – Line a muffin tin with foil. Put one serving of leftover mashed potatoes, meat anything and cover with foil. Freeze.When frozen store in labeled plastic freezer bags.

    Add leftover cooked rice to pancake batter. – Cook as usual. Serve with butter and syrup. They make a hearty breakfast.

    Sundae Pie – Crumble leftover cookies, angle food cake, pound cake or brownies in a pie pan. Spoon vanilla ice cream on tip. Spread on a thin layer of strawberry jam and cover that with chocolate and butterscotch ice cream topping. Freeze and serve for dessert.

     

    photo by: little blue hen

  • Our Readers Weigh In On The Great Milk Crisis!

    Our Readers Weigh In On The Great Milk Crisis!

    Our Readers Weigh In On The Great Milk Crisis!

    Tina H Writes: Thank you for the milk article. I have been attempting to warn my friends for months. I work for the local government and periodically get to sit in on different meetings including dairy farmers, etc. What the average person doesn’t know is that the farmers are not getting the profit increase. This also drives up the cost of butter, yogurt, cheese etc. So I warn others to stock up and freeze all the butter and cheese they can afford each week. This winter will be tough on everyone. All food is going up, freeze and can all you can! Also, I recommend you purchase block chedder cheese, it is easy to grate, you use less and does not come with binders and potato starch that causes many problems for people with hidden food alergies.

    Heidi Writes: I read your recent e-mail about the panic caused by the sudden rise in milk prices at the store. I appreciated your tounge in cheek humor. I just wanted to let you know, (and hopefully your readers) that dairy farmers are one of the most over-worked and under-paid groups of people that I know. I happen to know this because my husband and I are dairy farmers! We scrape by every month, many months spending more on farm expenses than we generate in income. For once, farmers are starting to get paid decently and the whole country erupts in angry protests. No one seems to take into account that bottled water costs consumers more in many cases than even milk!!!

    I recieve your e-mails to help me cut costs here in the house and I do appreciate the information, I just wish people realized that behind every gallon of milk is a family trying to make ends meet!

    ~Heidi

    Roxie Writes: The Big Milk Crisis———–One of the things I do to save money on milk (I did not see it in the article at all) is use 100% powdered milk for cooking and baking. I also mix powdered milk with whole milk for a nice tasting 2% milk for my family. If I did not make it to the store, I can get the kids to drink powered milk if I put some chocolate flavor in it. Every dime I save on food goes to help me put two little boys through college and fund my retirement, so I don’t spend money I don’t have to spend…Roxie

    Theresa K. writes: I was surprised to read that some people pour sour milk down the drain. All the women in our family always used sour milk to make the best pancakes. They are very light and fluffy. Sour milk is the same or similar to buttermilk and companies sell buttermilk mix for pancakes. Try it. -Theresa

    Barbara writes: I just wanted to say "amen sister" to today’s article on the price of milk going up. I am the daughter of a farm family who lived through the Great Depression and I can get livid when people complain about the price of milk, and other farm items.

    First of all, the farmer gets very little, if any, of that increase. The price of milk has not risen anywhere near the price of many non-food items. It is the same way with eggs. If they go over $1 a dozen, people are hollering in outrage.

    When my kids were little and I could not afford enough milk, I would buy a gallon of whole milk and dilute it with powdered milk to make three gallons. I then had three gallons of 1% milk at a cost much less than if I had bought 3 gallons of 1% milk. It was a lot cheaper and healthier. No one needs to drink whole milk. It is meant to get a calf to full grown in a year. This is also one reason why we have so many overweight kids. The other is lack of exercise, but don’t get me started!!!!

    AND THEN you mention the IPod. How can anyone in their right mind stand in line for two days to put out that much money for something that will probably be obsolete in 6 months or less!!!???

    Like you said, most people’s priorities are totally backward. I used to have an e-mail that compared the price of a bunch of items by the gallon that people do not complain about buying and it was really ridiculous. I wish I could find it. My favorite, though, is cigarettes. Around here they are all but $5 a pack. A pack a day habit cost more than a gallon of milk, which will usually last at least two or three days and it is only $4, I think. Personally, I drink nothing but reconstituted dry milk and I pay about $1.50 a gallon and always have it on hand! The water I use is free!!!!!

    Sorry to ramble on so, I just wanted to let you know someone agrees with you.

    Sincerely
    Barbara

    Lisa in Tennessee writes: This is in response to the milk article. We already implement most of what Jill suggested, but I have another suggestion to add. About one year ago, I heard of an acquaintance of mine who made their milk from powdered milk. I balked at the idea, but when we were out of the "real" milk one day, I decided to try it.

    From that day on I WAS STUCK ON POWDERED MILK! The children didn’t notice the difference at all (we already were drinking skim milk). We don’t drink that much milk anyway, because like you said, I make other things for breakfast and we drink water all day long. But when we eat cereal or I need milk for baking, etc., powdered milk is just fine for us.

    At Aldi I can get a big box of powdered milk for $8. That makes five gallons of milk. If I bought five gallons of milk at the store up the street, I’d pay about $20!

    Anyway, I just thought I’d pass that along. Sometimes it’s just our mindset that we have to hurdle ourselves over, and after that, it’s smooth sailing!

    Thanks for you ministry,
    Lisa in TN

    PS–to add to my suggestion, if someone wanted to slowly wean their family onto powdered milk, they could make some, add it to the "real" milk, and go from there. Within a couple of weeks family members would be used to it.

    Judy L Writes: One way to stretch milk is to mix with equal amounts of reconstituted dried milk. Make sure to mix the dried milk into water thoroughly and get it very cold before mixing with the fresh milk. We lived overseas and did this often when milk supplies were low. My kids never knew the difference. Love your newsletter!

    Judy L.

    Zafar asks: I received your one article the other day that stated you can freeze milk. I was wondering if you freeze milk before it is opened and expired, how long will it last after it has thawed? I am was very happy to see that milk could be frozen. Thanks for the great tips. I am trying to live a more productive lifestyle by "making the most of what I have."

    Zafar

    Tawra: I just put it straight in the freezer. I don’t even drain some off anymore. It expands but not enough to break the bottle. When you defrost it, shake it well because freezing causes it to separate somewhat. Once defrosted, it will last about as long as milk that had not been frozen — about a week if kept regularly refrigerated. If you keep it longer than that and it gets sour, use it for baking! Sour milk makes great pancakes and biscuits.

    Stacy T. writes: One thing I found interesting was a tidbit of advice from my mother. Since I bake bread in a bread machine, I keep around powdered milk. She told me of a friend who used to mix up a half gallon of the stuff and pour it in her milk gallons when they became half empty. Of course, no one in my family would go for that (I’m not a milk drinker myself, but my husband can drink a half gallon at dinner itself! I finally got him to drink 2%, but he would never drink the powdered skim!)

    But it got me thinking. How many dishes do I cook that call for milk? Honestly, no one would really know the difference if I used the reconstituted powdered skim or the store bought 2%! What a way to save money! Especially considering how much my husband drinks! (Trust me, I’ve tried to ask him to cut back on the milk, but it won’t work.)

    Stacy T.

    When my daughter was about 3 yr old (she just turned 40), we switched to using powdered milk. I had figured the cost and at that time it was less than buying regular milk. To switch, at first I mixed half regular milk and half powdered milk for a couple of months, then when to powdered milk completely. With having a large box of powdered milk on hand, it meant not running to the store just for milk. Now all these years later, I still using powdered milk most of the time. Since it is low fat, it is better for you anyway. I have read that kids over the age of 2 do not need whole milk.

    You are completely right about measuring milk, cereal, etc. My husband is now a diabetic. All of his food is measured at home. I am in shock when I see women at work pouring a huge bowl of cereal to eat at their first break. One bowl of what they consider normal equals about 6 servings of cereal. No wonder those women (and their kids) are grossly overweight. Americans do not know what a serving size is anymore. They need to read the labels.

    You have an excellent newsletter and I am telling all my friends and neighbors about it.

    Thanks,
    Linda J.