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Turn your stale bread ends into useful crumbs

cookie sheet of toasted bread crumbsWhen I was a kid, there was little I hated more than when my mom would make a peanut butter sandwich for my lunch using the heel of the bread. She didn't do it all that frequently, mostly when she hadn't been able to get to the store and there was no reserve loaf of bread in the freezer (on occasion she'd also use a whole wheat hot dog bun).

Marie at Make and Take doesn't force her children to suffer through sandwiches on the heels of bread. She saves them in her freezer and, when she's accumulated a good stash, processes them into homemade bread crumbs. She included step-by-step pictures in her post, along with a collection of recipe links that all use toasted bread crumbs. These days, when we're all trying to find ways to save a few pennies here and there, repurposing undesirable bread into crumbs seems like a good way to go.

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Filed under: On the Blogs, Ingredients, How To

St. Patricks Day: Old Style, Homemade, Corned Beef Hash



So the other day I showed you how I make a Boiled Corned Beef Dinner. I made twice as much as I needed so there would be a ton of leftovers. Sure, I'll make a few hot and cold corned beef sandwiches, but my main goal is hash. That's right, an Old Style, Homemade, Corned Beef Hash; full of the flavor of spiced corned beef and lots of vegetables, all simmered long and slow.

Old Style, Homemade, Corned Beef Hash

Roughly chop up as much leftover corned beef and vegetables as you want. I like to go about 40% corned beef, 50% potatoes/carrots/onions, and only 10% cabbage. To this add a nice amount of fresh chopped raw sweet onion and some chopped bell pepper or chile pepper. I usually use a stemmed and seeded Jalapeno Pepper. Dust thoroughly with fresh ground black pepper and add a fat pinch of Kosher or Sea Salt.

Cook over medium-high heat in a pre-heated cast iron pan, and stir every few minutes as it browns on the bottom. Do not add any oil or grease, the meat has plenty.

The hash should be a mix of browned bits and un-browned. If you brown it too much it will get all dry. Fry some eggs easy over and serve a pile of the hash with two eggs on top. Mmmm... that's some wicked good cookin'.

Filed under: Cooking Live with Slashfood, Ingredients, Holidays

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Homemade truffles for this week's chocolate holiday

homemade trufflesLast week, Shayna showed up how to make our own chocolates for Valentine's Day. Her chocolates are sure to be delicious, but they are, admittedly, a little time consuming to make. However, there are chocolates out there that you can whip up in your own kitchen in less time and with fewer pieces of specialty equipment.

Over a Su Good Sweets, Jessica recently tested three truffle recipes for ease and taste. She came to the conclusion that simple is best and offers her readers the recipe she used (Robert Linxe's cream truffles) to make easy and delicious truffles just in time for the biggest chocolate holiday of the year. Over at Culinate, Melissa Lion wrote about nearly the very same recipe, giving readers an entertaining step by step narration of how to make rustic truffles for Valentine's Day.

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Filed under: On the Blogs, Ingredients, Holidays

Food Porn Daily: Homemade chocolate cupcakes

homemade chocolate cupcake from Coconut and Lime
Being that Valentine's Day is less than a week away, I've got chocolate on the brain. We've got an awesome feature coming up a little later in the day on how to make your own chocolate for Valentine's Day and so I set off in search of a image that featured chocolate for today's Food Porn pic. I didn't have to look far, because as soon as I saw this photo of a homemade chocolate cupcake from Rachel of Coconut & Lime. She made these luscious cakes for her birthday last summer and lucky for us, she posted the recipe on her blog.

If you want to see your images in this space, head over to our Flickr group, join up and start adding your pics to the pool!

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Filed under: Food Porn, Feast Your Eyes, Ingredients

Homemade Irish Cream from the Real Potato

image of glass of Irish Cream with whipped cream and cinnamon stickI had never really thought of Irish Cream as something you could make at home (I thought it was something that only came in a bottle and was bought at the liquor store) until I came across this post on The Real Potato. Posted a couple of days ago, she offers a seemingly easy recipe for making your own Irish Cream (none of that pre-bottled stuff!). It does use raw eggs, so if that makes you feel uncomfortable, you can either get some pasteurized eggs or leave them out and add some extra cream. It would be a great thing to make tonight if you're going to have a mellow night at home with friends or family (or both)!

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Filed under: Ingredients, Drink Recipes, Holidays

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