Recipes

Ham, Cheddar & Red Onion Bread Pudding

I was pretty sure this recipe was going to be good after reading through the ingredients, and I was right! I had planned ahead and made a loaf of French bread earlier in the week (the recipe I used for the Spiral Stromboli made 2 loaves of bread). I knew I had to make this recipe soon, because if I didn’t, Andrew was going to eat that loaf of bread!

This recipe goes together pretty quickly, which is nice when you don’t want to spend a ton of time in the kitchen…like on a Friday evening. 🙂

Prep time: 15 minutes
Total time: 1 hour, 5 minutes
Serves: 6

oil for dish
4 large eggs
1-1/2 c. whole milk
1 T. Dijon mustard
1/8 t. freshly grated or ground nutmeg
Kosher salt & pepper
1 12-oz loaf French or Italian bread, cut into 1″ pieces
1 small red onion, cut into 1/4″ thick wedges
1 crisp red apple (such as Gala or Braeburn), cut into 1/4″ thick wedges
4 oz sliced ham, torn into 2″ pieces (I had a 7-oz container, so I just threw it all in there)
4 oz sharp cheddar cheese, shredded (about 1 cup)
green salad, for serving

1. Heat oven to 350F/180C. Oil a 2-1/2 to 3-quart baking dish (I just used a 9×13″ pan). In a large bowl, whisk together the eggs, milk, mustard, nutmeg, and 1/4 tsp each salt and pepper.
2. Add the bread and let sit, tossing occasionally, for 5 minutes.
I cut up the rest of my ingredients while the bread was soaking, so I thought I’d take the opportunity to show the quickest way I know to cut an onion:
First cut off the non-root end (the part without the hair-like things). Peel off the skin. Cut the onion in half through the root (this will keep the onion held together). Now make slices through the onion (like the picture above), making sure not to cut through the root. Then just slice off the root end, and there you go! Okay, back to the recipe…

3. Fold the onion, apple, ham, and cheese into the bread mixture.
4. Transfer to the prepared baking dish. Bake until set and a knife inserted in the center comes out clean (cover the bread pudding with foil if it browns too quickly), 45-50 minutes.
Serve with salad, if desired. Which we did:
What a great dinner! I love starting a meal off with a nice salad, and this bread pudding was both filling and flavorful. I can’t wait to make this one again!

**Each serving has about 367 calories, 13 g fat, 155 mg cholesterol, 830 mg sodium, 20 g protein, 42 g carbohydrates, and 2 g fiber. If you use more ham like I did, these numbers obviously won’t be right. 🙂

Recipes

Baileys Irish Cream Cupcakes

Here is the recipe for the delicious cupcakes I made on St. Patrick’s Day this year. The recipe comes from this website. The only difference here is that I cut the cupcake part of the recipe in half to have extra frosting! And the ones on the website are much cuter than mine. 🙂

For the cupcakes:

1-1/4 c. all-purpose flour
1-1/2 t. baking powder
1/4 t. salt
1/4 t. cinnamon
3/4 c. sugar
6 T. butter, softened
1 egg + 1 egg white, at room temperature
1 t. vanilla extract
1/4 c. Baileys Irish Creme

For the buttercream:

1 c. butter (2 sticks)
4 c. powdered sugar
3 T. Baileys Irish Creme

1. Preheat oven to 350F/180C. Line muffin tins with cupcake liners.
2. In a large bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon.
3. In a separate bowl, cream together the sugar and butter until light and fluffy with an electric mixer, about 2-3 minutes. Add egg and egg white one at a time, beating on low between each addition. Add vanilla.
4. Add flour mixture slowly in 3 additions, alternating with Baileys, starting and ending with flour. Fill cupcake liners about 2/3 full and bake 15-17 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the center of one comes out clean. Allow to cool in pan for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
5. For the frosting, beat butter with an electric mixer until light and fluffy. Add powdered sugar 1/2 cup at a time, until completely mixed. Add the Baileys and beat until well combined.
6. Poke holes in the tops of the cupcakes (I used a chopstick) and brush some Baileys on each before frosting.
7. Load frosting into a piping bag fit with a large tip and decorate as desired.

Makes 12 well-frosted cupcakes!

Enjoy!

Books & Movies · Crafts · Daily living

Happy St. Paddy’s Day!

Okay, I know I’m a couple of days late, but I really didn’t have much time to blog this weekend! Neither Andrew nor I are Irish, but I’m the type of person who looks for reasons to decorate for a new occasion and to bake yummy treats. 🙂

A few days into March, I turned my Valentine’s mantle into my St. Patrick’s Day mantle:

It’s really satisfying to find a way to decorate on a dime. I’m still pondering what cute thing I can come up with for Easter!

The day before St. Patrick’s Day (conveniently a Friday), I made my favorite butter cookies. Andrew had plans for a guys’ night out in Newmarket, so I was fairly excited to have the house to myself to watch movies (ones Andrew wouldn’t like) and spend hours decorating those cookies! The movies I watched weren’t the greatest, I’ll admit…

First I learned that you shouldn’t watch a movie based solely on who’s in it. I like Liam Neeson. I like Julianne Moore. And I’ve liked Amanda Seyfried in some of the things she’s done. So I thought I would like “Chloe.” Before I started watching it, I looked it up on Google and one of the first things I saw was that it was an erotic thriller. That right there worried me a bit. Needless to say, I didn’t really enjoy the movie. The actors all did a pretty good job, I think, but it was just really weird. The title character seriously has some issues, and in general I just felt like something was lacking.

Then I watched “Martha Marcy May Marlene.” Another pretty weird movie, but at least this one was intriguing and very “real” feeling. It stars the Olsen twins’ younger sister, Elizabeth, and I was actually really impressed by her. I guess I just wasn’t expecting much, based on all of the straight-to-video movies her older sisters were in during their teens, but Elizabeth Olsen really played the title role well. It’s a story about a young woman who escapes from a cult-like living environment and tries to meld back into “normal” life. It really doesn’t sugar-coat anything, and your heart really goes out to this woman’s struggles. I’ll probably make Andrew watch it, mostly to get his opinion on it!

Oh, and during this time, I got all of my cookies decorated. 🙂

I can never seem to stick with just one or two colors. Even for these, I felt the need to make two shades of green. They turned out pretty cute, and they were delicious, as usual!

I had outlined the cookies before dinner so the icing would have time to dry before I went back to “flood” the cookies with thinner icing. So two movies’ worth of decorating…roughly 3 hours? I don’t think I took all of “Martha Marcy May Marlene” to decorate them either. But now I know why people go with sprinkles to decorate: it’s a lot quicker!

The final movie I watched? “Midnight in Paris,” a romantic comedy starting Owen Wilson and Rachel McAdams. Definitely a good end to my trio of movies, since it was a lot more lighthearted than the previous two! This one was about a frustrated writer who gets transported back to the 20s every night at midnight while walking the streets of Paris. If you don’t know much about the writers, artists, and music of this era, you might not enjoy the movie much. But I thought it was pretty good, especially seeing how these famous people of the 20s are portrayed. It made some of those college English literature classes come back to me. 🙂

Andrew got home pretty late, so we slept in a bit on St. Patrick’s Day. I had bought some Baileys Irish Creme on Thursday, mostly for the cupcakes I wanted to make, but also to put in my coffee Saturday morning.

Delicious! My coffee looks pretty light there, huh? I may have been a little generous with the Baileys. Oh well, that’s what Saturdays are for! Plus it was St. Patrick’s Day!

After my butter finally was softened enough (I’m never patient waiting for that to happen!), I made Baileys Irish Creme cupcakes from a recipe I found online. I am not much of a cake person, and I’m not sure how good the actual cupcake part of these was, because I put quite a bit of Baileys buttercream frosting on top! Mmm, that was the best part!

The recipe said to double the frosting part if you wanted to put on as much frosting as is shown in the picture, but I just halved the cupcake part (no way did we need 24 cupcakes here!).

We had another couple over for dinner (Andrew grilled some Juicy Lucy burgers), and then after they headed home, another couple came over to hang out. We watched “The Boondock Saints,” which was the only St. Paddy’s Day-related movie we could think of. Overall, we had a fun, relaxing St. Patrick’s Day, which is what we both wanted. We may have had too many crazy St. Paddy’s Day celebrations in college… 🙂