Built in 1889, Tippecanoe Place, a fine dining restaurant in South Bend is an elaborately gabled and turreted 24,000-square-foot Richardsonian Romanesque-style house which belonged to Clem Studebaker, one of the Studebaker auto magnates. Perfectly preserved, it’s about what having it all meant back in the late 1800s. With 40 rooms, 20 fireplaces and ball room, it took three years to build at a cost of $250,000 (around $6.4 million in today’s money). Add in another $100,000 the family spent on furnishings for all four floors and you can see it was quite a home.
Clem and his brother Henry had made their fortune by growing their blacksmith shop into the world’s largest buggy business, making horse driven wagons for the Civil War effort and then segueing successfully into manufacturing Studebaker cars. At one time, after buying Pierce Arrow, the sleek automobile luxury brand, they even had a Rockne line named after the famed Notre Dame coach who talked up the cars at auto conventions. But alas, deep in debt and with the Depression in full force, Studebaker went into bankruptcy in 1933 and Clem’s son, George, who lived there with his family, abandoned the house which then stood empty for seven years until it was purchased for $20,000 and used first by the Red Cross and then as a school for the handicapped.
Placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, four years later Tippecanoe Place earned the even more coveted and prestigious designation as a National Historic Landmark. In 1980, it was restored at a cost of about $2 million and turned into a restaurant and since then, it’s been the go-to-place for weddings, family events, parties and gracious dining.
The interior of this splendid manse, all highly polished woods, stunning chandeliers, elaborately carved woodwork including the grand staircase, serves classic American fare such as prime rib with creamy horseradish sauce, Indiana roast duckling, shrimp cocktail and chicken Oscar amidst all this elegance (but don’t worry neither tiara or tux are required to dine—it’s casual despite the splendor). The sumptuous—and diet busting—Sunday Brunch is a feast that makes you swear, falsely of course, that you won’t need to eat for a month. There’s also an extensive wine and spirit list.
As for the name Tippecanoe, Clem was good friends with Benjamin Harrison, an Indianapolis lawyer who would become the 23rd President of the United States. Harrison’s grandfather, William Henry Harrison, was the hero (depending on whose side you were on) of the Battle of Tippecanoe which took place near Lafayette in 1811. He too was a U.S. President. But it also could originate from the fact that Tippecanoe, the leader of the Miami Indians, liked to camp on the land where Clem built his mansion. Guided tours are available but you can also take a peak on your own. And be sure to check out the historic memorabilia about the Studebaker family and business on display.
Here’s an adaptation of one of Tippecanoe’s signature desserts.
Frangelico Cream Mouse
3 large egg yolks
1-1/2 cups superfine sugar
1-1/2 pounds cream cheese, softened
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
2 tablespoons Frangelico liqueuor
2 cups heavy cream (36% milk fat) Note: Avoid using ultra pasteurized as it won’t whip properly.
In a mixer with a wire whip, beat egg yolks with the sugar and the vanilla until light and pale.
Beat in softened cream cheese, then add the Frangelico, mixing until very smooth. Set aside in a cool place.
Whip the heavy cream until stiff in another bowl and then fold into the cream cheese mixture. Chill.
Garnish with fresh berries and mint leaves
Serve in individual glasses or in a large, pretty dish.
Life is busy for a lovely mermaid (and aren’t they all?). There’s riding seahorses through shimmering sea foam capped with frothy white waves, finding the perfect rock on which to display their fish-like tails sheathed in iridescent spangles so they sparkle in the sunlight, combing their beautiful long locks and, of course, singing enticingly so that sailors forsake their duty and travel to their doom all to get a better look.
For mermaids as well as mermaid wannabees or just those who love reading about these mythical creatures, folklore expert Carolyn Turgeon introduces us to their world in her recently released The Mermaid Handbook: An Alluring Treasury of Literature, Lore, Art, Recipes, and Projects (Harper Design 2018; $35).
Turgeon, the editor-in-chief of Faerie Magazine, a quarterly print publication and author of several books including The Faerie Handbook, showcases all things mermaid by dividing her handbook into four sections. In “Fashion and Beauty” we learn techniques on creating mermaid hair—face it, haven’t you always wanted a reason to sprinkle glitter throughout your locks. Of course, then you need a mermaid mirror to admire yourself. Not to worry Turgeon includes directions. “Arts and Culture” tells the stories of sirens in classic mythology and contains luscious reproductions of mermaid art and recounts tales of mermaid from around the world. Fair warning—mermaids aren’t always nice.
You don’t have to go down to the sea for the section on “Real Mermaids and Where to Find Them.” Here, Turgeon takes us to the advent of mermaids as entertainers starting with the story of Annette Kellerman who learned to swim like a fish in her native Australia to overcome rickets and bowed legs, eventually becoming strong enough to swim an average of 45 miles a week. So good at what she did, Kellerman began swimming for money at young age and by 1907 was performing as the Australian Mermaid throughout the United States in glass tanks and in 1916 starred in A Daughter of the Gods, the first movie to cost over a $1 million to make as well as the first one featuring a naked woman (don’t worry, her long mermaid hair covered the most private of parts). Turgeon takes us into midcentury when there were a plethora of bars and restaurants with tanks for mermaids to perform in. Surprisingly, at least for me, not all of these have disappeared and some mermaid cocktail lounges are still in business including the Dive Bar in Sacramento, California, the Sip ‘N Dip Tiki Lounge in Great Falls, Montana and the Wreck Bar in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. We also learn the stories of women who have made their livings as mermaids.
Of course, even a mermaid has to eat and the last section of Turgeon’s delightful book “Food, Entertaining and Stories of the Sea” includes recipes for the types of edibles a mermaid might nibble such as Savory Sesame Seed and Seaweed Cookies, Salmon Poke with Wild Rice, Pineapple and Macadamia Nuts and an assortment of sea-themed shaped cookies covered with royal icing. And because what mermaid wouldn’t want to set the perfect table to indulge in such delights, there are crafts to create seashell fortune party favors and shell cocktail glasses to sip such libations as Blue Sea Cocktails and Seductive Siren Cocktails (recipes included).
Those wanting to indulge their inner mermaids can try the recipes below.
Honey Gingerbread Cookies with Royal Icing
8 ounces of unsalted butter
One and ½ granulated sugar
2 cups good quality honey
2 teaspoons baking powder
4 teaspoons ginger
4 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon cloves
1 teaspoon nutmeg
½ teaspoons salt
¼ cup cocoa powder, optional
3 large eggs
9 cups all-purpose flour
1 large egg, lightly beaten and mixed with 1 teaspoon water
Melt the butter in a medium sized saucepan over medium low heat. Add the sugar is still mostly dissolved, then pour in the honey and stir to combine. Cook until very hard and mixture is smooth, but did not boil. Remove from heat.
Sift together baking powder, ginger, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg and salt. Add up to 1/3 cup cocoa powder, depending on color desired. Add to the warm butter mixture and stir until well combined. Set aside to cool to room temperature.
Transfer the mixture to the ball of an electric mixer and add three eggs, beating until combined. Gradually adding flour, beating all the while.
When all the flour is absorbed, divided the dough in half and wrapped in several layers of plastic wrap.
Store in a cool place for at least 24 hours, or up to a week in the refrigerator. If the Joe is refrigerated bring it to room temperature before proceeding.
When you’re ready to bake, preheat the oven to 375°F. Unwrap the dough and place on a well-floured work surface. Knead flour into the dough until it is very smooth, pliable and not sticky. Roll up to ¼- inch thickness for small cookies, a little thicker for larger cookies.
Use cookie cutters to cut cookies into mermaid friendly shapes such as seahorses, shells and starfish.
Big six minutes, checking to see if any bubbles form. If they do, gently smooth with a spatula and continue to bake until done, about nine minutes total for medium cookies and up to 14 minutes for larger ones. Remove to a wire rack and use a pastry brush to apply coat of the lightly beaten egg. Cool completely.
Decorate with Royal Icing (see recipe below).
Royal Icing
2 pounds of powdered sugar
½ teaspoon cream of tartar
1 to 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
10 tablespoons liquid pasteurized egg whites
Combine powdered sugar, cream of tartar, vanilla and pasteurized egg whites in the bowl of a stand mixer and beat high speed with a paddle attachment for 4 to 5 minutes.
Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator.
Blue Sea Cocktail
1 ½ ounces white rum
1 ounce Blue Curaçao
½ ounce Suze or any aperitif
½ ounce Luxardo Maraschino Liqueur
½ ounce simple syrup
Dash fresh lemon juice
Ice cubes
Combine all the ingredients in the shaker.
Shake until will chilled. Strain into a cocktail glass, on the rocks and serve immediately.
Chef Myra Kornfeld and poet Stephen Massimilla have put together a luscious cookbook illustrating how poetry, prose and food have been inspirational throughout history.
The 500-page book, “Cooking With the Muse: A Sumptuous Gathering of Seasonal Recipes, Culinary Poetry and Literary Fare,” is divided by seasons. It pairs 150 recipes with culinary poems, essays and historic anecdotes.
Massimilla provides a few stanzas from Book IX of Homer’s “The Odyssey” to accompany a recipe for Mediterranean Cauliflower-Kale Roast with Feta. He recounts how the cheese, which dates back to 8th century B.C., was originally aged and brined to keep it from spoiling in Greek’s hot, arid climate. The way it was made, he says, has changed very little since Odysseus entered Polyphemus’ cave.
In the recipe for Corn Pudding “Soufflé,” the authors include John Greenleaf Whittier’s poem “Barbara Frietchie” as a preface to the simple recipe.
They end the recipe with a recommendation for cooking fresh corn by Mark Twain, who very much enjoyed his meals.
“Corn doesn’t hang on to its sugar long after it has been picked,” Massimilla writes. “The saying goes that you should put up a pot of hot water before you stroll out to the cornfield prepared to run back on the double. Mark Twain upped the challenge when he recommended carrying the boiling water to the garden to catch the corn with all its sweetness the moment it leaves the vine.”
The following recipes are from “Cooking with the Muse.”
Mediterranean Cauliflower-Kale Roast with Feta
Serves 4 to 6.
1 head cauliflower, cut into florets
4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
Salt
3/4 pound curly kale, stemmed and torn into bite-size pieces
1 tablespoon unsalted butter
2 garlic cloves, minced
1/4 cup Kalamata olives, chopped and pitted
1 tablespoon capers, drained, rinsed and chopped
1/4 cup water
2 tablespoons oregano
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Black pepper
2 ounces feta cheese (preferably from sheep’s milk), crumbled
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Have ready a parchment paper-covered baking sheet.
In one bowl, toss the cauliflower with 2 tablespoons of the oil and 1/2 teaspoon salt. Spread the cauliflower on the baking sheet and roast for 30 minutes, turning once halfway through.
In another bowl, toss the kale with 1 tablespoon oil. Massage the oil into the leaves so each leaf is lightly coated. Sprinkle with 1/8 teaspoon salt.
Roast the cauliflower for 30 minutes, then add the kale to the baking sheet. Return it to the oven and roast for an additional 10-15 minutes, until the cauliflower is browned and the kale is crispy. Remove from the oven.
Warm the remaining tablespoon of oil with the butter in a large skillet until the butter melts. Add the garlic, olives and capers and cook for a minute or two, until fragrant. Stir in the cauliflower and kale, the water and the oregano. Combine thoroughly. Stir in the lemon juice and a sprinkling of pepper.
Serve hot, with feta scattered on top.
Chocolate Tart with Salt and Caramelized Pecans
Makes one 9-inch tart.
For the pecans:
1 cup pecans
1/3 cup maple sugar, Sucanat sugar, Rapadura sugar or coconut sugar
1/8 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper, optional
1 large egg white
For the crust:
Oil and coconut flour, for preparing the pan
2 cups unsweetened coconut, dried and shredded
3 tablespoons granulated natural sugar (such as maple or Sucanat)
1 teaspoon orange zest
2 tablespoons coconut oil
2 large egg whites
For the filling:
1 cup unsweetened coconut milk
2 tablespoons maple sugar
Pinch of salt
7 ounces bittersweet chocolate, roughly chopped
1 large egg, lightly beaten
For the garnish:
Fleur de sel (French sea salt) or other large-flake sea salt
Position one rack in the middle of the oven and another in the lower third. Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. Have ready two parchment paper-covered baking sheets.
To make the pecans, toss the pecans, sugar, salt and cayenne, if using, in a medium bowl. Stir in the egg white to combine. Spread on one of the baking sheets. Bake on the middle rack until the sugar has clumped on the nuts and the mixture looks sandy and dry, 25 to 30 minutes. Stir every 8 minutes or so during the baking so that pecans caramelize evenly.
Let cool for a few minutes, transfer to a bowl and break up the clumps into small pieces. (The pecans can be stored at room temperature for up to a month.)
While the pecans are baking, make the crust. Oil and flour a 9-inch tart pan with a removable bottom. In a medium bowl, combine the coconut, sugar and orange zest. Work in the coconut oil with your fingers until everything is moistened evenly.
In a small bowl, whip the egg whites until frothy. Stir into the coconut mixture. Press the dough into the prepared tart pan. (Use a piece of plastic wrap between your hand and the dough to make pressing in the crust easier.) Give an extra press at the juncture where the sides meet the bottom, so you don’t have a triangular-shaped thick wedge of crust in the corners.
Place the tart pan on the other baking sheet. Bake the crust on the lower rack until it is a deep golden brown, about 15 minutes, checking after 10.
While the crust is baking, make the filling. In a small saucepan, bring the coconut milk, sugar and salt to a simmer. Remove from the heat, add the chocolate and stir with a whisk until the chocolate is completely melted and smooth. Cover to keep warm.
Just before the crust is ready, whisk the egg thoroughly into the chocolate. Pour the filling into the hot crust. Return the tart (still on the baking sheet) to the oven. Bake until the filling is set around the edges, 10 to 15 minutes. The filling should still jiggle a little in the center when you nudge the pan. Set on a rack to cool.
Unmold the tart and serve at room temperature or slightly chilled. Before serving, sprinkle a light dusting of flaky salt and the pecan clusters over the tart. Alternatively, serve each piece with a light dusting of coarse salt, then sprinkle the top with the caramelized pecans.
Cook’s note: The tart may be refrigerated for up to three days.
The wheels of Bridgeton Mill, a three story building next to a 268-foot covered bridge, both painted a matching red and rising above a large waterfall, are always working overtime.
“We sell about 40,000 pounds of flour, pancake mix and cornmeal every year,” says owner Mike Roe who was grinding away for the Indiana State Fair. After that he planned on starting up production for Parke County’s Annual Covered Bridge Festival, this year starting on October 12.
Roe, who says he was always fascinated by the old mill though he knew nothing about milling, bought what was then a ramshackle building in 1995 after seeing a for sale sign on its door. “I came home and my wife asked me how my day was and I told her I just spent a quarter-of-a-million dollars for an old mill.
Bridgeton Mill’s history dates back to the 1820s (it was rebuilt in 1870), making it the oldest continuously operating mill in Indiana and possibly the Midwest. The backdrop here is picture perfect and is one of the most photographed spots in the Midwest. It can be found along the backroads and byways of Parke County, a place so rural that the 31 covered bridges built between 1860 and 1920 still remain.
But no matter what time of the year you go, stock up on the freshly ground products produced by Roe and his family.
Karen Jean Stone Ground Cornbread
1¼ cup cornmeal
¾ cup all-purpose flour
1 cup milk
1 egg
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 tablespoons honey
2 tablespoon coconut oil
Preheat oven 425° F.
Mix the flour, salt and baking powder together. Add the milk, egg, honey and coconut oil.
Pour into a hot greased cast iron skillet. (Or pour into a greased 8 x 8 baking pan.)
Bake 25-30 minutes or until golden brown.
Karen Jean’s Bridgeton Mill Bread Buns
1-1/2 cups warm water, about 112 degrees F
4 teaspoons original dry yeast
1/3 cup honey
4 teaspoons olive oil
1-1/4 teaspoon salt
4 cups Bridgeton Mill Bread Flour
Place warm water in medium sized bowl; sprinkle yeast over water; stir until
dissolved; mix in honey and oil; set aside for 20 minutes and mixture
becomes frothy.
Place yeast mixture in mixing bowl; add salt and 1 cup flour; gradually beat
in remaining flour until dough forms. Mix or knead for about 6 to 10
minutes and forms into soft dough.
Place dough into a large greased bowl; turn over once to coat dough with
oil. Cover loosely with plastic wrap or soft towel. Set aside in warm place
to rise for about 45 to 60 minutes.
Remove dough to lightly floured surface. Roll to fit 13×9-inch pan. Foil line
and grease 13×9-inch baking pan; press dough evenly into pan. Cover
loosely; set aside in warm place to rise for about 30 to 45 minutes.
Bake in preheated 350° degree oven for about 30 minutes or golden brown.
Remove bread to cooling rack. When cool; cut into squares for sandwich
breads.
Yield: 12 square sandwich breads
Karen Jean Stone Ground Cornbread
1¼ cup cornmeal
¾ cup all-purpose flour
1 cup milk
1 egg
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 tablespoons honey
2 tablespoon coconut oil
Preheat oven 425° F.
Mix the flour, salt and baking powder together. Add the milk, egg, honey and coconut oil.
Pour into a hot greased cast iron skillet. (Or pour into a greased 8 x 8 baking pan.)
Bake 25-30 minutes or until golden brown.
Karen Jean’s Bridgeton Mill Bread Buns
1-1/2 cups warm water, about 112 degrees F
4 teaspoons original dry yeast
1/3 cup honey
4 teaspoons olive oil
1-1/4 teaspoon salt
4 cups Bridgeton Mill Bread Flour
Place warm water in medium sized bowl; sprinkle yeast over water; stir until
dissolved; mix in honey and oil; set aside for 20 minutes and mixture
becomes frothy.
Place yeast mixture in mixing bowl; add salt and 1 cup flour; gradually beat
in remaining flour until dough forms. Mix or knead for about 6 to 10
minutes and forms into soft dough.
Place dough into a large greased bowl; turn over once to coat dough with
oil. Cover loosely with plastic wrap or soft towel. Set aside in warm place
to rise for about 45 to 60 minutes.
Remove dough to lightly floured surface. Roll to fit 13×9-inch pan. Foil line
and grease 13×9-inch baking pan; press dough evenly into pan. Cover
loosely; set aside in warm place to rise for about 30 to 45 minutes.
Bake in preheated 350° degree oven for about 30 minutes or golden brown.
Remove bread to cooling rack. When cool; cut into squares for sandwich
Brilliant displays of flowers, vignettes of garden arts, a cast iron bed frame painted white and cozy sitting nooks, a pond, a memorial to a dear friend and such unique structures as a Japanese Garden are all components of the lovely garden created by Grace Gianforte, a two-acre extravaganza celebrating nature’s beauty. In keeping with the woodlands in the back of her more formal gardens, Gianforte and her husband, Peter Katz, maintain the Pier Nature Preserve, a meandering board walk lined by tree trunks leading across bridges, crossing a small stream and offering glimpses of semi-hidden delights—a circle of stained glass placed in the grass, birdhouses, a copper lantern and planters of flowers—is open to all the neighbors on Pier Road, a short road paralleling Lake Michigan north of St. Joseph in Hagar Shores, Michigan. Take a turn when wandering Gianforte’s garden and unexpectedly come across a peace garden, an intricately wrought iron bench and table, rolling waves of shrubs in different shades of luscious greens, a sign with a garden poem and ceramic birdbaths—it’s all a visual treasure hunt.The gardens have been a passion for Gianforte who lives and works in Chicago a few days each week and then comes back to indulge in a flurry of creativity. Her home, built in the 1920 and located at 5023 Pier Road, is the perfect backdrop of drop-dead garden rooms but unique as it is, it’s just one of a quartet of fabulous gardens on display during the 2018 Symphony League Garden Tour on Sunday, August 5th from Noon to 5pm. The League, the non-profit support organization of the Southwest Michigan Symphony Orchestra, was organized in 1975 to raise funds for the orchestra and holds several very successful fundraisers each year.
“We waited until August for the tour this year so that herbs, vegetables, and flowers will all be in season,” says Anne Odden who is co-chairing the event with Karen Johnson.
At the turn of the last century, Pier Road was a popular resort area and in 1915, according to the “Southwest Michigan RoadMap: The West Michigan Pike Volume II: Historic Resource Survey,” W. B. Pratt, owner of an area fruit farm since the 1860s, subdivided his land, opening a resort called Pratt’s Lakeview Park and later Pratt’s Resort. The history of the gardens on the tour are tied into this early history. Irish Catholics from Chicago vacationed here and the home belonging to Mike and Nancy Braun was once a retreat for nuns from Chicago and the garage/stable a place for priests to stay. Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley Sr. supposedly vacationed on Pier Road before buying a place closer to Chicago in Grand Beach. The property where Donna Schinto has her house and gorgeous gardens was on property that was part of the Pratt Resort and the home of the Ferrantellas was a farmhouse set upon a large expanse of farmland which east past M-63 and south to what is now Midwest Timer.The following gardens are on the tour:
TJ, Karen, and Kyle Ferrantella, 4835 Pier Road
““If you’re looking for pristine gardens, you’ll need to look elsewhere,” TJ Ferrantella writes to me in an email after I visited the gardens surrounding their second home on Pier Road.
Describing his flower gardens as being more likely to be maintained by a lawn mower and Round Up than by any other means, Ferrantella says that many of the concepts used in establishing the family’s extensive gardens were heavily influenced by Patricia Thorpe’s book The American Weekend Gardener, which advocates a realistic, low-maintenance approach to gardening.
Ferrantella has divided into his gardens and gives them names.
His favorite is the Bulb Garden defined by the birch tree and first established with the planting off over 1,000 bulbs. True to his emphasis on easy weekends requiring little to no maintenance, this garden requires about one hour of weeding once a year.
“In Spring, it’s filled with yellow daffodils, progress to blue irises in late-spring, and to lilies in summer,” he says. “We are often asked what is the greenery growing in the garden. It’s fallopian japonica – both variegated and non-variegated and it was originally planted here to hide the leggy stems of the summer plants.”
The Frog Pond Garden located at the fork in the brick sidewalk was created so the couple’s now grown three son could play with frogs, the plant material around it immune to the damage caused by stomping kid feet.Overall, the Ferrantellas’s garden areas offers a comforting and casual ambience. For lazing around there’s a hammock, for entertaining people have gathered in a pretty screened in porch, it’s door painted a bright red that contrasts nicely with the yellow house and its white shutters. The hum of laughing voices mingles along with Here people have the musical sounds of chimes moving in a gentle wind and the clucking of hens whose coop is tucked under a tree house. Tucked among the flowering bushes and masses of plants are pretty settings revolving around garden art and a wrought iron seating area.
Mike and Nancy Braun, 5006 Pier Road
Tucked along a high bluff overlooking Lake Michigan, when Nancy and Mike Braun first bought this late rambling 19th century home the land was barren and the buildings which not only include the house but a structure which because of its barn like doors looks like that it was, at one time, a stable before being used as a garage and guest quarters for those visiting the whoever was staying in the house. Mike Braun, a retired attorney, likes to build and he has turned part of the stable into a studio for his wife, naming it Nanistan. Also an attorney, Nancy creates her mosaics there and preserves flowers from her gardens. Inspired by a trip to England, she also built a garden wall out of stackings stones.Nanistan isn’t the only structure Braun has restored or built, he also has added a gazebo, pergola and trellis in a garden area so large that some are tucked out of sight.
“There was another home there years ago,” says Braun pointing to an area now full of separate gardens, some filled with vivid blooms, an abundance of herbs like chives, oreganos, thyme, French tarragon, cilantro, basil, winter savory and marjoram intersperse with globe thistle which Nancy says looks pretty when dried, strawberries and Sweet William.
And because she has a cat, Nancy also grows catnip, a plant she says the feline delights in.A large pond (dug out by Mike), bordered by hibiscus, iris, bear’s britches, candy tuft and buffalo beans with its spikes of yellow blooms, is accented with a flowing fountain and a statue of a heron.
The Brauns lived and worked in Chicago, for years coming up for weekends. But now, liking the peace and quiet of living on the lake, they now live here fulltime.
“We enjoy great sunsets and having friends visit,” says Nancy. “And, of course, working in our garden.”
Donna Schinto, 4887 Pier road
Donna Shinto also lived fulltime in the Chicago area, but when she decided to sell her home in Glenview, Illinois and move permanently to Pier Road, she took much of her garden with her. Digging up her favorite plants, she transported 50% of what was growing in her yard to the 1.4-acres surrounding her home—a task that took many car trips to and from her residences.But it was worth the effort. Shinto’s has fashioned a formal garden with garden rooms as well as fenced vegetable and herb gardens that invite visitors to explore. She uses art and statuary such as blue glass globes, a rustic metal rooster, huge pots of flowering plants, an old red pump mounted on a wooden box, a large geode with its interior crystals revealed, a pond circled by smooth stones and almost hidden by rich green foliage and a vintage toy Volkswagen, made of metal and painted in fading, slightly rusting colors of yellow, red, blue and green with a peace symbol on its hood.
Seeking to integrate her Glenview plants with the landscaping already in place—the property was once part of the Pratt Resort and boasts 12 majestic black walnut trees and large sugar maple with an 11-foot circumference and making sure the home fit in with her abundance of greenery, Shinto had the house designed and positioned so all fit in with the landscape. The mark of a true gardening afficianado.
Ifyougo
What: 2018 Symphony League Garden Tour
When: Sunday, August 5th from Noon to 5pm (EST)
Cost: $10 tickets on sale at the SMSO office or SMSO website in advance or at one of the four gardens during the day of the event.
FIBEGA, the premier worldwide gastronomy tourism fair, will take place in the states for the first time in May 2019 at the Miami Beach Convention Center. This is the third edition (inaugural fair took place in Merida, Spain followed by Buenos Aires, Argentina) and due to Miami’s status as an international hub, all future editions of the fair will remain in the destination.
The fair will feature global exhibitors from destinations and regions from all around the world including the U.S., Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia. Attendees (including consumers and the gastronomy and tourism industry) will enjoy: exploring destination booths, food, wine and spirit tastings throughout the fair, meeting tourism experts, and much more.
Miami, FL. (July 23, 2018) – FIBEGA, the premier worldwide gastronomy tourism fair, will take place in the U.S. for the first time next year from May 10-12, 2019. FIBEGA will bring together culture, gastronomy and destinations from different countries and regions to the Miami Beach Convention Center. Due to the city’s prestige as an international epicenter for tourism and gastronomy, all future editions of the fair will remain in Miami.
“After a successful edition last year in Buenos Aires, we are excited to bring FIBEGA to the United States for the first time,” said Roi Correa, FIBEGA president. “As the most important gastronomy tourism fair in the world, bringing this event to Miami is a testament to the city as a powerful leader in global tourism and hospitality. With influential attendees from various markets participating, Miami is certain to serve as the ideal backdrop and meeting point between the U.S., Canada, Latin America, Africa and Europe.”
FIBEGA 2019 is expected to surpass last year’s Buenos Aires edition, which received more than 22,000 attendees from all over the world and featured more than 800 global exhibitors, with heavy presence from Latin America and Europe. FIBEGA intends to become the most important networking fair in the tourism and gastronomy sector where destinations, enterprises and global institutions will meet for business, development and tourism.
According to the World Food Travel Association’s State of the Food Tourism Industry 2018 Annual Report, 93 percent of travelers have engaged in a unique or memorable food and beverage experience other than dining out. In other words, nearly everyone can now be considered a food traveler. According to the United Nation’s World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), more than 25 million American travelers visit international destinations each year, and culinary tourism is identified as a primary motivation for travel.
Each edition of this international fair brings the best diversity of gastronomy, tourism and culture from international regions with a daily agenda offering varied activities. Friday, May 10, the first day of the fair, will be exclusively curated for gastronomy and tourism industry professionals. Guests will also be able to build and strengthen their current network, with the opportunity to meet tourism experts and engage with representatives from global destinations. From May 11-12, both industry professionals and consumers interested in gastronomy and travel will be welcome. With exhibitions featuring destinations from all over the Americas, Europe, Africa and Asia, FIBEGA will offer visitors a chance to get a taste of the unique flavors and personalities that define various countries and regions.
FIBEGA inaugurated in November 2016 in Merida, Spain, where attendees enjoyed workshops and food, wine and spirit tastings by several represented countries including Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Bolivia, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Uruguay and more. The following year, the fair moved to Buenos Aires covering similar topics of tourism, gastronomy, health and sustainability and featured international chefs and Sommelier Josep Roca of El Celler de Can Roca, among others. Attendees also enjoyed tequila, mezcal, pisco, cachaça and rum tastings, as well as regional foods that varied from traditional Argentinean cuisine to Mayan specialties from Guatemala.
Supporting partners of FIBEGA Miami 2019 include the UNWTO. For more information and to register or purchase tickets, please visit: https://www.fibega.org/
“Good cooking and a lot of flavor don’t have to take a lot of time,” says Fabio Viviani, chef, restauranteur and TV personality, explaining why he wrote Fabio’s 30-Minute Italian (St. Martin’s 2017; $27.99), his beautifully photographed cookbook filled with wonderfully accessible recipes. “The whole premise is easy.”
Viviani, who lives in the Chicago area now but grew up in Florence, Italy, started working in a bakery when he was 11 not so much from a love of food but because his family needed the money. But labor developed into a passion. Now 28 years later, he’s amassed a food empire with two California vineyards, several cookbooks, stints on several Top Chef show (he won Fan Favorite on Season Five), restaurants including two in Chicago—Siena Tavern and Prime & Provisions and his Mercado concept, described as a “rustic-yet refined eatery destination by celebrity chef Fabio Viviani” with locations that include Chicago, Tempe, Arizona and Benton Harbor, Michigan.
He also currently has a weekly web series, “Fabio’s Kitchen” and is doing “Dinner is Served,” an online video series showcasing quick, easy recipes viewers can easily make at home.
With such a busy schedule, I wondered if he ever gets tired of cooking.
“I like it,” he says, “sometimes I don’t. It’s like a marriage, you yell at each other and then you go back to it.”
Asking what recipes he might recommend for those who haven’t cooked Italian before, Viviani replied that the chapters on pasta and salads because they have, for the most part particularly if you don’t make your pasta from scratch, “have less ingredients and take less time.”
Noting that his Italian heritage taught him less is more, Viviani says “you don’t have to overdo it to put really good food on the table.”
The following recipes are courtesy of Fabio’s 30-Minute Italian by Fabio Viviani.
Lemon-Roasted Chicken with Avocado and Warm Artichoke Hearts
3 chicken breasts cut in half lengthwise
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 small can artichoke hearts, cut into quarters
2 heads frisee lettuce, root removed
1 tablespoon honey
2 tablespoons white wine vinegar
¼ cup olive oil
2 avocados, diced and pitted 2 cloves garlic, grated
2 green onions cut sharply on the bias
15 basil leaves, torn Olive oil
Salt and pepper
Heat a large nonstick pan on medium high heat with a drizzle of olive oil in side. Season chicken with salt and pepper then place into pan. Cook for 2 minutes. Flip chicken and add lemon juice and artichokes to the pan. Cook for 2 minutes.
Pull frisee lettuce apart into bite-size pieces. In a large bowl, combine frisee with honey, vinegar, olive oil, avocados, garlic, green onions and basil along with warm artichokes and toss to dress. Serve chicken along with warm salad.
Salted Caramel Chocolate Cake
FOR THE CAKE
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons baking soda
3/4 cup cocoa powder
2 cups sugar
2 cups flour
1/2 cup buttermilk
1/2 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup canola oil
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla (extracted from pod)
2 teaspoons rum
1 cup hot water
2 teaspoons instant espresso powder
FOR THE CARAMEL
Splash vanilla extract
1 teaspoon fleur de sel
1/4 cup butter
1/2 cup heavy cream (plus 2 tablespoons)
1 cup sugar
Preheat oven to 350˚F. Grease and flour two 8-inch round baking pans. Set aside.
In a large stand mixer, combine the cinnamon, nutmeg, salt, baking powder, baking soda, cocoa powder, sugar and flour. Once combined, add buttermilk, heavy cream, oil, eggs, vanilla and rum; mix until smooth. Stir together the hot water and espresso powder. Pour slowly into the cake batter and stir until completely incorporated.
Pour the batter into the prepared cake pans. Bake for about 25 to 30 minutes, until baked through and a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean. Remove from the oven and allow to cool down completely.
While cakes are cooking, combine the vanilla extract, fleur de sel, butter, 1/2 cup of heavy cream and sugar in a sauce pot. Bring to a boil and simmer for 5-6 minutes. Cook until caramel in color, then add the final 2 tablespoons of heavy cream. Stir for 20 seconds and let cool before glazing cake.
Tip: Make the cakes in advance. When ready to serve make caramel sauce and drizzle over the top.
Stressed out during her last term of graduate school when she was counseling clients 30 hours a week, Ashley Melillo returned to her love of cooking, combining it with creating healthy plant-based recipes and creating Blissful Basil, a blog to share her experiences of cooking plant-based meals.
“I was taking my work home with me,” says Melillo who works as a school psychologist in the Chicago area. “So cooking and blogging became self-caring.”
Now Melillo’s blog has morphed into her new cookbook, Blissful Basil: Over 100 Plant-Powered Recipes to Unearth Vibrancy, Health & Happiness (BenBella 2016; $21.95).
“I developed a love of cooking when I was young,” says Melillo who also earned a certificate in Plant-Based Nutrition from the T. Colin Campbell Center for Nutrition Studies. “In the kitchen there’s so much sensory going on—touch, smells, textures, tastes. It’s relaxing after a long week of work. Once I am doing it, it becomes very therapeutic.”
Cooking plant-based or vegan foods are healthy not only physically but emotionally says Melillo. But it isn’t easy to incorporate both exercise and a wide variety of plant-based foods into our life-style.
Indeed, one wholesome smoothie such as her Energizing Carrot Cake Smoothie, Get Glowing Strawberry Mango Chia Pudding or her Cheesy Herb or the Sun-Dried Tomato Good Morning Biscuits, won’t turn our lives upside down health-wise. But it’s all a step in the right direction to achieving physical, mental and emotional well-being. It’s all part of shaping good habits by making good choices every day.
Of course, as a psychologist, Melillo recognizes that it’s most difficult to make these at the very time when we most need to do so.
“It’s when some of these emotions are most at their peak and when you feel almost too overwhelmed to try taking the steps to move forward, that’s when it’s the hardest,” she says. “But it’s the hardest things that push up forward and end up being the best things for us. But it’s important to make ourselves do so–to start chipping away at our anxiety or stress or depression. By taking that one step, often we can go on and take another and another and ultimately alleviate some of those overwhelming feelings.”
Such a cooking style doesn’t have to be severe. Have a sugar craving? Instead indulge in a vegan dessert such as her Snickerdoodle Cookie Bars, Enlivening Lemon Bars, Peanut Butter Cookies and Cosmically Fudgy Cacao Tahini Brownies. Don’t go out for pizza. Try one of Melillo’s pizzas like her White Pizza with Garlic Herb Oil, Mozzarella and Puffy Potato Crust.
For those who aren’t ready to go full-force plant-based or Vegan or know much it at all, Blissful Basil covers a glossary of terms, recipes for pantry items to keep on hand and contains helpful symbols– colored circle noting which recipes are free of gluten, grain, soy, nut, oil, refined sugar and/or they’re raw.
Melillo asked meat lovers to taste test the recipes in her book because she wanted them to be appealing not only for those already committed to a vegan or vegetarian lifestyle but to all those who pick up her cookbook or read her blog.
“I really want everyone to love the recipes in this book,” she says.
Swift Sweet Potato Curry
1 tablespoon curry powder
1 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/8 teaspoon ground turmeric
pinch of cayenne (optional)
1 medium yellow onion, finely diced (about 1 cup)
1 cup filtered water, divided
14-ounces full fat coconut milk
2 large sweet potatoes, peeled and diced into 1/2-inch cubes (about 4 cups)
2 green onions, trimmed and thinly sliced
1/4 cup fresh cilantro, stemmed and finely chopped
4 cups cooked brown basmati rice, for serving
1 lime for spritzing
In a large pot over medium heat, toast the spices for 30 seconds while stirring constantly. Add the onion and 1/3 cup of the water then cook for 5 minutes, until translucent.
Whisk in the coconut milk and the remaining 2/3 cup water, and bring to a boil.
Add the sweet potatoes, decrease the heat to medium-low, cover and rapidly simmer for 15 minutes, until potatoes are fork tender. Stir occasionally while cooking.
Spoon the curry into bowls with warm basmati rice. Top with a squeeze of lime juice, scallions and cilantro. Serve warm with whole grain naan and enjoy!
For her book King Solomon’s Table: A Culinary Exploration of Jewish Cooking from Around the World (Alfred A. Knopf 2017; $35), Joan Nathan, the multiple James Beard award winner, followed in the footsteps of Jewish traders as they circumvented the globe centuries and even millenniums ago. As they traveled, they brought the food cultures from the lands they’d visited before and adapted new ones but keeping close to their dietary laws, traditions and homelands.
Nathan, who has written almost a dozen cookbooks, recounts the culinary history and geography of these early travelers in her sumptuous new book featuring over 170 recipes.
It begins at the Paradesi Synagogue in Kochi, Kerala where Nathan spies an inscription indicating Jewish traders might have crossed the Indian Ocean from Judea to India during the reign of King Solomon. Already a world traveler, Nathan next made her way to Chendamangalam, a hamlet 20 miles north of Kochi surrounded by a lush landscape of mango, coconut and cinnamon trees and pepper and cardamom vines.
“As I walked toward the bank of the nearby Periyar River, which flows into the Arabian Sea, I imagined ancient Hebrew adventurers and traders arriving on the shores and marveling at the lushness of the terrain,” writes Nathan in the introduction of her book.
And so we too are seduced by her journey into exotic lands, looking at how foods and ingredients have crisscrossed the globe originating far from where we first might have thought.
We chat about Malai, a Romanian cornmeal ricotta breakfast pudding that she features in her book and I tell her how I learned to make a polenta-like dish from my Romanian grandmother.
“Oh mamaliga,” she says, like everyone knows about mamaliga. But then what would you expect from a woman whose book contains five recipes for haroset, a thick sauce or paste typically made of chopped fruits and nuts. It, like so many recipes, has morphed, bouncing back and forth between countries and continents, each time being tweaked just a little and Nathan includes a version from Brazil, Persia, Ferrara and, of all places, Maine.
Asked what recipes she’d recommend for those just starting using her cookbook, Nathan suggests Yemenite Chicken Soup with Dill, Cilantro and Parsley (“a really old recipe,” she says noting that historic records dating back to 12th century the healing power of chicken broth). She also suggests Malai, the Romania dish and Roman Ricotta Cheese Crostata with Cherries or Chocolate, a cheesecake recipe dating back to Imperial Rome in the 1st century. She also included a recipe from her friend, her friend Injy Farat-Lew, an Egyptian-Jew who grew up in Cairo and Paris, for a flourless chocolate cake and one for hard boiled eggs traditionally served ruing Passover on the Seder plate but can be used as a side for any meal.
“This recipe for long-cooked eggs with spinach came from the island of Corfu, Greece to Ancona, Italy, a seaport on the Adriatic coast,” writes Nathan, who first taste the dish in Rome, in the introduction to this recipe which also exemplifies the convoluted origins of food.
As she traveled (Nathan says her quest took her to approximately 30 countries over a six-year time span), the scope of her book changed. But it was all part of her culinary journey and one she continues to take.
Huevos Haminados con Spinaci
(Long-Cooked Hard-Boiled Eggs with Spinach)
Yield: 12 servings
12 large eggs, preferably fresh from a farmers’ market
4 tablespoons olive oil
1 1/2 cups red onion (about 1 large), peeled and chopped coarsely
1 tablespoon sea salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 1/2 pounds spinach, fresh or frozen (thawed and drained if frozen)
Put the eggs in a cooking pot and add water to cover by about 2 inches. Then add the olive oil, onions, salt and pepper. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, then lower heat and simmer for 30 minutes. Cool and remove the eggs with a slotted spoon. Tap the eggs gently against the counter and peel under cold running water, keeping them as whole as possible.
Return the peeled eggs to the pot with the seasoned water and simmer very slowly uncovered for at least 2 hours, or until the water is almost evaporated and the onions almost dissolved. The eggs will become dark and creamy as the cooking water evaporates and they absorb all the flavoring.
Remove the eggs carefully to a bowl, rubbing into the cooking liquid any of the cream that forms on the outside. Heat the remaining cooking liquid over medium heat, bring to a simmer, and add the spinach. Cook the spinach until most of the liquid is reduced, stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon, about 30 minutes, or until the spinach is creamy and well cooked. Serve a dollop of spinach with a hard-boiled egg on top as the first part of the Seder meal or as a first course of any meat.
Flourless Chocolate Cake
8 ounces good bittersweet chocolate
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter or coconut oil
6 large eggs, separated
3/4 cup sugar
Pinch of salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
Unsweetened cocoa powder for dusting
Raspberries and blueberries for topping
Whipped cream or ice cream (optional)
Directions
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees and butter a 9-or 10-inch spring-form pan with spray, or a little of the butter or coconut oil.
Melt the chocolate and the butter or coconut oil in a double-boiler or in a microwave for a little more than a minute. Let cool.
In the bowl of an electric stand mixer using the whip attachment, beat the egg whites with 1/2 cup of the sugar and the salt until soft peaks form. In a separate bowl, whip the yolks with the remaining 1/4 cup sugar and vanilla. Using a spatula, slowly stir in the chocolate in the egg yolk mixture. Then carefully fold in the egg whites. Don’t overmix or it will deflate.
Bake for 28 to 35 minutes, or until the cake is fully set around the edges. You want it to be slightly gooey in the center.
Let cool in the pan for a few minutes, then remove from pan and cool completely, and dust with cocoa.
Serve topped with berries and, if you like, with whipped cream or ice cream.
Yields 8 to 10 servings
Above recipes courtesy of Joan Nathan “King Solomon’s Table.”
Jane Ammeson can be contacted via email at janeammeson@gmail.com or by writing to Focus, The Herald Palladium, P.O. Box 128, St. Joseph, MI 49085.
It was all about the cherries, as it is every year at the Eau Claire Cherry Festival, held each July 4th in downtown Eau Claire. Michigan. This year, I was asked, along with Sara and Hanns Heil, to judge the festival’s 31st annual Cherry Baking Contest. Of course, loving small town food events, I had to say yes.
From left to right: Jane Simon Ammeson, Hanns Heil & Sara Heil.
Like in years past, contestants could enter one or more of the six categories: Cakes, Breads, Pies, Desserts, Miscellaneous and Quick Mixes, a category where entrants can use cake mixes, pie fillings and other store bought ingredients, none of which can be used in the other five categories. Besides that, both a Grand Prize and Most Eye Appealing winner is then selected from the first place winners of the six categories.
After the prizes were awarded, the baked goods were auctioned off by John Glassman, raising approximately $2245.00.
“We had a lot of great looking desserts,” said Chris Dohm, who with Betty Timmreck, organized the contest.
Celina Cantrell’s Cherry Celebration Cake won in three categories—taking first place for cakes, being selected as most Eye-Appealing and also was the Grand Prize winner. Coming in second for Cakes was Carole Skibbe’s Mrs. America Cherry Cake. Third place went to Denise Rogers for her Cherry Crumb Cake.
In the Quick & Easy category, Joyel Timmreck took first place for her Cherry Supreme Cake, Barb Adams placed second for her Cherry Treat and Levi Lollas won third place for his Cherry Golden Muffins.
Celina Cantrell’s Red, White & Cherry Dessert took first in the Desserts category, Debra Lollar won second for Cherries on a Cloud and third went to Kortney Rodriguez for her Cherry Pie Bars.
Stephanie Glassman’s Cherry Mousse was the first place winner in the Miscellaneous category. Coming in second was Aiye Akhigbe for her Cherry Pie Jam and third went to Danielle Dilts for her Very Cherry Salad.
In the pie category, Sara Disterheft’s Sweet Cherry Pie won first place, Maxine Wagner took second for her Cherry Rhubarb Pie and Celina Cantrell third for her 3 Cherry Cherry Pie.
The following are the first place recipes.
First Place: Cakes
Grand Prize Winner & Most Eye Appealing
Celina Cantrell’s Cherry Celebration Cake
12 tablespoons unsalted butter, room temperature
1 ¾ cups sugar
2 teaspoons almond extract
6 egg whites
2 ¼ cups cake flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup whole milk
21 ounces cherry pie filling
1 teaspoon almond extract
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon cornstarch
2 tablespoons water
Frosting:
12 ounces cream cheese, soft
6 tablespoons butter, room temperature
4 cups powdered sugar
1 ½ teaspoons vanilla extract
Preheat oven to 350° F.
Prepare three round cake pans with butter and flour.
In one bowl combine milk, egg whites, almond and vanilla extract.
Mix flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Mix in butter. Add one-half of the wet mixture, mix and then add remaining wet mixture.
Divide batter into three round cake pans.
Bake 25 minutes or until golden brown on top. Let cake cool in pans.
Cherry Filling:
In a sauce pan, cook cherry filling until warm, add extract and cook on low for five minutes. Mix water and cornstarch, then stir into cherries. Remove for heat and let cool.
Frosting:
Cream together cream cheese, butter and vanilla. Gradually add the powdered sugar.
Assemble the cake:
Spread a thin layer of frosting on the first layer of cake, then add cherries. Repeat with second layer. Top the two layers with the third cake, frost and top with cherries.
Optional: Add sliced almonds for looks and taste.
First Place: Quick & Easy Mixes
Joyel Timmreck’s Cherry Supreme Cake
One Cherry Chip cake mix
1 cup water
½ cup vegetable oil
3 eggs
½ cup chopped tart cherries
Heat oven to 350 F. Grease bottom only of two 8-inch cake pans. In a large mixing bowl, mix all ingredients except cherries until blended then beat on medium speed for two minutes. Add cherries and mix until blended. Pour into prepared baking pans and bake for 28 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool on cooling rack. Remove from pans and place cake on plate. Frost then place other on top and frost entire cake.
Frosting
8 ounces cream cheese
½ cup unsalted butter, slightly softened
1 pound confectioner’s sugar
4 tablespoons maraschino cherry juice
¼ teaspoon vanilla
Mix all together until fluffy.
Variations:
One jar stemmed maraschino cherries; desired amount to decorate cake.
First Place: Pies
Sara Disterheft’s Sweet Cherry Pie
2 ½ cups flour
2 tablespoons sugar
½ teaspoon salt
One cup unsweetened butter, very and cool cut into teeny cubes
½ cup ice water (you might not use it all)
Mix flour sugar and salt. Add butter until mixture becomes coarse. Slowly blend in just enough ice water form moist clumps. Gather the dough into a ball and divide in half. Form dough into 2 balls and gently flatten into disks. Wrap each in the plastic and place in the refrigerator to chill for at least two hours.
For the filling:
5 cups sweet cherries, pitted
¼ cup cornstarch
½ cup + 2 tablespoons sugar
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon lemon juice
In a large bowl stir together all the ingredients. Let mixture sit while you make your crumble and roll out your crust.
For the crumble:
¾ cup granulated sugar
½ cup all-purpose flour
5 tablespoons butter, melted
Mix sugar and flour together in a medium-sized bowl, then stir in melted butter. Put the topping in the freezer.
Assembly and Baking:
Preheat oven to 400° F.
Roll out half of the chilled dough on a well-floured work surface, rolling into a 12-inch round. Gently place the dough in 9-inch pie pan. Trim the edges of crimp them decoratively. Add cherry mixture into the pie crust, making sure the majority of its juices remain in the bowl. Add half of the frozen crumble on top of the pie filling and then place in the oven on the middle rack and bake for 30 minutes.
Rotate pie and add the remaining crumble. Bake for another 25 minutes or until crust and crumble are golden.
First Place: Breads
Celina Cantrell’s Red, Yellow, Cherry Bread with Cherry Blossom Butter
½ cup unsalted butter, room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon lemon rind, grated
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 2/3 cup flour
1 ½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
½ cup sour cream
1 cup chopped and pitted yellow cherries
Glaze:
¾ cup powdered sugar
1 ½ tablespoons lemon juice
Preheat oven to 350° F.
Grease and flour loaf pan.
Cream together butter and sugar. Add extract, lemon juice and rind. Add eggs one at a time. In another bowl, combine flour, baking soda and salt. Add the dry ingredients to the wet. Alternate with sour cream. With a spoon, fold in cherries.
Bake for 50 minutes or until golden brown and a tooth pick inserted comes out clean. Let cool before drizzling with glaze.
To make glaze, combine the powdered sugar and lemon juice.
Cherry Blossom Butter
Cream together 1 ½ sticks unsalted butter (at room temperature) with ½ cup powdered sugar, ½ cup chopped maraschino cherries and ½ teaspoon almond extract.
First Place: Miscellaneous
Stephanie Glassman’s Cherry Mousse
1 package cherry Jell-O (4 serving size)
½ cup boiling water
1 cup fresh cherries, chopped
½ cup cream cheese, softened
½ cup cold water
¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup Cool Whip
Cool Whip and/or maraschino cherries
Add Jell-O into a small bowl and pour in boiling water. Stir until dissolved.
Add cherries, cream cheese, cold water and vanilla extract. Blend for one minute or until smooth.
Pour mixture into a large bowl and whisk in Cool Whip
Spoon mixture into dessert dishes and place in refrigerator to set, about 2 hours.
To serve, top with Cool Whip and maraschino cherries, if desired.
First Place: Desserts
Celina Cantrell’s Red, White & Cherry Dessert
Crust:
1 cup crushed almond sugar cookies
¼ cup melted butter
Filling:
8 ounce package Cherry Jell-O
1 cup boiling water
½ cup
1 cup fresh chopped and pitted xx cherries
1 tablespoon lemon juice
3 ounces of cream cheese
1/3 cup powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Pinch of salt
1 cup heavy cream
In a small bowl combine cookie crumbs and melted butter. Press on to bottom of an ungreased pie plate.
Bake at 350° F. for 10 minutes.
In a bowl, dissolve gelatin in boiling water, add the partially set, about 1 ½ hours.
In a mixing bowl, cream the cream cheese and powdered sugar together until smooth. Add vanilla and salt.
In another mixing bowl, beat the whipping cream. When stiff peaks form, then fold in the cream cheese mixture.
Layer the dessert, starting at the bottom with some of the cream cheese/whipped cream mixture then add a layer of the cherries. Repeat layers. Top with whipping cream.