my Cute and Yummy Christmas gifts 2009


Happy New Year to my subscribers. This is a little video of some of the lovely gifts I got for Christmas. Thank you friends and family!

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Teach Your Kids How To Bake Yummy Banana Bread

Baking is definitely one good way to bond with your children.They’ll have fun stirring the yummy mixtures in your bowl (and putting their finger on it too so they can lick the leftover batter). Admittedly, letting your children loose inside your kitchen with you could create a huge mess, but what’s a little clutter and spill compared to a great experience that you will share with them? Not to mention if you end up baking delicious banana bread that you will share with your whole family. The children will see how painstakingly you prepare the food that you serve them and they will appreciate the time and effort you spend in preparing their favorite treats.

Plus, you could also teach your children how to take directions as you anticipate them of the succulent results that lie ahead. Mashed up bananas give the bread its distinct light sweet flavor. It became a staple in American cookbooks, especially when baking powder and baking soda became immensely popular during the 1930s. It was speculated that banana bread originated during the early 18th century. Because of the simplicity of the recipe, banana breads became more and more popular as time went by. Indeed, there’s nothing like smelling the aroma of sweet banana and cinnamon when you pull the bread out of the oven.

The delightfully crisp crust, with its mouth-watering golden brown color, is absolutely one of the best in the world. The quality of the bananas that you will choose in making the bread is a huge factor that contributes to the taste of the finished product. Lots of people believe that the best bananas for the bread are the ones with flesh that already turned soft and skins that already turned brown. Normally, people would throw away these overripe bananas, but this can actually be used to create the perfect banana bread.

Here are the recipe ingredients that you will need for baking banana bread:

3-4 pieces of mashed up bananas

1.5 cups of flour

1/2 tsp of salt

2 eggs, slightly beaten

1 tsp of vanilla extract

1/4 cup of softened butter

Mix eggs, sugar, vanilla extract and butter together into your big bowl. Toss in mashed up bananas then stir well. Add in salt and flour to your bowl then stir them up until evenly blended. Be careful not to over-stir though. Next, pour mixture into 2 well-greased loaf pans, making sure that it is evenly distributed. Now put the pans inside the oven and bake cake at around 350 deg. F for 45 mins. To check that the cake is ready, insert a clean toothpick at the center. If it comes out of your cake clean, then you can take it out of the oven.

Keep Dyes, Preservatives & Sugars at Bay – A Yummy Recipe to Show You the Way

Have you ever looked at the ingredients in  ready made frostings? Many of the ingredients that are found include dyes to formulate the pretty colors, artificial ingredients and preservatives to enhance the  taste. Oh – and let’s not forget  lots and lots  of sugar. Ah – a dream food for those with a sweet tooth and kids who go bonkers from the sugar high. Even in many homemade  recipes -  the  average  amount of sugar for a frosting recipe can  range anywhere from one to two cups. For those who don’t have time to bake cakes from scratch, there are some great boxed options for preservative free, low sugar cakes. Frosting on the other hand, presents a bit of a challenge.

 There has been an ongoing debate for decades regarding the use of dyes to improve food, and singled out in many of these arguments is red food coloring. Despite the controversy, red dyes are still seen  in the ingredients lists of  many boxed and canned frostings. Particularly in decorative frostings that are pink and purple. Red Dye Number 2  is a tar-based product known to cause constriction of the bronchial tubes, angioedema (swelling) and hives.

 As we are all becoming  more aware of  the  harmful effects of dyes, preservatives and high sugar, many families are trying to find healthier desserts. On a quest to research what was in our stores for a “healthier frosting”, I was disappointed to find just one. The frosting was made by Cherry Brook Kitchen and  did not have any preservatives, artificial colors or dyes. However, I was on a quest to find or create the perfect  pink frosting for my four little girls. My healthy frosting quest become even more complicated, since red dye is used to create pink. Of course the frosting had to be PINK, PINK, PINK. So what was a chef to do with four demanding customers at her feet? I did what any chef would do even in the most stressful situations – EXPERIMENT. So the five of us put on our princess aprons, our  thinking caps and rhinestone crowns. After many experiments in the kitchen, we found  a quick, easy way to make pink frosting without the preservatives or dyes. Here is our super healthy semi- homemade recipe for Spring Tulip Cupcakes! A scrumptious recipe for a spring birthday party or  a “girls day in”.

 The recipe from start to finish takes about 30 minutes. Unless you have four little assistants who never stop chattering, get side tracked by using spatulas as microphones and lose the cupcake wrappers because they are now Barbie’s new hat!

 INGREDIENTS

 Cake Mix

Cheerybrook Kitchen Yellow Cake Mix. My favorite boxed cake mix because it is  nut free, dairy free, preservative free,  gluten free, and  very simple to make.

 TulipCupcakeTower & Tulip Toppers (craft stores, ,thesugardiva.com, kitchencrafts.com)

 Pink Frosting

 One package of Philadelphia  cream cheese

Frozen Organic Cherries

Powdered Sugar

Horizon Organic Milk

 Mix one 8 oz package of Philadelphia Cream Cheese, one tablespoon of powdered sugar & one tablespoon of organic milk. Mix on medium setting until creamy. Heat  ½ cup of organic frozen cherries on stove or in microwave until liquid base. Heat on a very low setting. Pour ½ tablespoon of cherry juice into cream cheese base and start mixing again on medium speed. This is a bit experimental because you may need more if you want a darker pink color, so start with no more than ½ tablespoon. You may also add another tablespoon of sugar if you desire a sweeter frosting. Most recipes require one to two cups of sugar, so this amount is relatively low. The icing picks up  the natural sweetness from the cherries with a mild tart kick and compliments the natural sweet tones of the cake.

 Once cool, frost the cupcakes and top each one with a tulip topper and stack on the tower.. Voila -  it looks just like something Martha would do!! Check out leisanaples.com for more healthy recipes your family will love.