Friday, December 31, 2021

Reverse Sear Standing Rib Roast

I'm not much of a prime rib fan so when Dave brought home a standing rib roast (aka prime rib) I wasn't super enthused and had no idea what to do with it...he goes 'my mom just put olive oil, salt and pepper and rosemary all over it and baked at 350' for 1 1/2 hours'. I looked at him like he was a stranger, rolled my eyes and said that I'd google what to do. 

Side note - Dave has never made a roast in his life, has no idea what temp to bake at (one time he called me while I was golfing to ask how to turn on the oven. true story.), or how long to cook anything other than meat on the grill. Just sayin'. 

I talked to Al, who is a great cook, and asked how he does it and he told me about the 'reverse sear' method which I'd never heard of. Traditionally you start hot to get a sear on the outside and then turn the oven down and let it roast until cooked to your preferred temp - this creates a roast that is more done on the ends and rarer in the center. So with the reverse sear you bake at a very low temperature until the internal temperature of the roast is 118' (or to your preferred doneness), remove from the oven and let rest for 30 minutes, then crank the oven temp to 500' and cook for 10-15 minutes. The result is the roast is evenly cooked throughout and has an amazing crispy flavorful crust. 

Al advised me to look at some youtube videos to see it done in action - I found one by Alton Brown that was pretty much exactly what Al told me to do; I followed it other than the internal temp, I roasted mine to 125' before pulling it out to rest, and I did not dry-age for the week beforehand, mostly because I didn't get the recipe until the morning I made it!

Click here to watch Alton in action, and I'll post the recipe below.


My prime rib turned out SO GOOD!!! Oh my gosh - thank you so much Al! I actually ate an entire piece which never happens hahha. YUM. 

PS: I learned from Alton that prime rib is actually mislabeled - it's a standing rib roast, they are rarely 'prime' grade. 

Here's the recipe I copied and pasted, click the above link to see how Alton dry ages and makes yorkshire pudding, and if want more info:

  • When you’re ready to cookretrieve the roast from the refrigerator, and rub roast with the oil. Remember to rub the bones with oil, as well. Once the roast is completely coated with oil, cover the roast with kosher salt, using about 2 teaspoons per bone, and the pepper. Let sit at room temperature for 1 hour.
  • Place a probe thermometer into the center of the roast and set its alarm for 118°F. Set the roast on the lower middle rack in a cold oven and turn the oven to 250°F. Let roast until the meat hits its target temperature, about 3 hours for a 3-bone roast or up to about 4 hours for a 4-bone roast. (It is more important to keep an eye on the temperature than the time here; your times may vary depending on the exact weight and shape of the roast.)
  • When the thermometer alarm goes off, remove the roast from the oven, transfer to a cutting board, cover with foil, and let rest while preparing the pudding. (The roast’s internal temperature should rise up to around 130°F, then very slowly start to fall.) Pour off the drippings from the sheet pan into a heat-proof liquid measuring cup. Let the roast rest for 30 minutes. Hang on to the sheet pan and rack; you’ll use it again later.
  • After 30 minutes, return the roast to the rack and sheet pan, then return to the oven. Crank the oven up as high as it will go; ideally 550°F, but 500°F will also work, and cook until the exterior of the roast is browned, 10 to 15 minutes, depending on how hot you can get your oven to run.

Another note: I don't have a probe thermometer so kept checking the roast with an instant thermometer until it reached the temp I was shooting for (125' -130'). I found this temperature guide on another youtube video:

120-125' = rare

125-130' = medium-rare

130-135' = medium

135-140' = medium well

140+ = well done


12.31.20: New Years Eve



Thursday, December 30, 2021

Wonton Sausage Cups

Here's the delish appetizer I mentioned yesterday - my sis made them for our family Christmas and they were a big hit and devoured quickly! She made the original recipe as written, and made a second 'healthier' version - I'll give you both of them.


Original version of Aunt Debs Sausage Cups:

  • 1 lb. Bob Evans Sausage
  • 1 package wonton wrappers
  • 1 cup Monterey Jack Cheese
  • 1 cup shredded cheese (Jen used colby/jack)
  • 1/2 cup ranch dressing
Preheat oven to 350'. Cook sausage (out of casing) until browned thru, drain off grease. Spray regular size muffin tins with non-stick cooking spray; insert wonton wrappers to form a cup. Bake 5 minutes. 

Meanwhile, mix together the cooked sausage, cheeses, and ranch. Fill cups. Bake 10 minutes or until bubbly. 

Note: Jen made 12, not sure if she had extra filling or if she evenly divided it between the 12 cups. 





For the healthier version:
  • 1 lb. turkey sausage
  • wonton wrappers
  • chopped red and orange peppers
  • chopped spinach
  • 1 cup shredded cheese
  • 1/2 block (4 oz.) cream cheese
Prepare the same way as original recipe. 





12.30.20: borchers breakfast pie (rerun) 

12.30.19: crostini appetizers

12.30.18: ðŸ”¥week 52

12.30.17: elf place cards

12.30.16: pimento cheese spread aka: yummy cheese!

12.30.15: breakfast pie



Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Witty Wednesday - wreath making

Not sure who sent me this funny picture, probably my sis - she's good for sharing things that make me laugh! And this does for sure :) it hits really close to home hahha. 

Speaking of my sister - come back tomorrow to get the recipe for a delish appetizer she made for our family Christmas/Festivus last week, just in time for the New Years weekend if you want a yummy idea.


12.29.20: recycled card projects (rerun)

12.29.19: 🔥week 52

12.29.17: christmas bark

12.29.16: gold fish

12.29.15: christmas card crafts

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Creamy Chicken Ranch Sliders

Yesterday I showed you how I made bbq chicken with pineapple sliders, today it's this creamy chicken ranch version that is equally good


In a saucepan, mix together 8 oz. cream cheese, 1/4 cup chicken broth and 1 packet (1oz) of ranch seasoning (I use the kind that makes dip) until the cream cheese is melted. Stir in 1/2 cup shredded cheddar/jack blend cheese and 2 cups shredded chicken. 

Cut a package of 12 Hawaiian rolls (I did not use the sweet rolls) in half so you have a slab of tops and a slab of bottoms. Put the bottoms in a baking dish big enough to hold them all (spray with non-stick cooking spray first), spread the chicken filling on the bottoms, sprinkle with another 1/2 cup shredded cheese, replace the tops. 

Melt 3 T. butter, add about 1/2 t. garlic powder and 1 T. parmesan cheese and pour overtop of the rolls. Sprinkle with poppy seeds if desired. Cover and bake at 350' for 10 minutes, uncover and bake a few minutes more until the cheese is melted and rolls are golden brown. 


Yep, I forgot to take a picture after they baked with the buttery topping - I was in too big of a hurry to feed everyone!


12.28.20: stuffed pizza crust

12.28.19: wrapped ornament centerpiece

12.28.18: Christmas card pillow box

12.28.17: how to steam crab legs

12.28.15: storing Christmas lights

Monday, December 27, 2021

BBQ Chicken Sliders

I made 3 different kinds of sliders for our family get together last week and all three turned out great. One was the traditional ham and swiss kind I've made before and I'll share below, but the other 2 are different enough to deserve posts of their own. First up - bbq chicken sliders with pineapple, I think they are my new favorite (although tomorrows creamy chicken is pretty terrific too so maybe it's a tie).


I was inspired by a recipe I saw here that included jalapeños and the melted butter topping has honey and Worcestershire in it. I omitted the jalapeños, used a cheddar/jack blend, and topped it with melted butter, garlic powder, poppy seeds, and parmesan. 

I was planning to make the topping as the recipe is written but when it came time to pop these sliders in the oven (along with the ham and 2nd chicken version) with everyone standing around waiting for dinner,  I realized I needed to get a move on and not take time for 3 separate butter toppings! I figured butter and parm goes well with all 3, I added poppy seeds which sounds weird with bbq but really, you don't really taste them it's more for presentation I think. 

Naturally I forgot to take a picture after they baked with the butter topping! Aaannnddd I forgot to take a picture of the sliders filled with the bbq chicken, above is the creamy chicken - duh! 

Here's how I made them:

  • 2 1/2 cups shredded chicken breast (I boiled the chicken until done and then shredded it, you could also use rotisserie if you want to skip a step - my store was out so I did it the long way hahah)
  • 1/2 cup bbq sauce , more to taste or serve extra on the side (we like Sweet Baby Rays)
  • 8 oz. can crushed pineapple, drained
  • 1 cup shredded cheddar/jack cheese
  • 12 Hawaiian dinner rolls (not the sweet ones, although they'd also probably taste great)
  • 3 T. melted butter
  • garlic powder to taste (I didn't measure, probably about 1/2 t.)
  • 1 T. grated parmesan
  • poppy seeds (I didn't measure, enough to sprinkle them overtop of the sliders) 
Mix the chicken breast, bbq sauce, pineapple, and 1/3 cup cheese. Don't break apart the rolls, leave them in a rectangle all together - slice thru the middle so you have a slab of tops and a slab of bottoms. Lay the bottom of the rolls in a 13x9 baking dish, spread with the chicken mixture, top with remaining cheese. Put the top slab over the chicken cheese mixture. Mix together the melted butter and garlic powder and brush over the tops of the sliders, sprinkle with parmesan and poppy seeds. Cover and bake at 350' for 10 minutes, uncover and continue baking for another 5 until the cheese is melted and the tops are golden brown. 

Makes 12 sliders 

Ham and Cheese Sliders

you can Google and get lots of recipes for these, here's a pretty standard one:

  • 3/4 pound sliced ham
  • 3/4 pound swiss cheese slices
  • 12 Hawaiian sweet rolls (cut like in the recipe above, so you have a slab of tops and bottoms
  • 1/2 cup melted butter
  • 1 T. dijon mustard
  • 1 T. poppy seeds
  • 2 t. dried minced onion
  • 2 t. Worcestershire sauce
  • 1/4 t. salt
  • 1/4 t. pepper
Preheat oven to 350'. Spray 13x9 pan with non-stick cooking spray.

Place the bottom of rolls in the pan, evenly layer the ham over the rolls, top with an even layer of cheese. Add the top slab of rolls. 

Mix together the melted butter and remaining ingredients; spread the mixture over the tops. Cover with foil and allow rolls to stand at room temp for about 5-10 minutes. Bake covered for about 20 minutes or until cheese has melted. Uncover and cook for another 3-5 minutes until the tops are golden brown. 

my note: I wouldn't use that much butter for the topping. You definitely want to spray the pan, mine stuck to the bottom. I put down 1/2 of the cheese slices on the bottom rolls, topped with the ham, then added the remaining cheese. I also don't think they'd need to bake for a full 20 minutes, so watch that they don't burn. 


Sunday, December 26, 2021

🔥 Around the Campfire (week 52)

Dear Campers ~

Here's the final recap for 2021 - what happened at camp last week in case you missed anything:

Posts ~

12/19: 🔥 week 51

12/20: felt gift card holder

12/21: rudolph gift bags

12/22: witty wednesday - secret santa

12/23: broccoli tree veggie tray

12.24: saran wrap ball game

12/25: Merry Christmas

What's Cooking ~

Miss Lori sent me a note that she also made a saran wrap ball for her family Christmas get together, here's what she has to say about it:

I saw on your blog that you did the Saran Wrap ball game-I also did one for our family for the first time! It was such a blast, we will definitely do it again! We had 17 of us and it was loud, crazy, wonderful fun!

I enjoyed creating the ball-Saran wrap is ok when it doesn’t really matter if it is flat! Mine didn’t really end up a ball-it looked more like a Christmas ham!😃

It was good to see what you used in yours for future ideas! I used hot cocoa packets, candy, gift cards, lottery tickets, and cash. I want to add more next time so it is even bigger!


That's it for this week - hope everyone had a Merry Christmas! Stop back next week for more projects, recipes, whatever else I think of to make at camp - bye!

Sincerely ~


Jill
camp counselor

12.26.19: naughty gingerbread man

12.26.18: boxing day

12.26.17: chex mix

12.26.16: melting snowman cookies












12.26.15: Janis's crunchy fruity granola

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Merry Christmas 12.25.21

Merry Christmas everyone! Hope you are having a day filled with love, laughter, and peace 🎄 


Ghosts of Christmas's past:



Friday, December 24, 2021

Saran Wrap Ball Game

This saran wrap ball game has been around for a while but it's the first time I've made one; we played it last night at our 'Family Festivus' Christmas get-together and it was so much fun! This will be repeated for sure, everyone loved it.

I bought lots of stuff from the dollar store and scratch off tickets to roll up in the ball, Cathy gave me the idea to add 'coal cards' and I really like that twist. I designed the cards on avery.com and interspersed them here and there with a piece of candy coal between prizes - they said things like 'swap one gift with the person to your left' or 'stop rolling and hum Silent Night, continue rolling if you have time left'. 


To make the ball I wrapped the mug in a few layers of saran wrap and cut it. Then start rolling again adding something every wrap or two and keep cutting it so whoever is unrolling has to keep finding the end to continue unrolling. Change directions and keep in mind you're trying to make a round ball shape - mine isn't perfectly round obviously but try for that shape. 


The center of my ball was a Christmas mug filled with a gift card and a couple pieces of candy, when I bought the mug I was sure it was going to be too big but it wasn't - in fact, I bought quite a few bigger things (puzzle, aroma diffuser, batteries, mini drinks...) and I thought I was going to have a huge saran ball but it all fit and was only maybe 14" or so.

Other things I added are candy/suckers/gum, advil packs, mini flashlight, car fragrance things, playing cards, chapstick, a bath pouf, sunflower seeds, mini cookies, fruit gems, fuzzy socks, a cactus candle, hand lotion...I also added gold chocolate coins and if you unwrapped a coin you got to steal a present from anyone at the table. One thing I'll do differently next time is you have to use your gold coin when you get it, not hold it until the end like I did - we then had to figure out who got to steal first and how many times you could steal, if you use it right away it'd be easier. 

One funny moment came about half way thru when Brooke had so many good prizes including a few scratch offs and Mickey got a coal card that said to trade all her prizes with anyone so she took all of Brookes (and Mickey had pretty much just candy hahahah) and B was crushed hahahahah. Don't worry, by the end she had most of it back thanks to more coal cards LOL. 

We played it the standard way rolling dice until doubles came up and then ball gets passed to the next person in the circle. There's lots of info on that online if you want to read more about how to play. A couple things I did to make it harder - I cut the saran wrap after rolling around the mug in the middle a few times to slow down who was going to win the 'big' prize, and then once I was done making the ball I cut small pieces of the saran wrap and layered them all around the outside of the ball - first person to start unrolling wasn't happy hahahha. Also, we wore throw away latex gloves which slowed things down but wasn't impossible. I read some people play it wearing oven mitts but that seems too hard! 

This was so much fun, I wish I would have taken pics while we were playing but I was too caught up in the game :)

Merry Christmas Eve!! 


12.24.20: snowman place setting

12.24.19: appetizer wreath

12.24.18: animal figurine small gift holder









12.24.17: turkey breast and stuffing

12.24.16: Christmas eve thoughts

12.24.15: pop up gift wrap



Thursday, December 23, 2021

Broccoli Christmas Tree Veggie Tray

I haven't made this yet but it's pretty cute and seems easy enough. Wrap a styrofoam cone with aluminum foil; push a toothpick thru broccoli florets and into the wrapped cone. I don't know what they made the snowflake ornaments out of, I think I might spear cherry tomatoes along with the broccoli instead. For the star on top I'm thinking jicama - it's bright white and stays crunchy. Cute right? 

The veggies circled around the broccoli tree is also a cute idea, seems wreath like. My photo seems a little blurry to me, in case you can't see it good it's layers of carrots, cauliflower, broccoli, celery, radishes, green peppers and 4 small bowls of dip interspersed. 

Have no idea who to credit for this idea and photo - it's been in my file for 5 years and I'm just getting around to making it!

12.23.20: candy cane danish (rerun)

12.23.19: santa cheese plate

12.23.18: ðŸ”¥week 51

12.23.17: candy cane danish












12.23.16: caramel corn

12.23.15: Christmas table decorating ideas




Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Witty Wednesday: secret santa

My sis contributed this for a "Tip-sy Tuesday" post but since it's Wednesday I'm changing the theme this week to "Witty Wednesday" and sharing a laugh!


 - side note, I'm swamped over here getting ready for family Christmas tomorrow (side note to my side note - did you know that tomorrow the 23rd is 'Festivus'? hahahha so I'm now calling it 'Family Festivus' but there will not be a pole for airing grievances, we'd be here all night LOL), and don't have time to write a post today! So here's a quickie laugh and I'll post something tomorrow that is more helpful hahahahah. Bye!


12.22.20: circle gift card enclosure

12.22.19: 🔥 week 51

12.22.18: wine cork reindeer ornament












12.22.17: coconut thumbprint cookies


12.22.16: santa ball ornament












12.22.15: hot chocolate spoons


Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Rudolph Gift Bags

This is not my picture or idea, but it's such an easy cute gift wrapping idea that I'm sharing it without being able to give credit. Fold over the top of a brown paper lunch sack, poke holes in both top corners and fill with a candy cane. Glue on 2 googly eyes and a red pompom nose to make these adorable gift bags. 

 


12.21.20: tube gift wrapper by B










12.21.19: santa baby gift enclosure











12.21.18: chocolate fudge wreath










12.21.17: Nat's Christmas sugar cookies


12.21.16: focaccia bread tiles











12.21.15: framed wifi password


Monday, December 20, 2021

Felt Gift Card Holder

I thought I posted this before but can't find it so if you've seen it here before then just use this as a reminder of how cute these are hahaha. I can't remember how I closed the open one on the right, maybe it just has the white top tucked into the holder to contain the gift card - the one on the left closes by folding down the triangle flap and looping the twine around the bow.

For both examples I cut two different colors of felt, big enough to hold a gift card. Cut the piece that will be the backside a couple inches longer so you have enough material to fold over the front piece. The finished size of the holder is 4.5" tall x 4" wide, so cut the front piece 4.5 x 4 and the back piece 6.5 or 7" tall and then cut one end into a point as shown in the picture. 


When making the holder I initially was just going to glue the front and back together, but then I stitched them instead and think that looks nicer - gluing is totally fine tho and a bit quicker (other than waiting for the glue to dry). For the red/gray version, poke a hole in the point of the back piece (I use a small hole punch) and tie a length of bakers twine to form a loop. Fold it over the front piece and glue a small bow where the twine will reach it. A little button would look cute too - hold on one sec and I'm going to run and make another to show you ... 

...15 minutes later I'm back. That's including finding and cutting felt, picking a button and twine, hand sewing the button on and threading the sewing machine. I made this one 5" square, and cut the back piece 7.5" for the flap - it's bigger than I need for a gift card, but I'm going to use it for a small gift instead. 







12.20.19: caprese bites

12.20.18: cheeseball wreath












12.20.17: chocolate peppermint crinkle cookies 










12.20.16: tiger fudge (although I think it should be called Buckeye Bars!)

12.20.15: corn bread with jalapeños and cheese mini muffins