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Archive for the ‘Recipes’

Useful links for the Fourth of July

July 04, 2008 By: Mathilde Category: Miscellaneous, Recipes 3 Comments →

Patrick Smith has sent me these links you may find useful for the upcoming July 4th holiday:

Festive flag waving fare to enliven your day:

Epicurious’ feasts for the Fourth

The Epicurious site features gourmet twists on the usual picnic fare.
The radical Grilled Hot Dogs With Mango Chutney And Red Onion Relish
has many rave reviews. As one reviewer stated ” elevates the hot dog
to “haute” dog!”

All Recipes’ July 4th favorites

Another red, white, and blue site with down home fare. Check out their
” State of the Union” recipe listing featuring meals from around the
country.

Food Network’s Independence day’s All-American recipes

The food network sparkles with recipes broken down into regions and condiments.

Here is also another link:

Martha Stewart’s Fourth of July picnic party menu

Tip: Drag & drop the recipes into Shop’NCook to use!

Have a festive Fourth of July!

Fruit pie, whipped cream, and why the calories are not always where you think

June 22, 2008 By: Mathilde Category: Diet tracking, Online Recipe Database, Nutrition, Recipes 1 Comment →

I went yesterday to a barbecue organized by the parents of my eldest daughter’s class and brought a plum tart to share - a traditional Swiss summer pie. About half of it had been eaten when my husband sprayed generously the remaining slices with unsweetened whipped cream. The whipped cream matches well the bitterness of the plums and is also a traditional topping.

This action created a commotion among the moms and nobody took another slice. The consensus among the parents was: whipped cream is too fattening.

Here is the picture of the pie below. What do you think?

Would YOU eat it?

P1100983.JPG

Consider well: the thick layer of whipped cream, the healthy fruits, the custard and the crust. Then, stack it up against your dietary goals. Then decide. Would you eat it with the whipped cream? And how about without? (Write your answer in the comments before reading on!)
(more…)

The Hidden Christmas Menu

December 25, 2007 By: Mathilde Category: Miscellaneous, Shop'NCook, Recipes No Comments →

This is last minute, but… If you haven’t yet planned your Christmas day menu, are expecting visitors, don’t know what to make and how… This could be a life saver.

There is a hidden Christmas menu in Shop’NCook Menu and Pro.

Click on the Library tab of the Calendar, select “Example of complete menu” and display the Menu manager. Just set the number of servings, add the ingredients to the shopping list, print the menu and the recipes… and you are good to go!

Hidden Christmas menu in Shop'NCook Menu and Pro

Merry Christmas to all!

 

Bonus Thanksgiving cookbook!

November 18, 2007 By: Mathilde Category: Shop'NCook, Recipes, Cookbooks 5 Comments →

Registered Shop’NCook users can get for free the new Thanksgiving cookbook until Thursday, 22nd November 2007. Hurry up, don’t miss out on this goodie!

Thanksgiving Recipes, over 250 wonderful and delicious recipes

Go now to the Upgrade Center for download and installation instructions. You will need to input your registration number for a current edition of Shop’NCook software (Shop’NCook Home, Shop’NCook Menu or Shop’NCook Pro). If you don’t remember your registration number, you can also ask for a reminder on the same page.

Update: you can now get the cookbook from within Shop’NCook. See the instructions in the comments.

Shop’NCook Reader users are not eligible for the bonus. If you are not yet registered, order a registration number before November 22 to get this cookbook as a bonus (a $14.95 value!).

For teaser, here is one of the 250+ recipes of the cookbook:

Herb-Roasted Turkey with Citrus Glaze

Ingredients:
1 15-Pound WHOLE TURKEY fresh or frozen - (thawed)
3 Large lemons
2 Large limes
1-1/2 Teaspoon salt - divided
1/2 Teaspoon black pepper coarsely ground
1/4 Cup dry white wine - (see note)
1/4 Cup packed brown sugar
Pan Gravy
1 Bunch, each fresh sage, marjoram, and thyme, divided

Instructions:
Preheat oven to 325.
Remove giblets and neck from turkey; reserve for gravy. Rinse turkey with cold running water and drain well. Blot dry with paper towels.
Peel skin from lemons and limes to make rose garnishes. Reserve in refrigerator. Squeeze enough juice from the lemons and limes to equal 2 tablespoons each. Cut the remaining lemons and limes in half and place in the turkey cavity. Sprinkle salt in the cavity.
In a small bowl, mix the wine, brown sugar, and citrus juices; reserve for glaze.
Gently loosen skin from the turkey breast without totally detaching the skin and carefully place 1 tablespoon each fresh sage and marjoram under the skin. Replace the skin.
Fold neck skin and fasten to the back with 1 or 2 skewers.
Fold the wings under the back of the turkey. Return legs to tucked position.
Place turkey, breast side up, on a rack in a large shallow (about 2-1/2 inches deep) roasting pan.
Rub turkey with salt, pepper, and 2 to 3 tablespoons of salad oil. Insert oven-safe meat thermometer into the thickest part of the thigh, being careful that the pointed end of the thermometer does not touch the bone.
Roast the turkey in a preheated 325 degree F. oven about 3-3/4 hours.
During the last hour of roasting time, baste with the pan drippings.
During the last 30 minutes, baste with the citrus glaze.
Loosely cover with lightweight foil to prevent excessive browning.
Continue to roast until the thermometer registers 180 degrees F. in the thigh, or 170 degrees F. in the breast.
Remove turkey from the oven and allow it to rest for 15-20 minutes before carving.
Place on a warm large platter and garnish the platter with the remaining fresh herbs and lemon and lime roses.
Prepare lemon and lime roses as follows: with a small sharp knife or vegetable peeler, cut a continuous thin 1-inch strip of peel. Avoid cutting into the white pith. Roll tightly, skin inside out, and secure with toothpicks. Reserve in a bowl filled with ice water until time for service.

———-

Exported from Shop’NCook Pro 3.4.2

The cookbook contains the following recipes:

Angel Salad
Apple Cranberry Crisp
Apple Cranberry Pie
Apple Cranberry Streussel Pie
Apple Orchard Punch
Apple Pie
Apple Pie Sauce
Apple Pie Shot
Apple Strudel II
Apple, Cranberry, and Pear Crisp
Apple, Pear and Cranberry Cobbler
Apple-Cranberry Crisp
Apricot Honey Ham Glaze
Apricot Honey Ham Glaze
Artichoke, Mushroom and Parma Ham Tart
Baked Apricots
Baked Fruit Dip
Baked Ham With Pineapple
Baked Ham with Sweet Bourbon-Mustard Glaze
Baked Whole Pumpkin
Baked Ziti with Turkey Meatballs
Banana Cranberry Bread
Barbecued Turkey With Maple-Mustard Sauce
Barbecued Turkey With Maple-Mustard Sauce
Basic Turkey Gravy
Beans Over My Yammy
Best Ever Banana Bread
Best Ever Sugar Cookies
Best Pickled Eggs
Bing Cherry Gelatin Mold
Boiled Custard
Bread And Oyster Stuffing
Bread Pudding I
Bread Pudding II
Bread Pudding III
Broiled Ham Steak with Mustard Glaze
Brown Bread
Burnt Sugar Icing
Buttermilk Corn Fritters
Caramel Apple Salad
Carrot Pudding
Cheese and Tomato Fondue
Cheese Ball
Cheese Fondue
Cheeseball II
Cheezy Cheezy
Cherry Cider
Cherry Delight
Cherry Fluff
Cherry Salad
Chocolate Bar Fondue
Chocolate Custard Bread Pudding
Chopped Egg Stuffing
Classic Thanksgiving Dressing With Parsley, Sage and Thyme
Coffee Liqueur
Colonial Pumpkin Bars
Corn Fritters
Corn Pudding II
Cornucopia
Country Banana Bread
Country Banana Bread
Country French Cheese
Cran-Raspberry Gelatin Mold
Cranberry Apple Pie I
Cranberry Apple Pie II
Cranberry Bourbon Relish
Cranberry Chutney
Cranberry Cream Pie I
Cranberry Cream Pie II
Cranberry Frost
Cranberry Gelatin Mold
Cranberry Gelatin Salad I
Cranberry Gelatin Salad II
Cranberry Ice Cream Swirl Cake
Cranberry Muffins
Cranberry Nut Bread I
Cranberry Nut Bread I
Cranberry Nut Bread II
Cranberry Nut Pie
Cranberry Pecan Pie
Cranberry Pie I
Cranberry Pie II
Cranberry Pineapple Juice
Cranberry Punch
Cranberry Salad III
Cranberry Salad IV
Cranberry Salad VI
Cranberry Sauce
Cranberry Streusel Pie
Cranberry Stuffed Turkey Breasts
Cranberry Tea
Cranberry Whip
Creamy Cheddar Cheese Soup
Creamy Cranberry Salad
Crockpot Ham Recipe
Crockpot Scalloped Potatoes
Crustless Cranberry Pie
Date and Nut Bread
Deep-Fried Turkey
Deviled Eggs
Dinner in a Pumpkin
Dinner in a Pumpkin I
Dinner in a Pumpkin II
Dutch Potato Filling
Easy Apple Cider
Easy Pumpkin Cake
Eggnog Extreme
Eggnog I
Eggnog II
Famous Pumpkin Nut Bread
Favorite Sweet Potatoes
Feta Cheese Foldovers
Five Spiced Turkey
Five Spiced Turkey
Fluffy Fruit Dip
Fried Wild Turkey
Frosted Pecan Bites
Fruit Dip
Fruited Sweet Potatoes
Fruity Gelatin Salad
Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Giblet Gravy
Glazed Baked Ham
Glazed Baked Ham
Graham Cracker Pudding
Grandmother’s Famous Cranberry Bread
Grape Banana Salad
Gravy Secrets
Greek Chopped Meat Stuffing
Green Beans And Pecan Salad
Green Onion and Cornbread Stuffing
Green Onion And Cornbread Stuffing
Grilled Goose with Prune Stuffing and Gravy
Guilt-Free Turkey Gravy
Hawaiian Fruit Crumble
Herb Roasted Turkey Breast
Herb-Roasted Turkey with Citrus Glaze
Herbed Roasted Turkey
Herbed Roasted Turkey
Holiday Meal For Two
Holiday Punch I
Holiday Turkey with Michigan Maple Glaze and Cranberry Bourbon Relish
Honey Baked Apples
Honey Dijon Ham
Honey-Poppy Seed Cornish Hens
Hot Buttered Apple Cider
Hot Buttered Rum Batter
Ice Cream Pumpkin Pie
Indian Pudding
Individual Pumpkin Souffles
Jack Daniel’s Glazed Ham
Joey’s Bread Pudding
Kellogg’s® Rice Krispies Treats® Thanksgiving Turkey
Kellogg’s® Rice Krispies Treats® Turkeys
Kiddie Holiday Juice
Knodel
Lamb and Squash
Lime Gelatin Salad I
Little Secret
Maple Pumpkin Cheesecake
Mashed Sweet Potatoes
Meredith’s Cheesecake
Mincemeat II
Mincemeat III
Mini Sweet Potato Pies
Minnesota Wild Rice Dressing
Mocha Walnut Cookies
Moist Glazed Ham
Moist Glazed Ham
Mustard-glazed Turkey With Cornflake Stuffing and Mustard Gravy
Old Fashioned Bread Stuffing
Old Fashioned Turkey And Stuffing With Creamy Pan Gravy
Old Virginia Wassail Cider
Orange Cranberry Cream
Orange Cranberry Parfaits
Orange Gelatin Salad
Orange Glazed Ham
Orange Salad
Pear Conserve with Cherries and Hazelnuts
Pecan Pie Bars I
Pecan Pumpkin Pie
Persimmon Pudding
Pickled Pumpkin
Pineapple Cheese Salad
Pink Salad
Praline Sweet Potatoes Recipe
Pretzel Salad
Pueblo Pie
Pumpkin and Praline Pie
Pumpkin Apple Cobbler
Pumpkin Bars I
Pumpkin Butter IV
Pumpkin Cake Roll
Pumpkin Chip Muffins
Pumpkin Cranberry Bars
Pumpkin Cream Cheese Dessert
Pumpkin Crescent Rolls
Pumpkin Dip
Pumpkin Pie Smoothie
Pumpkin Pie Squares
Pumpkin Pudding I
Pumpkin Pudding II
Pumpkin Roll I
Pumpkin Roll III
Pumpkin Stew
Pumpkin Torte I
Raisin Sauce
Red Hot Baked Apples
Roast Garlic Mashed Potatoes
Roast Turkey with Herbal Rub
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds
Roasted Turkey with Bourbon-Butter Glaze
S’mores
Sausage Balls
Savory Pumpkin Soup
Seasoned Crackers
Slow Cooker Thanksgiving Turkey
Snow Ball Dessert
Southwestern Jalapeno Cornbread Dressing
Spiced Pumpkin Dip
Spiced Turkey Roast
Spicy Spaghetti Squash
Squash Casserole
Strudel Dough
Stuffed Acorn Squash
Stuffed Jalapenos
Stuffed Mushrooms II
Stuffed Pumpkin I
Stuffed Turkey Legs
Sugar Coated Pecans
Super Moist Pumpkin Bread
Sweet Pickled Eggs
Sweet Potato and Apple Casserole
Sweet Potato Balls
Sweet Potato Casserole
Sweet Potato Chimichangas
Sweet Potato Fluff
Sweet Potato Pudding
Tasty Toothpick Appetizers
Thanksgiving Ambrosia
Thanksgiving Cheese Ball
Thanksgiving Cranberry Relish
Thanksgiving Meatloaf
Thanksgiving Muffins
Thanksgiving Pumpkin Bread
Thanksgiving Stuffed Pumpkin
Thanksgiving Turkey
Thanksgiving Turkey
Thanksgiving Turkey
Thanksgiving Won Tons
Turkey Breast Braised with Garlic and Rice
Turkey Breast Braised With Garlic And Rice
Turkey Breast Braised With Garlic And Rice
Turkey Dumplings
Vegetable Dip
Warm and Spicy Autumn Punch
Watergate Salad
Yams and Apples

Happy Thanksgiving!

Do my children have enough calcium?

October 20, 2007 By: Mathilde Category: Diet tracking, Kids, Nutrition, Recipes 2 Comments →

I had this question in the back of my mind for a while:

“Do my children have enough Calcium in their diet?”

Something brought recently this question to the front of my mind: a woman who helps me at home slipped and broke a wrist. She is in her fifties and has osteoporosis. Googling it, I found that osteoporosis can be caused by a lack of calcium during childhood.

My children are eating regularly cheese, sometimes yogurt, drinking some milk. I had long assumed that in addition to the calcium found naturally in their non-dairy meals, this was enough to cover their needs.

Surely, you don’t actually expect children to drink one liter (= 4 cups) of milk every day like is recommended by the doctors? I mean, do your children drink that much milk? Mine certainly don’t, especially my oldest daughter (6 years old) who has some lactose intolerance and doesn’t drink more than a quarter of a cup at a time.

About one month ago, I tracked their diet during a few days with Shop’NCook Menu. I made sure to input every single food they ate, measured every bit of cheese, yogurt or milk they had. The result? Their needs in calcium were not covered. Way not.

Non-dairy products were covering less than a quarter of their needs, dairy products maybe another quarter but not even that every day. I had to more than double their calcium intake.

I took action in three ways:

  1. Introduce non-dairy products with higher calcium content in the diet;
  2. Increase the intake of dairy products;
  3. Make the children responsible of monitoring their own calcium intake.

1. Introducing non-dairy products with higher calcium content

I started replacing products with low-calcium content by similar products with higher calcium content:

  • whole-wheat bread and pasta instead of bread and pasta made with white flour, since whole wheat flour has more than twice the calcium content of white flour;
  • orange juice with calcium instead of plain orange juice;
  • tahini (sesame paste) instead of peanut butter;
  • sesame seeds rather than pumpkin or sunflower seeds;
  • supplements with minerals and calcium, instead of just vitamins.

2. Increasing dairy products intake

I made sure to give every day at least one dairy snack, like a bowl of cheese dices or a yogurt, and insisted the children drink more milk at breakfast and before sleeping.

The tough part was to get my older daughter take enough calcium without increasing her milk consumption as it gives her stomachache. After some research, I found that lassi (a drink made with 2 part of yogurt and 1 part of water) is a good substitute for milk as it has almost the same calcium contents and bifidus yogurt is usually well supported by persons who have lactose intolerance. The problem: she didn’t like the taste. I started experimenting with different flavors to make it more palatable, and settled finally on 1 tablespoon of sugar and a few drops of lemon essence per glass of lassi. It was a hit and now my daughter enjoys drinking it everyday (and I drink one with her too).

Here is my lemon lassi recipe (from Shop’NCook online recipe database):

Lemon lassi
Nb persons: 2
Portion size: 3/4 cups

My six-year-old daughter is lactose intolerant. I looked for alternative calcium source. I found out (with Shop’NCook program!) that lassi has almost as high a calcium content as milk. But my daughter didn’t like its plain yogurt taste. I experimented with different flavoring and with her help developped the recipe below that she really enjoys. Tip: DON’T try to flavor lassi with chocolate, yuck!

  • 1 cup plain yogurt, (I use acydophilius bifidus)
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 2 tbsp sugar
  • 1/4 tsp lemon extract, (or to taste)

Blend well with a hand mixer. Serve when foamy.

3. Monitoring of the calcium intake by the children

How do you monitor kids who have free access to the fridge, run all day long and share their food with the neighbor’s kids?

You don’t.

You teach them to monitor themselves. I explained them why they need calcium. Then I designed a simple system to count the calcium intake: I put a paper on the fridge where the children can write points for every days of the week. For each “calcium portion”, they are allowed to write a point. A calcium portion can be:

  • 1 small glass of milk (half a cup);
  • 1 small glass of lassi (half a cup);
  • 1 small glass of calcium-fortified orange juice (half a cup);
  • a little bit of cheese like half a mini babybel or two small slices of cheese;
  • a pot of yogurt (half a cup);
  • 2 slices of whole wheat bread;
  • 1 bowl of ice cream (about 3/4 cup).

Nutrition supplement is half a point and they can use it to complete to one point once a day when they take less than a calcium portion of something.

The goal is to have at least 8 points at the end of each day. When they do, they can put a sticker.

My children took enthusiastically to this game and they have been doing it more than three weeks now. They select calcium-rich options when they have the choice (vanilla ice cream over sorbet, whole-wheat bread over white bread, calcium-fortified orange juice over plain orange juice) and even my three years old is talking very knowledgeably of the calcium content of different types of food. Maybe they will continue it a few more weeks. And maybe - who knows! - it will change their eating habits for their lives…

If you have some tips to share on this subject, write them in the post comments. I would love to read them.

References:

Halloween Party Recipes: new free cookbook!

October 15, 2007 By: Mathilde Category: Shop'NCook, Cooking, Recipes, Cookbooks No Comments →

Need recipe ideas for your Halloween party? Look no more! Download here the new free Shop’NCook cookbook “Halloween Party Recipes”: thirty creepy recipes for a fun Halloween party!

The cookbook contains the following recipes:

  • After Trick-or-Treating Pumpkin Bars
  • Bobbing for Candied Apples
  • Boolicious Trick or Treat Smoothies
  • Chili in a Jack
  • Cider Cheese Halloween Party Fondue
  • Eewy Gooey Eyeballs
  • Fall Twice Baked Potatoes (or aka scrambled brains)
  • Fiesta Lasagna
  • Fruity Ghosts on a Stick
  • Giant Warts
  • Ginger Ghouls
  • Halloween Party Punch
  • Halloween Poke Cake
  • It’s the Great Pumpkin…. Pull Apart Cake!
  • Munchy Mummy Appetizer Dip
  • Party Mix
  • Party Parfaits
  • Peck of Pickled Pumpkin
  • Pumpkin Sloppy Joes
  • Pumpkin Soup
  • Roasted Pumpkin Seeds
  • Rocky Horror Picture Show Halloween Squares
  • Sausage and Cabbage One Dish Dinner
  • Stuffed Mini Pumpkins
  • Sweet and Salty Pirate Caramel Apples
  • Sweet Potato Filled Oranges
  • Vampire Bat Stew
  • Vampires Be Gone Spaghetti
  • Walking into Spider webs Brownies
  • Webtacular Cheesecake

Link to the “Halloween Party Recipes” download page

Get social with your recipes!

October 09, 2007 By: Mathilde Category: Online Recipe Database, Recipes No Comments →

I have been thinking how to help the users of Shop’NCook online database sharing their recipes with friends. The answer was easy: an RSS feed.

I have in fact added four RSS feeds to Shop’NCook recipe database, two for the database as a whole and two for your very own recipes:

  1. List of the latest recipes uploaded to the database (title only)
  2. The latest recipe uploaded to the database (includes the text of the recipe)
  3. List of your recipes (title only)
  4. Your latest recipe (includes the text of the recipe)

You can access the feeds on the recipe database page. To see the last two feeds, you need to login first.

Tip: If you have been adding recipes using Shop’NCook software, you may not have an account with the database. Make sure you create an account using the Setup Login function on the Tools menu of the recipe manager to be able to keep the ownership of the recipes you have already uploaded.

What can I do with the database feeds?

You subscribe to the feeds with a news aggregator (or feed reader). There are plenty of free online services like Google Reader or Bloglines, for example. This way, you can check in one convenient place all your subscriptions. Each time a new recipe is published on the database, it will be displayed on your news aggregator. You can also use your news aggregator to follow this blog’s RSS feed.

What can I do with my recipes’ feeds?

You can give the feed URL to your friends so that they know when you upload a new recipe. There are also a lot of cool ways you can use an RSS feed. A few examples:

  • If you have a blog, add the feed to your blog so that your latest recipes are automatically displayed on your blog. For an example, look at the topmost right corner of this blog that displays the latest ten recipes uploaded on the database.
  • If you have a Facebook account, there are several applications that allow to display an RSS feed on your profile. For example, Blog RSS Feed to display your own feed, or Feed Friend RSS that allows you to share your feeds with friends.
  • Twitter every time you add a recipe to the database by using RSS2Tweeter service.

Do I need Shop’NCook to upload recipes to the database?

No! The database is completely integrated with Shop’NCook software, but can also be used independently. To add a recipe, you can either use the Share function of Shop’NCook or add it directly on the recipe database page.

The database lists also now the latest hundred recipes uploaded on its main page. When you add a recipe, it will appear at once on the front page.

Have fun with this new RSS feature! If you have other suggestions to improve the online database, leave a comment below.

Two new free cookbooks

September 23, 2007 By: Mathilde Category: Cooking, Recipes, Cookbooks No Comments →

The following two cookbooks are available for download:

  • Collected Through the Years, a collection of 176 recipes by Kathy L. Pugh
  • Crock pot recipes, a collection of 160 recipes

Go now to the cookbook download page