Sunday, April 27, 2008

The Victorious Return of La Leche...

Me vs. Sweetened Condensed Milk.
Round 2.

Ok, so, I had to do some work this afternoon, and while I as doing it, decided to take another stab at the boiling milk and making caramel thing. All revved up and confident from my first experience (not that it went that well, but I was at least more sure that I wasn't going to blow anything up), I put the can in, really really boiled it for 4 hours. And... it totally worked!!! Check it out!


So, this looks basically like all the stuff everyone else made. Now my problem is (and this is very hard to admit given that I have now invested approximately 7.5 hours of boiling, 2 trips to the grocery store for the 2 cans of milk, and quite a bit of time on google)... I don't like it. Its actually kind of gross- its just too sweet and heavy and still has too much milky taste. Maybe there is some delicious thing to use it in that I don't know about yet, so I saved it, but... yeah... there you go... victory is (way too) sweet.

Delicious dulce de leche... ummm.... yeah...

So, usually if I post about food, its because I'm all psyched that something turned out really well. Well, not today. Today, I would like to introduce you to one of the nastiest things to emerge from my kitchen in quite a while.

It all started when one of my co-workers picked up a can of sweetened condensed milk and told me that you can boil it (the can) and make caramel. (as a side note, what kind of job would involve cans of sweetened condensed milk but not kitchens? thats another story). He claimed you just stick the can in a pot of water, boil it, and end up with a can of caramel. I am a huge giant sucker for things that have very few ingredients and yet produce that "no way, I made that!" feeling (see, pitas) so of course I had to try it.

I consulted the internets, and it was even better than I hoped, you seriously just take the label off a can of sweetened condensed milk, completely submerge the can, and either simmer or boil it for 4 hours (there was conflicting info regarding simmering vs boilin). Now, on the face of it, heating up a closed can full of molten sugar seems like an insane prospect. And, it turns out, you need to be very careful to avoid acquiring a new dulce de leche colored kitchen paint job and hair-do (also, to be serious, being burned by a projectile boiling sticky substance would be no joke). But, people the world over seem to have done this without too much damage to life and limb, so I gave it a shot.

Here are my ingredients:

I submerged the can, and since I was kind of concerned about this whole thing, decided to go with a simmer rather than a boil (this was the first mistake). I also read that you can cook it from anywhere from 1-4 hours, with the main difference being the thickness of the resulting caramel (pourable vs scoopable). So, after 3 hours I decided to be done mainly because I wanted to go to bed (second mistake).

All the info said it has to be really cool before you open it, or it explodes (this was a lot more drama than something like, cookies). So, I let it cool over night, and woke up this morning all excited to see what I made.

Now, this is the kind of delicious looking item people have made (they also frost cakes with it, top ice-cream with it, make cookie sandwiches, etc, etc):

This is what I made (little did I know, this was the pinnacle of what I would produce)... a can of under-cooked yellow goo:

I remembered reading that if this happens, you can just submerge the open can most of the way to the top in a pot and cook it for a while. I started to do that, but, I had things to do and places to go, and got bored. I had also read that you can cook it in a pan, on the stove, and it'll do the same thing. So, that seemed reasonable. And, it was initially promising:

That era of promise lasted 3-4 minutes tops... when it reached the phase you can see below, I finally decided to pull the plug on the whole debacle... as you can see I generated a pot of chunky goo that was simultaneously burnt and undercooked and in no way resembled delicious caramel. Julia Childs, here I come!

Now, the upside is, I am a stubborn lady, and now that I am more confident that the can won't explode, am definitely going to try this again... so, I'll keep you posted.

(The real irony here is that when I went to get the milk, strawberries were on sale, so I also made this super awesome strawberry pie inspired by Lauren over at Love Your Oven, but I didn't even get to take a picture because the camera batteries died (or maybe, the lens was burnt out by the hideousness of the chunky goo?). Anyhow, it is spectacularly delicious.

UPDATE: http://yellowfishblog.blogspot.com/2008/04/victorious-return-of-la-leche.html

Monday, April 14, 2008

Daily Mystery: Solved!!!

This is about as good a resolution as I could have hoped for... with almost no work on my part, I have figured out what these weird things are!

It was by complete random chance that I clicked on a post that had a link to this...

It looked very coincidentally like my mystery flower, so I sent a message to the very kind and helpful etsian Sapphires Child on the off chance she knew about this one too. Turns out, she did!

Since I am sure you were on the edge of your seat waiting to find out about this, this is your moment...

So, the mystery plant is a Blue Passion Flower, or Passiflora caerulea, which is a South American vine. Apparently it gets its name based on religious symbolism associated with the Passion of the Christ, which I'll leave to you to read on wikipedia if you feel like it. I was more intrigued by the fact that the weird fruits are actually edible, and the flowers can become tea. Although, I was sort of put off that idea by the fact that the article says that the leaves contain a substance that breaks down into cyanide, but that 'its possible to boil away most of the cyanide'. Really, this is a little disturbing on a couple levels... 1. should people really be getting instructions on eating random plants in their yard from wikipedia? and 2. "most of" the cyanide can be boiled off? MOST OF? hmmmm... when we're talking about a highly toxic substance (although- maybe its fine, the caveat here is the only thing I know about it is based on Sherlock Holmes novels where I remember that it smells of bitter almonds) somehow that just doesn't seem like a good idea...

But at any rate, I'm totally psyched that I ran into Sapphires Child and she helped me out... in honor of that, here's her etsy mini... check out her shop and spread the good will!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Major Excitement!

Now, I realize I haven't actually owned this thing long enough to take credit, but CHECK THIS OUT! These are totally baby limes... hurray! Now I just have to try not to kill them...

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Movie Alert: The King of Kong

If you haven't seen the documentary "The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters" yet, stop reading immediately, update your netflix cue, and them come back and finish. Seriously, you will regret it if you don't.

It tells the sordid story of the battle for the worlds highest Donkey Kong score. (Yes, apparently people still play Donkey Kong in arcades, and yes, they take it very very seriously). The main contenders are the reigning Donkey Kong champ, Billy Mitchell and the up and coming new kid, Steve Wiebe. Billy has been a video game champion since the 80's with high scores on PacMan and Donkey Kong. He also sports a truly fantastic blow-dried mullet, and equally fantastic gaudy neck ties. Steve is a pretty normal looking dude, with a nice seeming wife and kids, who sets a goal of achieving a high score, and spends the entire movie trying to get the higher echelons of the gaming establishment (mainly consisting of the community affiliated with Twin Galaxies, the main organization regulating gaming scores) to acknowledge his efforts.


Its totally hilariously intriguing, because the extent that Billy (and, his battalion s of yes-men and henchmen) will go to to maintain the status quo is kind of mind blowing. I got to go to a screening of this where the director and producer spoke afterwards, and, apparently not only is it all true, the drama continues on to this day. You've got to see this, mainly, because you seriously cannot make this kind of stuff up...

Monday, April 7, 2008

Mmmm.... Lemon Bars

I love lemon bars... (now it seems like maybe getting a lime tree was a tactical error? nah, I still want the margaritas. Maybe I just need lemon bars AND margaritas... hmmm...).

Anyhow, I made some on Saturday, as you can see here. I've loved them since I was a kid, and I like them better than any lemon bars you can get in a store because #1 they are not florescent yellow and #2 they are really tart and lemony. This is how you make them...

Crust:
2C flour
1C butter (real, unadulterated, buttery butter. yep)
.5C powdered sugar

Blend these up and then press them with your fingers into a buttered (more butter! hurray!) 9x13 pan-- just make sure its evenly spread, don't completely mush it down. Bake about 25 minutes at 350, or until its a really light lovely golden brown.

While its cooking, mix up the topping:
4 eggs
1/3 cup fresh lemon juice (fresh, seriously, its what makes the whole recipe)
2C sugar

Beat the eggs, blend in the sugar and juice and beat more. It will taste even better if you put in a bunch of really fine lemon zest from the lemons you just juiced.

When the crust is done, just pull it halfway out of the oven, pour the liquid topping on, and put it back in. Bake for 25 more minutes, until just slightly golden brown....

Take them out and let them totally cool off before you slice them up... garnish with powdered sugar.

Yum!

Saturday, April 5, 2008

Daily Mystery: Revisited

A while ago I posted about these totally bizarre fruits that were growing on a plant I pass every day on the way to my car. I didn't really think about it further, until that plant just popped out the weirdest Dr. Seuss-like flowers I have ever seen... check it out. So weird!

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