Thursday, January 7, 2010

Grandma's Soup!

My mom loved to cook for her family and friends.  When I was in high school I could smell her homemade bread and cinnamon rolls baking before I even reached the door.  Her pies, especially her banana and coconut cream pies, were often requested by members of her church for church functions. When you visited Mom's at Thanksgiving and Christmas you knew you wouldn't leave the house empty-handed, Mom would always have a tin of cookies, nut rolls, or a whole pie for you to take home!
When Mom passed-on five years ago I inherited her "cookbook," a steno book filled with her recipes. However, I found out very quickly that inheriting the cookbook did not make me the awesome cook and baker that Mom was!  And I also found out that one of my favorite dishes of hers - homemade vegetable soup - was not written down in her cookbook!
Mom would make homemade soup and bread at the end of January as a birthday treat for my daughter, Amy and me.  Mom made enough soup and bread to give to the whole family: Aunt Dee, Cousin Sheila and her husband, Mike, my brother David, all three of my daughters as well as Leonard and me.  Even after giving each of us large Tupperware bowls of soup there would still be enough left over for Mom and Dad and to share with friends that might stop by.  Mom always made at least ten loaves of homemade bread, not the frozen bread dough homemade bread, or the bread machine homemade bread, but homemade that she mixed, kneaded, shaped and baked from scratch!
After Mom's funeral I found a bowl of soup frozen in the freezer.  I defrosted the soup and heated it up for dinner one winter evening, noting what the ingredients were.  For the past four years after Christmas I have tried in vain to make what is now known as "Grandma's Soup," but according to my family, my version is just not the same.  "Too tomato-ee" my husband announces, buttering a slice of homemade bread (courtesy of Rhodes Frozen Bread Dough), "There's something missing, mom, it's not as good as Grandma's" Amy tells me bluntly.
I discuss my trials with making the soup with my cousin Sheila.  "Tomato juice, beef, and vegetables," she tells me.  Did that.
 I call Auntie Carol.  "I add a handful of lima beans and use rice, and I buy the bread from the bakery."
"Do you have a recipe for the soup written down anywhere?  Did Grandma Bennett write it her cookbook" (Auntie Carol has Grandma Bennett's steno cookbook - guess the steno books were popular with my family!)?
"No.  She had the ingredients memorized."
"Auntie Carol, PLEASE send me an e-mail with your recipe for Soup!"
So earlier this week I received an e-mail from Auntie Carol with a list of ingredients and instructions on how she makes the soup.  Yesterday, following her instructions exactly, I made "Grandma's Soup."
"Too tomato-ee," my husband says, buttering a slice of bread."
Personally, I thought it was pretty tasty soup!

Grandma's Soup Recipe
Handful of dry lima beans and cut-up hunks of beef.  Cook in water for about an hour to hour and a half.
Next add salt and pepper, 3/4 package of baby carrots and a half a head of cabbage cut up fine.  Cook for 1/2 hour.
Add 4 cut-up potatoes, cook for another 1/2 hour.  Add 1/4 cup rice or alphabet noodles and a can of tomato juice.  Add any other vegetables you desire - corn, peas, green beans, zucchini, etc.
Let simmer for as long as you like (all day is best). Add more water as needed.
(Recipe courtesy of Auntie Carol Brenzy)

Note: If you are not a beef eater, try making the soup with chicken!

For Rhodes Frozen Bread Dough visit http://www.rhodesbread.com/

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Crochet.Gan

      In the past two months I have crocheted six hats - one for Riley, one for Ben, one for Connor, and three for Chloe. Why three hats for Chloe? Well… the first two didn't fit her pretty little head!  
     I'm still not sure what the problem was, or even if the third hat fits her (I just finished hat #3 last night). I crocheted Chloe's hat with the same size crochet needle, used the same number of stitches, and used a single crocheted stitch as Connor's hat. The difference came in the type of yarn - for Chloe's first two hats I used Red Heart's Classic - the same yarn I used for Riley and Ben's hat but for Connor's I used Lion Brand Wool-Ease® Yarn. Although both yarns are a # 4 weight and
are two of my favorite yarns to work with, Wool-Ease® seems a little more flaccid than Red Heart’s Classic.
     Next on my “To-Do” list of items to crochet are hats for the big kids, drink coasters for my hubby, Amy’s birthday gift, and Hollie’s afghan that she was to receive when she graduated college in 2002!
Chloe's hat - Number 3!















Yarns:
Basic Hat -  Lion Brand Wool Ease in Blush Heather
Brim and Pom-Pom - Red Heart Soft Yarn in Chocolate
Pattern: Lion Brand Birthday Baby Pocket Cardigan and Hat.