About Me

I'm a full-time working mom of 3 in the IT industry, with a great husband. When not spending time with the family, I like to spend my time in the kitchen. I like to cook. I love to eat. I adore entertaining people. I prefer not to go by any particular recipe, but experiment on my own. I'm not professionally trained in any way and I don't claim to be correct on anything I might post. Meals are often tossed together at the last minute. Sometimes I think about them during the day, sometimes I browse my cook book library and compare ingredients of great chefs before me. Sometimes I scour the internet, and sometimes they are literally pulled from the freezer and tossed into a pan.

I also used to dabble in cake decorating. {shameless plug: Cakes By Jenn Facebook}

These are those stories. I play with my food.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

White Lasagna



I adore lasagna.  Could eat it every day if I had to.  What's not to love?  Pasta, sauce, and cheese and cheese, and more cheese!  Growing up, my mom made the best lasagna and I of course carry on that same recipe, but seriously, no one ever makes it as good as mom does.  But I like to think I hold a small flame to her, she did teach me after all.  I don't get red-sauce dishes very much in my house.  Neither my oldest child or my husband likes tomato sauce.  Though, husband has been known to enjoy the family lasagna recipe.  I was so craving this a few weeks back however that I had to adapt the recipe.  I figured, if my daughter doesn't eat red sauce, then I'll make it with white sauce.

I have to say, it turned out pretty darn good!  Only change is that next time I will use MORE sauce, and perhaps if time allows, I will make my own white sauce.  But when you're a full time working mom of two, with a busy household, making your own Alfredo sauce is a luxury you can't always have time to afford.  So, this recipe is truly "semi-homemade" and so simple!

Ingredients:
  • 1 lb Ground beef (or turkey)
  • 1 pkg mushrooms, sliced
  • 2 jars Alfredo sauce (or homemade)
  • 1 box lasagna noodles
  • 1 pkg chopped spinach (defrosted and drained)
  • Salt/Pepper
  • 16oz Ricotta cheese
  • Parmesan cheese
  • 2 pkgs shredded mozzarella cheese

  1. Boil your lasagna noodles according to directions on the box, to al dente
  2. In a large skillet, cook up the ground beef and sliced mushrooms.  
  3. Drain off any excess fat.
  4. Pour in the Alfredo sauce and bring to light simmer.  Set aside.


  1. In a large 13x9 lasagna pan, spread some of the sauce on the bottom, this prevents the noodles from sticking.
  2. Then lay your noodles over the bottom of the pan, in one layer, covering the entire bottom of the pan, one layer of noodles only..
  3. On top of the noodles, spread ricotta.  Honestly, just use your fingers to press it in and around, makes it much easier.  Just enough to cover the noodles, as shown.
  4. On top of the ricotta, sprinkle on the chopped spinach.  Just a bit, maybe 1/3 of what you have in the package.
  5. On top of the spinach, sprinkle on your mozzarella cheese, then on top of that, shake on the Parmesan cheese.
  6. At this layer, you will now pour on more sauce/meat, get it wet, but dont' use it all, you need to have enough for at least one more layer.
Repeat steps 2 through 5 until you've reached the top of the pan.
The final layer should end with Mozzarella cheese and just a smattering of spinach for color.


Place dish into a 350 degree oven for 40-50 minutes until the tops are golden brown and sauce is bubbling.


Cut into squares, serve and enjoy!

Jenn's Beef Brisket a la N.E Boiled Dinner

New England Boiled Dinner.  Take an extra salty, briny piece of meat, toss it in a pot of water, boil the life out of it, toss in potatoes, root veggies and cabbage.  Serve.  With mustard and/or vinegar.  A meal that was foreign to me until I met my husband's family some odd years ago now.  The first time this was served to me, I naturally proceeded with caution.  It all looked like the same gray matter sitting on a plate in front of me.  But those around me couldn't shovel it into their mouths quickly enough, so I proceeded.  And yeah, well, the rest is history.  It wasn't long until I was making my own boiled dinner at home.  But this isn't an entry about New England Boiled dinner.... well, not quite.

Last year, I was in the mood for boiled dinner, but it was the wrong time of year to find corned beef brisket at the store.  At least, MB and S&S weren't carrying it and I wasn't going to S's.  So, I asked the butcher if he had brisket.  Stupid question Jenn.  I wasn't paying attention to what I was asking.  I had simply said "brisket" and not "corned beef brisket."  The butcher replied kindly and disappeared into the back room, returning with this enormous 5lb hunk of beef, which I HAD to take home, he had special cut it for me.  Thankfully, beef at the time wasn't outrageously priced so I didn't go bankrupt at checkout.  Went home with my potato, cabbage, parsnips, carrots and set to work boiling the water.  Only to realize that "the package" of spices was missing.  It was then that it finally dawned on me... this was not corned beef brisket... this was just simply beef brisket.  What the HECK do I do with this!?

A quick search on the internet produced several brines and methods to make your own pickling spice to produced the "corned" part of beef brisket... but that took 2-3 days to complete properly.  I wanted boiled dinner now, not three days from now.  Further searches produced results about others who had run into a similar scenario, no not where someone mistakenly got just beef and forgot the corned... but where the spice packet had been left out of their package of corned beef.  Reading several question and answer sites I finally came up with the spices I wanted to use.  Tossed them all into the pot, boiled this plain old beef brisket up for about 3 hours, tossed in the veggies and served.  It was "OK."  It was certainly edible.  Both Rob and Kass at it, and since the butcher had given me enough to feed a family of 8, I had plenty of leftovers and lived off this for more than a week for lunch.

Fast forward to last night.  I've improved my recipe and it was AMAZING.  So, why not share it with you? 

First thing we need to do here though is finally establish my measuring techniques, because you will surely need it this time.  I palm measure.  Here's what I mean.

Hold your hand out in front of you.  Cup it.
You'll notice that you've now created a small divot in the palm of your hand.  The lowest point, the orange circle in the picture is #1, typically about a teaspoon.  The next higher point, pour to the red line, and that can be a teaspoon to one tablespoon, depending on how cupped your hand is.  The next higher point over that is the green circle, easily 2 tablespoons, but again, depends on how cupped your hand is.  Imagine an orange just sitting in there nicely with your hand cupped around it.  That's about right.

Now that you know the approximate measurements, here are the ingredients to Jenn's Beef Brisket.
  • 1 Beef Brisket, not too fatty, but not without fat
  • Bay Leaves
  • Coriander
  • Whole cloves
  • Whole all spice
  • Mustard Powder
  • 3 cloves garlic
  • Onion powder
  • Salt
  • Whole Pepper
  • Water
  • Root Vegetables (Russet Potatoes, Carrots, Turnip, Parsnip - all or some, depends on how many people you're feeding)
  • Head of Cabbage
Grab a pot big enough to hold the brisket and all your vegetables.  This is a one pot dish, everything is eventually going in, so make sure you have plenty of room!  Put the brisket in the bottom and fill with water to 2 inches from the top of the pot.  Get the pot on the stove and set to High to get it boiling. 

Add your spices. 
In the "Green Measurement" add the following: 
  • Coriander
  • Whole cloves
  • Mustard Powder
  • Salt
  • Whole Pepper
In the "Red Measurement" add the following:
  • Whole All spice
  • Onion powder
Drop in 2 Bay leaves
Drop in 3 cloves of garlic, peeled and chopped in half

  1. Bring everything to a boil, turn back heat to Medium and let simmer/boil for 1.5 hours.
    • Now... this is for a beef brisket that shreds but does not fall apart on its own.  If you want the brisket to fall apart on it's own, boil for 2.5 hours.  Otherwise, this makes a nice beef that's tender but may still want a knife to cut the shreds.  It WILL still shred, just not fall apart on its own.  Adjust to your taste.
  2. Meanwhile, cut your root vegetables into big chunks.  Carrots should just be cut in half, potatoes quartered, parsnip sliced and quartered.
  3. After 1.5 hours, you'll want to start progressively adding the vegetables for the last 30 minutes, the denser veggies first.  
    • Add another "Red Measurement" of salt at this point
    • Carrots, Parsnips, Turnips, Potatoes, Cabbage last.  Let the one veggie boil up for 5-10 minutes before adding the next.

Your house is going to smell AMAZING while this is happening.  :-)

After the 2 hours have completed, your meal is done.  Grab some serving trays to display it all in, or just serve right from the pot.  Minus the beef of course, you'll need to shred/cut that.

You will also be left with a super flavorful beef broth.  Make soup, or freeze for later.

Enjoy!!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Copious Cookies and Kahlua too!

I like to bake.  You know this.  Although, I'm not a fan of baking cakes (just decorating them).  But I am a fan of baking pastries, pies, and cookies.  Oh do I love to make cookies.  So anyone who knows me knows that come December, my kitchen is overflowing with copious counts of cookie dough.  You walk into the kitchen during one of my all day cooking marathons and you'll find me covered in flour, standing in sugar and licking a beater or spoon full of dough.

Now, I don't bake just one kind of cookie en masse.  No.  I do it up right.  I bake a minimum of 6 different kinds of cookies, 2 batches each.  A typical batch is 2 to 4 dozen.  You do the math.  Yes, cookies cover the counters, and my kitchen table, and my dining room table.  My husband loves it.

I have a book that I received from my husband several years ago for Christmas and it's 400+ pages or nothing but cookies.  So this cookie cookoff with myself is really his fault.  The first year I had it, I went through page by page and tagged several to try.  Starting off that year I baked 8 different kinds of cookies.  It was a 12 hour day in the kitchen, with one oven and 2 cookie sheets.  Took them all to work in Christmas tins and tupperware.  Huge hit, of course.  Did the same the following year, and again the next, now with more cookie sheets.  Had to take a year off due to pregnancy but came back the following years just as strong.  And here I was again this year with 2 ovens, 8 cookie sheets, 2 Kitchen Aids and one hand mixer.  It was "just" an 8 hour session this year, thanks to two kids at my legs... but followed with two more nights later that week to get to my 8 kinds of cookie.

I vary what I make from year to year.  I have my constants like chocolate chip, white chocolate chip and a peanut butter.  But I still like to try a new one every year.  This recipe is this year"s new one.  It's one I had marked a few years ago and added a post it on with notes.  The original recipe is a butterscotch base with a pecan on top.  I decided to change it up and play.  I have modified the recipe so that the cookie mimics a chocolate trifle.

Now in all fairness I had no idea what chocolate trifle was until I met my husband's family,  This was a dessert they had after holiday meals.  Chocolate cake, chocolate pudding, crushed heath bar, whipped cream...and... Kahlua, ever so lightly drizzled over the cake. A-mazing.  I have of course played with this recipe several times as well, one of my favorite versions include Oreos.  So when I read this cookie recipe that was a butterscotch pudding base, I noted that switch to chocolate and Kahlua drizzle.  This year was the year to do it, and they are stupidly easy!  They are my new go to dough for last minute cookies.

Chocolate Trifle Kahlua Pudding Cookies

Ingredients
  • 3/4 c sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/4 margarine, melted
  • 1 package of instant chocolate pudding
  • 1 bag crushed heath bar
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.  In a bowl, mix at high speed sguar and eggs until thick and yellow pale.  Beat in the margarine until smooth.  Stir in the flour and pudding until blended.  Stir in 3/4 the bag of heath bar.  Drop the batter by 2-3 Tablespoons each on to a greased AND floured cookie sheet.  Bake for 10-12 minutes.  Undercook slightly for more chewy cookie.  Remove from sheets and cool completely on wire rack with wax paper underneath the rack.

Drizzle/Dip on Top
  • 1 cup confectioner sugar
  • 2-3T of Kahlua
Keep in mind here, that this drizzle on top is really to taste. You want a thicker "frosting" use less Kahlua, more sugar.  You want a gooey feel to it, use more Kahlua.  I'm guessing at the measurement for the Kahula since I literally put 1 cup of sugar in and then poured the Kahlua in and turned on the mixer and adjusted until it was the consistency I wanted.

When your cookies are cool enough, use the drizzle by dipping in a spoon and zig-zagging across the cookie, or just dip the cookie in and put back on the wire racks to set.  While the drizzle is still is still wet, sprinkle just a touch of heath bar on top.

Serve this cookie with the following cocktail:
1 part vodka
1 part Kahlua
1 part Bailey's
2 parts milk or cream
ice into a shaker, shake well, pour into martini glass

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And in case you thought I was kidding about the massive amounts of cookies: