Category Archives: Very Appetizing

Brown Sugar Sweet Potato Scones

Sometimes there’s a sale on sweet potatoes.
And sometimes your father-in-law buys a case of them at a produce stand and takes two out and brings you the rest.
I’ve had both these things happen. And so I learned to do more than the usual sweet potato casserole or baked sweet potato or sweet potato fries or sweet potato pie. I’m sounding a bit like Bubba from Forrest Gump … but with sweet potatoes.
Our customers enjoyed new dishes. And they especially enjoyed seasonal new dishes. So in the fall/winter, we had an increase in requests for sweet potato pie and sweet potato casserole with the little marshmallows toasted on top. And we happily obliged those cravings.
But I like to try new things, so the brown sugar sweet potato scone became a winner. I loved them, customers loved them. And they’re pretty easy to make using pantry staples, so win-win. A scone is pretty much a ramped up biscuit. This means you can eat them anytime and all the time. Our customers loved to buy them for quick breakfasts or we served them for breakfast catering orders. They travel well and don’t have to be served hot.
Sweet potato scones
Here’s what you’ll need for brown sugar sweet potato scones with brown sugar icing.
(Makes 16 scones)
1 cup mashed sweet potatoes (2 medium sweet potatoes, cooked)
1 cup buttermilk (to make your own: put 1 Tbs lemon juice in a measuring cup and fill it to the cup line with milk)
2 Tbs heavy cream
3 tsp vanilla flavoring (here’s how to make homemade)
Healthy dollop of sour cream (about 2 Tbs)
Sweet potato scones
5 cups all purpose flour
2/3 cup packed brown sugar
1 tsp ground cinnamon
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup cold unsalted butter, cubed

Brown Sugar Icing:
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup powdered sugar
2 Tbs unsalted butter, melted
6 Tbs heavy cream

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
Sweet potato scones, whipping sweet potatoes
Smash those sweet potatoes up in a bowl with a large spoon or in your mixer bowl.
Sweet potato scones
Add milk.
Sweet potato scones
Add cream.
Sweet potato scones
Add vanilla flavoring.
Sweet potato scones
Add sour cream.
Sweet potato scones
Whip it. Whip it real good. … Until well mixed.
Sweet potato scones
In separate, large bowl, add brown sugar to flour.
Sweet potato scone spices
Add cinnamon, baking soda, baking powder and salt.
Whisking dry ingredients, sweet potato scones
Use a whisk to incorporate all ingredients well.
Sweet potato scones
Add cold buttter and mix with pastry blender or in food processor bowl.
Sweet potato scones
You might have to get in there with your hands. Mix until mixture resembles small pea-size pebbles of buttery goodness.
Sweet potato scones
Add the sweet potato mixture to the dry ingredients and mix just until combined.
Sweet potato scones
(You can do this in that same food processor bowl and stop the mixing as soon as the ingredients come together – it’s much easier this way.)
Sweet potato scones
On lightly floured surface, roll the dough into two 7-inch circles (so that you have nice size scones. You can roll it out into a 14-inch circle but you’ll have some monster size scones that take a little longer to bake through. But be a rebel and do what you want.)
Sweet potato scones
Cut the scones into 8 pieces, like you’re slicing up a pizza. Ummmm-a pizza scone. That’ll be a recipe for another day.
Sweet potato scones
Place scones on parchment-lined pan. Brush tops with a little cream and place in preheated oven.
Bake 20-30 minutes, just until tops are almost browning.
Remove from oven and place on wire racks to cool. This keeps them from getting sweaty and gooey bottomed. (Yes, that is a technical term.)

Sweet Potato Scone, Breakfast Scones, Best Scones
Brown Sugar Sweet Potato Scones with Brown Sugar Icing

Mix up your icing and drizzle on top. You can mix this icing over low heat and have a less grainy icing texture as well. But I like sugar, so the grains don’t bother me!
Sweet potato scones
Eat.
Sweet potato scones delicious

For catering: Depending on how many you are feeding, double or triple this recipe. You can also roll the dough into smaller 4-inch circles and make mini scones in different flavors. Or roll them into a large rectangle and cut corner pieces in various sizes. This smaller size requires a baking time of 15-20 minutes.

Salsa Time – The Food, not The Dance

A wish for dips led to this:

Our wonderful customers challenged us to offer more sides and snack items.
Challenge accepted.
In an attempt to have something – anything to easily fill at least one of our constantly emptying shelves (yes, actually a good problem), we turned to salads and dips. Things relatively easy to make and package.
One of the absolute all-time favorites was our homemade salsa. A great topper for tacos, a great chip dip, a great side with enchiladas  a great drink. Just kidding, I don’t think anybody was guzzling it. It just disappeared off the shelf so fast, we thought that.

Red Salsa

1 (10.5 oz.) can Rotel
1 (14.5 oz.) can diced tomatoes (I prefer fire roasted)
1 (14.5 oz.) can “Mexican style” diced tomatoes (Now the can just says with green peppers, celery and onion)
1/4 cup dried chopped onion (you could use fresh if you love onions)
1/3 bunch cilantro, bottom half of stems removed (or 2 Tbs dried cilantro flakes)
1 Tbs chopped garlic (refrigerated kind or fresh, not dried)
4 oz. can chopped green chilis
1 tsp. Cumin
1/2 tsp. Black pepper
1 tsp. Salt

Optional: Add 1 jalapeño, lightly sauted and chopped

Place all ingredients in food processor and process to desired smoothness.
Let sit for about 30 minutes to allow flavors to become friends.
Refrigerate leftovers, if there are any.

For Catering: Double or triple this easily and offer a variety of chips for dipping.

Healthy Option – Chicken Salad

Chicken Salad
3 cups chopped cooked chicken
1 cup mayo
1 cup chopped celery
1/4 cup sweet relish
1 cup sliced grapes
1/2 cup toasted sliced almonds
1/4 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. pepper

Mix together and keep refrigerated.

How chicken salad worked us to death

We could not make enough chicken salad!
We slow-roasted 40-80 pounds of chicken breast overnight, every night. And we used about 20-40 pounds of that in our chicken salad each day. It was good, delicious in fact, don’t get me wrong. But we made the stuff twice a day at least and it still wasn’t enough. And yes, we did increase our roasting and making of chicken salad as demand grew. All 4 of us – Rebecca, Joanne, Sue, and myself – could make a quadruple batch of the stuff in our sleep.
The recipe came about due to some customers of the former owner requesting healthier options. Seeing as how a lot of his recipes and ours contained cream and butter and cheese and creamy soups, I can understand why folks started putting on a little weight eating with us.
So JoAnne, a healthy eater herself, formulated the concoction on the fly one day, just remembering how she’d whipped up some for her family; and using what the owner had on hand.
We had this in our refrigerator from the first day we opened due to how “easy” it was to whip up and how much a quadruple batch would make for the case. We’d make half with celery. We’d fill at least 2 shelves with one-pound packages and it’d be gone before noon, either from customers stopping by to grab it on their way to work or people e-mailing a request that we save them a pound or two for when they could stop by. We had a dedicated refrigetor bay for “holds”. I’d begun typing up a daily offering of what we had and e-mailing that each morning to all our customers who requested to be on the list. They’d then e-mail or call with requests to hold a certain dish or two. It was simple and worked well, except for the times I forgot to check the e-mail around 4 (super busy time of day). Those who’d waited until later to let us know to hold food thought I was to check it routinely so their food would be ready and waiting. (Yes, I should’ve.) They’d arrive to pick up their dish and it wouldn’t be there as we sold out of things pretty quickly. But being the awesome group of customers they typically were, they’d find something else to grab for dinner.
One day, a new customer came in and walked right to the chicken salad without even looking at anything else. Rebecca happened to be out front arranging shelves and said hello to the lady, asking if she could help her.
They lady replied, (I must say in a condescending, smirky way), “ Oh no. I’ve just been hearing about how good your chicken salad is.”
Rebecca smiled and said, “It is good. We sell out every day.”
The lady was eyeing the package and said, “Well, it doesn’t look that special.”
Rebecca blinked and her smile grew tighter. I mean, what a thing to say!
Rebecca replied, “Well, it’s our most popular item.”
And walked to the counter to check the lady out.
She set the package on the counter and said, “Oh, I’m just buying it so I can figure out how to make it myself. This is expensive.”
We sold a full pound (yes, we weighed every package) for $3.99. And that wasn’t leaving much room for profit because we used quality ingredients and a lot of them.
Now, Rebecca was a super nice person. Very calm and forgiving and very rarely had any showing of a temper of any kind. She always went out of her way to make others feel comfortable and was never argumentative or aiming to have the last word. She wasn’t a confrontational person. But this lady had just hit one of her last frazzled nerves from a long week of aggravation.
She picked up the salad and didn’t ring the lady up. As she held the pound of deliciousness, she smiled sweetly and said, “Well, let me just tell you how to make it.”
The lady looked super surprised.
Rebecca continued, “You slow cook your chicken for 6-8 hours. That’s important because you want it to be easy to shred and that’s what makes it just melt in your mouth. Each pound of chicken salad has 1.5-2 chicken breasts in it. And while you’re chopping or shredding it, make sure you get out any of those gross grisly or fatty chicken pieces that are on the chicken breast. You get high quality mayonaise, you’ll need a half-cup of that, and sweet relish, about 1/8 cup. It just tastes better. Buy sliced almonds. Not whole ones because just chopping them is harder and just doesn’t give the right bite. You’ll need 1/4 cup of those and then toast those in a single layer on about 325-350 degrees for 4-5 minutes. Then shake them around so they evenly toast on the ends and other side. Continue toasting another 4-5 minutues. Chop up 1 cup of celery if you like it in there. Buy seedless red grapes and hand slice 1/2 cup of those in half. Now, don’t chop those or they get all squishy in the salad and it does affect the taste. Add salt and pepper and you’re done. Now, I’m guesstimating on those amounts because we make those big silver bowls (she was pointing) full of it about 3 times a day and package those 15 pounds up in single pounds so our customers can just enjoy it without all that hassle.” Then she smiled sweetly.
JoAnne, Sue, and I downed our heads and tried not to laugh. That’s as sarcastic and “mean” as Rebecca ever got.
The lady was standing and blinking, literally with her mouth open. She opened her purse and said, “Go ahead and ring me up. I think it might be easier just to buy it.”
Rebecca rang her up and wished her a good day.
That lady also became a regular customer. The thing she bought most? Chicken salad.

 

For a crowd: (Makes 15 pounds)
30 cups chopped cooked chicken
6 cups mayo
12 cups chopped celery
2 1/2 cup sweet relish
9 cups sliced grapes
5 cup toasted sliced almonds
2 1/2 tsp. salt
1 1/4 tsp. pepper

Spicing Things Up – Raspberry Hot Pepper Jelly

Raspberry (or any fruit) Hot Pepper Jelly
2 cups hot peppers (jalapeno, cayenne, chili), chopped fine
1 1/2 cups bell peppers, chopped fine
1 cup white vinegar
1 cup fruit juice (or water)
1 box pectin (Sure-Jell)
5 cups sugar

jelly jars and lids

Wash jelly jars in hot soapy water and rinse well
Chop peppers very fine (I use a food processor)
Put in large, heavy bottom pot
Add vinegar, fruit juice (or water), and pectin
Put jar lids in pan of water on stove
Place on medium-high to high heat and bring to boil, stirring constantly.
When it boils, add sugar and return to boil.
Turn jar lids on high to allow to come to a boil
Maintain rolling boil of pepper mixture for 5 minutes, stirring constantly.
Remove from heat and stir until foam is reabsorbed.
Pour liquid into clean jars. Wipe rims with clean, wet cloth to remove stickiness. Place hot lids on and screw tightly.
(You can process the jars in a hot water bath or pressure cooker to ensure sealing.)

How we came to spice things up:

As days wore on with the three of us, Rebecca, Joanne and Me, just doing our best to keep dishes in our 2 three-bay refrigerated cases in the storefront, it became apparent we needed more help. Making everything from scratch proved to be a pretty big task. After seeing we were indeed going to be busy, we decided to hire back another employee, Sue,  of the former caterer to handle the front and pitch in for dish washing and cooking. With that settled, I turned to our food vendors to make use of some of their frozen items and baked goods to fill up our shelves.
It was somewhat embarrassing to have folks come in and only have a couple things left in the refrigerator to choose from. Now this was a good problem, in a way. It meant people liked our food and that what we were making was delicious. We knew this, because as any cook knows, you must taste your own food to ensure quality. And I was quickly gaining weight “testing” our food.
It was somewhat crushing to work all day making huge pots of spaghetti and meatballs, or baked ziti; or trays and trays of meatloaf or roast and veggies; or pounds upon pounds of chicken salad and fruit salad; or huge convection ovens full of freshly-baked breads and cookies and cakes – only to have them all gone within a couple hours of placing them in the refrigerator.
Having frozen pecan-crusted tilapia, seasoned vegetables, baby potatoes, various appetizers, and breads from our food vendors ready and waiting in our freezer case was most helpful and our customers loved it.
I never knew so many things were available to buy ready-made. I realized a lot of what restaurants sell as homemade is purchased and heated or thawed or finished baking on site, thus “homemade.” But it was eye-opening to see a large portion of the food I’d believed to be special to a restaurant, simply a purchased item.
We still wanted to make as much as possible from scratch, and we did. But we did buy a few types of cookies and breads to bake and package for our shelves. It proved helpful, tasty and no one seemed to mind that it wasn’t from scratch.
We also became a vendor for a salad dressing company, a pre-packaged soup mix company and an enamelware company. These things help fill up our empty walls and shelving.
However, we wanted to offer unique items our customers could only get from us. So I looked through my recipe collection. I have a great pool of great cooks in my family going back generations and still have their recipes I use regularly. I decided to jar and sell raspberry and peach hot pepper jelly. I used to think this sounded gross. But I was wrong. It is delicious! On a cracker or crostini with cream cheese or manchego cheese, it is the bomb! You can also use this as a glaze for chicken or pork chops.
Bonus: It looks beautiful filling up a shelf!