Sausage and Wild Rice Casserole

A nice hot dinner on a winter’s day, not to mention a way to use up some leftover turkey. Preheat oven to 350 degrees; Butter a 2-quart casserole dish. Cook wild rice according to package directions; set aside. Brown sausage and onion; drain. Add vegetables and cook until tender. Add flour, pepper, broth, and milk; cook until bubbly and thickened, about 1 minute more. Add … Continue reading Sausage and Wild Rice Casserole

I hate the notion of a secret recipe. Recipes are by nature derivative and meant to be shared – that is how they improve, are changed, how new ideas are formed. To stop a recipe in it’s tracks, to label it “secret,” just seems mean. – Molly Wizenberg

Continue reading I hate the notion of a secret recipe. Recipes are by nature derivative and meant to be shared – that is how they improve, are changed, how new ideas are formed. To stop a recipe in it’s tracks, to label it “secret,” just seems mean. – Molly Wizenberg

Winter Spiced Peach Pie

When we were children, Mom bought canned spiced peaches for a side dish at every Thanksgiving dinner but they’ve now disappeared from store shelves. We miss them terribly, but the filling in this pie tastes deliciously like those spiced peaches. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Line 8- or 9-inch pie pan with pie crust. Put a colander over a large bowl and drain peaches; reserve … Continue reading Winter Spiced Peach Pie

Brown Sugar Apple Pie

Oh, my gosh, is this pie good. Don’t count on leftovers, ever. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Line 8- to 9-inch pie pan with one pie crust. Blend sugar, brown sugar, cornstarch, cinnamon, salt and cloves; set aside. Peel, core and slice apples. Melt butter in large nonstick skillet; add apples, lemon juice and sugar mixture. Cook until juice thickens slightly. Cool apples for about … Continue reading Brown Sugar Apple Pie

Cheesecake

Despite what we said in the introduction, we know our cheesecake recipe has previously appeared in a copyrighted work; but even though Nela’s Cookbook was a wonderful combination of recipes and memoir, we have no idea whether Aunt Nela got the recipe from Mamcik, or vice versa, or whether they both got it from someone else. Aunt Nela was our paternal grandmother’s younger sister – … Continue reading Cheesecake