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Food, Savory

Homemade Garlic Bread

Homemade Garlic Bread

Most of my life has been surrounded by bread, somehow. Which is odd that I recently had gone through The Whole 30, which meant I couldn’t eat any bread. I remember proofing dough on the radiators in our kitchen when my mom and I lived in Pennsylvania. And I remember putting all the ingredients in the bread machine for poppy seed bread with my grandmother when we lived at the campground (they owned it). My favorite part was getting the end of the bread, fresh out of the oven or the bread machine, slathering it in butter and eating it. It truly is the best part about bread, that warm end piece.

So while we’re not on The Whole 30 anymore, I opted to raid our cabinets and make my own since we’re refusing to buy it right now. And we had just enough flour to make two loaves. I didn’t need two loaves, but I didn’t think through dividing the recipe in half. Whoops. And because my grandmother always made flavored breads, I had to do something different, which is how the garlic came into play. Dusted on the top of the bread, it’s delicious.

Homemade Garlic Bread

Gather
1 (1/4 oz) package of active dry yeast
2 1/4 cups of warm water
3 tablespoons of sugar
1 tablespoon of salt
1/2 tablespoon of garlic powder
2 tablespoons of vegetable oil
4 1/2 to 5 cups of all-purpose flour

In a large bowl, dissolve yeast in warm water. Add sugar, salt, oil, garlic powder, and flour (1 cup at a time as you combine it( into bowl. Combine to form a soft dough ball.

Turn onto floured surface and knead until smooth, about 8 minutes. Place into a lightly greased bowl and cover with a towel. Place in a warm place to rise until doubled, about 1 to 1/2 hours.

Divide dough in half and shape into loaf. Lightly grease loaves with oil and place in two 9-in x 5-in loaf pans. Cover and let rise again, about 30 minutes. Lightly sprinkle garlic powder on top of dough.

Bake at 375 degrees for 30-35 minutes or until golden brown. Remove loaves from pans and let cool on wire racks.

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Food, Savory

Fried Buffalo Potato Chips

Buffalo Potato Chips

This one was an accident. I think. But the most delicious accident. I had sliced up some potato for baked fries, Andy had the fryer on, and he was making Buffalo chicken. He wanted to experiment, so I gave him a few slices of potato. He dipped them into the batters and then popped them in the fryer. A few minutes later, he had these golden, delicious spicy buffalo potato bites.

Fried Buffalo Potato Chips

Gather
2-3 large yellow potatoes
1/4 cup of Frank’s Red Hot Sauce
1 cup flour
1 teaspoon paprika
1 teaspoon cayenne

Preheat your fryer to 360 degrees.

Use a mandolin on its medium setting to slice potatoes. In a bowl, place your hot sauce. In a separate bowl mix flour, paprika, and cayenne. Dredge slices in Frank’s Red Hot (it’s your wet base), then dredge in flour mixture. Shake off excess flour and place potatoes in fryer. Try not to overcrowd potatoes and do this in batches.

Cook until golden brown, for about 3-5 minutes. Remove from fryer and let cool on a cookie cooling rack. This will remove excess oil. Remember to place paper towels under the cookie cooling rack. When cooled a bit, serve.

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Food, Savory

Paleo Breaded Chicken Wings

IMG_1655.JPGTwo of our friends are taking the Paleo/Whole 30 plunge. I’m proud of them. Like Andy and I, they, too, enjoy a cold beer, Chinese food, and well… anything bad for you that tastes so so good. And when they heard about how Andy and I were actually pretty successful at making meals feel like you weren’t suffering, they agreed to come over our house for the football game – Paleo food only served.

Which is exactly how I came up with these Paleo breaded chicken wings. Now stop right there. They are approved. My secret? Almond flour. All the crispy crunch of a breaded wing, without the bad stuff. Continue Reading

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Food, Savory

Paleo Swedish Meatballs

Paleo Swedish Meatballs

So I certainly could have taken a better picture of this, but I did my best. Really, I did. I’ll have to make these again during the daytime when the lighting is better. I was craving something different and stumbled upon some pins on Pinterest saying that Paleo Swedish Meatballs was a thing. Skeptical as I was, I did some digging, went through our cabinets, made a quick trip to the grocery store, and voila! I created Paleo Swedish Meatballs. Continue Reading

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