As I write this, it’s early Saturday morning and after
breakfast, I’m into the kitchen. I’m on hors-d'oeuvre
duty for the family Christmas party one of my sisters holds each year. She’s a
phenomenal cook, and for ages we’ve enjoyed preparing food when we are together
and sharing recipes when we aren’t. As a
result, when I am providing edibles for an event at her house, it’s important
for me to provide a quality dish. I’ve
spent a lot of time over my life pouring over recipes, but this year I didn’t. I’ve reached the age and stage where
experience speaks I guess. I figured I’d come up with something. And so, I did.
Last week, my husband had to attend a pot luck
Christmas party for his work, and as he’s not a cook (but an amazing dish washer and kitchen
cleaner) I was in charge. He requested something
his mum used to make, and while I was preparing his water chestnuts wrapped in
bacon, I remembered back to the late eighties, standing beside his mother at
her counter, watching as she dipped water chestnuts into soy sauce and brown
sugar before rolling them in bacon. I
made them myself for a New Year we spent in our first house. We had friends down, ate up a storm, and they
all stayed over. The next day, before
they were scheduled to leave, we pulled out the leftovers. Somehow time got away from us…and since we
were all childless, they all stayed another night. We called it "The New Year’s
that Never Ended." I chuckled as I recalled that and decided heck, yes; I’d make
them for this year’s family party.
My second choice was bit of a no-brainer, although I had a Eureka (!) moment when I thought of it, knowing how right it was. You’ve heard me say “Food is Memory.” Well, today will be the first Christmas
without my oldest sister. There were
seven years between us and she married young, so while I was still hanging
around the house being less than helpful to my mother, she and her husband
would arrive on holidays bearing several food offerings. Her spinach cheese squares are the right
thing to bring today. She’ll be with us as
we celebrate.
Comfort food, indeed.
Water Chestnuts wrapped in Bacon
1 pound bacon
2 can whole water chestnuts
1/3 cup soy sauce
½ cup brown sugar
1 pinch cayenne pepper (optional)
Set the oven to 375.
Spray a sheet pan with cooking spray, and then cover with aluminum
foil. Spray a cooking rack and put it on
the pan. ** See note.
Slice the pound of bacon down the middle, so you have halved
each piece. Soak the water chestnuts in
the soy sauce for a few minutes. Mix the cayenne (if using) with the brown sugar. Lay a
half piece of bacon on a cutting board.
Sprinkle it with about a teaspoon full of brown sugar making sure to it
spread the sugar the length of the bacon. Place a water chestnut on one end of the
bacon, and roll the whole thing up. Skewer with a tooth pick and place on the prepared
baking rack. Repeat with the rest. Bake
until the bacon is crispy, approximately 20-25 minutes, checking regularly.
*Note: The brown sugar caramelizes and makes for very
difficult cleaning, so don’t skip this step.
If some of the brown sugar mixture does stick to your pan, then soak in
very hot water, it will melt off as you scrape.
Susan’s Spinach Cheese Squares
4 TBSP butter
3 eggs
1 cup flour
1 cup milk
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking powder
½ cup chopped onion
10 oz. sharp cheddar
2 packages chopped frozen spinach, water squeezed out
Heat oven to 350. Melt butter in 9x12” pan. In a
large bowl, beat eggs, add flour, milk salt, and baking powder. Mix well. Grate cheese; add to bowl with
onion and spinach. Spoon into pan. Sprinkle with salt. Bake at 350 for 35 minutes. Cut into two-inch squares. (These are fine to cook ahead. Reheat in the microwave.)
Wishing you all a joyful Christmas, filled with good food
and good cheer.
10 comments:
Sorry you won't be able to share it with your sister but she'd appreciate that you are carrying on her food tradition.
Merry Christmas, Liza.
These recipes sound delicious! Thanks for sharing. Enjoy your holidays!
Merry Christmas to you. Those cheese squares sound easy and delicious. Might give them a try for New Years.
food is memory - so glad your sister's recipe lives on. Keep the good memories - eat well and enjoy your Christmas. And spread what you know to the younger crew, too
It all sounds so good.
Thank you for sharing the recipes and the memories that went along with them. Merry Christmas to you and yours!
Hi Lisa - lovely recipes - and I hope the party was successful .. I'm sure that it was. I said I'd take Angels on Horseback for Christmas Eve and my brother's sister in law - said don't tell him - he asked us for those and we didn't know what he was talking about ... funny how the wheels turn.
I love the idea of the water chestnuts though ... and then the spinach and cheese squares ... delicious mix - cheers and have a very happy festive season - Hilary
Hi everyone - I meant prunes wrapped in bacon (not oysters) ... rich man's food now! The water chestnut idea could well have come about that way too .. happy holidays .. and cheers Hilary
I just ate but am now feeling hungry again....!!!
It's so hard to move on when the people we love aren't there. BUT, can't you just picture your sister hanging out with you while you make her favorite dish? I think the people we love who've passed know when we're missing them and thinking about them!
and a Merry Christmas to you Ms Liza. Fond memories and happy a future is wished upon you and all your family and friends...Glenn
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