Wednesday, November 30, 2011

My Mom, Will and the Egg

Sometimes as you grow older you learn things about your parents that never quite fit into your perception of who they are.  One of my stories involves my Mom, Will and an egg.

Will, 6, and Jenny, 4, had spent some time on the farm with Grandma one summer. A few days after they returned, I was stirring up some cookies in the kitchen. They were intently watching (and waiting to slick the dish) until I got to the point of cracking the eggs. They asked excitedly if they could crack the eggs, assuring me that Grandma had let them when they were staying with her.

Now I have to insert here that I didn’t grow up getting to crack eggs for my mother when she was cooking. I’m not sure whether it was because it was easier to do it herself or whether it had to do with not making messes, but either way, I didn’t “help” when my mom baked.  So, when they assured me that Grandma had let them do that, I relented and gave Will the first egg to crack and a bowl to crack it in. I expected that he would crack the egg against the bowl. But no, he took the egg and immediately cracked it against his forehead!!

I was shocked! What, I asked him, was he doing???

That’s how Grandma showed him to do it, he said hesitantly, clearly not having gotten the positive response he expected from me. Jenny backed up his story. They seemed to be telling the truth. Was my mother going crazy? What on earth had happened?

I went straight to the phone, I didn’t even finish stirring up the cookies, and called my mother. When I told her what had just happened, she laughed and assured me that she had indeed taught him to crack eggs on his forehead.

Was she going crazy? I asked, pointing out that she never let me crack eggs, let alone on my forehead.  Of course not, she answered. Her grandmother had taught her to crack eggs on her forehead, so she was passing it along to her grandchildren.

This event will forever remain one of the great mysteries of life for me.  I’m not sure I will ever reconcile it with my perception of my mother. The one thing I did learn from it was that as a grandparent I could teach my grandchildren a lot of things that I would never have taught my children. Pursuant to that, I taught my grandchildren to crack eggs. Not on their foreheads, just on the dish.  And that brings me to the sequel to the story about my Mom, Will and the Egg.

My grandson Tony liked to watch me doing things in the kitchen and, remembering the lesson of my Mom and Will and the Egg, I taught him to crack eggs into a dish when he was 3 or 4. He did a great job and I gave him lots of praise about how good an egg cracker he was. He went home and the next time Sara was cooking with eggs, Tony asked to crack them for her. She declined his offer and he started crying, saying “But Grandma says I’m a good cwacker!”  She called me and I said, yes, I let him crack eggs.  

The cycle continues.

- Mary Bryan  
daughter of Hollis and Joy Miller 


Grandma Spratt's Everyday Cookies

Joy Miller's handwriting. Grandma Spratt's recipe.

Ingredients:
2 cups butter
3 cups sugar
4 eggs
1 tbsp sour milk
2 tsp soda
_  ________________  _


Neoma Ridlen's Peanut Cookies
Joy Miller's handwriting, Neoma Ridlen's recipe
Ingredients: 
2 cups brown sugar
1 cup shortening
1 cup crushed salted peanuts
2 eggs
2 cups flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 cup oatmeal
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 tsp baking soda

Mix all ingredients together.

Drop cookies (about walnut-sized balls) onto a cookie sheet

Bake at 350 degrees until golden brown around bottom edges.

_  ________________  _


 Mama's Cookies

Joy Miller's handwriting and sugar cookie recipe, Margret Ridlen's cookie recipe

Ingredients:
2 cups brown sugar (1/2 could be white)
1/2 cup lard
3 eggs beaten
1 cup thick sour cream
1 tbsp soda or 1/2 tsp soda and 1/2 tsp baking powder or 1/2 tsp cream of tarter
3 cups flour
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp cinnamon (optional)
raisins and or nuts (optional)

Cream sugar, lard.

Add beaten eggs.

Add soda to sour cream then add to sugar mixture.

Sift flour, cinnamon, and baking powder/cream of tarter.

Add raisins, nuts, and vanilla.

Drop walnut-sized cookie balls onto a greased cookie sheet.

Bake at 350  degrees.

_  ___  _

Joy's Sugar Cookies

Ingredients: 
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter 
1 egg beaten
2/3 cup sweet milk

Cream sugar and butter together.

Add beaten egg.

Sift soda, baking powder, flour, and salt.

Add flavoring and enough flour to make a soft dough.

Wrap dough in plastic wrap and chill.

Roll out dough and cut shapes or make balls and flatten.

Bake at 350 degrees until edges just start to brown.   


Monday, November 28, 2011

Neoma Ridlen's Salad Dressing

Remember Time before bottled salad dressing?  Ahh, maybe not Smile ...anyway, here’s a recipe from my mother.
 
- Mason Ridlen
son of Ben and Neoma Ridlen 
 
 
MOM RIDLEN’S SALAD DRESSING
 
Ingredients:
1  cup vinegar
1  cup water
1  cup sugar
4  level tablespoons cornstarch
4  eggs
1  cup Half & Half
1/2 teaspoon salt
 
Combine the vinegar and water in saucepan and bring to boil.
 
Add the sugar, cornstarch, eggs, half and half, and salt to the pan all at once (so it won’t curdle).
 
Mix with beater, cook until thick.
 
Note: Sometimes when stored in the refrigerator, this will separate.  If this occurs, simply beat well before using.
 
 

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Oyster Stew


While I was growing up it was the custom in my family to cook oyster stew to celebrate after we finished picking corn. In those days corn was picked in the ear and stored in corn cribs. We typically finished picking corn late in November, so fresh oysters were in season. Oyster stew was a special treat because fresh oysters were rather expensive then, just as they are today. My mother sometimes told about inviting my father to dinner while they were courting and serving oyster stew as a special treat. Only later did he admit that he didn’t like oysters. However, his taste changed, and he developed a liking for oyster stew. After Shirley and I were married we continued the tradition of celebrating the end of my parent’s corn harvest with oyster stew.

I don’t know what recipe Mother used for oyster stew, but this is the recipe that we use. It is a modified version of the recipe in Betty Crocker’s Good and Easy Cook Book, first edition, seventh printing.

     OYSTER STEW 
2 quarts whole milk
1 pint half and half or 1 cup cream
1 quart fresh oysters (with oyster liquid)
½ cup butter (not margarine)
2-3 teaspoons salt
2-3 dashes each of pepper and cayenne
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce

Heat the milk and half and half to boiling (do not scorch). Heat oysters, butter, and seasonings until edges of oysters curl. Pour into hot milk. It can be served immediately, but the flavor improves if it is simmered for a while. It is even better when warmed up the next day.

It is best to use Eastern oysters. Use small Western oysters only if Eastern oysters are not available. Smaller oysters are better than large ones. Serve with round oyster crackers. Avoid so-called oyster crackers with straight sides.  If your budget is robust, you can use 1 ½ quarts of oysters or just use a pint if cost is an issue.

-Max J. Miller
Son of Hollis and Joy Miller.

Joy's Oyster Stew

Mary Bryan's handwriting. Dictated by Joy Miller
Ingredients:
oysters
milk
salt
pepper
butter 

Put oysters in a pan and boil in own juices until the edges of the oysters curl or add oysters directly to milk and heat.

Season with salt, pepper, and butter.


Saturday, October 1, 2011

Baking Powder Biscuits

For as long as I can remember my mom has always used the same recipe for her baking powder biscuits. I had always thought that it was a family recipe handed down from mother to daughter over the years, but no. It actually came from a very unexpected origin. 

The other day my mom was making biscuits so thinking that it would be a cool story for my blog I asked her whose recipe it was. She stopped what she was doing, turned, looked at me and laughed. She said, “Well, its not a family recipe... I use the recipe off my Tupperware dough mat. (she then laughs) If I ever lose that mat I won’t know how to make them!” All I could do was shake my head and laugh. I then asked her where and when she got the dough mat, because she has had it for as long as I can remember. She thought about it for a minute and then decided it must have been a wedding shower present... probably from her mom, but she wasn’t sure. 

So there you have it, all along I thought that it was a family recipe passed down through the generations and as it turns out, it was! Just not quite in the way I had expected!!  =)

- Jennifer Figgins
Daughter of Jesse Figgins and Mary Bryan


Baking Powder Biscuits

From the infamous Tupperware dough mat!

Ingredients: 
2 cups sifted all purpose flour
1 Tbsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 cup shortening
3/4 cup milk

Wisk the dry ingredients together.

Cut in the shortening.

Slowly add the milk into mixture forming a loose dough.

Do not over work the dough. 

On a lightly floured surface flatten out the dough until it is about an inch thick.

Cut out biscuit rounds and place onto a cookie sheet.

Bake in a 450 degree oven until biscuits are light golden brown on top. 

Yield: 12 High Biscuits (its actually about 9 one inch high biscuits)


Note from Mom: "sometimes I add some sugar.... 1/4 cup... ehh... well maybe a couple tablespoons... or what ever you feel like! (laughs) I usually just take the sugar dispenser and pour some in! (laughs some more) Just depends on what I'm making them for." 

I'm telling you, the laughter never 
ends with this one!  =)

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Egg Butter

This is the story of a special kindness that my mother (Joy Miller), probably in her late 60s, did for her brother, who was just slightly younger. 
 
One day when I was home for the Christmas holidays my mother made up a small batch of Egg Butter. Now we had never had Egg Butter and she wasn't offering us any that day either. She put the entire batch in a jar and took it as a gift to Uncle Maynard. She said their mother (Margaret Ridlen) had made Egg Butter for them when they were children and she remembered it fondly and knew Uncle Maynard would too. It was a gift of remembrance, of intimate family connection, and it touched me then and does so still.

- Mary Bryan
daughter of Hollis and Joy Miller

Egg Butter

Joy Miller's handwriting. Margaret Ridlen's recipe.

Ingredients: 
1 cup sorghum (boil)
3 or 4 eggs 
shake of cinnamon

Beat eggs until they get real light.

In a saucepan bring sorghum to a boil.

Stir eggs into boiling sorghum. 

Set on stove and boil stirring constantly until thick.

To finish add a sprinkle of cinnamon.



Thursday, September 1, 2011

Spicy Tomato Soup

Once, when my mother was in the hospital, my father, brother, and I were batching and we had to prepare a meal. I think it was a noon meal. We all liked the tomato soup that my mother made for us, so we decided to make tomato soup. The recipe for Mother’s tomato soup was in one of her cookbooks. We found the recipe and had no problem following it until it called for 2 or 3 whole cloves. We looked through the spice shelf, but we found no whole cloves. We did find a container of ground cloves. I remember that we looked at each other and wondered how big a clove might be. The premise was that if we knew how big a clove was, we could substitute a suitable amount of ground cloves. We didn’t really know, but took a guess and put in a teaspoon or two of ground cloves. We heated the soup and dished it up. When we took our first spoonful, we quickly realized that it had way, way too many cloves! It was awful! We couldn’t eat it. But we were hungry and we didn’t want to waste a pot of soup. So we decided that if we doubled the recipe without adding more cloves, it might be saved. We went to the basement and got another big jar of canned tomatoes and doubled the recipe. That helped, but it was still pretty awful! I think we might have eaten a little bit of it, but in the end we had to throw it out. I still don’t care much for the taste of cloves.

As yet, I haven’t found the recipe, so I can’t share it. The cookbook that has the recipe was a hard bound cookbook that I remember as having a dull blue cover. It is still around somewhere because after Mother died, we divided up her cookbooks, and it either went to Maurice, Mary, or me. When we locate it, we can scan the recipe and add it to this story.

This fiasco happened sometime in the mid to late 1940’s when I was maybe 8 years old, but I still think about it whenever the subject of tomato soup comes up. 

- Max Miller
son of Hollis and Joy Miller

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Brodie’s Favorite “Green Stuff”

To explain how this came about I first have to tell you another story. When Joel first moved to Iowa he went through a slight bit of culture shock. One of the things that perplexed him the most was our (Iowans) obsession with everything Jell-O. Apparently they don’t eat a lot of Jell-O in Illinois. As a result Joel received a few Jell-O cookbooks to indoctrinate him into our culture. He laughed and the cookbooks were set aside. A while back I decided that I would work my way through the different Jell-O recipes in his cookbooks to give him a sampling of what he has been missing out on all these years.

My idea was to make a new Jell-O dish every time we got together for something. On one of those occasions I had planned to make the Watergate Salad recipe. I don’t remember the exact circumstances, but for some reason Brodie was having a really rough day so I decided to distract him. It was a pretty simple recipe so I had Brodie make the first “Green Stuff.” It worked so well that the other kids got upset that they didn’t get to make a salad! LOL Go figure. You can’t go wrong with cool whip and mini marshmallows. It will win over any kid's heart!

Needless to say I haven’t gotten too many of the Jell-O recipes tried yet. Every time we have a get together Brodie requests that “Green Stuff, you know the kind with the tiny marshmallows!" LOL He gets really bummed if I don’t make it, so my distraction for Brodie has now become a family favorite and is made for most occasions!

- Jennifer Figgins
daughter of Jesse Figgins and Mary Bryan


Watergate Salad

Ingredients:
1 pakage (4-serving size) Jell-O Pistachio Instant Pudding & Pie Filling
1 can (20 ounces) crushed pineapple, in juice, undrained
1 cup miniature marshmallows
1/2 cup chopped pecans 
1 1/2 cups (1/2  of 8 ounce tub) thawed whipped topping

Mix dry pudding mix, pineapple, marshmallows and pecans in large bowl until well blended.

Add whipped topping.

Stir gently until well blended. Cover.

Refrigerate 1 hour until ready to serve.

Jazz It Up: Serve this treat in small individual dessert dishes garnished with a maraschino cherry. 

Serves: 8 (1/2 cup servings)


Let the Fun Begin! 

Brodie starts by stirring the pineapple and pudding together.
Stirring is serious stuff!
Notice Drew in the background keeping a watchful eye.. he's waiting for his turn and the mini marshmallows! =)

Finally it's my turn! Brodie has already picked out his tasting spoon and is trying to be patient!


Silence is all the approval you need from these two!!

Have a great JELL-O filled summer! 

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Joy to the Rescue!

I remember a day when my mother (Alberta Kennedy) was cooking dinner for the farmers who had been helping my dad (George Kennedy). The gravy was not thickening and my mother was getting very nervous and upset. Joy calmly walked to the cupboard and got the cornstarch and made a thickening. The gravy thickened and was delicious and she calmed my mother down. I remember that many times when I am making gravy.

- Phyllis Kennedy Bishop
daughter of Alberta and George Kennedy 
(Friends of Joy and Hollis Miller and Neoma and Ben Ridlen) 


Joy Miller's Gravy Method

Ingredients:
Meat Drippings
Splash of Cream or Milk (add more until desired richness is met)
Cornstarch (for clear gravy) or Flour (for opaque gravy)
Water

To make the thickening agent incorporate the cornstarch/flour into the water at a ratio of 1.5 parts cornstarch/flour to 1 part water. This will be used later.

Heat the meat drippings in a cast iron skillet over medium heat. 

Add the cream to the meat drippings and stir constantly with a wisk.

Bring the mixture to a low boil.

Be sure to continue stirring to prevent burning.

Once it starts to boil you can start to add the thickening mixture. 

Add a little bit of the thickening mixture in at a time and stir constantly to prevent lumps. 

Add the thickening mixture in as needed until the desired consistency of the gravy is met.

Bring the mixture back to a low boil and continue to stir until done. 

When the gravy is done you will see the surface change from a dull sheen to a satiny shine. 

Remove from heat and enjoy!


Thanks for the great story Phyllis!

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Favorite Grandma Joy Recipes

Grandma Joy holding Marcia with Fluffy by her side (Sept. 1962)
My sister Tammy had family members write up recipes for a cookbook shower present when I got married. These are two of my favorite recipes that Grandma Joy put in that book:

The Banana Salad is a long time favorite. Don't miss my added note at the bottom. This is one of those secret recipes within a recipe. Grandma wrote up the original recipe but that's not the way she made it. I always loved it when Grandma or Aunt Marie brought it to a summer family picnic. We often met once or twice a summer in between our house and the farms to eat, play softball, and sometimes exchanged kids. Donna and Tammy would spend two weeks together, one at our house and one in SW Iowa. Kathy and I would do the same at the other location.

I always like Grandma's No Bake Cookies and even did a 4-H demonstration making them. I use the peanut butter instead of adding nuts.

- Marcia Chadly
daughter of Max and Shirley Miller 


Banana Salad 
Joy Miller's handwriting; Marcia Chadly's handwritten note at bottom

Ingredients:
2 cups milk
1/2 cup sugar
2 heaping tbsp flour
2 egg yolks
1 tbsp vinegar
1/2 dozen bananas sliced
1/4 to 1/2 cup (Spanish) salted peanuts

Put 1 1/2 cups milk in a sauce pan. 

Heat until bubbles show being careful not to scorch.

Beat 2 egg yolks, add other 1/2 cup of milk, flour, sugar. Stir until smooth.

Add to hot milk and cook until it thickens. Cool and add:
            1 tbsp vinegar
            1/2 dozen bananas sliced
            1/4 to 1/2 cup (Spanish) salted peanuts
 

Serves: 10 or 12

*Marcia's Note: Grandma doesn't add the vinegar! 

*Joy Miller's Note: My Aunt (Martha Spratt Parker) always brought this to family dinners. The original recipe calls for 5 cents salted peanuts so it is over 60 years old. 

Monday, July 4, 2011

Fourth of July At Grandma Joy’s

The cousins left to right: Beth Herzberg, Will Figgins, Kevin Herzberg, Jennifer Figgins
There were so many things that I loved about going to Grandma’s house for the Fourth of July, but my all-time favorite part was seeing the whole family. Every year the whole family would get together for a picnic outside. The day’s events usually started off with the guys spending the better part of the afternoon in the garage taking turns cranking away on the ice cream maker. Every once in a while if we were lucky the guys would let one of us kids have a turn, but that never lasted very long!

While the guys were cranking away on the ice cream the ladies would be setting up a table outside in the yard, filling it with fix’ins for the wiener-dog roast and the most wonderful side salads. We would have coleslaw, potato salad, sometimes if you were lucky banana salad, deviled eggs, celery sticks, carrot sticks, and it wouldn’t be complete without a variety of Jello salads! Yumm! Not to mention an array of delicious desserts!

The kids always had the job of gathering up sticks for the fire and readying the roasting sticks. When we had enough sticks stacked up by the old willow tree the guys would light the fire. I always thought that the best part of the wiener-dog roast was that you got to pick your own stick. I didn’t even have to share it! It was so cool! It was also the one time that you were allowed to play with your food. It’s not everyday that you get to stab a hotdog with a stick and swing it over a fire!

Marie, Mary, Marlin, and Max roasting hotdogs (1966)

After we successfully burned all of the hotdogs and stuffed ourselves to the gills it was marshmallow time! Stuffed or otherwise there is always room for s’mores, they just smoosh and melt into the cracks! Donna was always in charge of supervising the s’more making, after all she is the expert marshmallow burner. Still to this day I have never seen a blacker marshmallow than hers! I remember asking her one year why she always burned them to a fluffy crisp and she replied it was the only way they were good, and besides that how else did I think she kept her hair so dark and curly!?! You know after all it was the black coffee that shrunk her… she used to be over 6’ tall… and it was the burnt marshmallows that turned her hair black and curly! LOL


Barb roasting marshmallows. (1969?)

Then around dusk the guys would gather together at the end of the lane and assemble the fireworks show for the night. While they were getting ready the rest of us would set up lawn chairs and spread blankets at the top of the lane. While everyone waited us kids would put on a sparkler show. We would scroll our names through the air and spin around and around until we were too dizzy to stand! Mostly I think our show kept us busy and somewhat served as a bug deterrent …although, I don’t recall it ever working very well on the Junebugs. Nasty little critters!

Once the large fireworks were done we got to light our glow snakes. Oh, and just for the record if your much older cousins tell you it's okay to stomp the snakes when they are all done growing… don’t listen to them! Mom had a much different idea about that! She wasn’t too excited to find us covered head to toe in black soot! After the fireworks were said and done the party would move indoors for a night full of pinochle. Then to finish off the night, well before us kids went to bed, everyone would have a nice big bowl of homemade ice cream! Yumm!

- Jennifer Figgins
daughter of Jesse Figgins and Mary Bryan

Homemade Ice Cream (Uncooked Vanilla Ice Cream)

Now this isn't Grandma Joy's recipe, I'm still looking for it, but this year we used the following recipe and it turned out just delicious!

Ingredients:
5 pasteurized eggs
2 cups sugar
3 cups cream
3 tbsp vanilla
1/8 tsp salt
5 1/2-6 cups milk

Beat eggs until light and lemon-colored; gradually add sugar.

Continue adding cream, vanilla extract and salt; chill.

Pour mixture into the chilled container of a 1 gallon dasher type freezer.

Add milk, filling container two-thirds full; cover tightly.

Churn-freeze according to manufacturers directions.

Yield: 1 gallon

_  ________________  _
 


Apple Pie  (Mrs. Shellberg)
Recipes by Mrs. Shellberg, Joy Miller's handwriting.

Ingredients:
6 medium sized apples
1 1/2 cups sugar
3 tbsp flour
cinnamon & butter as desired
cream or milk

Mix 3/4 cup sugar and 1 1/2 tbsp in pie shell.

Place Sliced apples on top.

Mix the remaining flour and sugar together and sprinkle over apples

Drop butter and cinnamon on top of apples.

Cover with crust and brush crust with cream or milk before baking in 400 degree oven for 10 minutes then reduce heat to 350 degrees for 35 minutes.

_  ________________  _


Dutch Apple Pie  (Mrs. Shellberg)

Ingredients: 
6 medium sized sliced apples
3 tbsp flour
1 cup sugar
1 cup sour cream 
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1 1/2 tbsp sugar

Mix flour, sugar, and sour cream together.

Place apples in pie shell.

Pour sour cream mixture over apples.

Sprinkle remaining sugar and cinnamon on top.

Cover with crust and bake same as above Apple Pie recipe.

_  ________________  _



Here’s to a Happy 4th of July!

 

Friday, July 1, 2011

Friday Night Homemade Ice Cream & Cake

When I was growing up we spent every Friday night (it seemed like, anyway) with Jack and Gertrude Holmes and their family. One Friday Mom and Gertrude would clean our house and we'd have supper and make homemade ice cream and the big folks would play pinochle. The next week it was cleaning the other house and supper and ice cream and pinochle.

We kids all loved summer nights when the darkness was warm and lit up by fireflies. We would run around playing hide and seek while my Dad and Jack sat on the front step and used the flat side of an axe to smash big chunks of ice in a gunny sack. They broke the ice into small pieces perfect for packing around the round metal cylinder holding the creamy mixture that would become the yummy ice cream. They would turn the handle until the ice cream froze and then sometimes we got to lick the inside paddle while the ice cream was dished up for everyone to share.  There were always big pieces of chocolate cake to go with the ice cream.

Hollis Miller breaking ice with his axe
We always petitioned the adults to make chocolate ice cream, but they wouldn't. Leroy and I, being the oldest of the youngest four children, figured out that mixing chocolate cake in vanilla ice cream made a nice substitute for chocolate ice cream. It was working very well until the younger two kids started to imitate us and made some messes. We were banned from mixing cake and ice cream after that. Until we came up with the argument that sometimes the cake just fell into the ice cream and we were certainly willing to eat the result rather than throw it away. Again, that worked well until the younger two kids started to imitate us. <sigh>
 

- Mary Bryan
daughter of Hollis and Joy Miller 

Brownstone Front Cake

Recipe by Margaret Ridlen (Mama) in Joy Miller's handwriting

Ingredients: 
1 1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup lard
2 eggs
1 tsp soda
1 cup sour cream
2 heaping tbsp cocoa
1/2 cup boiling water
2 cups flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp vanilla 

Cream 1 1/2 cups sugar and 1/2 cup lard.

Add 2 eggs (unbeaten) to the creamed mixture and beat well.

In a separate bowl mix 1 tsp soda 1 cup sour cream .

Mix 2 heaping tablespoons cocoa with a 1/2 cup boiling water.

Add cocoa mixture to batter; then stir in 2 cups flour and 1 teaspoon salt.

Add 1 teaspoon vanilla and beat well.

Pour batter into an 8" x 11" pan and bake at 350 degrees for about 25-30 minutes. You can also divide the batter evenly between 2 or 3 round layer pans.

Once the cake is cool to the touch frost with cooked fudge frosting. 

 *Note from Joy Miller: I have never been able to make this cake successfully using an electric mixer.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Figgins Family Pizza Night

It's become a tradition for my family every Wednesday for dinner we have homemade pizza. Wednesday we have family night. I always love when my dad spins the pizza in the air it is sooo cool!

That is something that I will always remember.

- Tony Figgins
son of Will and Sara Figgins


No Rise Pizza Crust

Here is a super easy pizza dough recipe. The dough does not need to rise so it is a very quick recipe. 

Ingredients: 
1 Tbsp yeast
1 cup very warm water
1 tsp sugar
1 tsp salt
2 Tbsp olive oil
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 1/2 cup white flour

Mix the yeast, sugar, and water in a bowl and allow it to sit until the yeast starts to foam.

Add the salt, oil and flour (both wheat and white). Mix well.

Place the dough onto a lightly floured surface and knead until it becomes smooth. This will take about 3-4 minutes.

Allow the dough to rest for about 5-10 minutes.

Next press the dough onto a pizza pan or you can divide the dough into two equal portions for personal pan pizzas. We make ours into personal pan pizzas and move them onto our pizza stone. This dough will make about 2 small pizzas or one large pizza.

Add pizza sauce and toppings and pop them into the oven.

Bake at 425 degrees for about 10-15 minutes.

Enjoy! 


Brodie (in the back) and Drew add toppings to their personal pizzas
Jake (in the front) and Tony put the final touches on their pizzas! yumm!

- Thanks for the recipe Sara!