Thursday, October 27, 2011

Cake Ghosts


Delicious Cake Ghosts (or Cake Balls, or whatever cake shape you choose)

Ingredients
1 cake mix - any flavor
Oil, eggs, butter, water - whatever your cake mix package requires to bake the cake
1 can icing - in a complimentary flavor to your cake (and not the whipped version - though if it's all you can find you can use 1 1/2 containers to make it work)
1 package vanilla almond bark (chocolate works for regular cake balls but wouldn't have the ghost effect needed for these).
1 T shortening or canola oil
miniature chocolate chips
white sanding sugar (optional)
cupcake liners (for serving ease, also optional)

Directions
Two days prior to serving, bake your cake mix according to package directions - adding food coloring if desired. Cool completely. Crumble cake in a large bowl. Stir in icing until completely incorporated. Using a small serving spoon (meaning the big ones in your silverware drawer you can't exactly eat with due to mouth size restrictions, but not the large ones you use for serving up Thanksgiving dinner), place some of the cake mixture in your left hand (unless you're left handed, then you may want to use your right). Roll like a snake so that the mixture compacts. Set the bottom of your snake in the palm of your hand so the base flattens, then using the fingers of your opposite hand, shape into a ghost. I liked how the indention of my fingers made the ghost shapes more draped like Pac-man ghosts. Place formed ghosts back in the pan you baked the cake in (I'm all about less dishes, folks). You'll likely need an extra container depending on the size of your ghosts because they don't stack as well as some other shapes do. Chill overnight.

When you are ready to cover and decorate...Melt almond bark in microwave according to package directions. I like to add the shortening or canola oil between an interval of melting. I found it makes the almond bark smoother and a little shinier too. Lay waxed paper on your work space while bark melts and get your ghosts/balls/whatever shape you molded from your refrigerator. If coating balls, use two forks or a spoon or whatever works best for you, to dip and completely cover, then set on waxed paper to harden. If you made ghosts (or I imagine this would be true with snowmen too), I found it easier to set them about an inch or so apart and then drizzle the melted bark over them with a spoon making sure they were totally covered. This allowed a thinner coating (stretching our bark) and created a neat draping effect that I thought worked well for the ghosts. Sprinkle with sanding sugar and use mini-chips to create the eyes and mouth. Alternately, you can also poke holes in your ghosts with a toothpick and insert the pointy side of the chip. My mom found this to work better since the bark seemed to melt the chocolate chip. Chill overnight. Place in cupcake liners to serve (unless it's family, then save a tree and just set them on a platter).

I hope you enjoy!

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Pork Roast & Cornmeal Dumplings

Pork Roast

pork roast
salt
pepper
flour
onion soup mix
1/2 medium onion

Season roast with salt and pepper, coat in flour. Sear on all sides. Place in slow cooker. Cover with onion soup mix and sliced onion. Cook until done. Remove from pan so that you can use the cooking liquid or broth for your cornmeal dumplings.

Cornmeal Dumplings

2 cups cornmeal
1/2 cup flour
1 T baking powder
medium onion (diced)
3 T chili powder
2 eggs
1 -2 cups broth from pork roast
1 t salt

Mix all ingredients together until consistency is slightly thicker than cornbread (cookie dough consistency works great).



Boil remaining broth on stovetop (may need to add water to have enough liquid depending on how much broth your roast produces). Shape dumplings using large spoon and place gently in boiling liquid. Stir gently as you do to keep them separated. At this point, you can cook until they are done (about 10 minutes or so) or move back to slow cooker to stay warm. Gravy will thicken and spices will blend the longer they cook.