Anytime anyone mentions that they made something out of their "food storage" I become a skeptic. (For any of you non-mormon readers -- let me explain -- our church has counciled its members to establish food storage to prepare against a time of need -- it is not a doomsday thing -- it is a principle of personal responsibility and self reliance if times ever got bad. For practical reasons like cost, storage issues, and the variability to make many things most people purchase and store the very basics, -- wheat, oats, rice, sugar, oil, salt, powdered milk. This has spawned a whole slew of well meaning, but lousy recipes that I suppose I would use if I ever were starving, but am grateful to not use the rest of the time)
Today, I was emailed 2 sites about frugal living and one of them (specifically one recipe on one of them) caught my eye.
First, it is for a milkshake. I LOVE icecream.
Second, it uses all items from your food storage.
Third, it uses some pretty cool science.
So we tried it and IT IS AMAZING. If we are ever starving, I will make these milkshakes for breakfast, lunch and dinner --
Here is the link to the original post http://www.hillbillyhousewife.com/magicmilkshakes.htm
And here it is
1-1/2 to 2 cups ice water (I used 1 1/2 cups)
1-1/2 cups nonfat dry milk powder
2/3 cup sugar
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 to 1-1/2 trays of ice cubes, as much as you can spare (I added a bunch and then added more as it was blending to make it as thick as I wanted it)
2 tablespoons corn oil (I used canola as that was all I had)
plus a 5-second squirt of non-stick spray for emulsification purposes
Place all of the ingredients into the blender, including the oil and the non-stick spray. Use less water for thicker milk shakes and more water for shakes that are easy on your blender motor. The blender should be about 3/4's full. Place the lid on. Process for a full 2 minutes. Pour into cups and serve. This made 5 big milkshakes for my family and EVERYONE loved them!
In short -- the cool science is that this essentially makes icecream in your blender while replacing the the dairy fats with vegetable oil and the non-stick spray provides the stabilizer so that the water and oil don't separate.
You will really have to try it to believe it -- It tastes just like the smoothies from Wendy's. You will want to click on the link and read all the why's and hows and the rant about following the recipe exactly. (like if you don't do the cooking spray -- the water and oil will separate and instead of creamy you will get greasy!)
So call the kids, conduct your own science experiment and enjoy the nice cool milkshake today!
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Sunday, January 18, 2009
The rest of the cupcakes
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Puppy dog cupcakes
I got a new cookbook for Christmas that I love -- "Hello Cupcake." When Catherine saw all the different types of dog and cat cupcakes in the book, she immediately requested them for her birthday. So in case you are wondering what I am doing tonight . . . Now you know.
Hopefully soon, I will have cats to post as well!
Monday, December 1, 2008
Thanksgiving 2008 Menu
We had a wonderful meal! It was a little tricky getting it ready since we all went to the parade in the morning and only returned home around 1:30. We ate at 5:30.
Turkey (a small 13 pound one so it would cook in 3 hours)
Dressing (not stuffed in, since that would slow down the cooking time of the bird)
Lion House Rolls (which I made ahead of time and froze right after shaping-- all I had to do was set them out to rise and bake!)
Green Bean Casserole (since my sister Carrie was here)
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Frog Eye Salad
Cranberry Sauce
Lingonberry Jam (from IKEA -- since Trent served a mission in Sweden, he loves the stuff)
Homemade strawberry jam and butter for the rolls
It wasn't the hugest of meals, but in a limited amount of time it was all we could do. On Sunday we had Thanksgiving round 2.
Ham
Rice Pilaf
Roasted asparagus
Sweet Potatoes
Rolls, jam and butter
It was kind of nice to spread some of the traditional foods out over 2 bigs meals rather than all at once.
Friday, November 21, 2008
The trouble with decorating . . . SOLVED
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Mini Meatloaf
This recipe is so easy and so quick and so tasty and so healthy.

- 1 lb ground beef
- 1 box chicken stuffing mix (I usually use the store brand because it is cheaper and in this recipe it doesn't matter how fluffy the mix gets)
Put your hands inside plastic sandwich baggies and knead until well combined. Shape into small balls that will fit into a muffin pan. (this makes 12).
Bake at 350 for 20 - 30 minutes. They are crispy on the outside and moist in the middle. We each eat about 2 of them (which is only 2.66 ounces of meat) so if you are looking for portion control, this is perfect and filling. If you splurge and eat 4 of them you are looking at only 5.32 ounces -- still smaller than many burgers and most steaks. I usually serve them with baked potatoes or rice pilaf and brocolli (and of course ketchup for the kiddos).
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Fondant cake decorating class
I love the look of fondant, but I hate the taste. I took a class at church this week to learn how to do it. It was fun I don't think it is very hard -- It is just time consuming. That is probably why the class was so fun. Someone bought all the supplies, made all the cakes, fillings, frostings, and fondants -- colored them all, placed them in decorating bags with the right tips -- all we had to do was decorate.
This is the "inspiration" photo.
Here is my version. Now the biggest difference is obviously the cake size -- the inspiration looks to be like 3 layers of 6 in cake rounds and mine was 2 layers of 10 inch. Also we did not have the little white dots on the roses, but all in all I thought it was pretty close. . . too bad it still tastes like fondant.
This is the "inspiration" photo.
Here is my version. Now the biggest difference is obviously the cake size -- the inspiration looks to be like 3 layers of 6 in cake rounds and mine was 2 layers of 10 inch. Also we did not have the little white dots on the roses, but all in all I thought it was pretty close. . . too bad it still tastes like fondant.
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