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Corn Flake Macaroons

Corn Flake Macaroons

As vintage month comes to end I thought I would adapt an old recipe I found in a Searchlight Recipe Book printed in 1944, sidenote: this book also contains several recipes for squirrel (perfect for wedding receptions). Corn flake macaroons just sounded olde tyme to me. Sure adding cereal to a dessert is pretty normal just ask Snap, Crackle or Pop. But corn flakes? They're one of the oldest types of cold cereal. Honestly I think they should be added to more recipes. It adds just enough of a crunch. 

Corn Flake Macaroons remind me a lot of rice crispy treats. They're both crispy and sweet, but these macaroons have a bit more depth to them, thanks to the coconut and chocolate. So if you're ready to step up your dessert game and impress everyone at the next family event. Let the kids make the rice crispy treats and make an adult dessert instead. 

Corn Flake Macaroons
corn flakes
almonds!
macaroons

Corn Flake Macaroons

  • 2 Egg Whites
  • 1 cup Sugar
  • 1/4 teaspoon Salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
  • 1 cup Coconut shredded 
  • 2 cups Corn Flakes
  • 1/2 cup Almonds sliced 
  • 1/2 cup Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips
  • 3 tablespoons Water
  1. Preheat the oven to 375°
  2. Beat the egg whites with an electric mixer until stiff peaks form. 
  3. Gradually beat the sugar and salt into the egg whites. 
  4. Fold in the vanilla extract, coconut, corn flakes, and almonds.
  5. Scoop with a teaspoon onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.
  6. Bake until the sides and the tops of the cookies are golden brown. 
  7. Boil 3 cups of water in a sauce pan. Place the chocolate chips and 3 tablespoons of water in a heatproof metal bowl over the saucepan. Continue stirring the chips until melted. Drizzle the chocolate over the cookies. 
  8. Try to eat all of them in one sitting
All photos by Katy Weaver!

corn flake macaroons

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Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole

Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole

It's week three of vintage month and it's about time I made a casserole. Tuna Casserole has alway been a weird dish, I mean hot tuna? You could not have made me eat this when I was younger, but the first time I tried tuna casserole I was shocked at how good it was! For a dish that has been reduced to pre-made mixes in the grocery store, tuna casserole can impress when made from scratch. It's surprisingly easy to make! I used pretzels to top mine because I always have to be a little different. Go ahead and make this easy to prepare meal, it's sort of healthy!

Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole
Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole
pretzels and cheese

Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole

  • 2 cans of premium Tuna
  • 1/2 cup of Frozen Peas
  • 2 cups of Egg Noodles
  • 1 1/2 cups Milk
  • 2 cups Chicken Broth
  • 1 Small Yellow Onion diced
  • 1 tablespoon Olive Oil
  • 3 tablespoons Flour
  • 8 Large Pretzels coarsely crushed
  • 1/4 cup Parmesan finely grated
  • Salt and Pepper
  1. Preheat oven to 400°.
  2. In a large sauce pan heat the olive oil and onion over medium high heat. Stirring on occasion until slightly colored. Add the flour and stir. Cook until the flour coating on the onion turns slightly brown. Some will have stuck to the bottom of the pan that's okay. 
  3. Deglaze the pan by adding the milk and chicken broth. Stir and bring to a boil.
  4. While you're waiting for the mixture to come to a boil start making the topping. Crush the pretzels with your fingers into a small bowl. Stir in the grated parmesan.
  5. Once the mixture has come to a boil add the tuna, peas, noodles, salt and pepper.
  6. Cook for about 7 minutes or until the noodles become soft.
  7. Scoop the noodles and stuff into the baking vessel of your choice. I chose to use ramekins cause it adds a bit of classy, and this way you don't end up eating the whole pan by yourself. Top with the pretzel parm mix and bake until the cheese has melted. I garnished mine with some pea shoots!
  8. Enjoy!
Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole

Photos by Katy Weaver

Pretzel Topped Tuna Casserole

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Pot Roast


It's week two of vintage month on Cooking with B.S.! And we're featuring the most the oldest recipe ever, cooked meat. There is something appealing about simplicity. Maybe it's having fewer dishes to clean up after the meal is cooked or perhaps it's when you don't muddle the meat with every spice under the sun its true flavor comes out. Or perhaps these vintage recipes remind us of a simpler time, a better time, a time before quinoa.


Pot Roast

  • 1 lbs. Beef Roast
  • 2 Carrots
  • 5 Celery Stalks
  • 1/2 Medium Yellow Onion
  • 3 Potatoes
  • Salt and Pepper
  1. Preheat the oven to 375°
  2. Coarsely chop all the vegetables except the potatoes. 
  3. Place the roast in a pan or in a "pot" and add a dash of salt and pepper. Place the chopped vegetables around the roast.  Add another dash of salt and pepper to everything in the pot. Put the lid on the pot and place the pot in the oven. 
  4. Bake for 15 minutes. Stir all the vegetables around and turn the roast over. Cook for another 15 minutes.
  5. Coarsely cut up the potatoes and add to the pot. Continue cooking for another 30 minutes.
  6. Slice and serve. 

Photos by Katy Weaver


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Classic Potato Salad

Classic Potato Salad

No this potato salad doesn't have anything weird or crazy in it. No I didn't use some insane method of cooking these regular ol' potatoes. This is straightforward potato salad, though it does identify as egg salad on a few documents. 

I know last week I said this blog doesn't pander to the Pinterest people and that I wanted to move the culinary arts forward. The best way to move forward is to look to the past. That's why all month long on Cooking with B.S. we're bringing you classic-vintage recipes! 

Yes I know potato salad isn't exactly a culinary tentpole, but it's an American classic! Just try having a family picnic without potato salad. It doesn't work! Uncle Frank just spends the whole day asking, "Where's the potato salad?" Then Aunt Sally chimes in, "Frank you shouldn't be eating that anyway. Cause of the cholesterol." Next thing you know their martial banter turns into a full blown food fight and your quinoa-kale salad is on the ground. Where it belongs! The dog won't even eat it. All while you're quietly drinking a beer in the corner and telling yourself that you're definitely doing your own thing for Thanksgiving.

So yeah. Don't let that happen and just make this potato salad. 

Potatoes
Mayo & Mustard
cooking

Classic Potato Salad

  • 6 Eggs hard boiled
  • 6 Potatoes peeled and cubed
  • 10 Olives minced
  • 1/2 cup Mayonnaise
  • 1/3 cup Classic Yellow Mustard
  • 1/4 cup Relish
  • 1 heaping tablespoon Horseradish
  • Dill optional (I used a sprig of dill as garnish) 
  1. Hard boil your eggs for 15 minutes, once cooked cool in the fridge while you prepare the rest.
  2. Place the peeled and cubed potatoes in a pot of boiling water with a bit of salt. Cook just long enough until the potatoes break apart with a fork. 
  3. In a small mixing bowl combine the mayo, mustard, olives, relish and horseradish.
  4. One your eggs have cooled a bit. Shell them and cut in half. Stir the yolks in to the mayo-mustard mixture. Mince the egg whites and place in a large mixing bowl. 
  5. Drain the potatoes, place in the large mixing bowl with the egg whites. Stir in all the other ingredients. Let cool and serve. Or you can just eat it out of the bowl with a large mixing spoon. Not that I have ever done that...

These eggcellent Photos by Katy Weaver!!

Potato Salad

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The Menu


This post is only slightly food based, so I'm sorry if your evening plans included food porn from my blog. If your evening plans do include sexy food images, then I don't want to know what happens in the privacy of your own home.




This post is more of a menu appreciation post. I found this old menu in some of my great aunt's stuff. There's just something about it that appeals to me. It's a combination of the typography, their use of space on the menu, and just the overall simplicity of the entire thing.


I'm guessing this menu is from the 50's or 60's, I'm sorry the carbon dating lab is closed on weekends and I didn't want to wait until I got the lab results in to publish this post. Also, there's a holiday this week and it just would have taken forever for them to mail me the results, so my guess is the best you're going to get for now.


The food on this menu though is definitely old fashioned. I mean "cold pork or beef," "hamburger steak," "breaded veal cutlets," and "hot beef sandwich"(which was NOT my nickname in high school). Also their specialty is potato doughnuts!? You never see that anywhere today.


When I open my restaurant I am going to take a page out of this menu, figuratively of course.


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