Friday Favorites

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cooking This week’s Friday Favorites is a “recipe” with a comic twist! Hope it makes you smile! 🙂

Almost the Recipe

I didn’t have potatoes,
so I substituted rice.
Didn’t have paprika,
so I used another spice.

I didn’t have tomato sauce,
so I used tomato paste.
A whole can, not a half can,
I don’t believe in waste.

My friend gave me the recipe;
she said you couldn’t beat it.
There must be something wrong with her,
I couldn’t even eat it.

~ Author: Unknown

Thanks so much to Carol for the cooking smiley!!!

Have a relaxing weekend, everyone! See you Monday with the new questions!

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Swedish Cinnamon Cookies Recipe

Monday greetings!

My sister, Nancy, has sent in another of her favorite recipes. This one is for easy-to-make cinnamon cookies.

Her photo has me wishing I had a couple of them right now – with a nice hot cup of tea . . .

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Swedish Cinnamon Cookies

1 cup margarine or butter
1 cup sugar
1 TBSP molasses
1 tsp baking soda
1 egg yolk
2 cups flour
1 TBSP cinnamon
Sugar to coat cookies b4 baking

Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy.

Add the molasses and mix well.

In a small bowl, dissolve the baking soda in the egg yolk, and stir into creamed mixture.

Add the flour and cinnamon and mix well.

Roll the dough into small balls and drop (5 or 6 of them at a time) into a bowl of sugar.

Shake them around to coat and place on a cookie sheet.

Bake at 350 degrees for 12 minutes.

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Thanks again, Sis 🙂

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Crazy For Cake!

I baked an old favorite on Saturday. My Mum always made this cake when I was a kid. We grew up on it. Come to think of it, she made all kinds of cakes – all the time. That might not sound particularly amazing until I tell you that she had six kids, including a set of twins. You should have seen her camped out at the stove, making grilled cheese sandwiches or pancakes for all of us “starving Romans” (as she called us). Each day, we used to come home from school to have our lunch, and I swear there were times when she was at the stove continuously cooking and handing out plates of food from the time we arrived until we returned to school for the afternoon session!

Raisin Spice Cake

Raisin Spice Cake

But, as I was saying, on Saturday I made a double batch of this recipe that was such a staple in Mum’s kitchen. Known as “Depression Cake”, it became popular during the 1930’s when eggs, butter and milk were expensive and often difficult to obtain. This cake had none of those ingredients. It’s made with raisins and spice and is not only delicious, but you’ll adore the fringe benefit of aroma-therapy while it’s cooking – the entire house will be full of wonderful fragrance!

Here’s the recipe. No frosting is needed and it’s just the thing to have with your tea or coffee!

RAISIN SPICE CAKE ( or “Depression Cake”)

Boil together for 5 minutes:
1 cup water
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter (Lard in the old days.)
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. cloves
1 cup raisins

When cool, add 2 cups of flour sifted with 1 tsp. baking soda and 1/2 tsp. salt.

Mix thoroughly and spread into an 8″ round baking pan.

Bake at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.