Categories
Holiday Cook-off

Ms. Lange’s Potato Salad

I am not a chef. In fact, I wouldn’t even qualify myself as a cook.

In a past article, I proposed that everyone should have a handful of basic recipes that they can rely on. As someone who breaks out in a cold sweat at the thought of following a recipe in a timely manner, I am one of those people who needs basic – and I mean basic – recipes. If I don’t read a recipe at least 15 times prior to cooking, something that should take 10 minutes will most definitely take an hour.

Ok so you get it, right? I’m not great at cooking.

I should be, though.

Most people develop their cooking skills from family, shadowing their parents and grandparents in the kitchen and cutting their teeth on recipes passed down through generations. My story wasn’t any different. I sat in the kitchen during every holiday and family gathering, watching my grandmother and all of my aunties cook the dishes that I now associate with comfort and affection. Dishes like Filé Gumbo and Pecan Pie and Crab Soup.

For as much as I witnessed all of this cooking and baking and memory-making, I should be a James Beard Award-Winning chef.

And I’m not exaggerating – my grandmother’s sister, who learned the same family recipes from the same matriarch, is a James Beard Award-Winning chef. That’s right, my aunt was such an influential chef, she inspired the creation of a Disney Princess. She was Tiana. 

Basically, I’m saying I have no excuse. I should be able to do all of this, but for whatever reason, I’ve never felt as comfortable in the kitchen as I would like to. This is why my grandmother’s (or more accurately, my great-grandmother’s) potato salad recipe is so important to me. 

I learned how to make this recipe for two reasons: because I hate every other potato salad I’ve ever tried and because it’s so incredibly simple. It’s simple, but still delicious and makes me feel close to my family every time I make it and share it with others. Also, it makes the others that I share it with think I can cook. Next time you have a potluck or dinner party, whip up a batch of this potato salad and watch as your friends’ eyes light up. You can thank me later.

Ms. Lange’s Potato Salad

Ingredients: 

Serving Size 8

8 potatoes, peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes

8 hard-boiled eggs, peeled and diced

2 cups Mayonnaise

¼ cup Green onions, chopped 

¼ cup Parsley, chopped

Salt

Pepper

Step One: Peel the potatoes and cut them into 1-inch cubes. The general rule of thumb is to include one potato and one egg per serving. This recipe calls for eight, but if you’re only cooking for six people, use six potatoes and six eggs. Likewise, if you’re feeding an entire baseball team, maybe buy a whole bag of potatoes. You will most likely have leftovers, but it’s a good thing to keep in mind. Next, you’ll put the potatoes in a big pot, fill it with water about an inch higher than the potatoes, bring it to a boil and let them cook for about 15-20 minutes or until they are soft all the way through. Then drain the potatoes and let them cool. In the past, I’ve cooked the potatoes before I’ve cut them, but I’ve found that you get a more even cook if all the potatoes are cut to the same size. Besides, they call that game “Hot Potato” for a reason.

Step Two: Hard boil the eggs. I’ve read so many different instructions on how to hard boil eggs and I’m sure I do it a different way each time. I’ve done it on the stove, in an Instant Pot, I’ve even seen instructions on how to do it in the oven. It doesn’t matter much how you do it, but if you’re like me and always have to look it up, here you go: put the eggs in a pot, fill it with water about an inch higher than the eggs. Bring the water to a boil, then take it off the heat, cover it and let the pot sit for about 10 minutes. After that, put the eggs in a bowl of ice water and let them sit for another 10-15 minutes, or until they’re cool. When they’re cool enough to touch, peel them and dice them into sections about one centimeter wide. 

Step Three: Mix it all together! Stir the eggs and potatoes all together with the mayo, adding in the diced parsley and green onions as you go. If you’re not a fan of mayo you can use less. If you love it like I do, add in as much as you want! Season with salt and pepper to taste, let it chill out in the fridge for a bit, and you’re good to go!

Categories
Holiday Cook-off

Crazy Easy Cranberry Sauce

One thing to know about me; I don’t cook. When I do cook, it is in the most basic way possible. I eat at Chipotle 3 times a week, cooking is not my forte. However, I have always loved cranberry sauce. For as long as I could remember, I was one of the only people in my family who loved it, and I would demand it every year at Thanksgiving. This year I decided – Hey, it’s pretty simple! Could I really mess this up? Spoiler; it actually came out really well! Someone call Gordon Ramsay!

Crazy Easy Cranberry Sauce Recipe

If you somehow mess this up, maybe it’s not time for college yet!

Step 1: you will need whole cranberries, sugar, water and lime.

Step 2: Put one cup of water into a pot (I was later told by my mother that the cranberries are supposed to go first- but does that really matter?)

Step 3: Add in 3 cups of cranberries.

Step 4: Add one cup of sugar

Step 5: Stir! You’re going to alternate between stirring your sauce and covering the pot with a lid and letting it sit every few minutes. Make sure your heat isn’t too high, my sister said it should be on a “simmer” whatever that means. Continue this until your cause starts to get thicker.

Step 6: Add in some lime juice for some razzle dazzle, just before your sauce is almost done.

Step 7: Keep stirring until the berries have popped and you’re cause is looking thick. Pour it out into a bowl and you’re all done! Can be served hot, or you can let it cool down.

If you’re looking for a recipe with a little more kick to it, heres a great recipe for drunken cranberry sauce! https://www.thespeckledpalate.com/thanksgiving-food-2013-drunken-cranberry-sauce/

Want a gluten free holiday meal? Check out Jace’s Macaroni Surprise!

Categories
Holiday Cook-off

A little bit of Italy on the Thanksgiving Table

Lovingly shared by Sylvia Laabs

Nonna Tosca’s Florentine Stuffing

Thanksgiving meals have an impact on us all. It might be memories of having extended family sitting together to eat – or it might be memories of moving up from the “kids table” to the “big table”. I remember my first time moving up to the Big Table. While I was excited to move up, I was upset that my (favorite) cousin who was 4 years younger, and next-in-line, also moved up the same year I did! That’s not fair! But I digress.

Another fond memory of Thanksgiving meals was that my Nonna Tosca, a first generation Italian, always had spaghetti on the table. Maybe that’s why today, spaghetti and meat balls is one of my all-time comfort meals. Her family was from Lucca and Pontasserchio, located between Pisa and Florence. I always liked that we incorporated traditional Thanksgiving food with food from our family origins.

But the food that really stood out was her stuffing! It was seasoned with so much goodness; it wasn’t just moist, baked breadcrumbs. Every year there were spoonfuls on my plate, then turkey and stuffing sandwiches a few hours later, while Nonna would play Blackjack with me and my cousins. That’s how I learned to count so quickly in my head, well, at least multiples of 10 and 11. Nonna wasn’t made of lots of money, but she loved to go to Vegas to gamble, and Blackjack was her game. She took me to Vegas as my 21st birthday present, and that’s when I found out she didn’t know the betting strategies to get the best odds. I hated playing at the same table as her during that trip. But as a kid, playing Blackjack after Thanksgiving dinner with pennies, nickels, and dimes – it was the best after-dinner thing we could do with Nonna!

Ace and King of spades playing cards

One year, I went to my Nonna’s the day before Thanksgiving to help her prep food. I got to help make her Florentine stuffing. I told her I wanted the recipe so I could make it when I would host my own Thanksgiving meals in the future. She said she didn’t have a recipe, she just “knows what to do, like I was taught”. Fortunately, I had the foresight to grab a pen and paper. I had her put ingredients into a pan or bowl, then I’d take it out and measure it, and put it into another bowl so she could continue making her stuffing. I wrote down the entire recipe and it has become a treasured family recipe. For several years after my Nonna passed away, I’d get a call in early November from an Aunt or cousin, asking for Nonna’s stuffing recipe that no one else ever wrote down. But I had it… and it’s a staple on my Thanksgiving table now.

As a Christmas present, I’ve asked my family for a custom cutting board with the recipe etched on the board, like cutting boards found here. Let’s see if I get it this year!

Quality ingredients are key to a tasty stuffing. You can find the fresh vegetables to use in your stuffing at the local Channel Island Harbor Farmers Market.

Fresh veggies chopped and ready to add to the browned meat
browned meat with vegetables simmering
Spinach, eggs and parmesan cheese to add to chilled meat and veggie mix

Nonna Tosca’s Florentine Stuffing

  • 1 lb. ground beef
  • ¼ lb. pork sausage
  • 1 medium onion, chopped fine
  • 5 stalks celery, chopped fine
  • 2 cloves garlic, chopped fine
  • 2 carrots, grated fine
  • ½ C chopped parsley
  • 2 bunches fresh spinach (or 2 packs of frozen leaf spinach)
  • 3 T olive oil
  • 3 eggs beaten
  • 1 box of bread stuffing
  • 1 ¾ C parmesan cheese
  • 14 – 20 oz turkey/chicken broth
  1. Brown the meats in a little olive oil
  2. Add garlic and vegetables (except spinach) and let simmer for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally
  3. Put in a big bowl and let cool
  4. Add chopped spinach, beaten eggs and 1 C parmesan cheese
  5. Add bread stuffing and turkey/chicken broth to moisten mixture
  6. Put into baking dish (deep 9×13) so stuffing is about 2 inches thick
  7. Sprinkle remaining ¾ C Parmesan on top
  8. Bake covered at 325 for 40 minutes, then an additional 10 minutes uncovered
Tosca’s Florentine Stuffing

You can also check out other favorite recipes from my classmates https://vcsocial.biz/category/holiday-cook-off/

Mangia Mangia!

Categories
Holiday Cook-off

Grandma Fernanda’s Thanksgiving Stuffing Recipe

My great great grandmother Fernanda’s 125-year-old stuffing recipe is a dish you have to try at the Thanksgiving table. My grandma, mother, aunts, cousins, siblings, and I continue with my great great grandmother’s traditional stuffing recipe.  This stuffing recipe truly is one of a kind and it has never been shared with anyone outside of the family. Hope you enjoy it as much as we love it!

Ingredients

This recipe makes a large portion of stuffing

  • 3 boxes of  Mrs. Cubbison’s  Traditional Stuffing Seasoned Bread Crumbs- brown box
  • 3 boxes of  Mrs.  Cubbison’s  Cornbread Stuffing Bread Crumbs- yellow box
  • 3 pounds  of cooked lean hamburger meat with drippings
  • 3 pounds of cooked Farmer John ground  breakfast sausage meat- with drippings
  • 2 eggs- slightly mixed uncooked 
  • 3 cups of finely chopped celery
  • 1 1/4 cups of shredded/grated carrots
  • 1 cup of finely diced green onions
  • 4 cups of chicken broth
  • 1 can carnation evaporated milk
  • 1 teaspoon  garlic salt
  • 1 teaspoon pepper
  • 6 tablespoons of butter

Directions

  1. Begin with a very large mixing bowl
  2. Empty all of the 6 boxes of the traditional and cornbread stuffing into the large bowl
  3. Cook the hamburger meat and season with garlic salt and pepper. Break up hamburger meat to the small pieces [crumble pea size pieces} 
  4. In separate pan cook sausage, no seasoning, to pea sized pieces. It’s best to use a potato masher when cooking the hamburger meat and sausage. This helps to break it down to small pieces.
  5. Once the hamburger meat and sausage are cooked, pour them into the bowl with the drippings into the stuffing mix.
  6. Add chopped celery, diced green onions, and grated carrots. Mix well.
  7. Allow these ingredients to cool and the flavors of the meats to soak into the stuffing mix for about 10-15 minutes.
  8. Add UNCOOKED mixture/scramble eggs into stuffing mixture.
  9. Add 1 can Carnation evaporated milk into mixture. Make sure to shake can well before opening.
  10. Add 2 cups of  chicken broth then remaining broth a half a cup at a time
  11. Mix all ingredients well, its best to mix with your hands, it will look and feel like a meatloaf texture.
  12. It’s best to add the chicken broth a little at a time to make sure that your stuffing does not become too wet.  
  13. Once the stuffing is all mix up place in ziplock  bags or large bowl,  refrigerate until you’re ready to stuff your turkey.

Making your stuffing a day or two ahead allows the flavors to incorporate together.

You will also have plenty of stuffing to place in a large casserole bowl, place about   4 tablespoons of butter on top of uncooked stuffing. Cover the casserole bowl with foil and bake for 40 minutes @ 350 

To stuff turkey, take the cold stuffing, stuff your turkey at the neck and chest cavity add  1 tablespoon of butter on top of the stuffing mix before baking your turkey. The reason you add the butter on top of the stuffing it adds to the flavors and keeps it from drying up.

ALWAYS USE COLD STUFFING  FOR YOUR TURKEY

If you choose not to cook all of your stuffing, you can also freeze it and use it at a later time. To stuff a chicken, turkey, or danish hen.

If you don’t have all the ingredients listed above go check out Channel Islands Harbor Farmer’s Market Fall Season Favorites!

This recipe is not for the faint of heart. So, if you want to try an easier stuffing recipe check out Remi Cruz’s website that is linked below. https://www.cookingwithremi.com/turkey-cranberry-stuffing-meatballs

Categories
Holiday Cook-off

Classic Shaw Family Green Bean Casserole

A Shaw Family Thanksgiving staple

Hello, VcSocial fans I have for you today the one and only Shaw Family Green Bean Casserole the only cure for picky eaters, and your grandmother who can only consume warm soup as a meal. This traditional recipe has been passed down through my family for 17 years. It has been my constant craving from the start of November to Thanksgiving Day. I even enjoy heating up the leftovers in the microwave for my day after lunch. So without further ado, I bring you the recipe below.

Ingredients (Serves: 12-15) [Preheat oven to 400 degrees]

  • 1 1/2 Containers French’s Original Crispy Fried Onions
  • 2 Lbs. Fresh Green Beans Cut and Trimmed
  • 1 Lbs. Fresh Mushrooms Finely Chopped
  • 1/2 Teaspoon Fresh Ground Pepper
  • 2 Teaspoons Salt
  • 4 Cloves Garlic Minced
  • 2 Cups Chicken Broth
  • 1 Cup Cream
  • 1 Cup Milk
  • 4 Tbls Flour + 4 Tbls Butter [Rue]

Directions

  • Step 1: Blanche Green Beans in salted water for 7 minutes. [Drain, put aside, let cool]
  • Step 2: Saute mushrooms and garlic until cooked [set aside]
  • Step 3: Add butter and flour make light rue [Cook until it turns white] (DO NOT OVERCOOK!!!!)
  • Step 4: Add Cream, Milk, Stock, Mushroom Mix, salt & pepper
  • Step 5: Cook over low heat and simmer until sauce thickens (About 7 Mins)
  • Step 6: In a large bowl combine 1 container Crispy Onions, green beans, and mushroom soup mix. {Mix thouroughly}
  • Step 7: Pour Mixture into large Cassorole Dish
  • Step 8: Sprinkle remaining onions onto the top of the dish
  • Step 9: Cover, and place in oven for 15 Mins, Uncover and cook for 30 Mins or until bubbly
  • Step 10: Remove from oven and enjoy!

Thats how to make the Classic Shaw Family Green Bean Casserole so you to can enjoy these Good Eats! Because when your here your family.

Categories
Holiday Cook-off

Uncle Lonnie’s Rockin’ Guacamole

A chips and dip recipe that’s “So Good” from the hills of Kentucky to the beaches of Ventucky.

VC Social’s first ever “recipe-off” is on! It’s the final project for my Digital Media Marketing class and my entry is a recipe from my Uncle Lonnie, who is a conga playing hippie from the hills of Harlan County Kentucky. Yep, banjos congas and avocados go really well together!

Uncle Lonnie and I played in a band together once upon a time ago in the Valley of Los Angeles. He was “passsing through” and ended up living with us for a few months. We were glad to have him with us, and his gift in return was homemade trail mix cookies and…you guessed it…homemade Guacamole. He kept the beat as we jammed into the night, and he always had a fresh bowl of chips and guacamole.

“Everytime I make this guacamole I think of my uncle and all the good times we had…”

His recipe is, as you would imagine, an organic process loosely defined. For the sake of the event, I give you the best approximation of how to make Uncle Lonnie’s Rockin’ Guacamole. Feel free to improvise.

Ingredients
3-4 large ripe Avocados
1 lime 
1 large white onion
1 bunch of fresh cilantro
1 large tablespoon unground Cumin seed
1 jalapeno
1 dozen cherry tomatoes
Salt, pepper and Tajin



Directions
Cut the Avocados in half, take out the seed and spoon the contents into a mixing bowl.  Peel and coursely chop the onion.  Dice the Jalepeno,   Rinse, remove stems and coursely chop Cilantro. Coursely chop cherry tomatoes. Add ingredients to mixing bowl.  
Squeeze a small amount of lime juice on the cutting board and pour the unground cumin in the joice, Mix with knife until Cumin is wet.  Dice Cumin and add mixture to mixing bowl.  Squeeze the remaining lime juice into bowl and cooursely mix until all ingredients are unifom.  Do not over mix.  
Add salt, pepper and Tajin to taste.

Uncle Lonnie’s Rockin’ Guacamole recipe has two secrets…

Every time I make this guacamole I think of my uncle and all the good times we had during his stay with me. My old band mares and friends from that period of my life remember him because of the guacamole and his uplifting spirit. And now I’m sharing that spirit right here in Ventura, aka Ventucky. You gotta try it! Watch the video and just listen to my friends when they take a bite!

With Uncle Lonnie’s Rockin Guacamole, I came here to win. Just kidding, I came here to learn and have fun. And I brought some chips and salsa too.

In closing Uncle Lonnie’s Rockin’ Guacamole recipe has two secrets, one is to cook from the heart, and the other is to use freshly chopped cumin seed soaked in lime juice– And of course fresh ingredients. Now go! Play some music, eat, drink, be merry, and Rock On!

Get my classmate’s recipe entries here!

If you use this recipe, I’d love to hear from you! Share you story in the comments below.

Categories
Holiday Cook-off

Macaroni Surprise

AKA what I bring to family events so no one else has to worry about feeding me

So, imagine this. One day you’re sitting in class, and you’re kind of tired, because you’re always at least a little tired. Why wouldn’t you be? You’re a high school student, your commute is an hour and a half both ways minimum, and you barely have a functioning sleep schedule. It’s a normal day, until suddenly your insides feel like they want to be your outsides. A year of tests later and the doctors have discovered there’s a 95% chance you have celiac disease and 5% chance your body has spontaneously created a brand new illness. All the sudden, no gluten. Your body has determined some agriculture may have been a threat. No stuffing, no gravy, no store bought pie. You get first dibs on mashed potatoes, but that’s probably not the only thing you’re going to want out of Thanksgiving. So what do you do?

Well, you roll up your sleeves, you figure out how a stove works, and you start contributing to the family meals from a kitchen where you can make sure the knives won’t make you horribly sick. Through trial and error you make what I like to call Macaroni Surprise.

Not pictured: Butter. Very important. Pictured: My late start at cooking don’t judge me.

This was the first meal I really figured out how to make entirely on my own. I did not follow a cook book, instead using a bit of the knowledge I had already learned to create something completely original, and I’m still proud of it today. The portions for this recipe are also written to feed quite a bit of people or one person for several days.

The Bits

  • 2 chicken breasts
  • 1 quarter white onion, chopped
  • 2 boxes elbow macaroni, gluten free not required
  • 1/2 can of sweet peas
  • 1 1/2 cups of chopped mushroom
  • 1 tbsp. butter
  • 1 tbsp. salt
  • 1/2 tbsp. lemon pepper
  • 1 tbsp. parsley garlic powder
  • 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 1 tsp. paprika
  • (seasonings should be adjusted to taste)

The Sauce

  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 16 oz. Italian blend cheese
  • 4 oz. butter
  • 2 tbsp. cream cheese
  • 1 1/2 tsp finely chopped basil
  • 1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 tsp paprika
  • 1 tbsp. salt
  • 1/2 tbsp. black pepper
  • 1/4 tbsp. parsley garlic powder
  • 1 tsp onion powder
  1. Battle cry. This is the most important part.
  2. Set your water to boil. This will always take longer than you think it will. Continue with other steps until it boils and then throw in the pasta until al dente.
  3. In a pan, heat up your tbsp. of butter and use it to cover your entire pan.
  4. Throw in your onions. Cook them over medium high heat until they are translucent.
  5. Once your onions are ready, throw your chicken in there. Immediately cover with your seasonings and mix.
  6. Once your chicken has cooked on one side, mix in your chopped mushrooms and lower your heat to medium low, mixing occasionally.
  7. In a small pot, combine heavy cream, 4 oz. of butter, cream cheese, and seasonings. Put heat on low and bring to a simmer, stirring in the ingredients.
  8. Once your mixture has come to a simmer, add your cheese. Your cream cheese may not have melted it yet. That’s fine. It’s taking a gap year and we support it.
  9. Mix until cheese and cream cheese have completely melted in.
  10. Combine ingredients in a bowl with 1/2 can of peas and then stir until completely mix.
  11. Victory cry. This is the second most important part.

Interested in making some recipes of your own but don’t know where to start? Browse the Channel Islands Harbor Famers Market for some ideas! Just don’t go on an empty stomach, or else you’ll come back with an empty wallet.

Categories
Culture & Student Life

First Semester of Digital Content Marketing Comes to a Close

Many of you know that VC Social is the class brand for Digital Content Marketing (BUS V52) at Ventura College, and that I spent many hours getting this course approved by curriculum, not to mention the time it took to build the website on WordPress. This wouldn’t be possible without the amazing folks who work at Ventura College, and in particular, I’d like to thank my fellow Business Department faculty and my Division’s Dean.

As the first semester of this class comes to a close, I can’t help but reflect on what we accomplished and where our opportunities lie in the future.

To begin with, I couldn’t be more proud of the first ever cohort of students that went through this course together. Each week, they brought enthusiasm and creativity to the classroom. Whether it was a group or individual project, students were truly contributors and I’m excited with the direction that this brand is headed.

Did everything run perfectly? Is the website completely done? Are our social media profiles complete? Probably not. But then, I was never in a rush, so these questions are moot.

Was there collaboration amongst students? Did quality content get created? Was a standard set for future iterations of this course? Yes. Without a doubt. I even got a chance to do a food review of my own!

I will continue spending time on this project over the holiday season, in anticipation of the Spring 2022 section of Digital Content Marketing (BUS V52). To make sure that my time goes towards relevant actions, I’d like to pose the following questions to the current students:

  1. Was this class organized in an efficient way, or could it have been setup differently to optimize our efforts?
  2. What assignments had the most impact on learning? What assignments could have been improved?
  3. What are your educational/professional plans for after this class/program ends, and what have you learned in this class that you can take with you into the real world?
  4. Were there roles or activities that you were hoping to practice that you didn’t get a chance at? If so, what?
  5. Were there skills or lessons that you were hoping to learn about that didn’t get covered? If so, what?
  6. Finally, do you have any advice for future students that go through not only this course, but the Social Media Marketing program at Ventura College in general?
Categories
Culture & Student Life

Scavenger hunt? Count me in!

On November 23rd Jace McDonald and Alexander Shaw will be participating in the “One Team Scavenger Hunt,” created by Puzzling Adventures (TM). This is a cross between a scavenger hunt, adventure race, and self-guided tour around Ventura, a new and exciting way to learn more about the city, and all you need is a mobile device and an internet connection. Feel free to join us on the VC Social Instagram profile at 2pm November 23rd!

Categories
Culture & Student Life

It’s feeding time at Moorpark College’s Teaching Zoo!

Join us LIVE at 3:30pm on Sunday November 21st.

Go face-to-face with Ira the male African Lion, as the Exotic Animal & Training Management (EATM) students show how they feed, train and care for Ira!

Ira waiting for dinner

Then get a glimpse into how they feed and care for some of the other large carnivore animals at the America’s Teaching Zoo!

Bottle feeding a young tiger

America’s Teaching Zoo at Moorpark College was established in 1974, and is currently a five acre “classroom” for the Exotic Animal Training and Management Program. You can follow all your favorite animals on Instagram @americasteachingzoo.

Watch LIVE at @vcsocialbrand