Oven Cookbook Significant Article

by cooking on April 28, 2010

regional-cookbooks Oven Cookbook Significant Article

The art of dutch oven cooking has been dying for a long time. What my mother taught me was very little and I do remember great food from that cooking. I just wanted to bring back that comfortable feeling once again and to enjoy the basically hassle free cooking again. There is so much you can do with a dutch oven and I’m glad that they are still making them. I hope that there will be an increase in cooking the old fashioned, healthy way.


Help answer the question about Oven Cookbook
Blonde Cookbook......well it's funny, don't you think?
Blonde Cookbook It's fun to cook for Tom. Today I made angel food cake. The recipe said beat 12 eggs separately. The neighbors were nice enough to loan me some extra bowls. Tom wanted fruit salad for supper. The recipe said serve without dressing. So I didn't dress. What a surprise when Tom brought a friend home for supper A good day for rice. The recipe said wash thoroughly before steaming the rice. It seemed kind of silly but I took a bath anyway. I can't say it Oven Cookbook improved the rice any. Today Tom asked for salad again I tried a new recipe. It said prepare ingredients; lay on a bed of lettuce one hour before serving. Tom asked me why I was rolling around in the garden.. I found an easy recipe for cookies. It said put the ingredients in a bowl and beat it. There must have been something wrong with this recipe. When I got back, everything was the same as when I left. Tom did the shopping today and brought home a chicken. He asked me to dress it for Sunday. I don't have any clothes that fit it, and for some reason Tom keeps counting to ten. Tom's folks came to dinner. I wanted to serve roast but all I had was hamburger. Suddenly I had a flash of genius.. I put the hamburger in the oven and set the controls for roast. It still came out hamburger, much to my disappointment. GOOD NIGHT DEAR DIARY. This has been a very exciting week! I am eager for tomorrow to come so I can try out a new recipe on Tom. If I can talk Tom into buying a bigger oven, I would like to surprise him with a chocolate moose.

Ice Cream Cake Recipe - Cooling Off With Homemade Ice Cream Cake!

When the temperature is well pass 100 degrees, and your kids are sitting around complaining about the heat that is the best time to breakout the ice cream cake recipe. It is the cake recipe that keeps on giving. It will satisfy any sweet tooth while cooling down your body temperature. Your kids will not care which flavor combination you use, they will just be happy to have their cake and ice cream.

Making an ice cream cake sounds complicated, but an ice cream cake recipe can be easy to follow. The main ingredients are ice cream, cake batter, frosting and the toppings of your choice. You can use any flavor combination you choose, making your combination choices endless. As for utensils, you will need to make sure you have two cake pans, plastic wrap and foil.

Before you get started, you will need to put one of the cake pans in the freezer to chill. Once the cake pan has chilled you will want to line the pan with plastic wrap. This will keep the ice cream from sticking. Spread the ice cream evenly in the chilled cake pan. You will want to make sure you cover any air holes. Once that is complete, cover the pan with foil and place back in freezer.

Following the instructions on the outside of cake box, mix the cake batter. Place the mixed cake batter in the second Oven Cookbook cake pan. To keep the cake from sticking, do not forget to oil and flour the second cake pan. After the cake has finished cooking, leave it out to cool.

Once the cake has thoroughly cooled, you will be able to continue with your ice cream cake recipe. Take the ice cream cake pan from the freezer, and place it on a freeze proof platter, then place the cake on top of the ice cream. Once both cakes are aligned, you can start decorating the cake anyway you see fit. About this time, your kids will be begging for a piece. Once everyone has had a slice make sure to place the cake back in the freezer otherwise you will have a mess on your hands.

Dump Cake Recipes - A Dutch Oven Is Great For Baking Dump Cakes!

Every year about 20 of us go on an annual camping trip. However, this year I am bringing along a surprise for the group. I have recently purchased a new, Dutch oven for cooking an easy and different meal. A person can get tired of eating only hamburgers and hot dogs for a week. My oven comes with a complete, Dutch oven cookbook. As I was going through the cookbook, I found some truly fantastic recipes that I want to try. My favorite is the dump cake recipe. When I first read the name "dump" cake, I was not sure what I was expecting. I certainly was not expecting what the recipe produced.

The recipe was originally created to be cooked by kids. Therefore, making it lives up to its name. The dump cake recipe is quick and easy and can be made with two main ingredients in four easy steps.

Dump cake ingredients:
A can of your favorite fruit
A box of white cake mix
Butter (optional)
Non stick spray (optional)

Four easy steps:
Step 1 - open a can of fruit and empty it into the bottom of your Dutch oven. Do not forget to pack the can opener. You may also want to spray the oven with a non-stick spray. This will help keep the cake from sticking to the bottom of the pan.

Step 2 - poor the box of white cake mix evenly over the fruit. If you desire, you can place slices of butter of top of the cake mix.

Step 3 - place your Dutch oven over the open coals and place some coals on top of the oven.

Step 4 - bake until the cake is golden brown and crust is formed around the edges.

Using a Dutch oven to cook your meals over an open fire takes some skill. You need to understand how and when adding and removing coals will affect the dish that you are cooking. You will want to practice using the oven to make sure you get the feel of how it handles temperature changes. Especially, when making the dump cake recipe. Burning the bottom will ruin the taste. That is the last thing you want while you are camping out.


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{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }

McNeish April 28, 2010 at 11:07 am

I recently purchased my first cast iron, enamel-covered Dutch oven and wasn’t sure what to do with it. This is a great book on the basics and beyond. Very helpful! I had no idea this pot is so versatile!

Jensen April 28, 2010 at 11:26 pm

“The Dutch Oven Cookbook: Recipes for the Best Pot in Your Kitchen” is one of only three dutch oven cookbooks I am aware of on Amazon that provides recipes for indoor cooking with dutch ovens. I found this cookbook locally after recently buying my first cast iron dutch oven. Along with many promising recipes come a number of shortcomings, which I didn’t fully appreciate until I got the book home.

First off, although the author initially writes that they use both cast iron and enameled cast iron, she goes on later in the book to recommend enameled cast iron, and, indeed, the care instructions at the beginning of the book are geared toward that preference too. Consequently, this book will not replace the likes of “Cast Iron Cooking for Dummies”, a popular title that I was hoping to bypass due to its lack of applicable recipes for a dutch oven (most are geared toward a skillet, and the few dutch oven recipes that appear in that book are for the 7 quart size). Secondly, while the capacities called for in the recipes that appear in “The Dutch Oven Cookbook” range from 2-quarts to 5.5-quarts, most are geared toward a 5.5-quart dutch oven. I have two issues with this: First, I only own one dutch oven, not the variety of sizes called for in this cookbook. Secondly, the dutch oven I own is cast iron of the non-enameled type and because it is built by Lodge it is an even 5-quarts, with the next size being the 7-quart size (and there are no 7-quart recipes in this book).

Because I own a 5-quart dutch oven, most of the recipes would have to be cut down in order to fit, but neatly halving the larger recipes would be overkill so it would be closer to shaving off 1/4 of the ingredients. Similarly, increasing the 3 quart dutch oven recipes would involve slightly less than doubling the recipes — all of which sounds like too much math for this writer. The alternative, of course, is to eyeball it, but whether recipes will taste like the author intended them becomes iffy at that point. The last FYI that may be of importance to some home cooks is an additional item the description for this book doesn’t mention. At the beginning of the “Main Dishes” chapter, the author writes that it is necessary to use a cast iron skillet to brown and braise meats before transferring them to a large dutch oven. Of course, those who own a cast iron skillet will not have an objection to this, but it does add an extra expense and/or step. Now in all fairness, browning and braising is often called for by the better slow cooker cookbooks too. My main issue is that I hadn’t planned on buying a cast iron skillet because I already own the more conventional nonstick type. I bought this title precisely because most of the others aimed at indoor cast iron cooks involve a skillet, whereas a dutch oven cookbook is what I’m after.

It might just be that I will keep this dutch oven cookbook despite its drawbacks. Why? Because of another problem entirely: Lack of alternatives. There are at most two other cookbooks, as of this writing, that claim to offer recipes for indoor cast iron dutch oven cooking: “The Cast Iron Chef: The Main Course.” and “101 Things to Do with a Dutch Oven”. The problem with the latter is that while both outdoor briquette info. and indoor stovetop and oven conversion temps are supposedly offered in the book as per the Amazon description, a reviewer states that a number of the recipes are geared toward camp cooking without the indoor cooking instructions consistently included. Hmm…

Perhaps a general cookbook on so-called one pot meals would be a closer match to what I am looking for. Unfortunately, the ones I have seen thus far suffer from the same problem — the capacities the authors call for are all over the map and none that I’ve seen bother to state clearly on the front or back cover to whom their recipes are tailored. It would seem to be an overlooked editorial necessity on the part of publishers to delineate these particular types of cookbooks titles according to serving size, perhaps suggested by key words such as “One Pot Meals for Two” or “One Pot Family Meals”. In this way prospective buyers will have some idea how applicable the title is to their household.

In closing, those who shop from a farmer’s market will find themselves well served by “The Dutch Oven Cookbook”. Those who shop at grocery stores, on the other hand, may find some of the ingredients difficult to find (lemon grass, chanterelle mushrooms, Bosc pears, Cameo, Jonagold, Winesap or Braeburn apples, etc.). The main dish recipes call for roughly 8-16 ingredients, some of which are only available through ethnic markets and/or specialty suppliers mentioned at the back of the book (Mae Ploy Fish Sauce, Couger Gold cheddar cheese, Madras curry powder, Hungarian paprika, Italian parsley and kirschwasser, for example). There’s also the occasional recipe that requires more than just a dutch oven or a skillet. “Spaetzle”, for example, is a noodle dish that requires a “special piece of equipment”.

McDermut April 29, 2010 at 11:00 am

The photographer who created the cover should win a prize . . . It’s beautiful . . . the recipes not so much. I have returned this book because the recipes were simply not my cup of tea. When I buy a new cookbook, the first thing I do is page through every page, attaching “flags” to those recipes that sound good to me. There were no flags when I finished going through this book! Although less classy looking, I would recommend instead “Cooking the Dutch Oven Way” by Woody Woodruff. .Cooking the Dutch Oven Way Although the cover gives the impression that it is meant strictly for outdoor cooking, the recipes all include oven temperatures and can be made in your kitchen. and what’s more, the ingredients are simple items you’ll find at your local grocery store or in your cupboard. You won’t have to be heading for a specialty market to find what you need. . . and the recipes sound yummy. I can’s wait to try them . . . and it won’t be hard – I have almost every page flagged!

Jacobsen April 29, 2010 at 10:52 pm

Got this for my daughter-in-law since I bought her a Dutch Oven for Christmas – shipping was fast – book looks great – thank you!

Curry April 30, 2010 at 10:54 am

I was thrilled with this book. Not only did it give me useful information about convection ovens in general, but it had many recipes that I have highlighted and will try. Until I received the book, and even after reading the manufacturer’s book, I was unaware of all the convection oven could do. I am anxious to get to work and get cooking.

Asher April 30, 2010 at 10:54 pm

I have to write “The Best Convection Oven Cookbook” was less then I had hopped for. After acquiring a new convection oven and perplexed on the differences between a conventional one. I was looking for a deeper understanding between the two on my recipes. I have had the oven now for a couple of months and still find it difficult to achieve the same results I use to get with my conventional one. So the book, light in substance and recipes gave me little help in forming a relationship with my new wondrous oven.

Askins May 1, 2010 at 10:56 am

We had a convection oven installed at work and decided to cook a turkey in it but we had not idea how long to cook it. I went to the internet and found some baking instructions and it turned out very good. I then went on Amazon.com to find a cookbook that we could use at work when we wanted to cook something. It has some great recipes in it and we’re looking forward to using it.

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