Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corn. Show all posts

Sweet Cornbread

Font type seems to have vanished from the new Blogger interface and instead, this crappy default Times New Roman is what looks to be in the composer with the Font selector drop-down nowhere in sight or settings. Hmm..

As we all spend way too much time at home this year with 24x7 access to the pantry, you should be able to cycle through the ingredients in a more timely manner. Except, not in the last sweep of my pantry where I found several items past their "best buy" or "use by" dates. I'm not sure if a dry good like cornmeal goes bad if its stored in an air tight container. Yellow cornmeal used is from 2018, hope it's still good.

The Foodening Blog - Sweet Cornbread in a 9" round tin

Ingredients

1 c all-purpose flour
1 c yellow cornmeal
2/3 c organic granulated sugar
1/2 tsp salt 
3 1/2 tsp baking powder
1 whole egg
1 c organic whole milk
1/3 c neutral-tasting vegetable oil

Directions

Preheat oven to 400 F

Prepare a 9" round cake pan. I used butter, but any vegetable oil will work.

In a large bowl, whisk together flour, cornmeal, sugar, salt. and baking powder. Add egg, milk and oil. Mix until well combined.

Pour into prepared cake pan.

Bake for 25 minutes, or until a toothpick comes out clean from the center of the bread. Slice into eighths.


(Dungeness) Crab and Corn Chowder

You can use any type of crab for this chowder, except for shore crabs. I used Dungeness crab since it's available locally and is still in season. It certainly tastes awesome with the bread I made yesterday. No idea on how heavy the crab was prior to being shelled, but it yielded 1.5 cups of cooked crab meat.

Here's a breakdown of what it costs to make this chowder from scratch:

1 Dungeness crab, cooked (roughly $8 per whole crab, about a pound)
2 white potatoes, $0.50
2 c chicken broth (1/2 quart), $1.00
2 green onion stalks (assuming 8 stalks per bunch and $0.50/bunch), $0.16
1/4 c flour (10# flour at $4), $0.02
2 tbsp unsalted butter (at $3/lb), $0.38
3 organic celery stalks (your yield may vary, this is based on a $2 bag), $0.30
salt, black pepper, and various spices, $0.25
One 16 oz bag of cut sweet corn, $1.69
2 c (16 oz) of organic half 'n' half, $2

Yield: 2 quarts (8 one-cup servings)
Total: $14.30
Cost per cup: $1.79

When ingredient sourcing, food prep, and cook time is factored into the cost, that $5 bowl of chowder you get at the restaurant is actually a pretty good deal.