I've been trying some new recipes in the kitchen lately. When the kids were growing up, I was pretty explorative, and somehow that went away in the last dozen years or so (really, I think I know why, as 2015-2023 were all very stressful years). Lately I am finding that I miss that inquisitiveness and creativity and so I am trying to incorporate some of it back into my culinary life.
The first new recipe, which I tried for Pi Day, was a definite flop. I'm sure part of it had to do with me freestyling and tweaking the recipe I was using as a guideline. But even if I had made it to the letter as written, I don't think we would have liked it as much as it sounded like we would.
It was called Strawberry Cheesecake, but not a real cheesecake; it was actually a pie that mixed a block of softened cream cheese in with a box of vanilla pudding. In the recipe, it said to take a graham cracker crust (which I duly made from scratch), line it with fresh strawberries (which I did not have, but I did have several baggies of frozen strawberries), mix the cream cheese with the pudding mix and milk, pour into the crust, cover with plastic wrap and chill for at least 2 hours before serving (so the pudding would set).
I knew that my frozen strawberries, as they thawed, would get mushy underneath that pudding/cream cheese layer. So I thought why not just blend them in? Make it more like a strawberry pudding layer than fruit under pudding. Sounded feasible.
Um, yeah. Maybe you can tell from the photo below how well that worked. The photo was taken after I cut and removed the first two pieces.
It tasted good, although the combo of the cream cheese and vanilla pudding was a little weird. If I was in the habit of making no-bake cheesecake mixes maybe I would have liked the taste better, but typically when I make cheesecake it's an honest to God real cheesecake that requires a springform pan and the oven. And eggs. No pudding. Completely different texture and flavor.
The next kitchen experiment was Irish Soda Bread. I was planning on actually doing an 'Irish' dinner on St. Patrick's Day, and since I don't like corned beef (or, as I refer to it, "Salty Meat"), I was going with a lamb stew. Stew needs some form of bread to dip into it, in my book. So Irish Soda Bread was on the docket.
This was a yea. Definitely will make again. It was super easy to make, went well with the stew, and the rest of the loaf makes a nice toothsome toast or hearty sandwich bread.



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