Category Archives: Breakfast

Cherry Coffeecake

From Good Housekeeping. Jim and the kids love it.

All purpose flour
Sugar
1 t baking powder
¼ t baking soda
¼ t salt
10 T butter or margarine, melted
½ c milk
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla
¼ t lemon juice or extract
21 or 22 oz can cherry pie filling

Grease and flour a 9×9 baking pan. In large bowl with fork, mix 1 ¼ c flour, ½ c sugar, baking powder, soda, and salt. Add ½ c melted butter or margarine, milk, egg, and vanilla. With spoon, beat just until well mixed. Pour batter into baking pan, spread evenly. In small bowl, with fork, combine 1/2 c flour, ¼ c sugar, and remaining 2 T margarine until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Sprinkle half on top of batter. Stir lemon into pie filling. Spread over crumbs on batter, then sprinkle with the rest of the crumbs. Bake at 350 for one hour or until the top is light golden.

Almond Coffee Cakes

Lots of work, but great taste!

1 ½ c butter, softened
¼ c flour
¾ c milk
1/3 c sugar
1 T salt
½ c very warm water
2 pkg active dry yeast
1 egg
3 ¾ c flour
Filling:
8 oz almond paste
¾ c crushed zwieback crumbs
½ c melted butter
1 egg
½ t almond extract
Frosting:
2 c confectioner’s sugar
3-4 T milk

With a wooden spoon, beat 1 ½ butter and ¼ c flour until smooth. Spread on wet wax paper to a 12×8” rectangle. Refrigerate wax paper on cookie sheet until firm. Heat milk slightly. Add sugar and salt. Cool to lukewarm. Put warm water in large bowl. Stir and dissolve yeast.Stir in milk mixture, egg, and 3 c flour. Beat until smooth. Add rest of flour, kneading dough until dough leaves sides of bowl. Refrigerate, covered, ½ hour or longer.

Turn dough out onto floured board; roll to 12×16” rectangle. Place chilled butter mixture on one half and peel off waxed paper. Fold dough over butter and pinch edges to seal. With the fold at your right, roll out from center into 16×18” rectangle. From short side, fold into thirds, making three layers. Seal edges. Chill one hour. Repeat rolling to 16×18” and folding. If butter breaks through, cover with flour. Seal edges; chill ½ hour.

Roll and fold again, seal. Chill, wrapped in foil, three hours or overnight. Cut dough in half. Roll one half into a 22×8” strip; keep the other half chilled. Cut strip into thirds lengthwise. Mix filling. Take half of filling and fill center of each strip, dividing filling equally among strips. Close long edges together over filling and seal as much as possible. Braid strips. Form into a ring. Let rise in warm place for one hour. Bake at 375 for 30 minutes. Mix frosting ingredients and ice. Makes 2.

Yogurt Twists

Heat 1 c yogurt or sour cream to lukewarm. Dissolve 1 pkg yeast in ¼ c warm water. Add yogurt and 2 T soft margarine, 3 T sugar, 1 t salt, 1 egg, and 1 c flour. Beat till smooth. Add 2 c more flour. Beat. Knead 8-10 minutes. Let rise. Roll to 24×6” rectangle. Spread with 2T butter and sprinkled with 1/3c brown sugar and 1t cinnamon. Fold in half. Cut lengthwise in 1” pieces. Holding strips at each end, twist in opposite direction. Place on greased cookie sheet. Let rise. Bake at 375 for 12 minutes. Frost with confectioners sugar.

Blueberry Banana Bread

1 c fresh blueberries, washed and drained, then tossed with 2T flour. Sift together 1 ¾ c less 2T flour, 2 t baking powder, ¼ t baking soda, and ½ t salt. Cream 1/3 c margarine. Add 2/3 c sugar and beat until light. Add 2 eggs, one at a time. Add flour mixture alternately with 1 c mashed ripe bananas. Add berries. Pour into a greased bread pan and bake at 350 for 50 minutes or until done.

Dutch Babies

Great for breakfast or brunch.

Beat in blender 5 or 6 eggs. Add 1 c flour, 1 t salt, 1 c milk, 4 T melted butter. Pour into 2 greased 9” iron skillets or other pans of comparable size. Bake at 450 for 10 minutes then at 350 for ten minutes more or until puffy and light brown. Serve immediately sprinkled with fresh lemon juice and powdered sugar. They puff up like popovers then fall quickly. Can be served with syrup or jam.

Finnish Pancake

This giant pancake comes from friends in Arizona who look like they love to eat.

Preheat oven to 425° and heat a 10 ½ x 3” deep pan for 10 minutes.  Beat in blender until smooth : 4 eggs, ¼ c honey, ¾ tsp salt, 2 ½ c milk, and 1 c unsifted flour.  Put 4 Tbsp butter or margarine into hot pan.  Bake for 25 minutes or until set (with glass dish 400° for 35 minutes).  Serve immediately topped with fruit, honey, cinnamon sugar, syrup, etc.  Serves 10 for dessert or 5 for breakfast.

Dutch Cake or Sour Cream Kuchen

This is the closest recipe I have ever found to approximate the renowned Saturday kuchens.  While the recipe did not come from Grandma, the directions for “daubing” it with sour cream are those she wrote me years ago.

Scald 2 c milk and cool to lukewarm. Melt 1 c margarine. Put milk in large bowl and add 2 tsp sugar and 2 pkg yeast.  Stir until blended and add 2 c flour gradually.  Let stand 4 minutes till yeast rises.  In another bowl, beat 3 eggs until light.  Add ¾ c sugar, 2 tsp salt, 1 tsp vanilla, and melted butter, beating each in.  Add egg mixture to yeast mix, blending well.  Stir in 4-5 c more flour beating till smooth. Dough should be of a consistency easy to handle but not stiff as bread dough.  Let rise till double. Divide  dough in 3 parts and place in greased 8” or 9” square or round pans.  Spread thick sour cream on dough and sprinkle with brown sugar and cinnamon.  Let rise till light.  Bake 350° for 20-25 minutes or till nicely browned.  Immediately upon removing from oven, daub with more sour cream and brown sugar and cinnamon.  Or skip second sour cream application, cook and freeze.  When needed, defrost and warm in 350° oven and apply sour cream and brown sugar and cinnamon.