Dragonfly Home Recipes

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The Beginning of Apple Season and Simple Apple Crisp

apples in bowl 2The iconic, sweet scent of apples is in the air now.  The cider mill in the town where I grew up is open, offering bright-tasting cider and cinnamon doughnuts.  I bought our first few apples of the season at the farmers market last week.  They taste so fresh and delicious!  I had forgotten how good an in-season apple tastes.  There really is no comparison.  We have been munching on them raw the past few days, just enjoying the crispness and fullness of the flavor.  sliced applesBecause I have been craving the smell of apples and cinnamon baking in the oven, I recently made my family’s favorite apple crisp recipe, which I have posted below.  It is so much easier than making apple pie, but smells and tastes very similar.  I absolutely love to make apple pie when I have the time, but when time is tight, this apple crisp recipe is great.  Plus it is light on the butter and sugar, and allows the taste of the apples to shine through.  The health benefits of apples are well known–apples are a great source of vitamin C, fiber, and antioxidants.  Apple crisp makes a healthy snack or dessert.  My family is known to finish a whole batch of this apple crisp in one evening!  I hope to post more apple recipes as summer stretches into fall, because apples really are a legendary staple in this area, and so much of our eating revolves around apples this time of year.  For me, apples are truly comfort food.

apple crisp and potholderapple crisp in bowl 1

Recipe for Simple Apple Crisp

Simple Apple Crisp

  • Servings: six
  • Print

Ingredients:

  • 2 pounds of apples (about 6 medium apples)
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/3 cup graham cracker crumbs
  • 1/3 cup quick oats
  • 2 Tablespoons brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 Tablespoon butter

Directions:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.  In a small bowl, mix the graham cracker crumbs, oats, and brown sugar.  Wash and peel the apples.  Then quarter them and cut out the core and the seeds.  Slice the apple quarters.  Spread the sliced apples in a 12-by-8 inch baking dish.  Add 1/2 cup of water to the baking dish.  Sprinkle the cinnamon over the sliced apples. Then sprinkle the graham cracker/oat/brown sugar mixture evenly over the apples. Dot evenly with small pieces of the tablespoon of butter.  Bake for about 40 minutes, or until the apples are tender and the topping is lightly browned.  Enjoy!

Great Grandma Howlett’s Sour Mustard Pickles and Keeping Meaningful Traditions Alive

DSC_0735A couple of weeks ago, my two children and I spent the afternoon with my mother.  We engaged in one of our favorite August rituals–making sour mustard pickles.  Pickle-making, for me, is steeped in tradition, camaraderie, and memories.  I love the pungent scent of vinegar, the rich yellow of the mustard powder and the deep orange of the turmeric, the sound of multiple generations laughing together, and even the muggy heat of the kitchen in August.  My earliest pickle party memory is from when I was a small child, and I remember our tiny kitchen was filled with my great grandmother, grandmother, mother, her sister and her cousin, and a handful of  kids.  It was hot and crowded in that kitchen, but there was a lot of laughter.  My mother has much earlier memories than mine of making pickles with her grandmother when she was just a child, and it is a cherished tradition she has kept alive with us.

Throughout the years, our pickle parties have evolved to include whichever family members are available and interested.  Some parties have been quite large and lively,  including my mom and dad, my aunt and uncle, my husband and children, and varying degrees of my brothers, their wives, and their children.  My dad started getting involved in the process when his grandchildren were old enough to help, because he loved any chance to spend time with them.  This year, our pickle party was smaller and quieter.  It was the first time we had made pickles without my dad being around, since he passed away in January.  It was important to us to carry on the tradition, so my children and I spent the afternoon in my mom’s kitchen with her, making pickles and feeling the bittersweet emotions of missing my dad, yet knowing he would want us to carry on doing something we have all enjoyed together.

cucumbers in canning jarI have posted the recipe for my great grandmother’s sour mustard pickles below.  This recipe is not difficult, as pickle recipes go, and it results in some crunchy, mouth-watering pickles.  They have a very distinct flavor–as one of my mom’s cousins says, one bite tells you whether you will love them or not!  These pickles are part of every holiday meal for my whole extended family, and when anyone is homesick, they get pickles–either shipped to them, or a quart set aside for them when they come home to visit.  For a few years, we lost the official recipe, and had to rely on memory and trial and error.  Usually the pickles turned out great anyway!  Recently, my mom found the official recipe, printed in one of her many recipe books.  Now I feel like we can share this recipe, and it will be true to how my great grandma made pickles many, many years ago.  Sometimes, the past is better left behind, and sometimes, it is worth honoring.  In this case, we honor it and we are thankful to keep passing it along.

pickling cucumbersmustardpickles in processDSC_0730

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