Monday, June 8, 2009

Soul Food Recipes

Soul Food Recipes

Awesome Collard Greens

Collard greens are a very nutritious and inexpensive treat. When I was growing up, my

grandmother would buy about 50 cents worth of collard seeds and this would grow

enough collard greens to feed us for the entire year. That 50 cents worth of seeds would

produce hundreds of collard plants in our North Carolina backyard garden.

Ingredients:

2 - 3 medium smoked ham hocks or 2 pounds smoked pork neck bones

5 pounds of collards or several large bunches (If you can't get them fresh, frozen will do.

2 teaspoon of salt

My favorite way to cook collard greens is very simple. I take 2 or 3 smoked ham hocks

and put them in a large (6 quart) pot of water. Bring the water to a rolling boil and let it

boil for about 1 1/2 hours. Add more water as it boils down. The idea is to boil the ham

hocks until they begin to fall apart. You should always cook pork very thoroughly and

use proper food handling techniques. You want the ham hocks to be falling apart before

you add the collard greens.

Take the collard greens and separate the leaves (if fresh). Now rinse each leaf

individually under cold running water. After you rinse the collard greens thoroughly,

stack several leaves on top of each other. Roll these leaves together. Then slice the leaves

into thin strips using a cutting board and large knife. Rolling them together speeds up the

process as you are slicking through several leaves at once.

Next, add your collard greens to the pot. Since this is a lot of collards, you will need to

add them until the pot is full. Then allow them to wilt as they cook - then add more. Add

you salt, cover and cook for thirty minutes on medium heat. Stir every few minutes to

distribute the smoked meat taste evenly. Taste to confirm they are the tenderness you

prefer. Serve with your favorite meat dish such as chitterlings. Eat the ham hocks or neck

bones right along with the collards.

If you used frozen collards, simply pour them - frozen - right from the package to the pot.

If you use smoked neck bones, they usually don't take as long to cook as ham hocks.

People in my neck of the woods usually sprinkle lots of hot sauce on their collards. I like

them that way. Give it a try.

Since this is a large pot full, just save the extras in the refrigerator. They should keep for

a long time and actually get better as the juices settle in.

Pinto Beans and Ham Hocks

Ingredients:

3 smoked ham hocks

2 lbs. dried pinto beans

1/2 teaspoon garlic powder

1/2 teaspoon crushed red pepper

1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper

1/2 teaspoon salt

2 teaspoon hot sauce

1/2 medium chopped onion

Directions:

Boil ham hocks on high heat for 45 minutes. Add all seasonings except hot sauce and

onion. Continue boiling for 20 minutes. Add pinto beans, hot sauce, and onion. Boil on

medium heat until beans are done to taste.

Note: To speed up cooking of beans and reduce the gas beans produce, soak beans in cold

water overnight or for three hours during the day.

Serve with rice and a meat side dish. You can also use the ham hocks as your meat side

dish. However, ham hocks are a high-fat food with not that much meat (mostly skin).

Chitterlings and Hog Maws

Ingredients:

5 pounds hog maws (pig stomach)

10 pounds chitterlings (pig intestines)

5 quarts water

1 tablespoon salt

1 tablespoon pepper

1 teaspoon red pepper (flakes)

2 medium peeled whole onions (white or yellow)

1 tablespoon Lawry's Seasoned Salt

1/2 tsp sage

2 medium white potatoes

Preparation:

1. Thoroughly was hog maws. Trim off excess fat. Cut into small pieces.

(I make mine about 2 inch pieces).

2. Place maws in LARGE pot of water along with salt, pepper, onion, sage.

3. Boil (covered) over medium high heat for 1 hour.

4. Thoroughly clean chitterlings. Scrap off excess fat. Wash chitterlings

inside and out. It helps if you turn them.

5. Cut into 1-2 inch pieces and add chitterlings to hog maws after 1 hour.

6. Add more water as necessary and continue boiling (covered) for 1 hour.

7. Add Lawry's seasoned salt, turn heat down to medium, and continue

cooking until fork tender. After fork tender, remove lid and allow liquid

to evaporate (cook down). The flavor is better if you have less liquid.

8. Discard onions what's left or onions and potatoes.

Serve with rice, hush puppies, coleslaw, iced tea.

Store leftovers in the refrigerator. The flavor gets even better as they sit

around for a day or two. They've never lasted very long in my house though.

** Note: Since they do have a "distinct" odor, some people prefer cooking them

outside. I use the gas burner from my turkey deep fryer for this purpose. The

recipe is the same. You can read a good book while sitting in your back yard

cooking up a mess of chitlins.

SIMPLE SOUTHERN FRIED CHICKEN

Ingredients:

1 frying chicken, skin removed if you

want lower fat. I leave the skin on.

3 teaspoons Lawry's Seasoned Salt

2 garlic cloves, finely chopped

1 cup all purpose flour

1 cup vegetable oil

1. Season chicken with all seasonings.

2. Roll chicken in flour until covered. Shake off

excess flour. Sprinkle additional seasoning.

3. Simply fry chicken in frying pan until golden

brown. I like it crispy so I cook it a little longer

than most and turn the heat back up at the

very end.

Start out with the oil very hot and then

reduce it later. This seals in the moisture and

flavor, then cooks it.

Fried Green Tomatoes

Tomatoes were and still are a very easy plant to grow. All you need is soil with the right

ph balance, a little sun, and regular watering to harvest a great tomato crop just about

anywhere. I have lived in many states from North Carolina, to Florida, to Hawaii, to

Alaska (while flying military transport aircraft). I grew tomatoes in each of these

locations with ease. While tomatoes grow fast, it's hard to wait for them to ripen. Now

you've got a great way to eat mature but not ripened tomatoes. Do let some vine ripen

though. A juicy fully vine-ripened tomato eaten fresh off the vine is a treat in itself.

Ingredients

4 large green tomatoes

2 cups corn meal (white)

1 tablespoon salt

1/2 teaspoon black pepper

1/2 cup Wesson oil

Preparation:

1. Clean tomatoes

2. Slice tomatoes in slices about the thickness of

a cooked hamburger patty

3. Heat oil in frying pan over medium heat.

4. Sprinkle salt and pepper on both sides of tomato slices. I spread them on a

clean plate to do this.

5. Coat each side of tomato slices with cornmeal. I simply sprinkled the

corn meal over the tomatoes on the plate, turned them over, and sprinkled

the other side.

6. Gently shake off the loose meal and then place tomato slices in hot oil.

7. Cook over medium heat until brown on one side, turn over and brown

the other side.

8. Place on a paper towel to drain.

9. Serve hot.

I enjoy them with grits.

Liver Pudding

When I was growing up two of my favorite foods

were "smoked pork sausage," and liver pudding.

Liver pudding was fried in a skillet and served

with grits. Here is my Liver Pudding recipe.

1 pound pork liver

1 pound boneless pork chops

1/2 tsp salt

1/2 tsp pepper

1/4 tsp red crushed red pepper

A pinch of sage

Clean the liver and trim away the excess

fat, membrane and veins. Cook the liver and

pork chops over medium heat, in separate pots,

until they are thoroughly done and a fork easily

inserts in them. Cook them separate to avoid

overcooking either. Save the stock from the

pork chop.

Cut the liver and pork chop into small cubes

and then run them thorough a meat grinder

together. In a pinch you can use a food processor

but you want to grind the meat, not liquefy it. You

want it finely ground but not creamy.

Stir in your salt, two types of pepper, and sage.

Taste it and see if you want more seasoning.

But many of us need to watch our salt so

don't over do it. Use some of the liquid from

your pork chops to moisten your mixture so that

it sticks together nicely.

Now you have two choices. If you have casings,

you can run the pudding back through your

meat grinder, stuffing it into the casing as you

do. This is how we used to do it, and how also

how the pudding we bought from the local grocery

store was prepared. If you do not have casings

available locally, you can pack it tightly

into a lightly oiled Pyrex (glass) loaf pan.

Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for

a day. I know it's tough but you want the

flavors to blend and the texture to set in.

After a day you it should be set enough where

you can put it in a plastic container if you

want. It will keep for several days in the

fridge.

When ready to eat your liver pudding,

I like to slice off a few pieces and fry it

in a lightly oiled skillet until it is medium

browned. By medium browned I mean it has a

slight crust from cooking. Great with grits or

on a sandwich.

Mouthwatering Fried Catfish

Ingredients:

Enough catfish fillets for 3 or 4 medium

pieces per person.

1 cup Yellow Corn Meal (This should be enough

to coat the catfish fillets)

2 teaspoons Lawry's Seasoned Salt

Crisco or your favorite vegetable cooking oil.

(Enough to cover the catfish).

(I use a deep fryer although a frying pan will

work just as well)

The secret to fried catfish is cooking

it at just the right temperature to

seal in the moisture and flavor. When

you first drop it into the grease you

want to seal it and then cook it.

You can use fresh catfish fillets, or

you can use the farm-raised variety

available in the supermarket freezer section.

Rinse the fillets thoroughly and then

pat dry with a paper towel. If using fresh

catfish, skin the catfish and then wash

thoroughly. Pat dry with a paper towel.

Roll the fresh, catfish fillets in

a mixture of corn meal and Lawry's

Seasoned Salt. If you cannot find

Lawry's Seasoned Salt, then your favorite

seasoned salt will have to do. It's

just that Lawry's Seasoned Salt is a

southern favorite. A quick way to coat

the fish in the corn meal and season

mixture is to place it in a plastic bag

and just shake it.

Drop into deep fryer at 325 degrees.

Fry until it turns golden brown, about

5 minutes. Dump onto paper towel and

allow to drain.

Serve with collard greens, macaroni

and cheese, coleslaw and hush puppies.

Makes me hungry just thinking about it.

Beer Battered Halibut

Perhaps my all-time favorite fish is halibut, and beer battered is my favorite way of

cooking it although it's hard to ruin halibut. Fresh halibut should be available in your

supermarket's seafood section when in season. It can get expensive. I get mine from

friends who live in the northwest and overnight mail it to me :-)

Ingredients:

3 pounds halibut

1 1/2 cups all purpose flour

1 teaspoon seasoned salt

1 teaspoon pepper

1 teaspoon paprika

1 12 oz can of been (any kind)

Cooking oil. You can cook it in a frying pan or a deep fryer. That determines how much

cooking oil you use. I use vegetable oil.

Preparation:

1. Cut halibut into chunks about 1 1/2 inches square works nicely.

2. Combine all the dry ingredients in a bowl. Mix to blend.

3. Stir in beer to form a loose batter.

4. Drop the halibut chunks into the batter.

5. Heat your oil to medium high. I put my deep fryer on 375.

6. Fish out battered halibut chunks and drop them into the hot oil. Don't put too many at

a time. When they are a golden brown on all sides take them out and place on a paper

towel to drain.

Goes great with just about anything including collard greens, corn bread, and cole slaw.

Also tastes great just eaten alone.

Oven Barbecued Pork Baby Back Ribs

Ingredients:

5-6 pounds pork back ribs

1/2 teaspoon accent (monosodium glutamate)

2 T packed brown sugar

1/4 teaspoon liquid smoke

2 C fresh orange juice

1/4 teaspoon minced garlic

2 T fresh lemon juice

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

1 tablespoon cornstarch

Preparation:

1. Combine all ingredients except ribs in medium saucepan. Stir over medium heat

until mixture thickens.

2. Place sections of ribs in roasting pan. Brush liberally with sauce. Cover

with foil.

3. Bake in 350 degrees oven for 1 hour.

4. Baste and cook for another 1/2 hour. Uncover during final 15 minutes

of cooking to brown ribs slightly.

5. Brush on additional sauce or dip ribs in sauce at serving time.

Salmon Croquettes

Canned salmon was one of the cheaper fish that we

could get while growing up in interior North Carolina,

unless you caught your own fish. My grandmother often

bought canned pink salmon or canned mackerel. With

the mackerel she often stirred them into some

fried onion, simmer the mixture, and we ate it over

rice. With the salmon, she formed patties, fried

them and we called them salmon croquettes. Here is the recipe

I use for that:

Ingredients:

1 12 oz can pink salmon

2 Whole eggs

1/4 cup chopped onion

1/4 cup all purpose flour

2 tablespoons yellow corn meal

1/2 teaspoon salt (depending upon the

brand and how much salt is in it you

can leave this out if you want.

1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper

You basically pour all of the ingredients into

a large bowl and mix them. A large spoon or a

potato masher worked fine. I add the flour last

because I sometimes adjust the amount to control the

consistency. Mold the dough-like mix that you

end up with into patties (like thick homemade

hamburgers).

Coat a frying pan with a little cooking oil. Crisco

works just fine. Preheat the oiled pan over medium

heat. Slip the patties into the pan, fitting as

many as you can but leaving room to turn them. Cook

until medium brown on one side, then turn over and

do the same to the other side.

I enjoyed eating these hot fresh out of the pan

along with rice, maybe some corn or butterbeans,

and sweetened iced tea.

After leaving home, the Air Force sent me to Alaska

where I learned to catch my own salmon. There I

discovered that there are many species of salmon (red,

pink, king, silver, chum, etc). Each has a different

taste based mainly upon how firm the meat is and

how much fat is in the meat. I learned to prepare

salmon a lot of other ways but croquettes is still

one of my favorite.

Macaroni and Cheese

Ingredients:

5 cups cooked macaroni

(approx 4 cups uncooked)

5 tbsp butter

2 eggs

1/2 tsp salt

1/2 tsp pepper

3 cups milk

2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese

4 cups shredded cheddar cheese

Cook the macaroni until done as usual.

Do not overcook it. Drain macaroni in

strainer.

Place macaroni, butter, salt, pepper,

milk, mozzarella cheese, and 3 cups of

cheddar cheese in casserole dish. Mix

eggs in a bowl first and then stir into

mixture.

Cover everything with aluminum foil and

cook for 45 minutes at 350 degrees.

Uncover and add extra cup of cheddar

cheese across the top. Bake uncovered

for another 15 minutes.

Creamy and Healthy Coleslaw

Here is my favorite recipe for coleslaw.

An excellent way to add raw cabbage to your diet

and therefore add more fiber. See this stuff is

good for you!

Ingredients:

2 pound cabbage

2 large carrots

1 medium red pepper

1 medium green pepper

1/3 teaspoon celery seeds

3/4 cups apple cider vinegar

1 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup sugar

Warm the sugar and vinegar until sugar dissolves. Stir gently.

Shred the cabbage and carrots using a grater.

Allow the sugar and vinegar mixture to cool. Then pour

this mixture over the cabbage and carrot mixture.

Chop the peppers into small pieces. I slice them as thinly

as I can. Then, I chop these slices. The peppers are for flavor,

but they are also for color. The same is true for the carrots.

Mix the chopped peppers, the salt, and celery seeds into the

cabbage mixture. Pour the whole thing into a bowl, cover, and

allow to settle. I put mine in the refrigerator overnight to

allow the flavors to blend. This is very important with many

dishes. The longer you allow it to just sit, the more the

flavors mix.

Homemade Potato Salad

Here is my favorite recipe for potato salad. I vary

this recipe from time to time based upon my mood and

encourage you to do the same.

Ingredients:

4 large baking potatoes.

1/4 white or yellow onion (optional)

2 large eggs

1/2 tsp salt

1/3 cup mayonnaise

4 oz sweet relish

paprika

Boil the potatoes until they are done but not overcooked

I use the test here where I stick the fork in and it

meets a little resistance but not too much. How long

you boil them depends upon how big they are. You do want

the potatoes done though since no further cooking is

involve. If you overcook them, they don't really hurt

the recipe since the extra potato just mixes in with

the creamy portion of the mixture.

Boil the eggs over medium high heat until hard boiled.

Allow the potatoes and eggs to cool. You can run cold water

over them in a strainer to speed up the process.

Peel the potatoes and then slice into chunks. If you aim

for 1 inch by 1 inch chuck you will do well.

Peel and slice the egg into 1/2 inch pieces.

Chop the onion into very small pieces. I made this optional

because you WILL be able to smell the onion on your breath.

Stir all ingredients gently except for the paprika.

After all ingredients are well mixed, pour into a bowl.

Add the paprika across the top. Store in the refrigerator

until ready to serve.

Fried Grits and Egg

Ingredients:

Cold Grits

Butter or Margarine

Egg

Salt

Pepper

You'll invariable have left over grits. Save the left over grits

to fry for a delectable treat.

Allow the left over grits to cool and then place in the

refrigerator. When ready to eat fried grits, take pot out of

refrigerator and turn cold grits out onto cutting board.

Place eggs in a small bowl along with salt and pepper.

Lightly beat eggs.

Place several pats of butter/margarine in frying pan and

melt over medium heat.

Slice grits into 1/4 thick slices.

Dredge grits through egg mixture and place into frying pan.

Allow egg to brown, turn and brown other side.

Remove fried grits to serving platter, add more margarine

and fry remained of egg.

Enjoy breakfast.

Grits With Egg

Ingredients:

Raw grits

2-3 eggs

Shredded cheese (optional)

Salt and black pepper to taste

Preparation:

1. Break eggs into bowl, add salt and pepper, and lightly beat.

2. Cook grits according to package instructions or my instructions

for basic grits.

3. While grits are cooking stir in the eggs. They will blend right

in with the grits and give it a very nice flavor.

4. If you like cheese, stir cheese in after stirring in eggs.

Grits With Fish

Raw grits

Dash of salt

Dash of black pepper

Any type of leftover fried fish (bones removed).

Preparation:

1. Cook grits according to package instructions or my instructions

for basic grits.

2. Warm boneless fish separately. Microwave is ok.

3. Place serving of cooked grits on plate.

4. Add serving of warmed fish in the middle of grits.

Enjoy. The fish and grits flavors blend nicely.

Buttermilk Biscuits

I used to really enjoy hot fresh homemade buttermilk

biscuits. Split one open and spread some fresh butter

(actually, we always used margarine), or slip in a

fresh sausage patty. There's nothing better!

After I learned to make them I also enjoyed just getting

my hand dirty as I kneaded the dough. Kids have fun in

the strangest way. Anyway, here is how my grandma used

to make them. I don't think the store-bought, canned

biscuits will ever even begin to compare.

Ingredients:

3 cups all purpose flour

3 teaspoons baking powder

3/4 cups buttermilk

1 teaspoon salt

3/4 teaspoon baking soda

3/4 cup Crisco shortening

Sift the flour to make sure there are no lumps. Add in

the baking powder, salt, and baking soda. Add the

Crisco slowly, working it into the dry ingredients.

You can use a large spatula or spoon, but I preferred

using my hands.

Next add the buttermilk, working it into the mixture

too. After everything is thoroughly mixed, plop it

down on a floured counter top or cutting board.

Turn you oven to 450 to allow it to preheat. While

it's heating up knead your dough until it is about

the consistency of clay that kids play with in

grade school. You can make it a little dryer

if need be by sprinkling more flour on your

counter or cutting board. As you knead your dough

it will pick up more of the flour.

After you have it the right consistency you can

shape your biscuits by hand or using a cookie

cutter. I preferred pinching off a chunk, rolling

it into a ball, and then patting it a little flat.

It takes a little practice to get you biscuits all

about the same size. If you want them more perfect,

you can roll out your dough using a rolling pin and

then cut them with a round cookie cutter. That

would look neater when you have company over.

Anyway, place you biscuits on a cookie sheet that

is either lightly greased or lightly sprinkled with

flour. If you use the flour option, be sure not to

put too much.

Bake these biscuits for roughly 18 minutes on the

middle rack in your oven (depends upon how hot

your oven is and how far this rack is from the

top). If the rack is too low you can move the

biscuits to the top rack the last minute of so

to get them browned just the way you want. Leave

them on the middle rack and they should turn out

lightly browned.

Pop them out of the over and eat them while still

piping hot. That's the only way to get the butter

to melt just right.

Piping Hot Hush Puppies

These have cheese and bacon pieces added in too.

We ate a lot of corn meal based foods when I was

growing up because corn meal was cheap. In fact,

we could even take grain to the local mill and

have it ground into flour, meal, livestock feed,

etc. Cornbread or biscuits were almost always

served at any meal I attended at many houses in

the neighborhood. They were usually pretty good

too, although I preferred the lighter tasting

hush puppies. Eaten fresh out of the fryer, they

practically melted in your mouth. Here is my

recipe:

Ingredients:

2 cups yellow corn meal

1 cup plain flour (flour is what gave it the

lighter taste and you can experiment with the

amount you use if you want)

2 eggs

1 cup buttermilk (you can also use plain milk in

a pinch, but nothing compares to buttermilk)

3/4 teaspoon seasoned salt. I use Lawry’s but just

about any brand will work as you are just looking

for something to spice things up a little

1/2 teaspoon ground pepper blend (again, the idea

is to spice things up a little).

1 teaspoon baking powder

2/3 teaspoon baking soda

1/8 cup bacon grease. This is another big key to

the flavor. In a pinch you can use other types

of cooking oil, but bacon is my favorite.

You also need some type of cooking oil to deep fry

these in. I usually use Crisco oil although peanut oil

and some of the lower fat oils work well too.

Mix all of the dry ingredients in a bowl. Add your

eggs, oil, and buttermilk. Stir it all up until

the flavors are thoroughly blended.

Turn your cooker on medium-high heat. When it's

hot you can drop your hush puppies in using a

tablespoon. Allow them to brown on all sides.

They should begin floating when done, but if they

don't, don't overcook them.

Serve as a side dish with just about any meal. I

loved eating them with fried catfish or fresh

chopped or pulled pork barbecue. Most of the local

restaurants added them as a standard feature when you

bought plate meals.

After getting to Alaska, I visited a restaurant that

also added yellow corn to their hush puppies and a

touch of sugar. If you want to give this a try,

precook the corn, but don't overcook it. Use 3/4 cups

in the recipe above. On top of that add 2 tablespoons

of white sugar. The recipe at the restaurant in

Alaska was so popular that customers often ordered

side orders to take home. I always though that it

tasted pretty good.

You can also store this mixture in the refrigerator

for a day or so if you are only cooking for a smaller

group. Before cooking let it reach near room

temperature.

Delicious Sweet Potato Pie

Sweet potatoes were another staple I

grew up with. They were fairly inexpensive

and were great baked or put in a pie. Baked

potatoes were just eaten with a little butter.

Ingredients:

4 large potatoes

2 cups sugar

1 stick butter

1 pinch cinnamon

1 pinch nutmeg

1 store-bought pie 9" deep dish pie crust

or your can just line a pan with vanilla wafers

instead

1/2 cup milk

2 eggs (slightly beaten)

Boil the potatoes until tender. When you stick a

fork in them it should go in easy but you don't

want them to fall apart.

Let the potatoes cool and then peel them.

Put the potatoes in a large mixing bowl and

mash them thoroughly with a potato masher.

Melt the butter and pour it and the other

ingredients in the bowl of potatoes. Stir

until well mixed.

Whether you used a ready-made pie crust or

just cookies, pour the potatoes mixture

into the crust.

Put into an oven preheated to 375 degrees.

Cook for about 35-40 minutes or until a toothpick

inserted in the center comes out dry.

If you want you can make a meringue topping by

blending confectionary sugar with egg whites.

After the pie is almost done, spread the

meringue thinly across the top. Continue baking

until the meringue turns light brown. If you

are going to use a meringue topping, you can add the extra

egg yokes to the pie or save them for breakfast.

Enjoy.

Awesome Pound Cake

My Aunt Ruth used to make the best pound cake

in the whole world. It was so rich and creamy.

She explained to me that it was called a pound

cake because it used a pound of butter and a

pound of sugar. This was what made it so rich.

Here's my recipe - hers was very similar.

Ingredients:

3 cups cake flour

6 large eggs

1 pound butter

1 pound sugar (2 1/4 cups)

2 teaspoons of pure vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup buttermilk

Sift the flour into a large mixing bowl. Stir in

the sugar. I use a large spoon for this. Next I add

the butter. My grandmother would melt the butter

in a pan over slow heat to make it blend easier.

You can do this or just let the butter soften at

room temperature. Add the eggs, whole. At this

point I break out my mixer and begin mixing on

slow. I slowly add my buttermilk, and then the

vanilla extract. After it is thoroughly stirred,

I turn the mixer up to medium for a few minutes,

and then finally on high. If the mixture is a little

thick I add just a touch more buttermilk. If you don't

mix things thoroughly you will have lumps that will

form air bubbles in your mixture and leave holes

in your finished cake. It was always a matter of pride

not to have these air pocket holes in our cakes so we

always made sure we got all of the lumps. In the

pre-electric-mixer day that involved a lot of whipping

the cake by hand. We usually didn't have a hand cranked

mixer that worked well, so this involved a large mixing

spoon to whip it. Some old timers even counted the number

of times they whipped the mixture - sort of made it

fun and you didn't notice your arm tiring.

Preheat the over to 325 degrees.

Take your standard tube cake pan and oil it with

butter. Then lightly flour the oiled pan. Shake

the excess flour from the pan.

Pour the mix in, bake the cake for about 1 hour

and twenty minutes. Keep looking at how your cake

is doing through the oven door but avoid opening

the door too much while it is cooking as I have

seen this, or jarring a cake, cause it to collapse.

When you think it is done, do the toothpick test.

Stick a wooden toothpick into one of the thickest

parts of the cake. If it's dry when you pull it our,

the cake is done.

Allow the cake to cool 15 or 20 minutes in the pan.

Then gently remove it, and stick it on your favorite

decorative cake plate.

Vanilla Wafer Cake

Here's a cake that's incredibly easy, and unbelievably delicious!

Ingredients:

1 cup margarine

2 cups sugar

6 eggs

1 box vanilla wafers (12 oz. box)

1/3 cup milk

1 cup chopped pecans

1 cup coconut

Preparation:

Heat milk until warm, pour over wafers.

Cream margarine and sugar. Add eggs one at a time. Add wafers & milk to the mixture.

Fold in nuts and coconut. Pour into bundt ban

Heat oven 300 degrees

Bake 1 1/2 hours, or until done.

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