Tea Time: Black Jack Tea With Red Plum Jam Mini Pies

It’s the Christmas season and this means families getting together to spend some quality time. Spending quality time involves food, in fact, a lot of food. Speaking of food, ever since I was little(r), I always dreamed of having a tea party. Yes a tea party complete with fancy china and all sorts of sweets that I made for everyone attending. I think I am close to achieving  this dream now that I know how easy it is to make these pies.

I am sure most of you know what black jack is. A common weed  that has awns which get  stuck to your clothes if you happen to be near a bush of some sort. As irritating as this plant can be, it also has benefits like how it makes a super flavorful tea.  Seriously, my list of teas(is this a word?) is growing. All you  have to do is get some black jack leaves with their flowers too(preferably the tender ones), wash them and  boil them in enough water.  After it has boiled,strain out the awn, leaf and flower particles, add sugar and serve. It’s that simple really. So in honor of the holiday season, I thought this super easy black jack tea would really go well with these jam pies. Since the teas is easy to make, I am sharing the pie recipe below

What you will need:
Zesta Red Plum Jam
2C. Baking flour
½ C. Margarine (blue band)/ Butter
1/2 C. Cold water
1Tbsp. Sugar
½ Tsp. Salt

Method
Sift flour in a bowl. Add salt and sugar. Mix well.
Add margarine and using your hands mix it in the flour until the mixture becomes coarse.
Next add the water, a tablespoon at a time, while mixing. Keep adding little water until a firm dough is formed. It should not be very wet and should not stick to your hands so much (you may need more or less water).
After you have formed a firm dough, put it back in the bowl and keep it refrigerated for 15 minutes.
After 15 minutes, remove from the refrigerator and, on a floured surface, cut the dough into two equal parts.
Using a floured rolling pin or a glass bottle, roll the dough out till it is thin enough. Using a circular cookie cutter or glass, cut out as many circles as possible. The size of the cutter determines the size of the pies. If you want them large, use a larger cutter and vice versa. Using a rolling-pin, roll out the scraps and continue cutting out circles until the dough is over.
Spoon ½teaspoon of the Zesta red plum jam into the center of half of the pie circles. Make sure to leave enough of a border around the filling to seal them shut. Do not overfill!
Brush around the edges of the dough with a finger dipped in a whisked egg. This will be the “glue”.
Place a second dough circle on top each filled circle then use a fork to press the edges together.
Cut a hole on the top of each pie with a sharp knife and place on prepared sheet pan.
Refrigerate for 15 minutes.
Bake the pies for 15 minutes, or until they’re golden brown. Enjoy!
Makes 25+

I realize the method is lengthy but it’s just me trying to break down the whole process which is easy. So no worries. While making the tea, I grabbed the camera and went out in the back yard to shoot some weeds A.K.A Black Jack. That’s how easy it is to find black jack.

 

Happy Holidays

🙂

Sophie

Pan-Fried Cookies

Hi there! The other day my little sis had a project to do and the requirement was to make cookies. I was excited because it was an excuse to bake (yey!). So we set out to make sugar cookies. The day came to finally bake the cookies and halfway through the process, a blackout happened (…or rather electricity went since it was daytime). We were frustrated because this is a common phenomenon and when doing anything that involves the use of electricity, one has to simply pray and hope… The situation was completely hopeless since we had made the dough already (we even thought of freezing it and then we realized a refrigerator too uses electricity)! Then out of the blue my sis was like “let’s just fry them” and I told her that is the worst idea ever. I mean seriously who fries their cookies? (!?!) Guess we did (ha!). I have to say this is one of those ideas you don’t think will work out but then in the end you realize its way better that you hopped!

What you will need:

2 ½ C all-purpose flour

½ Tsp. baking powder

1 C butter/margarine (melted)

¾ C sugar

1 Large egg

1 Tsp. Vanilla extract

¼ C.Milk/Water

Method

In a large bowl, mix all ingredients together starting with the dry ingredients (flour, baking powder, sugar).

Next, add the wet ingredients (butter, egg and vanilla extract and milk). Keep mixing till the mixture is coarse but well blended and has formed a firm dough.

Next, shape the dough into cookies of your desired size and place them in a large non-stick pan.

Set the pan on low fire (really low) to prevent them from burning and cover.

Let them cook for five minutes. Using a spatula, flip them and let the other side cook for another five minutes.

Make sure they don’t burn. Remove from pan and let them cool down.

So there you have it. A pan-fried cookie. The taste is amazing (duh!) and it is super crunchy. I used to feel sad when I realized I couldn’t try out all these amazing recipes because I lack an oven but slowly by slowly I am discovering hacks that make it fun(ner) to be in the kitchen. Guess that is the joy of cooking. Now go cook some cookies (no pun intended)… hmm now that I am thinking about it, maybe that is why they are called cookies in the first place. Maybe they are meant to be cooked people! Ha!

🙂

Sophie

PS:BTW the second batch burnt because I was busy doing other things. Shame!

Pumpkin Cookies

I first discovered Indochine kitchen at the beginning of this year and by now I can say it is my official Indonesian food directory. Lots of nostalgic memories are brought back when I discover familiar looking foods and then sheer happiness when I realize I can actually try them. Lately we have been inhaling chilli(Soo Much!). You should definitely check it out. Wait…we’re talking Pumpkin cookies eh!!

Whenever there is a new ingredient in the kitchen, my mind get crazy with recipe possibilities. Does this happen to you? A couple of weeks ago, we happened to be having pumpkin and cashew nuts at the same time and I thought does a pumpkin cookie exist and the rest, as they say, is history. So maybe I got way too excited but I had much hope in this thing materializing I bought chocolate to fancy everything up! I can’t say they were a fail even though they I actually failed to achieve the cookie feel(?!?!). I will just let you in on what went down.

I used:

2 ½ C mashed (boiled) pumpkin

¾ C Butter/Margarine

3 Tbsp Sugar

A pinch of salt

½ Tsp Vanilla extract

2 C baking flour

¼ C Crushed chocolate

¼ C Crushed cashew nuts

 

Mixed all ingredients in their listed order. Dropped the dough by spoonful on greased cookie sheet (in my case oven toaster sheet) and baked for 10-15 minutes  or until the cookies started browning on the sides(but not burnt). Makes about two dozens.

Funny thing is after making these I went online and actually found out that the pumpkin cookie does exist. But it felt great making everything from scratch.  The result was a sweet smelling really soft and chewy cookie… and for some reason I didn’t like it that much. But surprisingly everyone else did. So maybe I might have to make this again someday…you know for the sake of everyone else or when I just happened to have pumpkin or cashews around. But hey, that’s one experiment down!

What are you planning to experiment on this week?

🙂

Sophie

PS: Don’t forget to check out my previous post about making dreams happen…or you can just click here to go to the post.