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Itadakimasu! Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice)

Posted by in Step-by-Step Recipes

Welcome to Fujimama, longtime Tasty Kitchen member and new contributor to the TK Blog. So happy to see you here! (And I’ve never wanted taco rice as much as I do right now. And it’s 6:53 am.) Take it away, Fujimama! –PW

 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

 
When you hear the words “Taco Rice” I suspect that Japan is not the first country that pops into your mind. But Taco Rice, or Takoraisu as it’s called in Japan, is a popular Okinawan dish invented in the 1960s by a Japanese chef who took the idea of tacos, so popular among the American military stationed on Okinawa, and combined it with rice, a staple item in the Okinawan diet. The dish has since become, ironically enough, one of the most well-known Okinawan dishes. Its popularity has also spread into other parts of Japan.

 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

When I lived in Tokyo there were many cafes that offered it on their lunch menus. One of the last meals I ate before moving back to the US was takoraisu. I was pregnant with my second child and takoraisu totally hit the spot. I’m not surprised, as takoraisu is total comfort food. Not only do you not have to worry about handling any awkward taco shells or worry about them going soggy, but takoraisu is traditionally eaten with a spoon, so all you have to do is shovel it in.

Even better? Takoraisu is so easy to make.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

You start by steaming some Japanese white rice (a short grain rice, often labeled as “sushi rice” here in the US). If you want your rice to be less sticky, you will need to rinse it before cooking it. This removes the powdery starch that builds up around the grains during transport. To rinse rice, put the rice in a bowl, fill it with cold water, and swish the rice gently around with your fingers. Pour the water out (keeping the rice in the pan with your hand), and repeat the process until the water is clear.

I make things even easier by cooking my rice in a rice cooker. (I’m lazy, what can I say?)

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

Once you’ve got your rice cooking, chop some tomatoes …

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

And shred some lettuce.

Then prepare your cheese. In Japan, recipes for takoraisu usually call for “pizza cheese,” a mild white cheese similar to mozzarella. You can use shredded mozzarella, but I like using crumbled queso blanco, a delicious and affordable Mexican cheese.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

Then you make some seasoned beef by first heating some oil in a saute pan. Sauté onions, garlic, ground beef, and seasonings until everything is cooked through and fragrant.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

All that’s left to do is build your takoraisu! Start with a bed of hot steamed rice, and layer the seasoned beef, shredded lettuce, chopped tomatoes, cheese, some salsa, and a dollop of sour cream on top.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

Now comes the best part: EATING!

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Okinawan Takoraisu (Taco Rice). Guest post and recipe from Rachael of La Fuji Mama.

Itadakimasu!

 
 

Printable Recipe

Okinawan Takoraisu (aka “Taco Rice”)

4.94 Mitt(s) 32 Rating(s)32 votes, average: 4.94 out of 532 votes, average: 4.94 out of 532 votes, average: 4.94 out of 532 votes, average: 4.94 out of 532 votes, average: 4.94 out of 5

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Difficulty: Easy

Servings: 5

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Taco Rice, or “Takoraisu” as it’s called in Japan, is a popular Okinawan dish invented in the 1960s by a Japanese chef who took the idea of tacos, so popular among the American military stationed on Okinawa, and combined it with rice, a staple item in the Okinawan diet. The dish has since become, ironically enough, one of the most well-known Okinawan dishes.

Ingredients

  • 1 Tablespoon Vegetable Oil
  • 3 cloves Garlic, Minced
  • 1 cup Onion, Chopped
  • 1 pound Ground Beef
  • 3 Tablespoons Soy Sauce
  • 1 Tablespoon Chili Powder
  • 1 teaspoon Ground Cumin
  • 1 teaspoon Table Salt
  • 1 teaspoon Freshly Ground Black Pepper
  • 4 cups Steamed Japanese Rice (sometimes Labeled "sushi Rice")
  • 2 cups Lettuce, Shredded
  • 2 cups Tomatoes, Chopped
  • 12 ounces, weight Queso Blanco, Crumbled OR 2 Cups Shredded Mozzarella Cheese
  • 1 cup Salsa
  • 4 Tablespoons Sour Cream

Preparation Instructions

1. Heat the vegetable oil in a saute pan over medium heat. Add the garlic and onion and saute until the onions are barely soft. Add the ground beef and break it into small chunks. Once the meat is cooked, add the soy sauce, chili powder, cumin, salt, and pepper. Let this simmer until the liquid reduces.

2. Spread 1/2 to 1 cup of the steamed rice on each plate. Top with the seasoned beef.

3. Then top with the shredded lettuce, tomatoes, queso blanco (or mozzarella), and salsa, and finish it off with a dollop of sour cream.

 
 
_______________________________________

Visit Rachael’s blog, La Fuji Mama, where she shares more than just her vast knowledge of Japanese cuisine. She has great travel photos, product reviews, and all sorts of food ninja-ness. You’ll also enjoy seeing more photos of her adorable girls, Squirrel and Bug. (And no, those aren’t their real names.)

 

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Pecan Pie Muffins

Posted by in Baking, Step-by-Step Recipes

Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

 
Your attention please … Your attention please …

This is a public service announcement.

Make these Pecan Pie Muffins.

You will be glad you did. Your friends and family will thank you.

That is all.

I’m sure glad I ran across this Tasty Kitchen recipe submitted by blackhawkwife. Between the butter and the pecans, I feel such a connection to her. There’s a bond there. Don’t ya feel it blackhawkwife? We’ve gotta be kin somewhere along the line.

Seriously though, when I made these my husband swooned, then said, “This … this is good stuff you’re doing. Telling people about this recipe is a good thing.”

A good thing indeed.

AND there are only five ingredients.

So what are you waiting for?

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

You’ll need brown brown sugar, flour, pecans, butter and eggs, as well as two bowls and a muffin pan.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Begin by preheating the oven to 350°F, and grease the muffin pan or spray with no stick cooking spray.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Baker’s Joy no stick cooking spray works like a charm. Tasty Kitchen member blackhawkwife used silicone baking cups, which are pretty cool too.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Next, in a mixing bowl, combine the dry ingredients: brown sugar, flour, pecans.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Mix all together well so they get to know each other.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

They don’t want to go to the big party without knowing someone.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

That can be awkward. That’s no fun at all.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Next, it’s the wet ingredients’ turn.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

In a separate bowl, mix together the butter and beaten eggs.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Mix until fairly smooth.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Now for the party. Let the mingling commence.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Stir them all together until just combined.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

It’s not necessary to do any major mixing. Just combine well.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Fill each muffin cup about 2/3 full.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

By the way, I used a jumbo muffin tin. This recipe will make five jumbo muffins or eight standard size muffins. I’m not sure how many mini muffins this would make; those sure would be cute and tasty.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Bake in a 350°F oven for 20-25 minutes. For this jumbo size I cooked it for the full 25 minutes. Adjust the cook time for standard-sized muffins. The top of the muffin should be flat and slightly crusty. Remove from the oven and carefully release muffins from the muffin pan to cool slightly. I use a bread knife or spoon to gently lift the muffins out while still hot.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

These are unbelievable when served warm.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Maybe with a pat of butter on top? Or some fresh whipped cream? These keep nicely. I stored a batch in ziplocks and re-warmed them a bit in the microwave the next day.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Oh my word y’all.

Actually, there are no words.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Pecan Pie Muffins. Guest post by Amy Johnson of She Wears Many Hats, recipe submitted by TK member blackhawkwife.

Just try them for yourself and see.

Thanks, blackhawkwife, for posting this incredible recipe!

 
 

Printable Recipe

Pecan Pie Muffins

4.83 Mitt(s) 63 Rating(s)63 votes, average: 4.83 out of 563 votes, average: 4.83 out of 563 votes, average: 4.83 out of 563 votes, average: 4.83 out of 563 votes, average: 4.83 out of 5

Prep Time:

Cook Time:

Difficulty: Easy

Servings: 8

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It’s a Pecan Pie in a muffin.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup Packed Light Brown Sugar
  • ½ cups All-purpose Flour
  • 1 cup Chopped Pecans
  • ⅔ cups Softened Butter
  • 2 whole Eggs, Beaten

Preparation Instructions

Preheat oven 350 F.

Grease your muffin pan (whatever size) or use the silicone cups. I grease my silicone muffin cups with Crisco or lard.

In a medium bowl, stir together brown sugar, flour and pecans. In a separate bowl, beat the butter and eggs together until smooth. Stir into the dry ingredients just until combined. Spoon the batter into the prepared muffin cups. Cups should be about 2/3 full. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes. Cool on wire racks when done.

Option: when you take them out of the oven, place a slice of butter on top and eat warm. You may also use walnuts instead of pecans.

 
 
_______________________________________

Amy Johnson is a blogger who writes about food, travel, the home (both inside and out), and various observations and random musings about anything and everything. Visit her blog She Wears Many Hats for a dose of deliciousness, practicality, hilarity, or just plain fun. She lives in South Carolina with her husband and two children.

 

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Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies

Posted by in Baking, Step-by-Step Recipes

Note: The wonderful Alice strikes again, selecting a fantastic cookie recipe from among Tasty Kitchen’s (almost) 20,000 recipes (wow!) and taking photos for us, step-by-step. These look so incredibly delicious.

 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

 
What exactly is a hot chocolate triple chocolate chip cookie? This cookie addict just had to find out! Browsing through all the delicious cookie recipes here on Tasty Kitchen, I was very intrigued by this creative adaptation for the traditional chocolate chip cookies. Not only does it use pre-made hot chocolate packets, it also uses three different types of chocolate chips. Now you’re speaking my love language.

Tasty Kitchen member, Alison Anderson, is the genius behind this great cookie. When you bite into the cookie, it tastes exactly like hot chocolate and a chocolate chip cookies. This is a fusion of the very best kind! So let’s get started.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

You will need butter, white and brown sugar, vanilla extract, eggs, hot chocolate packets, flour, baking soda, salt, and three types of chocolate chips: milk, semi-sweet, and white.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Cream the butter and sugars.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

What you’re looking for is a nice and light texture. Typically when you begin to cream butter and sugar together, the mixture is very dense.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

By beating them for a few minutes longer the dense mass transforms itself into a frosting-like (light and fluffy) texture.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Add eggs and vanilla making sure to scrape down the sides of the bowl. Mix until it is well combined. The recipe calls for mixing all the dry ingredients into a bowl before adding it to the wet ingredients.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

The mixture should resemble chocolate ice cream in color and visually.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Add chocolate chips and slowly mix them in. If you have kids they will love helping with this part because they will steal chocolate chips when you’re not looking. Go ahead and let them have fun. This is the only time I will advocate stealing anything. We’re talking about chocolate here—I get it.

The recipe calls for chilling the dough for an hour. I allowed mine to chill for a little bit shorter. Chilling dough helps for a few reasons. It gives the ingredients time to come together, makes for an easier time for scooping, and also helps retain its shape when baking.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

When I bake cookies I always use a cookie scoop to form uniform dough balls. It helps for the cookies to be the same size. This way my kids don’t complain that the other one got a bigger one. If you want to avoid the ‘Mom, Suzie got a bigger cookie than I did!’ battle, do yourself a huge favor and invest in a cookie scoop. They are very inexpensive and will become one of your most valuable kitchen tools—I promise.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

The key to scooping uniformed dough balls is to make sure the scoop is packed with dough.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Like this!

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Be sure to scrape the scoop alongside your mixing bowl so any excess dough is removed.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Feel free to lick and eat the batter of the beater and the scoop. It’s a baker’s reward.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Bake cookies 9-11 minutes or until golden brown. Some ovens may take longer so be sure to check after the recommended times. Mine took 13 minutes.

And make sure you have a glass of milk ready when they come out of the oven.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Enjoy!

This recipe makes a lot of cookies. I cannot tell you an exact amount because I chose to freeze some of my cookie dough for a rainy day, but I’m guessing it probably makes about 4 dozen.

 
 
 
Tasty Kitchen Blog: Hot Chocolate Triple Chocolate Chip Cookies. Guest post by Alice Currah of Savory Sweet Life, recipe submitted by TK member Alison Anderson (elimaxandlela).

Just for fun, I suggest adding a teaspoon of cinnamon or an additional ½ teaspoon of sea salt. The cinnamon would make it more like a Mexican hot chocolate and the hint of sea salt adds is nice because it offsets all the sweetness from the chocolate.

Thanks, Alison. My kids loved your cookie recipe!

 
 

Printable Recipe

See post on elimaxandlela’s site!
4.73 Mitt(s) 45 Rating(s)45 votes, average: 4.73 out of 545 votes, average: 4.73 out of 545 votes, average: 4.73 out of 545 votes, average: 4.73 out of 545 votes, average: 4.73 out of 5

Prep Time:

Cook Time:

Difficulty: Easy

Servings: 30

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I decided to see what happens if you add hot chocolate mix to cookie batter. AMAZING things, that’s what.

Ingredients

  • 2 sticks Salted Butter, At Room Temperature
  • 1 cup White Granulated Sugar (I Like Baker's)
  • ⅔ cups Packed Light Brown Sugar
  • 2 whole Large Eggs
  • 1 teaspoon Pure Vanilla
  • 3-¼ cups All-purpose Flour
  • 4 packages (1 Oz. Packets, NOT Sugar-free) Hot Chocolate Mix
  • 1 teaspoon Salt
  • 1-¼ teaspoon Baking Soda
  • 1 cup Each White, Milk, And Semi-sweet Chocolate Chips

Preparation Instructions

Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Cream butter and sugars until smooth. Beat in eggs and vanilla until combined. In a separate bowl, combine flour, hot chocolate mix, salt and baking soda. Add to wet ingredients in 3 to 4 parts, making sure all is incorporated. Fold in chips. Chill the dough for an hour or so. Use a 1/4 cup as a scoop to scoop dough onto baking sheets lined with parchment paper. Bake for 9-11 minutes or until edges are golden brown. Let cool for 5 minutes before removing from pan.

 
 
_______________________________________

Alice Currah is the force behind Sweet Savory Life and Everyday Alice. She and her husband Rob are the proud parents of three children: Abbi, Mimi, and Elli. Alice is the winner of Saveur’s Cover Contest and is on the Forbes.com list of Eight of The Very Best Food Bloggers. She’s also a weekly writer for PBS Parents’ Kitchen Explorers. She’s the best-est.

 

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Funnel Cakes!

Posted by in Step-by-Step Recipes

Republished from May 2010.

Mmm…funnel cakes. There’s nothing like them in the world. And when I found this funnel cake recipe (submitted by HeatherD) on Tasty Kitchen not long ago, I immediately printed it out and put it on the top of the stack of Tasty Kitchen recipes to try before I croak.

It’s becoming a rather large stack.

Funnel Cakes, for those of you who aren’t familiar, are a standard carnival treat. A thin batter is poured through—get ready—a FUNNEL directly into hot oil and fried until golden, then topped with plenty of powdered sugar…

And then the world becomes a sweeter place.

 
TPW_9734
Here’s what you need: flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, eggs, vanilla, and milk. I use whole milk whenever I can in desserts and baked (and fried) goods, but any milk you have should be fine.

 
 
 
 

TPW_9735
Start by throwing the dry ingredients (flour, sugar, baking soda, salt) into a bowl.

 
 
 
 

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Whisk them together to combine.

 
 
 
 

TPW_9739
Add eggs, milk, and vanilla.

 
 
 
 

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Whisk it together until everything’s all combined.

 
 
 
 

TPW_9750
Check the consistency…

 
 
 
 

TPW_9751
And splash in more milk if you need it. NOTE: The recipe called for 2 1/4 cups of milk, but I probably wound up adding an additional 1/2 cup of milk to get the thinness I thought it might need.

 
 
 
 

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That’s better. And watch…

 
 
 
 

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You can drizzle it around in the bowl a little…

 
 
 
 

TPW_9763
And practice your funnel cake making skills.

 
 
 
 

TPW_9767
When you’re ready (and the oil is hot), throw some of the batter into a…

Are you ready?…

FUNNEL.

Now, first I’m going to show you the wrong way to make a funnel cake.

 
 
 

TPW_9776
If you hold the funnel to far away from the surface of the oil…

 
 
 
 

TPW_9781
The batter can scatter in little pieces and not form into a cohesive, neat funnel cake.

 
 
 
 

TPW_9808
But if you hold the funnel close to the oil (though obviously not IN the oil), you can make sure it stays together.

 
 
 
 

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Just move the funnel around in a circle until it gets to the size you want. Let it brown on one side, then carefully flip it over to the other.

 
 
 
 

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When it’s finished cooking, remove it and set it on a stack of paper towels.

 
 
 
 

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Break out the powdered sugar and the sifter, and sprinkle it on thick.

 
 
 
 

TPW_9816

 
 
 
 

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I love funnel cakes!

 
 
 
 

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Then just pull it apart and chow down! Eat it while it’s warm and crispy. Delicious.

These are really easy to make, and so delicious. The only thing that’s a little tricky is just getting the hang of drizzling the batter into the oil, and making sure the oil is hot enough to cook and crisp the funnel cakes, but not so hot that the cake will immediately burn.

Also, HOT OIL: Keep the pan on one of the back burners if you have little kids.

Enjoy! THANK YOU to HeatherD for sharing this great recipe. I loved it.

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Coffee Toffee Bars

Posted by in Baking, Step-by-Step Recipes

WINNERS – Here are the winners of the KitchenAid mixers: Jamie M. – “We made Cookie Salad last night with girl scout cookies, it was delish!” Kimberly – “We wanted something fruity and spring-like, even though it was February. I had 3 kinds of berries in the freezer, along with some rhubarb–and combined a few […]

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Delicious Thai Chicken Soup

Posted by in Step-by-Step Recipes

For today’s Tasty Recipe, Erika sent me a link to a delicious sounding soup submitted by thekitchenpixie last September. The name was enough to rope me in: “Thai Chicken Soup with Cilantro-Infused Rice“. Who could possibly resist that? The ingredients were simple (and I happened to have them all on hand), so yesterday I whipped […]

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The Mushroom Soup!

Posted by in Step-by-Step Recipes

This is the day of the week when we select a lesser-known Tasty Kitchen recipe—one that might otherwise go unnoticed—and cook it up. My friend and fellow food lover Erika (you might know her as TK Erika) spends a lot of time looking at every recipe that comes through Tasty Kitchen’s doors and sent me […]

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Oreo Cheesecake Cookies

Posted by in Baking, Step-by-Step Recipes

I first met Maria at Two Peas and Their Pod in Salt Lake City about a year ago, and she’s as lovely in person as she is on her blog. Since then, she’s been a prolific contributor on Tasty Kitchen and I’m so excited to have her join the ranks as a contributor here on […]