Merciful God, You are great in compassion and Your tenderness for us is without measure. We ask You to give us today our daily bread, and also provide for the needs of all of Your hungry children around the world. Through Christ Your Son and Our Lord. Amen.

Showing posts with label Blessed Pope John Paul II. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blessed Pope John Paul II. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Pierogies with Bacon and Peas







I realize this recipe is not for everyone (including members of my own family), but it's a comfort dish to me, and maybe will be for you. It's easy -- you can whip it up in less than 25 minutes, and it's good rib-sticking food for autumn and winter. Because the menfolk in my family will not eat it, ahem, I save this dish for a night when just Faith and I are home and we both love it.

The recipe came from Cooking Light (though I doubt the "lightness" of it), and I make it almost the way it's written -- a little less bacon and onion and regular sour cream instead of low-fat. I am posting it the way I make it. Be sure to slice the onion like an apple so that the pieces are big enough for picky onion eaters to remove them.

This is a great dish to serve for the feast of St. Faustina, Blessed John Paul II, St. Maximilian Kolbe, St. Teresa Benedicta (martyred in Poland) or any of the Polish saints, as pierogies are a traditional Polish dish.



Pierogies with Bacon and Peas


12 frozen potato and onion pierogies (such as Mrs. T's)
4-6 slices center-cut bacon
1 onion, peeled and sliced vertically
1 t. sugar
1/4 t. dried thyme
1 cup frozen green peas
salt and pepper to taste
1/4 cup sour cream


Place frozen pierogies in a bowl of tepid water, high enough to cover them.

Cook bacon in a large nonstick skillet until crisp. Remove bacon; crumble. Increase heat to medium-high. Add onion, sugar, and thyme to drippings in pan; sauté 5 minutes. Stir in peas; sauté 1 minute. Drain pierogies and add them to the skillet, Salt, and pepper; cook 30 seconds. Sprinkle with crumbled bacon. Taste for seasoning and adjust if necessary.

Serve with sour cream.



I suggest serving with warm applesauce, or a green salad, and soft rolls.



Source: modified from Cooking Light


Monday, May 2, 2011

Polish Kremówka Papieska

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With three big events on the Catholic calendar yesterday I had a hard time deciding which to celebrate. It was the feast of St. Joseph the Worker, for whom I have great fondness, the feast of Divine Mercy, for which I have great devotion, and the beatification of our blessed Pope John Paul II. Hmmm...which to celebrate?

Well, I ended up praying the prayers of the Divine Mercy throughout the day, preparing an Italian meal (which covered St. Joseph in my mind) and enjoying a wonderful a Polish dessert, supposedly the favorite dessert of Pope John Paul II. It was a full and complete day. ;-)

This dessert is one that will be an annual treat on October 22 the new feast day of our beloved Blessed John Paul II. What a treat to look forward to -- like a giant cream filled pastry. Yum! I used the "easier" of the two recipes found at Catholic Cuisine and it turned out just wonderful (but I am wondering how that other one would turn out...might have to do a test run). With just the purchase of a box of puff pastry and cooking a quick pastry cream, the entire dessert was finished. Just a few hours of chilling is all it needed (and it's just as tasty this morning, so don't worry about those leftovers!). I'm not certain how authentic this recipe is, as the video at Catholic Cuisine states the cream cake has a shortbread crust and a pasry top, but it was a delicious attempt at this ethnic dish.



I struggled with the pronunciation of this heavenly treat, but after watching the video at Catholic Cuisine it seems the pronunication is: Krem'-ōf-ka Puh-pes'-ka -- not as complicated as it looks.

I am posting the recipe just as Jessica posted it at Catholic Cuisine, but just so you know I did not bake the pastries with a baking rack on top. I did, however, push them down lightly with a large spatula (just to push some of the air out) halfway through the bake and at the end. My total bake time was 25 minutes. Also, I pulled the pastry out of the freezer and while it thawed, I cooked and chilled my cream -- kind of backwards, but it worked. After the pastries were baked and almost completely cool, I spooned on the chilled cream. Because the cream was set, it didn't run and didn't require the use of the sided dish as a mold, I just plated it on my serving platter and chilled it for several hours before serving. The whipped cream and strawberry are optional, but special.





Polish Kremówka Papieska





2 sheets (1.1-pound package) frozen puff pastry dough, thawed
1 recipe Easy Pastry Cream (see below)
Confectioners' sugar


Heat oven to 400 degrees. Roll out each piece of puff pastry slightly to blend the seam lines. Without cutting all the way through, lightly score each pastry sheet into 9 sections. Sandwich each puff pastry sheet between two pieces of parchment paper and two cooling racks. This will keep the pastry flat but still flaky. Bake 15 minutes, remove top rack and top sheet of parchment paper. Replace rack and continue to bake until golden and crispy throughout, about 15 more minutes. (See my note above on this technique.) Cool completely.

If you like a thick layer of filling, make a double batch of Easy Pastry Cream. (I made one recipe)

Using a 13x9-inch pan as a mold, place one layer of cooked puff pastry in the bottom of the pan. Pour hot pastry cream over it, and place second layer of cooked puff pastry on top. Refrigerate until set. When ready to serve, using the prescored marks as guides, cut into 9 pieces. Dust each piece with confectioners' sugar. Refrigerate leftovers. (I chilled my cream and spooned it on almost completely cooled pastries. I pulled the pastry out of the freezer and while it thawed, I cooked and chilled my cream -- kind of backwards but it works.)


Easy Pastry Cream

2 cups milk
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Pinch salt
5 tablespoons cornstarch
6 large egg yolks


In a medium saucepan, bring milk, sugar, vanilla, salt, cornstarch and egg yolks to a boil, stirring constantly with a wire whisk. Reduce heat slightly and continue to boil 1 minute, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon to get in the corners. Take the pan off the heat and plunge it into an ice-water bath or, if you have lumps, strain it through a sieve into a pan or heatproof bowl set in ice water.