Author: Debbie

Debbie Arnold: Gary’s Favorite Pumpkin Bread {Foodie Friday}

I spent most of October experimenting with and developing recipes with pumpkin, pumpkin seeds or pepitas as an ingredient in preparation for my “starring role’ on THV 11 This Morning.   Gary’s Favorite Pumpkin Bread was one of those dishes I took with me since it seems to be a real favorite of everyone with whom we have ever shared it.   Probably most of you either don’t get up early enough (really early) or you live outside the viewing range of that program, but I have enjoyed the opportunity tof appearing on three occasions so far and, hopefully, will be looking at more in the future.  I digress.

I’ve explored all the Top 10 Ways to Enjoy Pumpkin and then some.  When it comes to pumpkin, many people automatically think of pie.  In fact, in a survey conducting by Schwan’s Consumer Brands of North America, 37 % of Americans named the pumpkin pie as their favorite only being nudged out by apple at 47%.  While I do love a good piece of pumpkin pie, I seldom make one.  When I do, it is more likely to be something in the nature of a hand pie or a tart. When it comes to sweet pumpkin baking, I’m much more likely to serve up a pumpkin roll, pumpkin spice cake, pumpkin spice doughnuts (oh my goodness!) or pumpkin cinnamon rolls.  And I’m not above enjoying those while sipping on some pumpkin spice latte.

pumpkin spice latte

Pumpkin Spice Latte

I am just as likely to use pumpkin in a savory manner as I am one that is sweet.  Roasted Pumpkin and Brussels Sprouts is one of the side dishes that we really enjoy.  As they caramelize, both take on a delectable and rich sweetness. Throw on a little crumbled Petit Jean Bacon or some cubes of crispy pancetta and you have a mouth full of autumn!   Make this slow cooker Chicken with Pumpkin Seed Mole I shared over on Taste Arkansas a regular part of your menu plan.  Oh and pumpkin soup?  Yes, please.  I recently made a version that used navy beans, sage and hot Italian sausage that was hearty and delicious.  It was even better warmed up the next day for lunch.

chicken with pumpkin seed mole5

 Maple Glazed Pumpkin and Chicken with Pumpkin Seed Mole

Did you know that  a pumpkin is not a vegetable? In fact, it’s a berry. Within  family Cucurbitaceae, which includes cucumbers, melons, squash, and gourds is the genus Cuacurbita which includes gourds, winter and summer squash, and all varieties of pumpkin.  They are indigenous to North America which is  one of the reasons they probably appeared at the early Thanksgiving feasts. However, more than likely, pie would not have been one of those dishes on the harvest table since flour and sugar were not readily available or affordable during that time.

Do you get the idea that  we like and never seem to tire of pumpkin at our house?

The original idea for Gary’s Favorite Pumpkin Bread began with Mrs. Watson from my hometown.  She was always willing to bake up a batch and would often share a loaf or two with Hubby and me when we were first married.  Because we were either working or going to school or both, baking was not high on my cooking priority list even though it was and is one of my favorite things to do now.  Mrs. Watson, I’m sure, felt sorry for my skinny hubs and thought she might fatten him up a tad.  Eventually, she shared her recipe when she decided that I might just be able to keep up with the demands of filling his tummy.

Many years ago, I began making her bread as a way of sharing during the Christmas holidays.  At first, it was a couple of recipes and a few loaves.  Our friends. Our families.  No one turned it down.  Then it started going to work with us and then to our daughter’s school.  And the list grew.  And grew.  When people see Hubby around the holidays, they automatically assume he is making pumpkin bread deliveries.  I stopped counting at 93 loaves last year.

Some of you will remember the ONE year Arkansas participated in the Super Tuesday (1988) election process; some of you weren’t even born yet, I’m sure.  Hubby was a candidate for public office in a three-county race that pretty much required us to go door to door asking for votes.  There were many days and nights when it was so dang cold that my lips seemed to freeze together!  On one particularly cold and snowy day, Hubby took small loaves of bread around with him as he campaigned.  Some people credit his victory to that pumpkin bread!  I guess it makes for a good story, but I do know that some of his supporters are always asking when the next delivery of pumpkin bread will arrive.

I hope you enjoy it as much as we do. For more ways to use pumpkin, both sweet and savory, visit DiningWithDebbie.  I’d love to know some of your family favorites as well.

pumpkin bread

Gary's Favorite Pumpkin Bread
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Ingredients
  1. 3 cups sugar
  2. 1 cup vegetable or canola oil
  3. 4 eggs
  4. 1 (1 pound) can pumpkin puree (not pie mix)
  5. 3 1/2 cups good quality all-purpose flour
  6. 1 teaspoon baking powder
  7. 1 1/2 teaspoons soda
  8. 2 teaspoons salt
  9. 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  10. 1 teaspoon nutmeg
  11. 1 teaspoon allspice
  12. 2/3 cup water
  13. 1 cup (or more) chopped pecans or walnuts, lightly toasted
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Spray two large bread loaf pans with nonstick spray.
  3. Combine sugar, oil and eggs; beat well.
  4. Add pumpkin and mix well.
  5. Sift (I don't EVEN do this anymore.) together dry ingredients.
  6. Add water and beat well. Stir in nuts.
  7. Pour into large loaf pans.
  8. Bake at 350 degrees for one hour. (If you use a convection oven, you may want to shorten this time.)
  9. Cool slightly on cake racks before removing from the pans.
Notes
  1. If you want to use other size pans, just adjust the time spent in the oven. This can be wrapped in heavy duty aluminum foil and frozen. It keeps well. My daughter replaces the nuts with chocolate chips due to our grandson's nut allergy. She bakes them as mini-muffins for their lunches (as I did for her).
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/
debbie headshot

 

Arkansas Women Blogger member and co-administrator Debbie Arnold pontificates and eats at Dining With Debbie.  She and her Hubby split their time between Central and Northwest Arkansas.  She loves to cook, develop recipes and have play dates with her two perfect grands.  Mostly, she has play dates with the Perfect Ones.  Twitter: @diningwithdeb  Intagrams : @diningwithdebbie

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 2

By Elizabeth Michael

After you are sure you are up and running, you should go ahead and make three views: the master, sandbox, and unfiltered. The master is what you will look at every day and has all of the customization built in. The sandbox is where you will test the customization before you implement in the master. The unfiltered view is your fail-safe. This is your back up that you have not messed with at all. There is no going back once you have made changes in Google Analytics, so it is best to make these three views so you never ruin your data sets.

#8

From the admin panel, click the drop down menu under “view.” Then, click “Create new view.”

#9

Name your new view and then click “Create View.” Repeat this process until you have established all of the views you want.

From the drop down menu, choose the view in which you wish to view your data.

Now that you have Google Analytics working on your blog and have set up the different views of data, lets move forward with implementing some goals that will help you measure you business objectives.

#11

Google Goals track user actions and answer questions like “how often do they start the action?” and “do they complete the action?” You will want to set up your goal in the sandbox view first to test and make sure it is working properly. Once you know it is good to go, then implement in your master. Leave the unfiltered version untouched.

#12

To set up a goal, first click on the “Admin” tab and then click on “Goals.”

#13

Then click on “New Goal.”

#14

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 1
#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 2 Scheduled for Nov. 1, 2014

 

 

#AWBU 2014 Recap Google Analytics Part 1

 By Elizabeth Michael

#1

 

Google Analytics is a powerful and easy-to-use tool that tracks your website traffic.  Google Analytics presents aggregated sets of data that can help you make business decisions. 

Bloggers can use Google Analytics and Goals to help measure successful content, important traffic patterns, flaws in the user’s experience, and much more. 

Google Analytics is extremely to use; however, there are a few strategic decisions you must make before jumping right in.

#2

 The Cycle of Success outlines a process that acts as a roadmap to your success as a blogger.  The inner circle represents the process that Google recommends that you follow when setting up their analytics tracking on your site.   You start with defining and setting your business goals.  Your goals should be straightforward and realistic.  What do you wish to accomplish with your website?  Generate revenue?  Page views?  Information downloads?  Defining your business goals will set the foundation for your measurement plan, the second step in the Cycle of Success.

 @3

­­­­

Above is an example measurement plan.  The steps to make a measurement plan do not change.  You can see an example a blogger may write on the right.  Here is a blank plan for you to try:

 #5

The third step is more technical in nature and nine times out of 10 you will have everything you need to implement Google Analytics and Google Goals.  Your technical infrastructure is your computer, software, etc.  Basically, it is all of the physical tools you will need to implement your plan. 

Creating your implementation plan will guide you through the implementation process, prioritizing what needs to get implemented first, and so on.  For a simple blog, you will not have any complicated customization to implement. 

How-to implement Google Analytics:

 First, you will need to set up your account.  Then, you will need to get your code.  Finally, you pick and install a plug-in for you blog.  Yoast seems to be very popular, but there are lots of options out there.

 #5b

 

Once you are logged in to your Google Analytics account, click “Admin” and then “Create New Account.” 

 #6

Click “Website” if you are tracking traffic on a website, or “Mobile App” if you are tracking an app.

 #7

 

Click “Get Tracking ID.”  This gives you the code you will enter into your plug-in.  Now, make sure your plug-in is correctly installed on your blog.  Go to the plug-in settings and copy and paste your tracking ID into the appropriate field.  Depending on which plug-in you choose, the steps may change; however, they should be simple enough to follow along and get your tracking installed correctly.  To test and make sure that you are up and running, access your website from another device.  Go to your Google Analytics dashboard and on the left hand side, click “Real-time.” You will see all of the users currently on your website.

 

#AWBU 2014 Google Analytics Part 2 – Scheduled for Oct. 29, 2014
#AWBU 2014 Google Analytics Part 3 – Scheduled for Nov. 1, 2014

 

 

Shannon Magsam: Curry Chicken Salad {Foodie Friday}

You might call me an occasional cook.

I have good-cooker genes in spades, but I haven’t brought them to a complete boil yet. You might say my skills are blanched, at best. Or maybe parboiled?

I like to cook when I have time or if I’m in the mood for a specific dish (which is almost always this Creamy Tomato Bowtie Pasta for me). I like to cook when I want to serve up a big helping of love to my husband  and this when I want to make my picky tween-age daughter happy.

Even though I didn’t spend much time actually preparing food when I was a kid, I absorbed lots of cooking terminology while watching my mother, aunts and grandmothers flit about the kitchen, simultaneously sautéing while prepping homemade biscuits for the oven.  

Because of those amazing home cooks, I innately know what it means to fold, dredge, julienne and caramelize.

I also learned it’s not a big deal to keep measurements completely precise, unless you’re baking, that is. And for Heaven’s sake, if you don’t like an ingredient in your chicken salad (recipe below!) or chicken pot pie – or whatever you’re making — just leave it out, replace it with something you like better or use more (or fewer) of the called-for ingredients. It’s all about customization in your kitchen.

I remember my best friend in middle school marveling at how I could cook up a tasty pot of macaroni and cheese without measuring out the six cups of water as instructed on the box. And how did I know to add a splash of olive oil to the pot so the water wouldn’t boil over?!

As with most of the cooks in my family, I just “eyeball it” when it comes to measuring.

My mother is the Queen of the Kitchen. She can pull together the most complicated meals at top speed. It ain’t no big thing for her to whip up some chicken and dumplings while making a from-scratch blackberry pie with the fruit her granddaughter just picked from the bushes up by the horse barn (that happened several times this summer).

Compared to my relatives, I’m not the Master of my Kitchen yet, but I’m becoming more advanced the older I get.

I prefer to cook a little more simply, though. Maybe it’s because I’m woefully inept at getting all the food on the table while everything’s still hot. I still don’t know how my mom does it.

One of my favorite (simplest, yet delicious) recipes right now is fall-inspired chicken salad.

I first made this fruited chicken salad recipe for a nautical-themed baby shower (link:http://nwamotherlode.com/archives/42840) at my house in Fayetteville back in May. Here’s a shot of the cute “crabs” I served:

Crab chicken salad

This recipe has become a go-to for me. I found it on the All Recipes website, but adapted it, i.e. added extra ingredients I liked and took out the ones I didn’t.  Like I said, super easy to make:.

Curry Chicken Salad
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Ingredients
  1. 4 skinless, boneless chicken breasts (cooked, diced)
  2. 1 small red apple (cored, diced)
  3. 1 small Bartlett pear (cored, diced)
  4. 1/3 cup raisins
  5. 1/3 cup halved green grapes
  6. ½ teaspoon curry powder
  7. ½ teaspoon onion powder
  8. 1 cup mayonnaise (less if you like your chicken salad drier)
  9. Salt (to taste)
  10. Pepper (to taste)
Instructions
  1. Mix diced, cooked chicken with mayonnaise.
  2. Then add curry powder, onion powder, salt and pepper. Stir.
  3. Next, add fruits and gently stir until well mixed.
  4. You can serve immediately, but it always tastes better after it’s been in the fridge for an hour or two.
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/

You can serve this chicken salad on croissants, fancy flatbread (or any bread, really), atop a salad (if you’re making a salad, consider cutting the pear into larger pieces and adding to the top for pretty) or just as an entrée on the plate by itself.

Here, I just made a quick salad and added a dollop of the chicken salad on top (I didn’t have green grapes, so I used red):

Chicken salad salad, Shannon

 

I  hope you enjoy the crunch of this chicken salad and happy fall! Here’s to eating at tables brimming with your favorite foods, friends and family. Cheers!

 

 

shan-blue-dress-circle   Shannon Magsam is mama to one little lady(bug), is married to a long-time newspaperman, John, and co-founded    nwaMotherlode, a resource website devoted to entertaining and connecting moms and families in Northwest Arkansas. nwaMotherlode offers advice, health information, book reviews, local mom interviews, recipes and much more. 

Karen Weido: Cooking With Kids {Foodie Friday}

tingsmom-easy-apple-cake 

Since the day my daughter was old enough to sit up, she has been in the kitchen with me. It doesn’t seem like that long ago that I had her sitting up on the counter top while I measured the ingredients, analyzed recipes, and did my best to place something edible on the table for my family.

As soon as Ting got old enough to help, baking together became a tradition for us. Lately Bug has been in on the action as well, and cooking with my kids has become one of my favorite activities.

At our house Fall doesn’t really bring a longing for pumpkin flavored anything, but it does stir up a need for apple based desserts. I started searching for a new apple-something for us to bake, and I found this Apple Cake recipe on one of those recipe database sites.

The first step for me when cooking with my kids is always prep work. It is so much easier to get all the ingredients measured out before the kids hit the kitchen. I know the day is coming that Ting will be ready to practice measuring, but for now our cooking sessions always begin with pre-measured ingredients.

tingsmom-apple-cake-ingredients (1)

I love this recipe because it is so simple for both my kids to just pour and mix all the ingredients together. Everything just goes into the same bowl and then it pours over the apples. It makes it easy when both kids can participate at the same level and this cake was definitely on that scale.

tingsmom-apple-cake-kids-cook

 We also loved this cake because it smells delicious when it gets in the oven, and it tastes even better when it gets on the table!

 What are your favorite fall dessert recipes?

Easy Apple Cake
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Ingredients
  1. 3 pounds apples, peeled & sliced
  2. 2 cups all-purpose flour
  3. 1 ½ cup sugar
  4. 2 teaspoon baking powder
  5. 1 teaspoon salt
  6. 2 eggs
  7. 1 cup vegetable oil
  8. 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Lightly grease 9x13 baking dish.
  3. Place sliced apples into baking dish.
  4. In bowl, mix together all remaining ingredients.
  5. Spread mixture over apples and pack down.
  6. Lightly sprinkle cinnamon on top.
  7. Bake 45 minutes or until puffed and lightly brown
Arkansas Women Bloggers https://arkansaswomenbloggers.com/

tings mom

 

Karen lives in South Arkansas with her husband and two kids. When she’s not working or chasing kids, she blogs about her family’s life on Ting’s Mom Blog. She also reads books for all ages and reviews them on her book site, Ting’s Mom Books.

#ARWB Recap: Coping With the Anxiety of Blogging

By Dr. Margaret Rutherford

Anxiety

Photo Source:  Google Images

Being a blogger in general is just anxiety provoking. You are doing something that most people would never do in a million years. Reveal things and then be evaluated over the Internet? To just anyone who might be reading?

You have got to be kidding.

There are different levels of anxiety of bloggers have.

1) The BEHAVIORAL Level: Disorganization and Feeling Overwhelmed
2) The SELF-CONCEPTUAL Level: Having Doubt About Yourself and Feeling Isolated
3) The LIFE STRATEGY Level: Indecisiveness and Waffling

All of this was beginning to sound very psychological so we broke it down. Real things you can do to help keep the stress and anxiety of blogging to a minimum. Especially if you are a new blogger. Or a blogger that is kinda stuck in a rut and is getting anxious about it.

First we looked at BEHAVIORS TO BUILD IN.

1) Write on a schedule so you don’t procrastinate. A huge source of anxiety.
2) Learn the technicalities of your blog so you can fix problems when they occur.
3) Get an editor! Which can help with the loneliness of blogging. Another big source of anxiety. And get someone who will be honest with you. So you will get better.
4) Network. Support other bloggers.

Above all : Keep you in your plan so it will work.

What I mean by that is – if you are trying to get back on track by doing something that you “hear” works for someone else, but just isn’t you? It’s not going to work. Stick to your plan. Your track. Use your editor to help you with fresh ideas. If you are shy, don’t play to go a conference by yourself. Take a friend. Accept who and where you are. It’s okay!

The second big area we looked at was SELF-CONCEPT.

1) Trust in the power of your voice.

If you are always putting yourself down, or even sometimes doing it, please challenge that. We are all insecure. All of us. But your voice can be strong. You can find it. It is unique.

We all talked about this in the session. How we came or were coming to trust our own voices.

2) Dare to not compare. Just step into the light that is yours.

Comparison with others is just not helpful. We all have to realize that we are all on a spectrum. There is always going to be someone who we can find that we feel has more going for her than us. And And believe it or not. There is someone who is looking at you. And wanting to be you. I promise you that’s true.

Then the third part.

LIFE STRATEGY ANXIETIES.

These are caused more due to not knowing the answers to questions about where you are going with your website or blog. What you want from it. What your goals are for it. You might be indecisive about advertising or whether or not you wanted to be featured on certain websites. Because you are not sure of where your own parameters are. Of who you are. Of what you stand for.

If you are clear about what you are creating, the reader will be clear as well. And seek you out.

margaret_headshot 2

Dr. Margaret Rutherford is a clinical psychologist who has been in private practice for over 20 years in Fayetteville, Arkansas. She began blogging in 2012, coining the term “NestAche” for her empty nest experience. She launched Dr.MargaretRutherford.com in April of 2014 and now can be found on the Huffington Post, MidlifeBoulevard, BetterAfter50, Boomeon, and here at Arkansas Women Bloggers!