What are we about here at Bakeroose?

Chef Stephanie Petersen is know as Chef Tess Bakeresse. She is joined in her cooking adventures here on the Bakeroose blog by her two sons, Little Man and Face. We also have regular posts from other Little Chefs who share their cooking adventures. Our kid's blog is a help to moms, grandmas, grandpas and caregivers. We want to help a whole new generation of cooks get excited about the culinary world. If you cook together and have the desire to join our Bakeroose, feel free to send an email to Chef Stephanie Petersen (chef-tess@hotmail.com). If we like what we see, we'll add your story! That simple. If you homeschool, welcome! We have a twice monthly bakeroose class that will be highlighted on this blog as a way to incorporate food science into your child's education. We hope you want to come back again and again. Even better, we hope you like it enough to want to share your cooking experiences and anything you learn along the way! We are so excited to hear from you! Chef Stephanie's main blog is http://www.cheftessbakeresse..com/

Cooking class information can be found here:

Kids Cooking Classes

Any class Chef Tess teaches with kids will usually be added here automatically! So...how cool is that?!

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Car show

Hey everyone I'm Chef Tess' son, Little Man. There is a car show on the last Saturday of every month. We got a picture of one of my favorite cars, a 1970's mach 1 Mustang.
Here we are behind of a cool 70's-80's hot rod.

A beautiful car .

That's a big truck it is very small in this picture and It's hauling a lifted trailer.

Good luck to our soldiers.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Homemade Fridge Pickles

Today we got together for kids cooking class to continue our knife skills. In the middle of class, this jar of pickles walked in attached to the hand of a dad. Wait. Does that sound like the pickles had legs? Well...they didn't. We needed them for our potato salad. We decided that we should make some pickles too. Did you know that pickles are made of cucumbers? Some kids don't know that. I bet you did.

Here's what you need:
One quart jar with lid
measuring spoons and cups
knife to cut cucumbers (if you are allowed...ask an adult!)
Food for Fridge Pickles:
2 large cucumbers
1/2 cup vinegar
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup water
1/2 tsp dill weed or seed
1 clove garlic (peel off skin and cut in half)
3-4 small red pepper flakes (optional)

Slice the cucumbers in 1/4 inch slices. We cut them in half first.
Put all the rest of the food ingredients in the glass jar. Be sure to stir it a little to dissolve the salt.

Fill up the jar with the cucumbers. If there is any uncovered pickles, be sure to fill up the rest of the jar with water.
Put on the lid tightly and put the jar in the fridge. The pickles will be ready to eat in about a week.

There you go!


Friday, April 16, 2010

Homemade Potato Chips

These need to be made with an adult. Obviously we are cutting with sharp knives. We will also be frying the chips in hot oil. Don't do this alone. You need supervising. Mrs. Chef Tess almost needs supervision. The boy holding the knife and cutting this potato is a member of our Friday kids cooking class. Today we made some homemade potato chips. I think these kids are very much improving on their knife skills. Ages five through twelve and all of them did a wonderful job handling the knives safely and practicing cutting potatoes paper thin. Amazing isn't it!
We put the cut chips in big bowls of water. Water keeps the potatoes from touching air, which will make them turn brown. This is called oxidation. It doesn't make the potatoes bad to eat, just ugly to look at. When they where all cut, we drained the chips and dried them between two clean kitchen towels. Too much water in frying oil is very dangerous. It will spit hot oil all over the kitchen and all over you. So be sure to dry them very well. Now we piled them in a bowl and heated a large heavy pot full of oil. The oil got very hot. When it came time to fry the chips, we had the kids play outside for the most part to avoid any oil injuries. It takes 3-5 minutes to cook a potato chip to optimum crispness. It took a while. We skimmed them out with a metal skimmer. Okay. Mrs. Chef Tess skimmed them. The only one who stayed and helped where the very oldest kids.

Put in a paper towel lined metal pan or metal colander. The best part of teaching knife skills with potato chips (free hand, without a food processor or other appliance) was that they felt extreme ownership for those potatoes. They could easily tell if the thickness was acceptable when it was fried and we got to talk about the cooking times being different for thick and thin cut potatoes. It was a great lesson learned.
The chips where delicious!

There you go.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Fast Taco Rice

Middle of the week fast meal here it comes! This is one the kids can do very easily. It uses the stove so if you have to have an adult with you, make sure it's okay. Taco Rice is one of our family favorites. It's got a lot of vegetables in it. You don't have to use them all, but it is good to try new stuff. It makes you a better chef when you try new foods. It really does. So, gather your ingredients.

Tess' Taco Rice
1/2 lb lean turkey meat (taco seasoned)
2 bell peppers, chopped fine
1 medium onion, chopped fine
2 cloves of garlic chopped fine
1 14.5 oz can diced tomatoes
2 cups instant brown rice
1/2 cup chicken or vegetable broth

sour cream (optional)
chopped green onions or chopped cilantro (it's a Mexican herb)
Directions: Saute the bell peppers, onions and garlic with the taco meat in a 12-14 inch skillet with a lid that fits. Cook 4-5 minutes until meat is no longer pink and the veggies are tender.
We like a lot of vegetables around here and after years of practice, we are finally on board with wanting a lot of the good stuff in our food too. It's a process. Mom says that it takes fifteen exposures to a new food before kids will want to eat it. Sometimes you have to try it made a lot of different ways until you find a way to like it. It's worth liking vegetables because they will make you strong. Here's a picture of me...Face. Would I stir the pot if I didn't want to eat it? Maybe. But this time, take my word for it, this is good stuff.


Add the tomatoes and broth. Stir and bring to a boil. That's big bubbles. Add instant brown rice, mix well. Cover with lid and turn to lowest heat. Cook 10 minutes. Stir in cilantro or green onions if desired.

Serve with taco chips, sour cream. Homemade yogurt also works as a topping. Really anything you put on a taco would work. Yes, this would work wonderfully as the base for taco salads. You're so smart.


There you go.

Friday, March 26, 2010

UFO Alien Egg Ships

It's crazy how easy these are to make and how fun! We take hamburger buns, any number, just depending on how many we want to serve. Then we have that same number of whole eggs as there are buns.
Open up the buns. Put the bottom on a sheet pan. Have an adult turn on the oven to 350 degrees.
Put the tops of the hamburger buns in a pile.

With a small round cookie or biscuit cutter, cut a circle out of the top of the hamburger bun.




We eat the inside circle while the buns are baking.
place a tablespoon of bacon bits in the bun or shredded cheese. Salt and pepper if you want it to taste really good. Just a little sprinkle.
Bake uncovered 15-20 minutes, until egg is cooked. We like ours a little runny because it really doesn remind us of aliens. If you want a well done alien, wait the full 20 minutes.
There you go.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Biscuit Quiche Muffins

Chef Tess here. How are all my little chefs? This morning, with Spring Break in full swing I was excited to make some breakfast with the kids. I love days when we don't have to rush off in the magic mini van and defy laws of nature to make it to school in one piece with our sanity in tact and homework papers trailing the highway behind us. It may not really be that bad, but it feels that bad. Slower days mean breakfasts like this biscuit and quiche muffin. The first time I saw these it was at a dear friend's house. Face and Little Man gobbled them up and begged for more. We've loved them ever since. Thank you Heather!
I like mine made with Crisp buttery French Onion biscuits on the bottom and Swiss cheese, bacon, bell peppers and egg nestled in between the outer crust. You don't have to use the French onion biscuit mix, you can just use regular plain baking mix. It is simple to make. I used my French Onion biscuit mix this morning. (technical difficulties...please see "Make a Mix" section of my main blog for the full recipe http://cheftessbakeresse.blogspot.com ).
4 cups of the mix with 1 cup of buttermilk. Mix lightly and then roll out to 1/2 inch thickness using 1/2 cup of flour on your counter top. (If you don't want to make the biscuits from scratch, you can use the tubes of pre-made biscuit dough. They aren't all natural, but they work.)
Cut 12, 2 inch circles with a biscuit cutter. Lightly oil a muffin tin and place the dough in the bottom of each cup, like a crust. The same way we made the pizza muffin bites.
You will also need:
4 slices of bacon, sliced in 3 pieces (total 12 small pieces)
3 eggs, beat well
1/4 bell pepper, chopped fine (if you like bell pepper)
12 1 inch squares of Swiss cheese (or any cheese you like)
Every time I told my son Face to,"cut the cheese again"...he laughed in hysterics. Seems my husband Ace has been teaching him some slang terms. Tisk, tisk. Your cheese should look like this. In squares that will cover the top of the muffins.
Put pieces of bacon and bell pepper in each cup.
Fill cup with 1 Tablespoon scrambled egg.
Put a nice little cheese top on the whole deal-eee-oh. Like a lid.
Have an adult turn on the oven to 425 degrees. Adults should do the oven stuff unless you have specific instructions that it is okay to use it. Bake 425 degrees 13-15 minutes. Serve warm. Any left overs need to go in the fridge. You know I want you to have a good time and not be all woozy from eating food that has been left out too long. Much longer than an hour and a half, and I wouldn't eat it. Use the fridge. Love it. If this really makes it that long. It may not...Yields 12.
There you go.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Bubu's fruit salad.

Hi all from one of the little chefs!!! My bubu (pronounced BOO-BOO), which means 'grandma' in Marshallese, (My grandparents went to the Marshall islands for one of their missions.) came over one time and we were trying make a dish sorta like this and she told us what we should put in it. It's really good. ;) About 6/8 of us like it. Here's the recipe:

Bubu's fruit salad
1 Lb (16 oz) cottage cheese
1 8 oz (226g) whipped or "cool" whip
2 11 oz (311g) or 1 22 oz can mandarin oranges
1 box of flavored gelatin or jello

Now the only thing you need to do is put all of the ingredients in a bowl and put in fridge until you are ready to serve. Here are the pictures of me making it:
The ingredients.









And stir it all up!!!! (make sure that NO white is showing and that there isn't to much pink in one spot)










And the finished product!

















And Dad tasting!!!! Hope you all like it!! I know I do!!! There you go.
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