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General tips

Kitchen Tip : On electric stovetops, use flat-bottomed pans that make full contact with the element. A warped or rounded pan may be a conversation piece, but will waste most of the heat.


Buy Local Food : ...but at the same time, figure out what makes sense. It is more energy efficient to raise lambs in New Zealand and ship them to the UK than to raise them in the UK, because New Zealand lamb farming is more energy efficient. It is also more energy efficient to buy produce raised in Spain, than produce that has to be grown in greenhouses in the UK. Baby steps require figuring out which things make sense and which don't.


A local veg box shared between friends is a few quid a week, and the perfect way to slash your food miles while eating good food. So if you're self-catering at university why not try a doorstep delivery from one of the many veg box scheme providers?









Christys Christmas Trees Recipe

Christys Christmas Trees Category Holiday Recipes 
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Ingredients And Procedures
------------------------1 1/2 POUND------------------------

---------------------------DOUGH--------------------------- 7/8 c Buttermilk; for Welbilt/DAK

-and Zojirushi, add 2 tb. -more buttermilk) 1 Egg

3 c All-purpose flour

1 ts Salt

4 tb Butter or margarine

1/4 c Sugar

1 1/2 ts Red Star active dry yeast

---------------------------ICING--------------------------- 1 c Powdered sugar

1 tb Milk or eggnog; up to 1.5 Tb

1/2 ts Vanilla

Green food coloring

--------------------------GARNISH-------------------------- Cinnamon red hot candies 1. Place dough ingredients in bread pan, select

Dough setting, and press Start. 2. When the dough has risen long enough, the machine

will beep. Turn off bread machine, remove bread pan, and turn out dough onto a lightly floured countertop or cutting board. Gently roll and stretch dough into an 18-inch rope. Grease a large baking sheet(s). With a sharp knife, divide the dough into 17 pieces. Roll each piece into a ball and place it on the greased baking sheet in the shape of a Christmas tree, spaced about a half-inch apart; 5 balls for the bottom roll, 4 balls for the next row, 3 balls for the next row, 2 balls for the next row, and 1 ball at the top. Combine the remaining 2 balls into 1 large ball, gently roll it into a thick rope and shape it into an "S" to form the tree trunk. VARIATION: This recipe makes one large Christmas tree coffee cake. To create 2, 4, or 6 smaller trees, simply divide the dough into 2, 4, or 6 pieces initially and then follow the directions for dividing up the dough and shaping each tree. 3. Cover and let rise in a warm oven for 30 to 45

minutes until doubled. (Hint: To warm oven slightly, turn oven on Warm setting for 1 minute, then turn it off, and place covered dough in oven to rise. Remove from oven to preheat.) Remove baking sheet(s) from oven. Preheat oven to 375 F. 4. Bake 20 to 25 minutes until golden brown. Cool on

a cake rack. 5. When the coffee cake(s) is cooled, in a small

bowl, combine the icing ingredients, adding enough liquid to make the icing thin enough to spread over the coffee cake. Spread each roll with icing, then decorate with cinnamon red hot candies. Yields 1 Christmas tree coffee cake. Nutritional information per Christmas tree: Calories 149, Fat 3.4 g, Carbohydrate 26.3 g, Protein 3.2 g, Fiber .7 gm, Sodium 166 mg, Cholesterol 20.5 mg. Joyce's Notes: For a cinnamon nut coffee cake, I added 1 tsp. of cinnamon and about 1/2 cups chopped pecans. Good!! I also made 2 trees by dividing the dough in half, then making 12 balls, using 10 for the tree and 2 for the trunk. Source: "The Bread Machine Magic Book of Helpful Hints" by Linda Rehberg and Lois Conway.

 
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