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Overnight Cinnamon Rolls with Maple Cream Cheese Icing

February 12, 2015 by Asharae Leave a Comment

These past few weeks, between some of the stories we’ve heard from our friends, the book we’re reading with our small group, and reflecting on our own circumstances, I’ve been hit over and over with the truth that God uses the “in-between times” to shape us for what he has ahead of us.

We’ve been filming the story of our dear friends Courtney and Ryan who adopted their daughter Nara from Ethiopia nearly two years ago. From the time they started the adoption process, they waited three years to be able to bring her home. They agonized in the waiting when all they wanted to do was have their daughter in their arms. And yet, as we’ve been unpacking more of their story the last couple weeks, they shared how God was active and working that whole time. He was preparing them for the next task – moving to Ethiopia to work in full-time ministry. It’s something they didn’t see coming, but looking back they’re able to see all the pieces of the puzzle falling into place. I can’t wait to share more of their story with you – till then you can read more on their blog.

Just last night as I was reading the book that we’re going through with our small group, I came across this quote. “God uses your present experiences to mold you for future usefulness here on earth and in eternity.” Stop. Read it again. Okay, and maybe one more time for good measure. He is using our present experiences. And He is preparing us not just for tomorrow but for the future, for eternity. Whoa. I honestly can’t even wrap my mind around that.

Do your present experiences seem ordinary and dull like mine usually feel? Maybe it’s not that they’re actually ordinary, but that we simply don’t have our eyes open to the ways God is working around us and through those “normal” events. Maybe it’s not that He’s not working around us, but rather we’re just not seeing Him. He is there, but we’re getting too bogged down by the seemingly ordinary-ness of our circumstances – we’re too self-focused to see beyond to what could be.

I want to learn to be sensitive to how God is at work around me. Most days I don’t even know where to begin. If I look back though, it’s so incredibly clear to see how He has used other people and the pieces of my story to bring me to where I am now. Why then is it so hard to believe that He’s using the here and now for what is to come?

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I’d love to have some sweet analogy for you to tell you why I’m sharing this recipe with my thoughts above. It would be something about waiting, patience, and trusting that your cinnamon rolls are rising, even though you don’t see it happening in the moment. I haven’t fully worked it out in my head, so I’ll let you make those connections if you wish 😉

Now, on to the recipe! These cinnamon rolls are sweet goodness! The best part? You can make them ahead of time, pop them in the fridge overnight, let them come to room temperature and rise a bit in the morning, and they’re ready to bake! Make these this weekend for your sweetheart, for your kids, or maybe even just for yourself!

Overnight Cinnamon Rolls with Maple Cream Cheese Icing

Adapted from Beth Kirby
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 5 hrs
Cook Time 25 mins
Total Time 5 hrs 25 mins
Servings 12 rolls

Ingredients
  

For the Dough

  • 3.5 cups all purpose flour + 1/4 - 1/2 c for kneading
  • 1.5 c buttermilk warm
  • 1 stick unsalted butter melted & warm
  • 3/4 c sugar
  • 6 Tbs cornstarch
  • 1 packet instant yeast 2 1/4 tsp
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 Tbs butter for greasing the pan

For the Filling

  • 1 cup brown sugar packed
  • 1.5 Tbs cinnamon
  • A couple dashes of nutmeg
  • One stick of butter very soft

For the Icing

  • 4 oz cream cheese softened
  • 1 Tbs brewed coffee
  • 1 Tbs maple syrup
  • 1.5 c powdered sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 1-2 Tbs milk

Instructions
 

  • Gently warm buttermilk - you don't want it to get too hot or it will curdle. Dissolve yeast in warmed buttermilk. Add warm melted butter, sugar, salt, and eggs. Stir together thoroughly by hand.
  • Mix the cornstarch and flour in a separate bowl. Add to the buttermilk mixture. Stir together until flour is completely incorporated. Cover with a cloth and let rise in a warm place for an hour and a half, or until dough has doubled. Punch down and let rise for another hour and a half.
  • On a clean work surface, sprinkle 1/4 c flour. Place the dough in the middle of the flour and gently knead it into a workable dough. Use the other 1/4 cup flour if it's still too sticky to work with. Beth's advice is to use the least amount of flour possible - that makes the rolls more tender in the end. Be sure not to over-work the dough while you're kneading it.
  • Flour a large work surface (about 20inx20in) and roll your dough out into an 18x18in square. At this point be sure you have enough flour so the dough doesn't stick to the counter when you're ready to roll it up (I made that mistake!)
  • Combine brown sugar and cinnamon and a couple dashes of nutmeg in a small bowl. Gently spread the very soft butter over your dough, leaving about a 1in border around the edges. Sprinkle nearly all of the cinnamon sugar mixture over the butter, reserving a couple tablespoons to use in a moment. Start with the edge closest to you and begin gently rolling the dough. Once you reach the end, pinch the seam shut so all your cinnamon-sugary-butter goodness doesn't escape.
  • Melt two Tbs of butter and pour them into a 9x13 glass baking dish. Tip the baking dish so the butter coats the bottom and up the sides a bit. It may pool in the bottom of your pan - that's okay! It'll make the bottoms of your cinnamon rolls extra delicious! Using a floured knife, cut your rolled up dough into 12 equal pieces. I think the easiest to do is cut your roll in half. Then cut each of those pieces in half. You'll have four equal pieces. Each of those gets cut in thirds, leaving you 12 equal-ish cinnamon rolls. Place each in the buttered baking dish.
  • You'll notice that those sad little end rolls got skimped on the sugar - once they're in the pan, feel free to use the cinnamon sugar mixture you saved to sprinkle in those end rolls and any others that look like they need some extra love.
  • If you're making these rolls at night so they'll be ready to bake the next morning, you cover them tightly with plastic wrap at this point and place them in the fridge. In the morning, set them in a warm place till they have doubled in size, about an hour (they may have risen a bit in the fridge.) If making these rolls straight through, let them rise till doubled in size, about an hour and a half, then you're ready to bake.
  • Heat your oven to 325F. Bake rolls for 25-35 min. Beth recommends using an instant read thermometer and removing the rolls once they've reached an internal temperature of 190F. She says this ensures they stay delicious and gooey on the inside, and I have to agree! Allow rolls to cool about 10 minutes in the pan.
  • While the rolls are baking, you can assemble the icing. Use a fork or a whisk to combine cream cheese, coffee, maple syrup, and vanilla. Add powdered sugar and milk and mix well to combine, making sure icing doesn't have any lumps of powdered sugar. Start with 1 Tbs milk and add another if icing seems too dry. Drizzle over the cinnamon rolls and enjoy!

This post contains affiliate links, but all opinions are my own.

Filed Under: Breakfast/Brunch, Personal

Blueberry Syrup

July 29, 2014 by Asharae 2 Comments

Blueberry-picking season has come and gone where we live in North Carolina, but if you live a little further north you’ve still got time to find a local blueberry patch and pick your own! A couple weekends ago we heard about a blueberry farm just a few minutes from our house, so we got up on Saturday morning and came home $11 lighter and nearly 4 pounds of blueberries richer!

Our first order of business was to make crepes and blueberry syrup to go with. Tim is the crepe-master, and the only one of us with enough patience to make a whole batch of crepes and not get discouraged when the first two don’t turn out right. While he mixed up some batter, I looked up recipes for blueberry syrup and landed on this one. It seemed simple enough and didn’t call for any ingredients like corn syrup or corn starch, which I rarely have around. You only need three ingredients plus some water for this recipe – it really couldn’t be much simpler.

If you end up with extra blueberries like we did, you should enjoy them in pancakes or muffins, on top of yogurt, blended into homemade lemonade (SO good), or just eat them right out of the bowl.

As for the blueberry syrup, it’s just as good on some vanilla ice cream for dessert as it is on pancakes, waffles, or crepes for breakfast!

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Blueberry Syrup

Recipe from Balancing Beauty and Bedlam
Print Recipe Pin Recipe

Ingredients
  

  • 2 cups of fresh or frozen blueberries
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1/3 cup of sugar
  • 2 teaspoons lime or lemon juice

Instructions
 

  • Combine one cup of blueberries, sugar, water, and lemon or lime juice in a small saucepan.
  • Cook and stir on medium heat for 2-3 minutes until the sugar dissolves.
  • Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and simmer, uncovered for 15-20 minutes or until it begins to thicken. Stir occasionally. Blueberries may split while heating - that is okay!
  • Stir in remaining cup of blueberries and cook for 2-3 more minutes until blueberries become soft.
  • Serve warm with pancakes, waffles, crepes, ice cream, you name it!

 

Filed Under: Breakfast/Brunch Tagged With: blueberries, breakfast recipe, brunch recipe, syrup

The Power of Presence. And a Recipe for Costa Rican Gallo Pinto

June 12, 2014 by Asharae 3 Comments

I would like to introduce you to Flor (I’m actually going to introduce you to her cooking, but first a little about her.) During one of my summers in college I lived in Costa Rica with Flor and her husband while volunteering for a local organization with my friend Leslie. Flor became more than our host mom while we lived with her – she took it upon herself to be our guide to the bus system and the ins and outs of San Jose, she guarded us fiercely with her warnings about Costa Rican men (my friend and I stuck out like sore thumbs with our blonde hair and blue eyes – Flor made certain we knew to avoid the attention of men in the city), she was our personal chef as she prepared Gallo Pinto every morning, packed our lunch each day to take to work, and had dinner waiting each night when we returned home. Flor always spoke with immense faith in the Lord, his provision, and his power to heal.

A couple months before I was set to go to Costa Rica, my dad was diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia. The doctors quickly started him on chemo and he had a particularly strong round a week or so before I left for my summer trip. He was expected to get sick shortly after, due to the chemo-therapy knocking out his immune system. I remember my dad hugging me tight in the airport before I left, reminding me that Costa Rica is where I was meant to be for the summer and putting my fears and feelings of guilt to rest about being so far away while he was undergoing treatment.

Within about a week of arriving in San Jose with Leslie and beginning our volunteer work with the Rahab Foundation, I got word that my dad was very ill and had been rushed to Duke for treatment. Those conversations are all a blur to me as I found out he had fallen into a coma and the doctors were doing what they could to keep him stable. What I do remember from that night is Leslie helping me scour our local shops for phone cards so I could call my mom to hear more news (these were the early days of Skype and all the internet cafes were already closed.) And I remember Flor comforting me as I anxiously dialed my mom’s number only to have to fight with Costa Rica’s automated system (in Spanish of course) until I could reach my mom’s distant voice on the other end of the phone. Instead of telling me everything was going to be okay or patting me on the back, Flor quietly grabbed a bowl of warm water, knelt down on the tile in her living room, took my shoes off one by one, and gently washed my feet.

I’m tearing up just remembering it.

In that moment, there was nothing more powerful, more thoughtful, or more meaningful anyone could have done. There were no words that would have been helpful, and no amount of “I’ll be praying for you”s that would have comforted, but I will forever remember her selfless act of loving on me without hesitation.

I wonder how I could share that selfless kind of love with others. How do you comfort someone when they’re in the midst of the darkness and they’re not sure the light is anywhere close? I’m not entirely sure. But having been on the other side, I can say that perhaps actions and presence are more important than having the perfect words.

My dad had been in a coma for a few weeks when I called my mom on Skype one afternoon. She answered and then said “hang on a second,” I waited a moment and then heard my dad’s weak voice from miles away – “hey baby.”

 

And there I was, bawling in the internet cafe.

 

My dad is all healed now. He spent 80-something days in the hospital that year, but just over a year ago he passed the 5-year mark, so they’ve declared him cured. Praise the Lord.

All that to say, this recipe for Flor’s Gallo Pinto is pretty special to me. It’s simple, and maybe you don’t like rice and beans, that’s fine. But to me this dish is comfort food. It reminds me of sitting in Flor’s kitchen in Costa Rica, chatting over the newspaper, learning to like coffee, and her husband laughing at me because it was possible that I liked Gallo Pinto even more than he did. Most of all it reminds me of Flor and her selfless act of washing my feet the night I was so scared and felt so uncertain about the future. I pray I learn to love like that.

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It would make my day if you tried this recipe. It’s the closest I’ve been able to get to the dish Flor would serve us each morning. I love it served with bananas – call me crazy but the salty sweet combination of the rice and beans with the banana is delicious. Avocado and scrambled eggs are also great sides. We even became friends with one family in Costa Rica whose tradition was to have Gallo Pinto with leftover birthday cake the day after a family member’s celebration (that was also surprisingly delicious!)

On a side note – if you live in Chicago, you should visit Irazu, one of the only Costa Rican restaurants I know of in the states. Be sure to ask them for Salsa Lizano (pronounced lee-san-o) – they’ll be impressed. If you can’t get to Irazu to try Lizano, you can always order some online! Tim got a bottle for me for my birthday this year – he knows me so well.

Happy cooking! And Pura Vida!

Costa Rican Gallo Pinto

Asharae Kroll
This is the closest recipe I've gotten to the delicious gallo pinto my Costa Rican host mom made every morning.
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 5 mins
Cook Time 25 mins
Total Time 30 mins
Servings 4 -6

Ingredients
  

  • 1 yellow onion diced
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 Tbs canola/vegetable oil don't use olive oil or spray
  • 1 15 oz can black beans do not drain
  • About 3 c cooked rice day-old is best
  • Kosher salt and black pepper to taste.
  • Salsa Lizano only if you're lucky enough to own a bottle
  • Optional Avocado, banana, scrambled eggs, birthday cake.

Instructions
 

  • Cook rice according to package directions (day old rice is actually best, so you can skip this step if you have cooked rice on hand)
  • Heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Sauté onion, about 3 minutes.
  • Add garlic and sauté one more minute.
  • Add beans, with liquid, and salt and black pepper. Heat through and let simmer for 1-2 min.
  • Add rice and stir to combine, trying not to smash the beans. Cook until heated through. I like to stir it together and then let it cook, without stirring it for about 3 minutes at a time. This allows the mixture to get little crunchy bits throughout. Stir after 3 minutes and then let it sit an additional 3 minutes. Repeat this, tasting along the way, till the gallo pinto is the consistency you'd like. I cooked mine about 15 minutes total.
  • Serve with your choice of bananas, avocado, and scrambled eggs.

 

Filed Under: Breakfast/Brunch, Main Course Tagged With: breakfast recipe, Costa Rica, Costa Rican food, easy recipe, simple recipe

Simple Breakfast Tacos

May 5, 2014 by Asharae Leave a Comment

Happy Cinco de Mayo you guys! Hope you had a wonderful weekend full of adventures! Tim and I had our first weekend off since March, so we spent it up in Raleigh and Durham visiting friends, going to the Handmade Market, eating good food, and going to a Durham Bulls game – we couldn’t have asked for better spring weather to spend all weekend outside!

We’re also (finally) getting a start on our garden here and we spent yesterday afternoon picking up additional flowers and veggies for our front porch and raised-bed garden. We brought them home, did a little research on Smart Gardener (highly recommend for anyone starting a garden or wanting to learn more!), and carefully placed each tomato and pepper plant in the soil. I’ll be honest – the main reason I have a garden is to be able to make salsa all summer long. Salsa and bruschetta and tzatziki. That’s pretty much it.

This year we’re adjusting what we’re growing to exclude the peas and beans that we never got around to eating last year (they’re still in our freezer) and include a few new veggies that we haven’t tried before – namely zucchini and eggplant. We’re trying a few new tomato varieties that we’re pretty excited about, and we even planted marigolds and basil next to the tomatoes to test out the theories that marigolds help tomatoes grow better and basil makes them taste better! Who knew? (Lots of other well-seasoned gardeners, that’s who. Not us though – we’re learning as we go!)

We’ve still got some extra space in the garden and we haven’t yet figured out what we’ll plant. Have you grown veggies in the past? Anything in particular that is easy to grow and produces tasty veggies? Anything we should shy away from that’s difficult to grow?

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In honor of Cinco de Mayo I’ve got a simple recipe for breakfast tacos – who says tacos can only be for lunch and dinner?? You already know that I’m more of a savory breakfast person than sweet, so I absolutely love meals like this one for breakfast! Feel free to add your own flair to this recipe – add some salsa or jalapeños, brown some breakfast sausage and toss that in, slice up an avocado and include it in your taco.

This would make a really fun brunch for a group of friends – you could set up a make-your-own taco station with tiny bowls for each ingredient, brown some sausage and cook up a large batch of scrambled eggs, and have everyone assemble their own tacos!

Simple Breakfast Tacos

Asharae Kroll
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 5 mins
Cook Time 10 mins
Total Time 15 mins
Course Breakfast/Brunch
Cuisine Mexican

Ingredients
  

  • Eggs 2-3 per person
  • Small Flour Tortillas 2-3 per person
  • Cheddar Cheese or queso fresco if you have it!
  • Your choice of red onion cilantro, tomatoes, salsa, avocado, lime juice etc.

Instructions
 

  • Whisk eggs together with a splash of milk and a dash of cumin, chili powder, a little salt and some pepper. Scramble over medium-low heat in a greased pan.
  • Heat tortillas and serve topped with eggs, cheese, and your choice of red onion, cilantro, tomatoes, salsa, avocado, a spritz of lime juice, or whatever other goodies you'd like to add to make these breakfast tacos your own!
  • You could also add browned sausage or cooked bacon to give these tacos a little something extra!

 

Filed Under: Breakfast/Brunch Tagged With: breakfast recipe, brunch recipe, easy recipe, tacos

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Hello there!

My name is Asharae. I’m a photographer by trade, wife to an amazing man, and mama to three little ones. I am passionate about creating good food, sharing meaningful conversation around the table, trying new things, and encouraging others to do the same.

Welcome to This Wild Season! This is a place for sharing what I’m learning in the kitchen and outside of it. Most of all, it is a challenge to myself and to you to slow down, be present in the moment, and re-learn how to savor food and conversation around the table.

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