Search Recipes
 
Find it. File it. Save it.
An easy way to organize.
Welcome to BettyCrocker.com
Log In | Join Us
Join Us!

Join BettyCrocker.com for even more ways to organize, save, share recipes and join the talk around the kitchen table.

Join Now


Find Help          Find Help


recipes
cooking
baking
entertaining
how-to
products
Community
Shop

RSS Feeds
Share in the real-life stories of two Betty Crocker editors. Each week, Andi and Heidi will tell you all about their personal food experiences: what they love to cook, their kitchen disasters, their biggest food challenges, and how they feed their families and friends. And they’ll help you find ways to bring creativity and inspiration to your kitchen every day.
 
 

October 2007 - Posts

  •  

    Want to see something scary (besides my pumpkin-carving skills)? Check this out. I’ll never think of a cheeseburger the same way again.

  • One fall many years ago, I was given lots of pumpkins as a gift. At the time I was living in a big old house in St. Paul with six friends. For weeks we used them as decorations on our dining room table, in our family room and well, all over the house. The night before Halloween we carved some of the pumpkins into jack-o'-lanterns. There were still a dozen or left and I decided to cook each one. After a week of eating pumpkin bread, pumpkin cookies, pumpkin baked Alaska (I don't remember where I found that recipe!), a pumpkin cake and even pumpkin pickles (they turned out like watermelon pickles) my friends told me that I was banned from making pumpkin anything else.

     

    Many years later, my favorite pumpkin recipe is Pumpkin Cookies with Browned Butter Frosting. It is a soft, moist cookie with a generous dollop of a browned butter frosting on top (don't worry—you don't need fresh pumpkin to make these delicious cookies).  Halloween treats aren't always just for kids!

     

    Pumpkin Cookies

  • You are now looking at our brand new Kitchen Journals! We've still got a few kinks to work out, but we’re on our way to giving you a behind-the-scenes look at what goes on in the Betty Crocker Kitchens, as well as our own lives—at least when it pertains to food. 
     
    There are going to be two of us logging in. I (Heidi) plan to post Mondays, Wednesday and Fridays, while Andi will share her foodie experiences Tuesday and Thursdays. (Since she cooks WAY more than I do, I only thought it fair to write the extra post.)

    Here’s the 411 on us both:
    Andi is a total foodie who loves to entertain. She can whip up a dinner party for 12 or a baby shower for 24 without batting an eye. This is a woman who lives to eat and is truly passionate about food. When not entertaining hordes of hungry people, Andi cooks for her husband, Jack (a meat-and-potatoes guy if ever there was one). She recently became a grandmother and can’t wait to introduce her grandson to the joys of eating grown-up food.

    Me? I definitely eat to live, not the other way around. I’m a single gal and since I’m just cooking for myself I don’t spend a lot of time in the kitchen, at least during the week. Weekends are a different story. I often get together with friends to make a meal and enjoy a cocktail (or two). My friends find it hilarious that I edit cookbooks for a living because I have so little knowledge of food or cooking. I’m working on changing that, if only for shock value.

    We hope you’ll like our stories. Happy reading! 

     

Portions of content provided by Betty Crocker Store powered by Cooking.com