VANILLA BEAN CRANBERRY SAUCE

This month marks my 9-year anniversary at my law firm.  Wow.

My first week on the job my boss asked me to finalize an appellate brief for filing, which required preparing a table of contents and index of authorities.  “You know how to do that, right?” he asked.  Of course I knew how to do that.  Sort of.  I mean, I could prepare the table of contents in chronological order, and prepare the index of authorities in alphabetical order (I did go to elementary school, after all).  But I had no clue how to do the dot dot dot thing, which looks like this:

The staff at the time (and I use the term “staff” loosely) were unhelpful, if not openly hostile.  The attorney sitting next door to me advised me that my life at the firm would be much better if I just learned how to do things myself.  Yikes.  (He was right.)  So I copied the dot dot dot thing from a brief my secretary at my prior job had prepared for me, and inserted it into the brief I was working on.  To this day, that is still how I do the dot dot dot thing — I just cut and paste from a prior brief.

And so every appellate brief I have written for the past 9 years has a little dot dot dot DNA from my old firm.  Kind of like sourdough starter.

Speaking of sourdough starter, were you one of the people that embraced bread baking as a pandemic hobby?  I am not.  My pandemic hobby was making vanilla extract, which became popular when the price of vanilla extract skyrocketed.  I discovered a co-op on Facebook that sells beautiful beans from various locations around the world for roughly $9-$10 per ounce (which is about 8 or 9 beans).

My first order of 4 ounces of Madagascar beans

Put the beans in alcohol — vodka is my booze of choice — and let them sit in a cool dark place for about a year or so (kind of like they did to me at my last job).  1 ounce of beans to 1 cup of alcohol for single fold, 2 ounces to 1 cup for double fold.  It’s easy to get carried away when the co-op offers beans from different countries, and there’s a fair amount of FOMO associated with the whole thing.

When the beans arrive, the first I thing I learned to do is inspect each one for “tattoos” — the pinpoint marks growers make on them to identify the beans in case of theft.  I can’t describe how exciting it is to find a tattoo!  It’s like a little love note from the grower.

Tattoo marks on unripe beans

Tattoos!

So what to do with my now lifetime supply of vanilla extract in the making?  Baking, obviously.  And vanilla sugar and vanilla salt.  And Vanilla Bean Cranberry Sauce, which is a favorite at the annual senior Thanksgiving luncheon hosted by my son’s former Boy Scout Troop — there’s never a drop left.  In the past, I’ve made it with sad, dry, shriveled up beans that come in a glass tube, but this year I’m making it with my gorgeous, plump, vodka-soaked beans — and it is good!  For a beautiful, delicious punch of color on your Thanksgiving plate, this cranberry sauce is a winner dot dot dot.

5 from 1 reviews
VANILLA BEAN CRANBERRY SAUCE
Author: 
 
Ingredients
  • 1 vanilla bean
  • 1 cup sugar
  • ½ cup water
  • ½ cup orange juice
  • 12-ounce package fresh cranberries, rinsed and drained
Instructions
  1. With a sharp paring knife, split vanilla bean vertically. Scrape out seeds (also known as caviar) and set aside.
  2. Combine vanilla bean, sugar, water, and juice in a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil over high heat. Add cranberries and vanilla bean seeds. Reduce heat and gently simmer for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat. With the back of a spoon, smash some of the cranberries against the side of the pot. Cover and cool completely at room temperature. Discard vanilla bean and refrigerate until ready to serve.

Use the plumpest, reddest, firmest cranberries you can find

Simmering in their vanilla bath

This is no ordinary cranberry sauce!

Bonus joke:  Why did the cranberry sauce cross the road?  To get to the other sides.

HALLOWEEN DEVILED EGGS — MERRY TO MACABRE

Who says deviled eggs are just for Easter?  They’re also fun to dress up for Halloween — cute or creepy, your pick!  I’m constantly surprised by the creative ideas folks come up with for these time-honored favorites.  Get inspired by this updated roundup of Halloween deviled eggs, from the merry to the macabre.

Nothing scary about these adorable candy corn deviled eggs from Edible Crafts:

Guests will go batty for these batty deviled eggs from Tastefully Simple:

And these from Edible Crafts:

Wonder who the brain was behind these creepy deviled eggs from Brit & Co.?

Who could resist a cute little pumpkin deviled egg, like these from Tadka Pasta?

Too generic?  How about a grinning Jack O’ Lantern, like these from Ochikeron’s You Tube channel:

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Or these from Happier Than A Pig In Mud:

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Who wouldn’t get a kick out of these owl deviled eggs from Maker, Baker, Glitter Shaker?  Hoo?  Hoo?

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Spider deviled eggs are cute without being too creepy, like these black olive ones from The World According To Eggface:

halloween1And these green olive ones from Momtastic:

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Of course, you can make them creepy, like this albino black widow spider deviled egg found on Hairpin:

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If you’re going to have spiders, you might as well have spider webs, like these from health-actually.com:halloween7

Food Planet kicks spider web eggs up a notch with a bright green filling;

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Devil horns are an easy way to dress up deviled eggs for Halloween, like these from Cookin’ Canuck:

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You can have lots of fun coming up with devilish little faces on your deviled eggs, like these from So Lovely Sweet Tables:

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Or these amusing little devils from Kraft:

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Or these simply devilish ones from She Keeps a Lovely Home:

Skeleton deviled eggs from Thrifty Fun are a scream:

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These guys from Community Chickens will send you crying to mummy:

It wouldn’t be Halloween without some eyeballs, like these from Kath’s Kitchen Sync:

halloween4  Or these zombie eyeballs from Happier Than A Pig In Mud:

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Or next level creepy with piped on capillaries from Mom Foodie:

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Or even these dragon (or cat) eyeballs from Chow Bella Paleo:

And just when I thought eyeball deviled eggs couldn’t get any creepier . . . there’s these super creepy ones from Instructables:

These black and orange eggs from aol.com/food might be too scary for some people:

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These red ones found on Homemade Recipes puts the devil in deviled eggs:

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Deviled eggs make cute ghosts in a graveyard, from Chef Morgan:

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These green goblin eggs from Betty Crocker are pretty scary:

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Baby Yoda do do do do do do — so cute:

Popcorner Reviews

Could anything possibly be creepier (or less likely to be eaten) than these Satan’s Spawn deviled eggs from Kravings.blog?  Nothing.  Ever.

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But why just make Halloween deviled eggs when you can BE Halloween deviled eggs?  Check out these deviled egg costumes on Amazon:

 

Happy Halloween!

P.S.  Do you know why ghosts don’t like it to rain on Halloween?  It dampens their spirits!