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Five Cup Fruit Salad – Southern Plate by Gordon Ramsay

Five Cup Fruit Salad


Five Cup Fruit Salad

This recipe for Five Cup Fruit Salad was shared by a sweet Southern Plate reader, Cindy Burton, and published in my third cookbook, Sweetness. Cindy shared the story behind the recipe in Sweetness and I’m sharing it here with you, today. 

“My mother in law was hands down the sweetest of sweet little old ladies. When I first met her in 1987, she came waddling through the hallway with the prettiest dimpled gun on her face. I knew right then that we would be good friends. 

Her name was Ruby Helen Reece Burton and she was the mother of seven children, with my husband being her ‘baby boy’. We used to joke about how both she ad Oliver, my father in law, were the babies of their families, and Eldon (my husband) and I were the babies of our families. We would always say we are doing pretty good for a bunch of babies! 

Ruby was the queen of making do. She and Oliver were poor throughout their entire fifty sex years together, but you wouldn’t be able to tell it by anything Ruby said or did. She never let on like they didn’t have money for anything she wanted; she always found. suitable alternative to whatever it was. 

Often, you would see Ruby crocheting hand towels or working on some type of sewing project to make a little extra money. Oh, how she loved to craft and bring smiles to people’s faces!

I could go on and on about how special this woman was to me ad my family, but with tears rolling down my face while thinking about her, I will end with this special recipe that she was known for, Five Cup Fruit Salad. Now folks, this is just a basic little fruit salad that Ia m sure many of you have tasted in some variation, but to our family, it is five layers of love, happiness, joy, family, and faith.

Ruby passed away a few years ago and our family hasn’t been the same since. I still miss her so much and would love to walk into her home and hear that sweet voice say, ‘Howdy Doody Momma Mo!’.” 

Ingredients for Five Cup Fruit Salad

You’ll news: mini marshmallows*, mandarin oranges, whipped topping, pineapple chunks, and fruit cocktail. You’ll drain all of your fruit for this recipe and you’re just using one cup of each thing pictured so I usually just double it and then use the whole can of each thing and two cups of both marshmallows and whipped topping. 

*For the marshmallows, I use kosher or vegan marshmallows so they don’t have pork gelatin in them. Use whatever you prefer. 

 

Mixing Up Five Cup Fruit Salad

Ready for the instructions? 

Dump everything into a bowl. 

Stirred up Five Cup Fruit Salad

Stir. 

Beautiful Five Cup Fruit Salad

Done! Look how pretty this is! You can store this in the fridge for up to a week! 

Five Cup Fruit Salad

It is a fun, fruity, easy as can be treat. I hope you get to try it soon. You can switch out the fruits with other canned fruits or even fresh if you like and some people like to add nuts or coconut as well to make more of an ambrosia type fruit salad. You are limited only by your imagination! 

Five Cup Fruit Salad

An old fashioned recipe that is simple as can be and loved by all who try it!

Ingredients

  • 1 cup mini marshmallows fruit flavored or plain (I use kosher)
  • 1 cup mandarin oranges, drained
  • 1 cup whipped topping
  • 1 cup pineapple chunks, drained
  • 1 cup fruit cocktail, drained

Instructions

  • Mix together all ingredients in a large mixing bowl. Refrigerate until ready to serve.

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Have a great day! 


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Chocolate Vanilla Wafer Pudding – Southern Plate by Gordon Ramsay

Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding


Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Devotees of our beloved Banana Pudding were likely raised having this Chocolate Vanilla Wafer Pudding version as well. Although the bananas are absent, the homemade chocolate custard, layered with vanilla wafers and topped with a fluffy meringue is an old fashioned dessert we all love and adore just as much as it’s cousin. This recipe was included in my third cookbook, Sweetness: Southern Recipes to Celebrate The Warmth, The Love, and The Blessings Of A Full Life. If you’d like to jump to the recipe, just scroll down. But if you’ve been finding yourself tired from time to time and might be able to benefit from a little encouragement, keep on reading. 

Our lives are so busy these days and in many cases, there isn’t much we can do to avoid that. We care for children, our parents, our grandchildren. We have errands to run and appointments to go to. We have jobs and deadlines and bills. It’s all part of the process of living for most of us right now.

But amid all of that busy-ness, it is vitally important that we set aside time for small things that bring us joy. Yes, time for ourselves, to do something that we want to do, preferably that isn’t very productive. 🙂

My mother has gotten into cross stitching. She looks forward to her time every day where she sits and settles into the relaxing rhythm of needle and thread. I enjoy writing in my journal, sitting out in the sun and sipping iced tea, and my morning coffee time in a quiet house before everyone else is awake. My husband and I also keep a weekly Sabbath so the entire order of our week has changed to one that, at a certain time each week, we let go of all the stress and work of the world and go into a state of complete rest and respite, with no guilt whatsoever. Any work not done is left undone until our rest is over and we don’t give it a single thought. We develop what I call “sabbath vision” where we can look at the couch and the pile of clean laundry is rendered invisible. 🙂 It’s simply folded the following day and none the worse for wear due to the wait. 

But the one thing I’ve discovered to be true with most people, including myself, is that we have to learn how to rest. Now, at the onset, I realize that sounds crazy, but when you think about it I think you’ll find yourself agreeing. We are so used to trying to be productive, getting everything done, and once you get your list done there always seems to be more waiting. It’s difficult to allow yourself to hold up your hands and just say “Stop. It’s time for me to step away from this for a bit.” 

But I want to assure you of a few things: 

  • There will always be more to do. The work will never get completely done. 
  • The work will be there waiting for you to do it when you come back. And if it is not, that means that someone else did it or it wasn’t as important as you thought it was. 
  • taking a rest from the world for a half hour a day and/or one day out of seven will not result in the world crumbling. It will, however, result in better physical and mental health for you. 
  • If you have become one of the people that others depend on, times of rest will only make you stronger both for yourself and for them.
  • I can promise you, with absolute conviction and clarity, that the human body was not designed to go full steam ahead seven days a week. 

And so, today I would like to encourage you to take a deep breath. If you feel overwhelmed, exhausted, and frazzled and can’t possibly entertain the thought of taking a day or even regular moments of rest, I’d like to suggest that this is the very reason why you are overwhelmed, exhausted, and frazzled. 

It takes work to get used to. It will take some training of yourself, even. But you know what? You’re worth the work. It’s a process. Commit to the process.

One year from now, you could be that person who is calm in the middle of the storm. That person who is able to be still, and know

And now for our recipe, from scratch, and worthy of a potluck at Grandma’s.

Ingredients for Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Ingredients are simple and not much different from Homemade Banana Pudding: Vanilla wafers, milk, eggs, sugar, flour, cocoa powder, and vanilla. 

Separating Eggs For Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Begin by separating your eggs, yolks from whites. Be careful not to let any yolk get into the whites because if you decide you want a meringue on this, they won’t beat up as you’d like if they have any yolk in them. No pressure or anything. I mean, it’s not like your life would be a failure, just your meringue. Let’s keep it in perspective here..Mixing up pudding for Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Place your sugar, flour, and cocoa powder in a medium saucepan. You’re not going to use all of the sugar here, some is reserved for the meringue, so make sure you follow the recipe card at the bottom. Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

I stir my dry ingredients up a bit to combine them some. Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding mixture (homemade)

Add in milk and egg yolks and stir some more. Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Place this over medium heat and stir constantly until thickened, about 10-15 minutes. Now y’all, when I say you need to stir constantly, I’m not kidding. The pudding can easily scorch but if you stir you’ll be fine. 

Folks used to always use double broilers for this but as long as you have a nice thick saucepan, this works perfectly. I haven’t used a double boiler since my college culinary classes and even then we only used it once and then we learned how to live happily without it. Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Here is our thickened pudding. As soon as it thickens stir in the vanilla flavoring and remove from the heat. Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Layer your vanilla wafers in an oven safe bowl or dish. I tend to use a bowl but I’ve seen lots of people use a 9×13 baking dish. This isn’t a salvation issue folks, just go with whatever cranks your tractor and encourage your neighbor to do the same. I do about one layer of wafers, one of pudding, one of wafers, one of pudding. But you can get fancy and add more layers if you like. Apparently I was having a fancy day when this picture was taken. It happens. Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

If you want to top it with meringue, put your egg whites in a clean mixing bowl and beat ’em until they get foamy. Then add your sugar and beat again until stiff peaks form. 

Chocolate Nilla Wafer Pudding

Top with meringue and place this in a 325 oven for about 10-15 minutes, or until the meringue is lightly browned on top. 

I love a meringue on top of pudding or pies but my mother hates it. She calls it calf slobber. It’s all good though. We honor each other’s weirdness.

Oh, Hey, Enjoy your pudding!

Do you have something you do each day or each week just for yourself? How have you learned to rest? Please share with us in the comments below and thank you, in advance, for encouraging us! 

Ingredients

  • 1 box (11 ounces) Vanilla wafers
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup cocoa powder
  • 3 large eggs
  • 2 cups milk (I like to use whole milk but you can use your favorite)
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla

Instructions

  • Place 1/2 of the vanilla wafers in a large oven safe bowl or casserole dish.Separate eggs, yolk from white, and place in separate bowls, being careful not to get any yolk into the whites.
  • In medium sized sauce pot, combine 1/2 cup sugar, flour, and cocoa powder. Stir to combine. Add in egg yolks and milk and cook over medium heat, stirring constnatly (very important), with a wire whisk to prevent scorching, until thickened. This will take 10-15 minutes. Stir in vanilla.

  • Once the pudding is done, pour half over the wafers. Top with remaining wafers and remaining pudding.

If you want to top with a meringue

  • Preheat oven to 325. In large, clean mixing bowl, beat egg whites with an electric mixer on high speed until foamy. Gradually add 1/4 cup sugar and continue beating on high speed until stiff peaks form.

  • Spread meringue onto top of pudding and spread to touch the edges of the dish on all sides. Bake until meringue is golden on top, about 15 minutes.

  • I like this pudding served warm. It will keep for up to three days if stored in the fridge.

I want to hear from you! Tell me how you carve out time for yourself and what you enjoy doing for the pure joy of it in the comments below!

I’ll choose two comments at random next Monday to win a Southern Plate Prize pack with a signed copy of my book, Sweetness, and a Southern Plate collapsible fan! Winner will be contacted via email and announced on this post.

See all of my quote pictures by clicking here


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Bananas in Red Stuff – Southern Plate by Gordon Ramsay

Bananas in Red Stuff


Bananas in Red Stuff
In case you haven’t noticed, there is an awful lot of high falootin’ness going around in the foodie world today and I try to keep as much distance between myself and anything high falootin’ as possible, because that’s just how I like to live. Occasionally though, we all have high falootin’ days.

Sometimes I like to have a bit of lettuce to pretty up my sandwich and every now and then I find my pinky sticking up as I go to take a swig of tea. It happens to the best of us so with me being at the bottom rung, I’m certainly not immune. So if you’re feeling a little falootin‘ today, I just thought I’d warn ya that you’re gonna have to come down a few notches in order to appreciate the wonder of this recipe.

You see today, I have achieved my highest culinary dream. I have reached the pinnacle of delicious greatness! I have climbed the highest mountain and crossed the raging seas and I have returned with:

BANANAS IN RED STUFF!

Alright, I know, I could do better on the name. But the thing is, I’ve been calling it that for as long as I can remember and whenever you ask someone “Hey you know that banana stuff at Shoney’s” they always reply “Oh yeah, you mean bananas in red stuff?”. So today, on Southern Plate, we’re just gonna call it what it is and anyone with eyes can see that it is Bananas in Red Stuff.

If you are familiar with the Shoney’s breakfast bar you know how wonderful this stuff is. It’s the belle of the ball. Light tasting, slightly sweet, filling, and refreshing, I’ve longed (literally, longed) for the recipe for years. Then a few years back me and Mama found ourselves talking about it yet again. We’ve gone over all sorts of possible scenarios from diluted jello to a grenadine based sauce. The thing is, though, it has to be simple for a restaurant like Shoney’s to turn it out on the scale that they do and restaurants are notoriously creative when it comes to creating dishes using what they already have on hand. It dawned on us, what is Shoney’s specialty? Strawberry pie. So what would they have on hand at all times? Strawberry glaze!

Oh goodness folks, we’ve hit pay dirt! Here’s the recipe, I hope you make it soon.

Bananas in Red Stuff Ingredients

Now here are the ingredients, but stay with me here because we’re not going to just combine the two. There is another step in between.

You’ll need: Strawberry Glaze and Bananas. You want your bananas to be ripe, but not overly ripe because we want a little firmness left in them.

And now we need to talk about glaze. Lots of places offer this “red stuff” near the strawberries and there are tons of different brands and such. You can even get it sugar free. My original plan was to get sugar free because I love this stuff so much that I wanted to be able to eat as much as I wanted. Normally, this plan works for me HOWEVER, the sugar free glaze tasted nothing like the regular glaze. It wasn’t bad, it was just very different (okay so maybe I described it as tasting like hair, but I admit nothing). It was so different that I actually ended up throwing it away and going back to the store for the regular glaze. So I’m gonna recommend you get the regular glaze to make this. You understand, right?

Bananas in Red Stuff

Pour your glaze into a mixing bowl.

Bananas in Red Stuff

Using the container the glaze came in, fill it up with cold water and pour that in the mixing bowl as well.

Now mix this on medium speed until completely blended.

It really helps to do this with an electric mixer because its just globby and slightly annoying to do it with a spoon. Apparently glaze and water are like siblings, they only get along when forced to. 🙂

Now I know a few folks just about keeled over at the first part of the recipe when they saw I was using strawberry glaze. You see, I get occasional comments about using products that contain dye or preservatives or whatnot and I think some people just about go into full on hyperventilatin’ at the very thought.

Me? Aww, I’m good. I figure, look at all of these preservatives and coloring, see how well a twinkie is preserved over the years? Imagine what that will do to you! I mentioned this at breakfast this morning and one of my friends said “We can eat this and look just like we got botox!”. I imagine its a sight cheaper, too.

To each his own, most especially when it comes to dietary choices. I’ll support any decision you make regarding your diet or what you feed your family, I’ll even cheer you on with my Southern Plate themed pom poms because I like you and I think you’re awesome from start to finish. But this is my little corner of the web and I’m pretty happy with my bananas in red stuff, if it keeps a few wrinkles off my face and has me looking as good as a twinkie after a hundred years then thats just another bonus! 

Bananas in Red Stuff

Now slice your bananas into a medium bowl.

Make the slices kinda thick so they will hold up better when you are stirring them up in our next step.

I gotta tell you a funny story about me and slicing bananas. About two years ago I was making homemade banana pudding on a local tv station. Mama called me after it aired and said “Christy, why did you use a butter knife to slice your bananas?“.

I thought this was a silly question and told her Well, its what we always used at home to slice them.”

She said “Christy, I made you use a butter knife because you were little and I didn’t want you to cut yourself. I think you’re old enough to use a sharp knife now.”

~snickers~ I had never thought of it that way!

So if you are reading this, I just want you to know that you are probably old enough to move up to the sharp knife now, too!

Bananas in Red Stuff

Now pour your red stuff over the bananas in your bowl.

Bananas in Red Stuff

And give them a good stir to coat. Cover with foil or saran wrap and place in the refrigerator for a few hours or until well chilled. Oh this is gonna be so good!

Bananas in Red Stuff

Just for you, I dished it all out into pretty little dessert dishes to take a photo and spent a few minutes pretending I wasn’t going to eat it all myself. 🙂

Ingredients

  • 4-6 medium bananas
  • 1 container strawberry glaze About ten ounces

Instructions

  • Place glaze in medium mixing bowl. Fill empty glaze container with water and pour that in bowl as well. Mix with electric mixer until completely blended.

  • Slice bananas in thick slices into bowl. Pour glaze over and stir to coat.

  • Cover and place in refrigerator several hours to chill. Serve cold.

Notes

This post was originally published in 2011 and I updated the photos in 2019. Enjoy!

This would also be excellent as a dessert topping. Serve it on top of slices of pound cake, on top of pancakes, ice cream, the possibilities are limitless. I just like to eat it on it’s own!

Do you have a super simple recipe that you just absolutely love?

I’d love to hear about it in the comments section below!

Now here is a man with an attitude of appreciation for anyone who cooks for him!

My husband is well known at church as appreciating Southern cooking – any and everyones Southern cooking. His famous line is “The worst I ever had was delicious”.  That comes from a man that will eat whatever I put in front of him and really appreciate it. ~Submitted by Alice McKinney

Submit your quote by clicking here.

 


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