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Month: May 2025

Sticky Date Pudding

This melt-in-your-mouth spoonful of deliciousness became a favorite at Camp Waldemar! Initially, the girls looked at it as a funny-looking “brown dessert,” but after tasting it, they literally claimed it as one of their absolute favorite camp treats. I’m excited to share the recipe with you so you can experience the same joy!

But rest assured, this is not just a heavenly dessert, it’s a nutritious one too. Dates are high in fiber, provide essential vitamins and minerals, including potassium, magnesium, iron, and vitamin B6.  You could also use white whole wheat flour to further enhance the health benefits.   I also appreciate that you can prepare it in advance, making it a convenient dessert to pop in the oven.

Words can’t do justice to the sheer deliciousness of Sticky Date Pudding. It’s a taste that needs to be experienced to be believed!

Sticky Date Pudding

That "brown dessert" that became a Waldemar Fave
Course Dessert
Cuisine American

Ingredients
  

  • 8 oz pitted Medjool dates cut into small rings
  • 3/4 cup warm water
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1 1/4 cups flour
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar packed
  • 2 large eggs
  • 4 tbsp unsalted butter melted
  • 1 1/2 tsp vanilla

Lemon Sauce

  • 4 tbsp butter unsalted
  • 1 cup brown sugar packed
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 cup heavy cream
  • 1 T rum
  • 1/2 tsp lemon juice

Instructions
 

Pudding

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour 8 inch round cake pan.
  • Combine about half of the dates, warm water and baking soda.  Soak dates for 5 - 10 minutes
  • Whisk together dry ingredients (flour, baking powder and salt)
  • Process remaining, set aside and pour the liquid in with the pureed dates
  • Add the eggs, melted butter and vanilla. Process another 15 seconds or until mixture is blended.
  • Add to the dry ingredients and gently fold in the soaked dates until the mixture is smooth and the dates are evenly dispersed.
  • Pour into the pan about ⅔ full. Cover TIGHTLY with parchment paper, and aluminum foil.  You can make up to this point and chill for up to one day. But it needs to be baked at the last minute and served warm!
  • Bake about 40 minutes, until edges are spongy and center is firm to touch but still moist. A toothpick will not come out dry, but should have tender crumbs.
  • Remove foil and punch many holes using a bamboo stick or oven thermometer in the pudding. 
  • Pour lemon sauce over and let soak in for 5 minutes. Serve warm with an extra pour of sauce, accompanied with soft fresh whipped cream or vanilla ice cream.

Sauce

  •  Melt butter and whisk in the sugar and salt until smooth. Cook, stirring occasionally until the sugar melts and is slightly darkened

Video

Keyword dates pudding

Spicy Watermelon Margaritas

Recently when strolling through HEB, I stopped in my tracks upon noticing they carried fresh watermelon juice!  Aha!  So in addition to their fresh-squeezed lime juice, what an opportunity to make an easy watermelon marg!

Delicious and actually on the healthy side with two fresh juices – HEB makes this an easy and time-saving drink.

I’m sharing a quick way  to make simple syrup so you are not dependent upon having it on hand.  Adding slices of jalapeños gives it a spicy twist.  When entertaining, I like to make a pitcher of drinks so I’m able to enjoy my guests and not have to jump up and make an individual drink.  (wouldn’t want to miss out on any conversation:) This recipe doubles easily as well.

For a mocktail, simply leave out the liquor and substitute fresh squeezed orange juice for the cointreau.  It’s really nice to have this on hand for the designated driver!

EnJOY!

Watch Video

Spicy Watermelon Margaritas

Fresh squeezed lime and watermelon juice from HEB make this super easy!
Prep Time 10 minutes
Course Drinks
Cuisine American
Servings 6

Ingredients
  

  • 3/4 cup agave tequila
  • 1/3 cup Grand Marnier
  • 3/4 cup watermelon juice
  • 1/2 cup lime juice
  • 1/3 cup spiced simple syrup 1 cup water + 1 cup sugar, sliced jalapeno
  • 2 jalapeños sliced thinly

Instructions
 

  • Combine water and sugar in a. microwave bowl. Microwave for about 2 minutes. Stir. Repeat again until sugar is completely dissolved. Add sliced jalapeno and let cool for at least 15 minutes. (remove jalapeno and remainder that is not used can be stored in a mason jar for up to one month in the fridge.)
  • In a pitcher, combine the watermelon juice, lime, juice, tequila, cointreau and simple syrup.
  • Rub the rims with a slice of lime or dip into a small bowl of lime juice. Then dip into a bowl of sugar (or can mix sugar and salt together). Fill the glasses with ice and then add margarita mixture.
  • Garnish with a lime wedge and jalapeno slice if desired.
Keyword watermelon, lime, spiced simple syrup, margaritas

100 years of Camp Waldemar and Ukrainian Borscht

Camp Waldemar

100 Years of Cherished Memories

Nestled among age-old cypress and oaks along the meandering North Fork of the Guadalupe River lies iconic Camp Waldemar – pouring forth life experiences, cherished friends, and memories to last a lifetime for girls over the past 100 years.  

To learn more about Camp Waldemar, I had the wonderful privilege to share kitchen time and a couple of recipes revered by the campers with former Waldemar Executive Chef, Laura Pipkin.  

 

A little about Laura:

Laura was a “Waldemar Girl” as a camper for four summers during her high school years.  She later became the Executive Chef at Waldemar, sharing her love of exploring new recipes and techniques with the campers  for  8 ½ years.

Taking this experience to another level, Laura wrote and published, The Waldemar Cookbook:  Memorable Savorings from the Waldemar Kitchen

(cookbook is available on Amazon).  The dedication in her cookbook describes the importance of the dinner table at the camp:

 

“One important constant that has persisted through all these years is an absolute dedication to delicious food.  Serving over 1000 people each summer, Waldemar has always settled for nothing less than the best.  The tradition of simple, timeless classics nourishing our bodies, the routine of daily exercise and the spiritual support of love and God’s beauty in every word and breath – these are the essence of the success of Waldemar.”

 

Laura Shares a bit of Camp Waldemar History:

“Camp Waldemar opened in 1926, founded by Ora Johnson, a woman ahead of her time in a time of women’s liberation, Ora Johnson had risen to the uppermost level of leadership of education available to women in San Antonio, Texas.  Frustrated by the limitations of the era, she, with the support of her family, leased land along the beautiful Guadalupe River in the Texas Hill Country.  Her vision was to create a place where girls could explore and nurture their full potential, learning to do all the things that had previously only been available to boys while still learning to be proper ladies.

 

Girls could learn to paddle a canoe, ride a horse, shoot a rifle, shoot archery, fence, as well as ballroom dance, make pottery and sing in choral compositions.  Competition was part of the formula, learning to be gracious winners and graceful losers, doing one’s best at all times and working as a team to achieve excellence.  

 

Aunt Ora hired the talented culinary team of Lucille Bishop Smith and her husband, US Smith, to create a culinary program that matched this same excellence. Ora sought to create a program that offered the girls a place to stretch their appetite and fill it with delicious, nutritious food.  A side note about Lucille; she is considered one of the 100 most influential women in the State of Texas.  Her great-grandsons opened a restaurant in Houston as an homage to her and it’s called Lucille’s.

 

The same mission is still in effect today, 100 summers later.  Meals are still served family style with table manners, conversational skills and gratitude complemented by menus that gently stretch the girls expectations.  Everyone is expected to have 3 bites of everything.  Many women return years after their camping days to share that they believe they learned to eat, and to truly appreciate a meal prepared with love and gratitude at Camp Waldemar.” 

 

Ukrainian Borscht

Laura chose two recipes that represented this ideology:  Ukrainian Borscht was served on international food night.  Many of the girls had never tried Borscht, but upon tasting, found that they really liked it!   

 

This recipe comes by way of several college students from Ukraine making soup the way their family made it for the campers at Camp Waldemar.  It is an amalgamation of numerous family recipes to be made with love and gratitude for the opportunity to share a hearty dish that spans many generations of community sharing a meal around the table.  Serves 4 – 6.

Ukrainian Borscht

A Camp Waldemar Favorite!
Course Main Course
Cuisine Ukranian
Servings 6

Ingredients
  

  • 1 1 pound pork tenderloin Cut into cubes
  • 4 - 6 culinary juniper berries
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 10 cups water
  • 1 small white onion finely chopped or pulse chopped in food processor
  • 1 medium carrot peeled and grated
  • 3 medium red beets scrubbed and peeled
  • 2 tbsp tomato paste
  • 2 tbsp red wine vinegar
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • 3 medium potatoes peeled and cut into 1" slices
  • 1/4 head green cabbage shredded
  • 2-4 garlic cloves
  • fresh dill leaves removed from the stem and coarsely chopped for garnish
  • sour cream for garnish

Instructions
 

  •  Add the cubed meat into a large soup pot and cover with 10 cups cold water.  
  • Over a medium heat, gently bring the water to a simmer and skim meat foam as soon as it begins to form.  Carefully skimming the foam keeps the broth clear and is an important step. Let cook for about 45 minutes.  Add in bay leaves and juniper berries.  Continue to cook for about 2 hours total, or until meat is tender and broth is flavorful
  • Meanwhile, sauté onions with salt in a skillet until translucent and fragrant.  Set onions aside.
  •  In the same skillet, sauté the grated carrots with salt in skillet and set aside.
  •  Sauté beets in the skillet until they begin to soften. Stir in red wine vinegar and salt, tomato paste and a little sugar until evenly combined.  Set aside.
  •  Crush whole peeled tomatoes with your hands. 
  • Once meat is tender, add in the chopped potatoes, sautéed veggies, tomatoes, shredded cabbage and continue to cook until potatoes are tender and flavors are married.  Adjust flavor with salt and pepper.  
  • Grate 2-4 cloves fresh garlic using zester into soup. Add more red wine vinegar if desired.  
  •  Serve and garnish with sour cream and fresh dill. 
  •   The soup can be stored in the refrigerator for several days or frozen for up to 2 months. 
     

Video

Keyword Borscht, Beets, Pork Tenderloin

 

Chilled Lemon Carrot Soup

Easy to prepare and full of that much revered beta carotene, you will love preparing this soup at the beginning of the week and enjoying for lunch daily!

Fall and winter offer many squashes and sweet potatoes full of beta carotene, but spring and summer our bodies crave it as well.  Carrots are abundant in our  spotlight small Texas farmer, Kim Standley’s garden.  So eating with the season is perfect with this chilled soup.

Use of an immersion blender really simplifies clean up and speed of preparation.  Once you get used to using one, you will find lots of ways to incorporate it into your cooking regimen.  You can also use a regular blender with this recipe.  Just be really careful to let it chill a bit before pouring into the blender.

And that pop of lemon….Yum!

EnJOY!!!

Watch Video

A video tour of Kim Standley’s garden! (@heavymetalhomestead) 

Chilled Lemon Carrot Soup

A lemony burst of beta carotene
Course Side Dish
Cuisine American
Servings 6

Ingredients
  

  • 4 carrots large, peeled and. chopped (approx 3 cups)
  • 2 leeks chopped (or approx 1/3 cup chopped onion)
  • 1 clove garlic chopped
  • 4 cups vegetable broth
  • 1 lemon zested and juiced
  • 1 tbsp EVOO
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • fresh dill or parsley for garnish

Instructions
 

  • Saute leeks in EVOO until translucent. Add garlic and saute for about 1 minute.
  • Add chopped carrots and vegetable broth. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer about 20 minutes until carrots are soft.
  • Remove from heat and let cool slightly, Blend the mixture until smooth with an immersion blender or pour into a blender.
  • Stir in lemon juice and zest. Season with salt and pepper. Chill for at least 2 hours before serving.
Keyword lemon, carrots, chilled soup