Author Archive for katestorey

16
Feb
10

Winter Local Roots Recipe: Maple Cheesecake

Last week, we hosted our Winter Local Roots Evening Dining in Eagle Tavern. A sold-out crowd indulged in some of the best of Michigan’s winter foods, including one sweet finale – maple cheesecake, featuring maple syrup from Blanchard, Michigan’s Doodles Sugar Bush.

Here’s the recipe from our executive chef, Nick Seccia – give it a try at home!

Maple Cheesecake

Makes 1 – 9×2 inch cheesecake

Ingredients

Graham cracker crumbs – 3 cups

Unsalted butter – 1 stick

Granulated sugar – 1 tablespoon

Fresh cream cheese – 1 1/2lbs

Brown sugar – 1/4 cup

Cornstarch – 1 Tablespoon

Vanilla bean – ½ each

Eggs (whole) –  2

Egg yolks – 4

Michigan A grade maple syrup – 1/2 cup

Sour cream – 1/3 cup

  1. Pre heat oven to 300 degrees F.
  2. Melt butter and combine with crumbs and granulated sugar.
  3. Pack into a greased 9 inch spring form or cake pan.
  4. Bake at 300 degrees F for ten minutes and allow to cool.
  5. Combine cream cheese, brown sugar, and cornstarch and mix on low speed until fully creamed and smooth.
  6. Split and scrape the vanilla bean to remove the seeds; add to the mixture.
  7. Add eggs and yolks one at a time and mix until fully combined.
  8. Add maple syrup and sour cream and mix until combined.
  9. Pour batter into the prepared crust.
  10. Bake the cake in a water bath* at 300 degrees F for 45 minutes or until set.
  11. Allow the cake to cool in the water bath for one hour, then refrigerate overnight.

* A water bath would be to bake the cake in a pan larger than the cake or spring form pan, with water about halfway up the pan; if using a spring form pan, line the outside of the pan with a double layer of foil all the way up the sides to prevent water from seeping inside the pan.

22
Dec
09

These are a few of my favorite things…

The holiday season is in full swing, and Christmas is fast approaching – here are a few things you can enjoy at Henry Ford Museum, all of which will be on display through January 3.  (Just a quick reminder that we’re closed on Christmas Day, but open on New Year’s Eve – still until 5 p.m. – and on New Year’s Day too!)

Grab the family and some friends, and come down and celebrate with us!

Santa, of course, will only be here until December 24 – he has a big night ahead of him that night!

Happy holidays, everyone!

04
Dec
09

Big news for Makers…

This morning, we announced that The Henry Ford and MAKE Magazine are teaming up to bring you Maker Faire Detroit next summer!  If you’re not familiar with Maker Faire, here’s a quick synopsis from their Web site:

Maker Faire is a two-day, family-friendly event that celebrates the Do-It-Yourself (DIY) mindset. It’s for creative, resourceful people of all ages and backgrounds who like to tinker and love to make things. So much to see, you will need 2 days to see it all!

Basically, Maker Faire Detroit will be the ultimate tinkerer’s event, at the home of America’s greatest tinkerers and innovators. 

We’ll pass along more details as we get closer to the event, so stay tuned!

25
Nov
09

Get ready for “the most wonderful time of the year” at The Henry Ford!

The 25-foot Christmas tree is up and sparkling…wreaths and garlands are draped over everything that will stand still…and the carols are ringing through the air – it must be holidays at The Henry Ford!

This Friday, November 27 kicks off two of our seasonal daytime celebrations – the Holiday Homes Tour in Greenfield Village, and Holidays in Henry Ford Museum. Both offer a bevy of holiday delights for the senses, so here’s a quick run-down of what you can expect to experience during your visit to The Henry Ford this season.

Throughout the season, each weekend day until the end of December, the homes of Greenfield Village are filled with the sights and sounds of Christmas past. Of course, everything is decorated to the appropriate period of the home, so look for the subtle differences between each abode.

But one thing you can’t miss is the delectable scent of freshly-baked goods wafting through the homes – stop in and chat with some of our costumed presenters to find out how the home’s inhabitants prepared meals for the holiday season. They can’t offer you a taste, but to borrow a phrase, smells are free!

(By the way, there’s only one more week until one of our most popular programs, Holiday Nights in Greenfield Village, opens; make sure to get your tickets now – dates do sell out!)

On your way in to Henry Ford Museum, you’ll find freshly-cut greens for sale – everything from roping to wreaths to Christmas trees of every shape and size. You’ll probably notice the scent of these greens almost as soon as you see them; we work with a Nova Scotia tree grower raising balsam firs, so everything has that classic spicy scent.

And for some tips on how to decorate with all that gorgeous greenery, check out our video for creating a simple yet beautiful doorway entrance.

Henry Ford Museum is completely decked out for the season, including two huge can’t-miss elements: Our 25-foot Christmas tree in the Museum Plaza, completely covered in lights and American-made ornaments, and a model train circling a massive LEGO train display of Detroit’s downtown area, built by the Michigan LEGO Users Group.

And it isn’t really the holidays until you visit Santa! He’s in a new location this year, near the entrance to the Pewter aisle, so make sure you stop by and tell him your Christmas wish list. But, if you happen to miss him (he is a busy guy this time of year, you know!), don’t worry – you can always drop a letter to him in a mailbox made of LEGO bricks.

From all of us at The Henry Ford, we wish you a wonderful and warm holiday season – we hope to see you here soon!

28
Sep
09

Adventure awaits: Journey to Mecca at The Henry Ford IMAX Theatre

Today’s guest poster is Hanan Saab, promotions assistant for The Henry Ford IMAX Theatre.

I was first attracted to The Henry Ford because it is important for me to work with products and people that enrich lives. Now that I am here, it is wonderful to walk through Henry Ford Museum or Greenfield Village and see children’s faces light up with curiosity, or pass a family posing together for a photo.  People make memories here, and I am privileged to be a part of it.  For these reasons, I am pleased to tell you about a film currently playing here at The Henry Ford IMAX® Theatre. 

 Many of us remember Ibn Battuta from our history classes, but few know the real extent of his travels.  In the film Journey to Mecca: In the Footsteps of Ibn Battuta, we learn of this extraordinary traveler’s first pilgrimage to the Hajj.  As a young man, Battuta felt compelled to leave his home in Morocco and travel to distant lands.  In 1325, he began his journey by traveling to the destination considered the most sacred by Muslims throughout the world, both then and now: Mecca.  Battuta would not return home to Morocco for nearly 30 years.  We often see images of the white-clad masses gathering in Mecca, but only some understand the spirit that motivates the more than three million pilgrims who make this trip each year.  This film brings that spirit into focus.  Through the story of Ibn Battuta, we learn of each ritual’s origin, see how they were performed nearly 700 years ago and how they are still practiced today. 

In Battuta’s time, the journey took much more commitment.  Just getting to Mecca took over a year – but now, people arrive by planes, trains, ships, and even automobiles.  .  Through the film, we’ll follow Battuta as he travels across the North African desert, visits the splendid city of Cairo, and how he is thwarted by war at the Red Sea, turning back and heading north to join the legendary Damascus Caravan with thousands of pilgrims, camels, water carriers, beekeepers, bankers, soldiers, and musicians.

Journey to Mecca marks the first and only time an IMAX® camera has captured an aerial view of the Hajj – from a helicopter hovering 200 ft above Mecca – and the first time an IMAX® team has been admitted to this most sacred sanctuary of Islam.  The permission process alone lasted nearly two and a half years.  It took 85 permits for a team of 80 people drawn from 30 nations to embark on the largest and most ambitions production ever to take place in the Gulf region.  The result of these efforts is a fantastic voyage from Morocco to Saudi Arabia.  You’ll fly above the desert as aerial shots capture the largest caravan caught on film since Lawrence of Arabia. 

Narrated by Academy Award winner Ben Kingsley, this remarkable and dramatic story begins and ends in modern day Mecca.  When we first see the pilgrims, we are unfamiliar with their motivations; but after travelling with Ibn Battuta, we better understand the reasoning behind each pilgrim’s journey.  Remarkable time lapse footage captures the constant activity at the Grande Mosque, from sunrise to nightfall.  We see first-hand the tremendous scale of the Hajj and how many people are involved.  And it really hits you that while Ibn Battuta’s story is compelling, he is only one of billions of pilgrims who have made this same journey over hundreds of years.

If you have not yet experienced an IMAX® film or are simply looking for a reason to experience it again, this film is your chance.  Journey to Mecca encompasses all that IMAX® has to offer: thrills, drama, action, adventure, emotion – and yes, you might even learn something.  Join us here at The Henry Ford for one of our daily screenings; you will not be disappointed.

For more information on the film please visit:

http://www.journeytomeccagiantscreen.com/

And for a behind-the-scenes look at how this film was made:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o79jlw8HtDA

Hope to see you soon!

14
May
09

“Party on, Henry!” Behind the scenes of our Rock Stars’ Cars & Guitars 2 exhibit preview party

Today’s post is a guest post from Tom Fetters, one of the interns in our Media and Film Relations Department. Party on, Tom!

Like many, I go way back with The Henry Ford — back to my childhood when Dad and Mom loaded the kids into the family car for a day with Thomas Edison, the Wright Brothers and George Washington Carver. But there was never enough time to see everything, or talk to everybody.

This makes my internship here especially sweet: Not only do I get to explore and blog about The Henry Ford’s five attractions – Henry Ford Museum, Greenfield Village, the Benson Ford Research Center, the Ford Rouge Factory Tour and The Henry Ford IMAX Theatre — I get to meet the people who make the place so special. People like Shauna Wilson, who planned tonight’s preview party for Rock Stars, Cars & Guitars 2 our summer exhibit this Saturday, May 16.

Continue reading ‘“Party on, Henry!” Behind the scenes of our Rock Stars’ Cars & Guitars 2 exhibit preview party’




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