I got a free copy of Cook’s Country and decided to try a couple of recipes. I had seen the Skillet Lasagna recipe before and finally gave it a try. Its a thirty minute recipe and the folks ate it up. It is a good warm meal for a week night and a nice change of pace. I was not able to find the meat loaf mix they recommended so I substituted 1/2 pound of ground sirloin(10% fat) with the meat from two Italian sausages.
The triple chocolate cookies were a splurge. Two bags of chocolate chips is a lot of chocolate. The goods news is that the cookies were good but not addictive. Since they were so chocolately it was more likely we would eat just one or two rather than a whole bunch. It took us almost a week to go through the batch.
Recipes
RE: Test Recipes: Pan Pizza
I love pizza – any kind of pizza. Traditional Italian style, Chicago deep dish, New York, Californian, and even those bagel pizzas. To me, every type of pizza has its charm. Sure, there are days where I feel like one type of pizza more than another, but in the end, I can’t say that I dislike any of them. To me, the key of making pizza is the dough – generally this is what differentiates one pizza from the next. Pizza Hut’s pan pizzas are particularly appealing to me as they have a crisp exterior and spongy interior. When I saw this recipe to recreate the pan pizza at home, I had to give it a try.
Pepperoni Pan Pizza (makes two 9-in. pizzas)
Pizza Sauce (makes enough for 6 to 8 pizzas)Pizza Dough
Pepperoni Pan Pizza
General Pizza In Pan Layer Diagram
[Via Cooking For Engineers]
I have been making bread for thirty years. Some years ago I started mixing and kneading the bread in the mixer. There was a great discovery. Kneading by hand tended to make me lazy and quit early. Now I finish up with a little hand kneading to get the right texture. My next great discovery was to remember that someone had given me an electric warming plate and it was the perfect device for preparing the environment for the dough to rise. It is too easy to cook your dough with a too hot oven when you mean to let your dough rise. About ten years ago I experimented with using bread dough for pizza. It was fun. It was a lot of fun when I involved children. They love to be involved in making their own pizza. I will probably try this recipe for kicks. It looks fun and delicious!
RE: Galette super-complète: IMBB23
Having spent ample time in France, I have seen a lot of regions and eaten my way through many a local cuisine, but I have always had a very special connection with Brittany. Maybe because it was the first region I ever visited, maybe because I know this area like the back of my hand, since I’ve got a lot of friends there and have travelled it extensively. Or maybe because I am addicted to its glorious cuisine (galettes, crêpes, far breton, kouign aman etc) and the fact that you can drop into any restaurant and get the freshest, most succulent seafood and it won’t cost and arm and a leg, pick up a basket of fruits de mer early in the morning when the fishermen have just come in with their catch or eat oysters straight from the sea.
I was only 15 on my first trip to Brittany and completely hooked by the end of it… going back there at every occasion. At the start of every holiday, long or short, I would hop on the Orient Express to Paris, take the first train from Montparnasse to Rennes the next morning and be reunited with a bunch of friends there. Back then, I obviously didn’t have much disposable income, so grand eateries were out of the question. When I wasn’t staying over at a friend’s and raiding their fridge, I mostly resorted to one of the many crêperies to be found up and down the country which used to offer the regional speciality at very reasonable prices.
Now, for those of you unfamiliar with the “cuisine bretonne”, here’s a pancake crash course: Many people think “pancake” translates into “crêpe”. Well, it does. But that’s only half the story.
A “crêpe” is made with regular (wheat) flour and is enjoyed with a sweet filling. But there’s also a far more interesting incarnation by the name of “galette”, an extremely thin pancake made with buckwheat flour (blé noir, sarrasin) which will always have a savoury filling. And there are NO exceptions to this rule.
The fillings are many and varied and most crêperies will let you choose your own combinations. For the savoury galettes, you usually have a choice of butter (always salted), cheese, onions, mushrooms, ham, bacon, eggs and sometimes less traditional options like blue cheese or spinach. As for the sweet, you’ll find a simple jam or butter & sugar crpe as well as more elaborate combinations like the famous crêpe suzette, or pairings like apple and caramel, chocolate and vanilla ice cream, nuts and cream… the list is endless.
For this 23rd instalment of Is My Blog Burning (read the roundup), which calls for a piece of regional French cooking and almost coincides with the British Pancake Day, I chose to make galettes – but not just any kind: the queen of galettes, a “super-complète”. This is something you will find on every menu in any crêperie and as the name suggests, it is the Rolls-Royce of the Breton pancake and comes with everything you could possibly wish for: onions, tomatoes, ham, cheese, mushrooms and a fried egg on top.
Now, I’d like to say that my galettes turned out perfectly thin on the first try… they didn’t. I was expecting the first ones to be messy, always remembering the French saying: “La première, c’est pour le chien!” (“The first one’s for the dog”). But the third and forth were still nowhere near what I have become used to eating in Brittany. Then again, I don’t have the right equipment, let’s just blame it on that. In France, there’s no need to make your own anyway, as you can buy perfect galettes to fill and reheat at every bakery and every supermarket. Not here, unfortunately, so I’ll have to get used to pancakes that are slightly thicker then the norm. But they tasted just like the real thing and that’s all that matters.
PS: The rules for this round of IMBB call for a “verre de vin” to go with the dish. Well, I’d be an ignorant if I was to offer wine with a galette: the drink of choice is a glass of cidre, of course, an alcoholic beverage made from apples, similar to cider, but a bit more refined, shall I say. If you can’t find that, you can always have a beer.
Galette super-complète
(makes 4)For the galettes:
175 g buckwheat flour
1 egg
400 ml cold water (preferrably sparkling)
20 g melted butter (salted)
1 generous pinch of salt
salted butter for fryingFor the filling:
4 tbsp chopped onions
4 tbsp chopped mushrooms
8 tbsp grated Emmental cheese
8 tbsp chopped tomatoes
8 slices thinly sliced smoked ham (I used Brunswick)
4 eggs
some oil
crushed pepperPrepare the dough at least 2 hrs ahead.
Combine the buckwheat flours, butter, egg, water and salt in a mixing bowl and whisk with a fork until combined thoroughly to form a smooth and very runny dough. Cover and leave to rest in the fridge for at least 2 hrs.
Take out of the fridge and beat the dough with a fork for at least 10 minutes. The longer you beat it, the more it will be airated and the thinner your dough will turn out to be.
Fry the galettes in batches using a 30 cm skillet (crêpes pan, if you have one) – heat a little bit of butter, then add a ladle of dough, making them as thin as you possibly can. If you’re incredibly talented, the dough will probably yield 6-8 galettes, a “normal” first-timer will probably succeed 4… don’t dispair and always remember the French saying: “La première, c’est pour le chien!” (“The first one’s for the dog”) Fry on both sides until golden brown and reserve.
Heat a little bit of butter in a pan, add the chopped onions and fry until starting to brown. Add the mushrooms and fry until soft. Reserve.
When you’re ready to serve, heat the pan and add a galette. Sprinkle with 2 tbsp cheese, spread a quarter of the mushroom/onion mix on top, add 1 tbsp tomatoes, cover with 2 slices of ham and fold the galette on three sides to form something ressembling an envelope.
Meanwhile, in another pan, heat some oil and fry the 4 eggs until the whites have set.
Top each galette with a fried egg, sprinkle with pepper and serve with a salad on the side.
[Via thepassionatecook]
RE: Test Recipes: Orzo Risotto with Buttery Shrimp
While waiting for my eyes to dilate at the optometrist’s office, I came upon this recipe in Food & Wine Magazine. Barely able to focus, I took down some messy notes and gave it a shot that evening. Even with a mistake or two, the recipe came out tasting good without too much work.
Orzo Risotto with Buttery Shrimp (serves 4)
[Via Cooking For Engineers]
Even if my friend did not have a Risotto obsession I would have to try this. It looks both easy and delicious!
RE: Two Bean Salad: Recipe
Consider this my heartfelt apology to the leeks, rutabagas and beets languishing in my fridge. I’m sorry. It’s not that I don’t love you. I’m just so bored of Winter right now. I yearn for Summer tomatoes, bright fresh herbs, spicy chilies and a little more vibrant color than say, beige, olive drab and reddish-brown. And I’m not the only one feeling this way.Last night we went to a birthday party for a fabulous cake maker. Our instructions were to bring something vegetarian for a potluck. Why don’t all my friends throw potlucks? A potluck party is so much fun. You get to meet interesting people and their cuisine. It’s a whole other component to the matching up face-name-personality game.
So faced with a fridge full of Winter vegetables I headed for the pantry where I found chipotle salsa, white beans, black beans, and yellow corn. I threw in a couple of chopped scallions, a green pepper, a pinch of cumin and a crumble of dried tomatoes. A garnish of fresh cilantro topped the whole thing off. This is an interesting dish because you can serve it as a salad or with tortilla chips as a dip. Kinda helps you forget it’s pouring down rain outside.
Note: All ingredients are approximate, feel free to add more salsa, vegetables or spices. You could also make this a three bean salad or swap out the black or white beans for another variety such as chickpeas, pinto or kidney beans.
Two Bean Salad
serves a crowd1 can white beans (15 ounces)
1 can black beans (15 ounces)
1 can corn (15 ounces)
2 scallions, chopped
1 fresh pepper, chopped (red or green bell pepper or jalapeno)
1 cup chunky chipotle salsa
1 Tablespoon olive oil
pinch of cumin
salt to taste
optional: cilantro, crumbled sun-dried tomatoes, chopped fresh mango, whatever else strikes your fancy!Drain the beans and corn, combine in a large mixing bowl. Add the fresh chopped vegetables, salsa, oil and spices. Allow to sit in the refrigerator for several hours before tasting for seasoning. Add fresh torn cilantro before serving, if desired.
Enjoy!
[Via Cooking with Amy: A Food Blog]
This looked easy and it was. My wife and son liked it. I used a red pepper and jalapeno I had as my fresh veggies.
RE: Stinky Pete’s Straight-up Chunky Guacamole
It’s a trend. First, Kate over at Accidental Hedonist posted her recipe for guacamole. Then, The Food Whore posted her recipe for guacamole.
Well none of these are the one true recipe for guacamole which was fortuitously given to me many years ago in a bar in Pilsen by a 174 year old one eyed four-foot tall Mexican native by the name of “Stinky Pete”. I think he was married to Charo.
OK, maybe Pete wasn’t married to Charo, but he did tell me he was 174. And Mexican. Even with the shock blonde hair and the tongue piercing. He might have been lying.
Or maybe I’m lying about his existence, but this truly is the recipe that converted many a supermarket guacamole hater, including my mother-in-law Rosalind.
In any case, I couldn’t agree more with Kate’s assertion that eating commercial guacamole is just the worst thing you can do. I also would encourage the Food Whore to fight back against the tomato and tomatilla haters who beat her with a bag of chips when she introduced the round red vegetable (OK, I know it’s really a fruit) into her guacamole.
Good guacamole, in my opinion, should be a mix of fresh tastes and a variety of textures. Overmashing must be discouraged. An avocado is a vegetable, not a butter. OK, an avocado is also really a fruit, not a vegetable, but roll with me here.
Way back when, I posted a chipotle guacamole recipe. That’s a specialty guacamole that may not appeal to everyone. For example, I loved it and wife, the Redhead, did not. Try this one and see if everyone who likes guacamole doesn’t just love the stuff.
And for Pete’s sake (remember Pete?), don’t buy those guacamole flavored chips. I don’t know what that flavor is supposed to be, but it sure isn’t guacamole.
Stinky Pete’s Straight-Up Chunky Guacamole
About 4 avocados, plus one for adjustments
About 1/2 white onion, diced 1/4″, plus one for adjustments
About 2 small tomatoes, diced 1/4″, plus one for adjustments (you could substitute tomatillos for a more tart flavor)
The juice of about 2 small limes (not key lime small, just small), plus some for adjustments
1/4 cup or so of cilantro, plus some for adjustments
1/2 jalapeno, deveined, deseeded, minced finely, plus some for adjustments
2 cloves garlic or so, plus some for adjustments
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt plus some for adjustmentsOK, so the first thing you’ll notice is that this recipe isn’t very precise. That’s because we’re working with all natural ingredients here. Flavor, intensity, size all differ from specimen to specimen. This is what being a cook or a chef is all about – workig with the reality of your ingredients, not the arbitrary confines of a recipe.
What I have above is what I used for the latest batch of guacamole I made which was and is scrummy, let me tell you.
Cut your avocado in half, use a spoon and scoop out the pit, taking as little flesh with it as possible. Discard the pit. That stuff about the pit keeping the guacamole from turning brown? It’s hooey, according to Harold McGee and Cecil Adams. Your lime juice is the anti-oxidation agent here.
Using a sharp knife, cut the flesh of one avocado half lengthwise into five or six separate sections. Don’t penetrate the skin of the avocado (or the chef), but use enough pressure to make it through the flesh. Make about five or six cuts across the previous cuts so you have a number of small squares scored. Take a spoon and carefully scoop out the flesh from the peel, depositing it into a non-metallic mixing bowl. Repeat with the other half and the other avocados.
Add your diced tomatoes, onion, garlic, and jalapeno. Toss roughly to mix. Taste.
Sprinkle the salt and squeeze the lime juice into the bowl to taste and mix well. Now, if you insist on mashing your avocados, do so, with a fork, but only very, very lightly. Chunky is king. Taste again and adjust by adding more of anything that demands to be added.
Guacamole is easy, and even bad guacamole is pretty good if it’s not too bad. Serve with chips and maybe a dusting of red chili powder for color.
If, by some miracle, there is guacamole left to store, put it into a container taller than wide and cover the top with lime slices. That should help delay oxidation.
If you enjoy this recipe, Stinky Pete salutes you.
comments
[Via Too Many Chefs]
Tiramisu
For Thanksgiving I was asked to make Tiramisu. It is an easy recipe I last made about a decade ago using a Southern Living recipe. Our fond memories of it inspired me to use the old recipe. However, it was far to eggish for me this time. I was hopeful that a night in the refrigerator would mellow it out. It was a bit more mellow in the morning but it still bothered me. I decided to try a different recipe that I found on the wrapper of the Lady Fingers. It was a much simpler recipe involving eggs, Marscapone, and a little sugar. Remember there is a slight health risk when you use raw eggs in your recipes(e.g. tiramisu, eggnog). Your mileage will vary! 🙂
- Separate three eggs. While gradually adding sugar(2 Tbs), beat egg yolks until pale in color, add 1 carton(17.5 oz) Marscapone and fold gently until smooth.
- In a separate bowl, beat egg whites with a wire whisk or electric beater until very stiff and fold gently into the Marscapone mixture.
- Dip “I Dolci di Montagna” Ladyfingers quickly into the coffee mixture and line a triffle dish. I used espresso and a little brandy. I cannot stress the word “quickly” enough. If you dawdle you will have Ladyfinger mush and half of the Ladyfinger will end up in the cup.
- Pour the Marscapone mixture into the lined dish. Sprinkle the top with bitter cocoa powder. I liked the look of shaved chocolate. Refrigerate at least one hour before serving. This is a nice dish you can prepare the night before.
For my disaster I ended up with a double recipe, the original recipe on the bottom and the new recipe on the top. The recipe tells me that this double recipe should provide 24 portions. In my case it provided ample portions for four relatives. They would have had more comments but they had problems speaking with the spoon in their mouth. My sister-in-law felt so badly about it that she took most of it home. I guess it worked! So I have been asked to make Tiramisu for Christmas dinner. It looks like I am going to use the simple version of the recipe. The hard part is finding the Ladyfingers and Marscapone. Marscapone I found at Sam’s and the Ladyfingers I think I can find at a specialty store in the area.
Cuisinart® Pro Classic™ DLC-10
The Cuisinart® Pro Classicâ„¢ Food Processor makes all your favorites, from stir-fries and main course salads, to peanut butter and home-made bread.
I bought myself a food processor recently. I was taking advantage of a 20% coupon at Linens and Things. I have not been a big fan of food processors and had been using an old food processor occasionally. To give you an idea how little I used a food processor, the old food processor was given to my wife before we were married and that was a long time ago. Well, the old food processor died recently when I tried to do something with cheese. Yea, that was a bad idea! Out with the old and in with the new.
For the last week I have been experimenting with the food processor. The video included with the food processor encouraged me. Despite their instructions I found that there is a fine line between chopped vegetables and purée. Almost all of the time I want the chopped look but some of my mistakes(i.e. purée) have had more flavor than the chopped versions. 🙂
Salsas and sauces may benefit from using the food processor with a gentle hand. This week I will experiment with pie dough. It may work better in the smaller container than in the mixer. I doubt I will try the food processor with bread dough. I am very happy with my results with my mixer.
RE: Classic Cream of Tomato Soup
Last week I suddenly realized I was ill. I woke one morning feeling not too great and got on the metro. Two stops past the station where I usually get off to go to work, I came to my senses, sighed, got back on the metro going in the opposite direction. Arriving at the office, I met the office manager going out for a pastry and explained and apologized. Needless to say, I did not last the day. Around two, I headed home. As a measure of how out of it I was for the next three days, let me say that on Wednesday I went home sick and it wasn’t until Friday evening that I discovered I’d had my wallet stolen on the way home Wednesday. I was out of it.
And what do you when you are sick? Soup, soup, soup. Something hot and full of vitamins. Salty, flavorful. When I was a child it was nearly always the same: Campbell’s cream of Tomato Soup and a grilled cheese sandwich. Now that I’m older and no longer live in the Land Of Easily Purchased Campbell’s Soup, I have discovered a perfect (and healthier, incidentally) substitute: the Fannie Farmer Cookbook recipe for cream of tomato soup. The fresh tomatoes are just barely still in season and are full of juice and vitamins. The milk is comforting and indulgent. It’s a simple recipe and absolutely perfect for comforting you when all you want to do is crawl into bed. And, incidentally, it’s quick and easy to make, important when you are already sick.
Classic Cream of Tomato Soup
Although this recipe is nominally a cream soup, in fact you’ll notice there is no cream in the ingredients, just milk. It tastes wonderfully rich nevertheless. The basic recipe is Fannie Farmer’s but I’ve tweaked it here and there to make it my own. The cloves are all hers, though, a stroke of genius. They compliment the tomatoes and the soup perfectly, a slightly exotic and earthy note.
8-10 small ripe tomatoes
1 1/2 cups semi-skimmed milk
1 onion
10-12 cloves
salt
freshly ground pepper
1/2 Tbs baking sodaPour boiling water (to cover) over the tomates and let them sit in the water for a few minutes. In the meantime, begin heating the milk to scalding point. Peel the onion and cut it in half. Poke the cloves into onion halves and put them in the milk. Simmer the onion halves and cloves in the milk for 15 minutes. While the milk is simmering, drain the tomatoes and slip the skins off them. Roughly chop them, and, if you are so inclined, seed them. I don’t bother, but it’s true the seeds can mar a perfectly smooth soup.
Fish the onion halves out of the milk. Add the chopped tomatoes and cook for another 10-15 minutes. When they are tender, remove from the heat and using a stick blender or food processor process the soup until it’s smooth and creamy. Add the baking soda and watch, amazed, as it froths up and threatens to overflow the pot. (That’s the photo at the start of the post, incidentally.) Fannie Farmer admits that she doesn’t know why the baking soda makes the soup taste better. I don’t know if it does: I just like the frothing. Fun. Salt and pepper generously to taste and serve with cheese and crackers. Nice sharp cheddar cheese, if you can get it.
It might not cure your cold, but it will take you on a nostalgia trip and make you feel better at heart. And the steam and vitamins can’t hurt.
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[Via Too Many Chefs]
RE: Recipe File: Shepherd’s Pie (Cottage Pie)
When the English, who seem to have a national fascination with minced meat pies, combined mashed potatoes with minced meat, a truly remarkable dish was born. For over two hundred years, Shepherd’s Pie has been made by cooking chopped up lamb or mutton mixed with gravy, topped with mashed potatoes, and baked until a crispy crust forms. When made with beef, this dish is traditionally called Cottage Pie.
Shepherd’s Pie (serves four to six)
Mashed potatoesShepherd’s pie
[Via Cooking For Engineers]