Aug 31, 2013

Chilled Orange Rosemary Chicken


This wonderful  orange-glazed chicken  is   so simple yet so delish and perfect to make ahead to enjoy on a warm summer evening.  I made it once for the Beach Boys, who were kind enough to say it was 'superb'  as part of a charity  "VIP backstage picnic with the Beach Boys"  eons ago ....maybe 1995-ish.

I can't recall now what else I served  with the chicken, except that I  had  a local chocolatier make  woven dark-chocolate baskets  that I filled with a light chocolate mousse and raspberries for garnish.  Tonight I'm serving it to my "Book Babes"  with  summer tomato-tart  squares,  a green salad topped with pecans, bacon, and fresh strawberries,  and a luxuriously custard-soaked rhubarb custard cake.    The  other recipes  are  here on the blog, use the search feature at top right to locate them. 

Per about  8  boneless chicken breasts ( skin on or not, your call):  Mix 5T  kosher salt with 1  1/2 T crushed rosemary. Rub the chicken with it, then place in a plastic bag or bowl and refrigerate at least 4 hours - preferably overnight or a day ahead for best flavor.   Then roast on a rimmed cookie sheet at 400 for 20-40 minutes, depending on  the size and thickness of the breasts. Use  uniform sizes so you don't have some overdone.    Baste a couple times with the pan juices, remove and let cool. 

Melt a 12-14 oz jar of orange  marmalade in a small pan with 1 TB coarse salt and 2 TB salad oil.  Carefully cut the cooled breasts diagonally into slices, not quite all the way through to keep them together.  Spoon half the glaze over the chicken pieces, cover and refrigerate.  Spoon the rest of the glaze on after the first layer has had time to 'set'.  Cover carefully  and chill until time to serve  each breast on it's own Bibb ( butter) lettuce leaf.

Dec 27, 2012

Chilled Stuffed Pepper Wedges



Happily, the dried beef-cream cheese balls of the 60's reappeared, amped up a bit, to stuff peppers in the 80's.  They  make a visually attractive and delicious appetizer  for a tailgate or  any party.      I think I've stuffed  a few thousand appetizer  peppers over the years...they were a popular  choice when I was catering.     I use  red and green peppers at Christmas   and add yellow and/ or  orange other times of the year. Lately I've been stuffing the  bite-sized small  sweet mixed peppers that come bagged,  but  do miss that pop of green color.

Today I  used the small  yellow, red  and orange peppers, so I've added the original  1985 cookbook photo  to show  the  pepper wedges.  It's a photo of a photo, sorry 'bout the quality, but it serves its purpose.

For the wedges, be sure  to choose three similarly -sized and -shaped peppers  so they are uniform when  sliced.  Short and fat are preferable to long  and slender.  If the peppers are smallish you may want  to buy four. 

Using a mixer or food processor with a blade, process  8 oz. of cream cheese with 1c. ricotta cheese, 2 tsp horseradish, 1 tsp yellow mustard, 1/2 tsp. black pepper, & 1/2 tsp seasoned salt,  until smooth.  Stir in  about 3 oz. dried beef from a jar,  finely chopped,   2 minced radishes or water chestnuts,  4 TB  minced green onion.  Set aside in the fridge.

Remove the stems of three  bell peppers (one green, one red, one yellow)  by cutting a small, 1" circle around the  top.  Save the stem & top.  Scoop out the seeds and white membranes from inside the peppers.  Densely pack the cheese mixture inside the peppers, pressing to fill  solidly  to the bottom and edges. Top with the reserved stem. Wrap each pepper in plastic wrap or a baggie, and  seal.    This is the stopping point if you're making these a day or two ahead.

When ready to proceed, after  chilling for a minimum of 2-3 hours, discard the stems and cut each pepper in half lengthwise, then each half in four wedges. Arrange on a tray and garnish with pimiento strips or black olive slices. A longer  chilling time makes slicing  easier.

 You'll get 24 wedges from ordinary  peppers.  I've pushed  my luck when making dozens of these  ahead for a large party ......they start getting  soft instead of crunchy, and a little weepy, around the 48-hour period.. .. still OK to eat,  but   messier than they should be.   When slicing,  wipe your knife with a damp paper towel between cuts to keep the pepper from getting messy.

Serve the small  bagged peppers whole, cutting a little more from the stem end to reveal what's inside. 



Dec 23, 2012

Oh Gosh, Ganache

  I was telling a friend how to make a quickie little dessert, ( not the one pictured)  and that conversation was going along just fine until I added "then just put a ganache on them"   Whoa!  Her  reaction was "no way, I  can't do fancy stuff".   So here is my little ganache lecture for anyone who is similarly confused.

Ganache is just a harmless little  French word for a 2-ingredient concoction.  Really.   Ganache is  just a rich fudgy concoction made of cream and chocolate, melted together. It's a glaze, an icing, a sauce........  Pretty simple, and certainly not frightening.  You are braver than any ganache.

   Depending on how you let  it thicken - or not --  ganache is the smooth sheet of thick  fudge icing on a cupcake....a  rich hot fudge sauce for your ice cream,  a lovely filling for sandwich cookies,  a warm fondue sauce for dipping  fruit or cake cubes, a  brownie  or cake glaze or  doughnut  icing......   Or  fold cooled ganache into whipped cream for an instant chocolate mousse.  And  if that's not  quite enough chocolate, accompany any of those with a cup of hot chocolate made by  stirring ganache into warm milk for the ultimate jolt of cacao heaven. Yowza.


Here are two simple ways to make ganache: ( Actually, all ways to make ganache are simple)   In a microwave:     Place 8 oz semisweet or bittersweet chocolate (  finely chopped, or chips are fine) in a medium bowl.  In a glass measuring cup,  nuke 3/4 c. heavy  whipping cream  on high 1-2 minutes or until it comes to a boil.  Immediately pour it over the chocolate and  stir til smooth.  Cool just a bit- til slightly warm - and stir in 2 TB softened butter, unsalted is best, stir til melted.  Now , based on what you intend to do with it,  use it now, or let it cool a bit to thicken, or of you want it really thick, put in the fridge  until it's the thickness you want. Stir now  and then to check on the consistency.

or, use a saucepan -  put the cream and chocolate in together and slowly warm,  stirring,  over low heat, til its completely melted and smooth.  Let cool a couple minutes off the heat and stir in the butter.  Butter adds the shine. Because  I feel  that the  hot pan keeps the ganache warm and spoonable longer, I tend to use this method when doing large batches of cupcakes or brownies that take a little longer  to get them all iced.

3/4 cup   of cream to 12 oz chocolate will make enough to glaze an 8 or 9 inch 2-layer cake or  a 13x9 cake. 

To make a to-die-for ice cream sauce, use the saucepan method using  8 oz finely chopped chocolate and 1 cup whipping cream.  It can be covered and  stored in the fridge for  about a month.

And if you want to see the similarity between  making a ganache and  a super-duperly-easy  2  minute  'chocolat pot de creme', enter it into the search bar on this blog and laugh merrily as you   picture yourself saying modestly "oh gosh, it's  really just a ganache"!


You're very welcome. 






Dec 21, 2012

Bacon Bark

    

As though bacon addicts need any more incredibly awesome  bacon recipes?   A wonderful   sweet/salty  finger-food appetizer or bar snack, you can  jar this up  for gifts, or selfishly keep it all to yourself.  

I almost always use sugar free 'maple syrup' and brown Splenda or Stevia, so if you want to calculate  a carb count, it's essentially just nuts and the sweetener.  Using real maple syrup  tastes  only slightly more fabulous.  If you intend to make this low sodium, use real maple syrup and low sodium bacon, cut the salt amount down and/or use  Diamond Crystal kosher salt.

It's a quickie recipe.  Use two dishes-- one medium bowl for the nut mixture, and a large  shallow one..... like  a pie plate  or platter.for the bacon mixture.   Preheat the oven to 350 for at least 15 minutes. Prepare  a rimmed cookie sheet.  Non-stick is best but even so, be sure to use  parchment or foil or disposable baking sheets. Parchment is best - and  if you use foil give it a light spray of Pam.  There's bigtime stickiness ahead. 

Nuts:  In one bowl, place 2 c. pecan halves and 2c walnut halves, 1/2 c. light brown sugar, 4 TB maple syrup, 2 tsp pumpkin pie spice, 1 tsp Hungarian paprika, 1 tsp coarse salt, 1/2 tsp black pepper. mix well and set aside.  Do not  use chopped  nuts!  but slightly broken,  almost-half  pieces are OK to include.

Bacon:  Into the other dish, cut 12 slices of center-cut bacon  in  1"  pieces across the strips.  It's easiest to use scissors and cut  several strips at once, while the bacon is still cold and stuck together, then separate the pieces once they're cut... space them out in the flat dish so when  you add the other ingredients they'll  easily coat the bacon.  Then add  a mixture of  1/2 c. brown sugar, 1 tsp Hungarian paprika,  zest of  2 oranges or  lemons, salt and pepper. Pat it on and then with a fork or fingers , stir/toss   gently til all  bacon pieces are pretty much coated.  Then spread them  on the prepared pan and bake until the bacon is almost done and all the  sugar is bubbling, about 10 minutes.

Then add the nuts to the pan.   Using a  spatula, turn and mix, then spread out again and bake 15-25 minutes more, turning and spreading again halfway through.   It's done when the mixture has obviously turned caramel-ly and sticky.   The length of time will depend on how thinly or closely the mixture is spread on the pan.  Be sure that there are no large gaps --- you want it to stick together. Just slide the foil or parchment sheets off the hot pan to cool.

When cooling, you may want to flip the  pieces over a few times   to let the undersides harden a bit before storing them away so they  won't be sticky.  Let sit on the counter until it's 'dry' enough to  break or tear into  clumps. This may take several hours..   Edited to add that it doesn't need to be refrigerated in the  short term.  If saving for days on end I do pop it in the fridge

Scarf some  down while gooey and warm,  or let it cool and break it apart.   This recipe will make  about  6-7  cups of sweet,  spicy, salty, bacony, nutty  goodness.  No one will be the wiser  if you  claim  that you only made a half recipe...just be sure you get all the sticky evidence off your fingers.

Oct 1, 2012

Looo-siana Crawdad Spread !

  Crawdads, crayfish..... the flavorful  little critters by any name are  most delicious!   I've made this  for guests several times and have yet to remember to   photograph it before it disappears so this is the Southern Living photo.  Full credit to SL for the  easy  recipe, which I've tweaked just a tad.

If you are the sole human  not  within reach of a Wal-Mart, you're on your own  locating crawdad meat. Otherwise, you're in luck.  Two  of the three Walmarts  near us sells an 11-oz pack of frozen crawdad tail meat, ready to thaw & use.      Should  your own  store not carry it, the seafood manager in that store  can order it in for you.  Meijer stores sometimes have whole crawdads on ice in their seafood case, which is great if you're having a boil, but I am too lazy to cook and peel 7 lbs, which is what you'd need for one batch of spread. Meijer is great about sourcing items for customers, so it's worth asking them to special order the meat too. To avoid a runny spread, drain the 'dads well in a sieve and/or on paper towels. I dry them off with a paper towel.

In a  large saucepan with 1/2 c. butter, saute 1  diced green pepper and 1 c. chopped green onion (most of the green included), til the pepper is soft, about 8 minutes.  Then add  3 tsp.   Creole seasoning, 3 cloves minced garlic,  a 4 oz jar  of drained pimientos , and a few shakes of hot sauce or sriracha --- but just  for flavor, not for heat.      Stir it well, then add  16-24 oz.  crawdad meat. When I double the batch I use 33 oz. of meat, ( three packages of the size I buy) and  it's not too much.   The tails will be the size of  tiny shrimp. Don't chop them.

 Heat gently for about 15 minutes, then stir in 16 oz.  cubed cream cheese. Continue cooking a few minutes  until  it's all melted , stir now and then.   Curiously, quite a bit of liquid is  generated....the  crawdads must be very juicy -- but there's more juice than I want to deal with when spooning or spreading this dip onto toasts, so  on those occasions I drain much of it off before adding the cream cheese. ( of course some of the flavor departs too...)  Keep the heat  low, and  as the spread cools off a bit, it may thicken slightly.   I do like a little  juice to  soften the toasts if crisp, but more than that gets very messy.  Offer forks to  help capture all the goodies that fall off the toasts.

One batch  should serve about 8 people.  I wouldn't make it  in a crockpot.....if you want to keep it warm, make it on the stove, pre-warm your crockpot,  transfer the hot spread  & keep it in there on warm or low...but keep the lid off or cracked a lot.  Otherwise you will be serving a quite delicious crawdad soup.    A little garnish of  of green onion or parsley gives the finished dish some pretty color. .


Aug 19, 2012

Malaysian Cognac-Coconut Shrimp

15-minute meals always get my attention, and if you like  coconut with  shrimp, you'll be grateful for this entree, which elevates it  light-years  beyond the ubiquitous  coconut-crusted frozen  shrimp sold as appetizers  everywhere.

Here, the  toasted coconut is not a crust; it's  only on the shrimp as part of a very scant, very thin  but very delicious glaze  that is spooned over  shrimp and   brown, saffron,  jasmine,  or white rice.  Because we live far, far from civilization and I must grow my own red Thai bird peppers, this dish only appears  on our  table in summer.  I really need to experiment with more readily available hot peppers.

   Thai bird peppers can be  tiny, and if you don't like 'hot', no problem, they're not meant to be ingested here anyway----  use them whole  --- then  simply pluck them out  when serving or better yet, leave them in for color and remind people not to eat them.   But don't just skip using them; they add an important depth of flavor to the dish.

This goes together quickly, so have  all your ingredients next to the stove, and your rice  and sides ready before you begin the shrimp.  Shrimp toughens too quickly  for the cook to be  collecting  what you need as they're cooking.

Use a pound of the largest raw shrimp you can find  -  shell  & clean them well, rinse, butterfly,  and dry thoroughly  on paper towels.  In a small  dry skillet, toast 1/4 cup flaked or chipped coconut, stirring very frequently so it  browns evenly but doesn't burn. Set  aside. Chipped ( flat chips, flaked) coconut is worth looking for.

In a large wok or pan, heat 1-2 TB  veg oil til just  it begins smoking and add the shrimp just briefly- a minute or two, until you think they are about halfway cooked; then remove from the pan.  Add 3 green  onions, green and whites,  cut in 2" lengths, a TB of chopped garlic, a big pinch of salt and  maybe a half dozen little  red Thai bird peppers.  Don't skip the peppers!  Stir just briefly, for less than a minute, before adding 4 TB butter, 6 TB cognac, 2 tsp sugar. Reduce a minute or two, then return the shrimp to the pan and finish cooking   for a couple minutes more.  The sauce should  glaze  the shrimp.  Stir in the  toasted coconut and serve immediately, spooning the sauce over the shrimp.  It's tempting to use a very large pan, but your sauce will  cook off too quickly over a larger surface and there won't be enough; better to use a medium skillet,  cook the shrimp in two batches, then combine them  at the end.

Credit for this recipe may go to Jaden Hair, although I've seen it several places...once a recipe circulates thru magazines and the internet, it's hard to know who invented and who tweaked what. In any case,  it's  simply delicious!


Panzanella- an Italian Bread Salad


I can't think of a better way to use up a big batch of ripe tomatoes and a load of fresh basil.  The crusty bread soaks up the tomatoes' juices, the basil and onion flavors, and the red-wine vinaigrette, yet doesn't  get soggy.  As  a variation, I sometimes add  very thinly sliced, then shredded, hard or Genoa salami.

Panzanella's aren't new, but whenever I  serve this salad it's  invariably  a new  concept for someone, and certainly a conversation-starter, as they dubiously  consider  trying soaked bread. It only takes a bite to make  them panzanella fans. It's  the perfect dish for an outdoor meal, since there are no  concerns about refrigeration or spoilage in the heat of a summer day.

Unless you are fortunate to live somewhere where tomatoes are grown year round, this will be a seasonal dish, because supermarket tomatoes imported from who knows where just won't cut it. It's simple to make a half-batch if you prefer , but don't let the initial amount of bread alarm you --- it reduces dramatically in size when it absorbs all those lovely summery flavors.

For 12-15 servings:    In a very large bowl,  whisk together 1 1/2 c. extra virgin olive oil, 2 1/2 tsp finely chopped  garlic, 1/2 c. red-wine vinegar and 1 1/2 tsp kosher or sea salt.

Add to the bowl: 2 lbs. crusty,  firm  bread- such as French or Italian - torn in  half-dollar size pieces.  Two lbs is about 24 cups of bread -- hey, I  warned you it  will seem crazy -- but  not to worry, it 'shrinks'.  Add 3 lbs ( 9 cups) of garden-ripe tomatoes cut in 1/2 " chunks,  3 cups of loosely packed, coarsely chopped fresh basil, and 1 medium red onion, thinly sliced and then chopped.     Toss it  well,  til the bread is coated,  and let it stand for at least 30 minutes.  An hour or two is fine. Really.  Sogginess isn't an issue for at least a day or two.   Don't refrigerate this salad, except for  overnight leftovers, and then let it come to room temperature again..    

 

Aug 15, 2012

Bacon- Tomato Jam and Bacon-Wrapped Strawberries


 
There's no point in suggesting you  need new ways to use up 'extra' bacon  - is there such a thing?  but we often have loads of  vine-ripe tomatoes that need to be used.    Here are  two ways.    The jam recipe  just makes one pint, so take your neighbors up on  their offers  of ripe tomatoes next time and make a big batch  to share.  I've never  used purchased tomatoes  for this so can't vouch for what they'd taste like.

Tomato Bacon Jam
In a large skillet over medium heat cook ½ lb smoked bacon til crispy. Transfer to paper towels to drain, blotting dry if necessary.   In a large saucepan combine 2 lb. very ripe tomatoes, cored and chopped; 1 medium yellow onion, diced; 1 c. sugar; 2 ½ TB cider vinegar, 1 ½ tsp salt, ¼ tsp black pepper. Bring to a boil, stirring often, then reduce heat .  Crumble the bacon into the mixture and simmer til very thick, about 1  hour.  Season with salt and pepper if needed (probably not salt).  Let the jam cook briefly, then ladle into jar.  Refrigerate a week or two, or freeze for 2-3 months.  If freezing, freeze in several  small containers.  Let thaw overnight in the refrigerator.  If you like some heat, add more black pepper, or finely diced jalapenos. A great condiment for grilled cheese sandwiches,  burgers,  on a cracker, or with toast  or  bagels   for breakfast.

Grilled Bacon-Wrapped Strawberries
Clean the berries ( small-medium ones work best for one-bite  portions) and wrap each in 1/3  slice of raw bacon - fasten with two toothpicks, which may catch fire  but  that's OK.   You can also try  lightly coating  the "inside'  of the bacon strip in brown sugar before wrapping.    Place on a hot grill and turn often til crisp. Remove the picks of course, and enjoy warm, possibly with a drizleof balsmic.   Fresh  pineapple is good too, but then what  isn't  good wrapped in bacon?

   

Aug 11, 2012

S'mores To Go

 
Hardly a recipe but an idea....  a fun way to serve a bite of deliciousness..... skewer a marshmallow, dip in melted semisweet chocolate, and immediately roll it  in  graham cracker crumbs.  Place on foil or parchment .      Pop the tray into the fridge for  a few  minutes to help harden it; this is not necessary, but I  think any chocolate that  tempers ( hardens)  in cooler temps  is much  less  likely to soften/melt  later.  To dress up the skewer, you know, for formal   s'more occasions, leave the pointy end UP and put a chocolate-covered raisin on it.   If made a day ahead, cover the  tray so the exposed marshmallow area stays soft, but don't cover tightly. Don't  store in the fridge, but they do freeze well  for future s'more emergencies.

Aug 9, 2012

Spaghetti with Crab and Lemon

Fresh lemon is essential for this dish, so  don't even think about using bottled juice, or worse yet,  using fake "krab" !  I can hardly type it without shuddering.  It'  goes together quickly and tastes like the sea.

Cook  a pound of spaghetti or fettuccine in a pot of boiling salted water to al dente.   While it's cooking, heat 2 TB extra virgin olive oil in a large skillet.  Gently stir in a  pound of cooked lump crab meat and heat til it's warmed through.  Add  1/4 c. white wine.  Bring the liquid  just to the boiling point, then turn the heat down and add 1/2 c.  fresh lemon juice and lots of salt and pepper.

Drain your pasta and be sure to save about 1/2 c of the pasta water.   Add the pasta to the skillet along with 1/2 c. freshly grated Parmesan cheese and a handful of  chopped fresh parsley.  Add a little of the reserved pasta water  as needed to loosen it slightly, and  serve with  more Parmesan. Serves at least  4.



Pineapple Upside Down Carrot Cake

No need to choose between pineapple upside down cake and carrot cake.....  there's  cream cheese inside instead of  on top as icing, and raisins, nuts, and a crushed pineapple topping. 

Preheat oven to 350.

Melt 1/2 stick butter in   a 10" square or round pan, then sprinkle it with 3/4 c. light brown  sugar, packed,  then  (SAVE the juice)  spread a 20-oz can of well drained,  crushed pineapple  over that, and finally, sprinkle on 2 TB chopped walnuts or pecans.

With a mixer, cream 8 oz  room-temperature  cream cheese  til smooth, then add 1 c sugar.  Mix, then add 2 eggs, one at time, beating well.  Blend in  1/4 c. reserved  pineapple juice or syrup, and 1/2 c.  veg oil ( not olive).   Mix dry ingredients  together ( 1 3/4 c. flour, 2 tsp baking powder, 1/2 tsp baking soda, 1/4 tsp salt, and 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon. )      Add dry  mixture  to wet mixture,  beat til well combined.   Fold in by hand: 1 cup finely shredded raw carrot, 3/4 c. raisins,  2 TB finely chopped nuts.   Blend well. This is a heavy batter.

Spoon batter evenly over the pineapple topping.   Bake about 30-35 minutes. Remove and let sit on a wire rack for 3-4 minutes - don't let it cool there.  Run a knife around edges to loosen the cake, then invert onto a serving plate.  Let the pan sit on it for a minute or two so  any syrup will drain off onto the cake.  Let cool.

Dec 25, 2011

Cinnabon Cheesecake

So, what could  be more sinful  than cheesecake or cream-cheese frosted Cinnabon rolls?  Umm.... that would be  Cinnabons inside a cheesecake.... with an extra layer of cream cheese icing and a cinnamon-sugar swirl.  Like most cheesecakes, it goes together quickly. No need for a crust; the buns  take care of that step.

Preheat the oven for at least 15 minutes to 325.  Place racks on the lower  part of the oven and another in the center. Use a large flat-ish pan...maybe a roaster or deep  9x13, half-filled with water, on the bottom shelf to keep the oven  moist.

Use about 1 lb  mini   iced Cinnabons ( or substitutes below) cut in half vertically to lay over the bottom of a well sprayed 9" springform pan.Put  them in cut-side down. No need to cram tightly. 

On medium speed, beat  32 oz room-temp cream cheese with 1 1/2 c sugar til light and fluffy, 2-3 minutes. Beat in 5 eggs, one at a time. Add 1/4 c. flour, 8 oz sour cream, 1 TB vanilla; beat til well combined and smooth.  Pour batter over the buns; jiggle a little to get it in between any gaps in buns.

Bake 1 hour on the center rack, or til center jiggles  just slightly. Turn oven off and leave it in there  for about an hour.  Remove and cool completely on a rack.  When  completely  cool, spread on the  topping, then  the drizzle, in any pattern you like. I didn't do it in this photo but  it's fun to use the drizzle to draw on circles like individual cinnabuns, so the top  appears  like a pan of buns.

As for the Cinnabons, no doubt, they are wonderful but pricey as an ingredient--- if you have an acceptably close version of frosted cinnamon buns  available, use it. Here in the Great Lakes states  the Meijer grocery chain's bakery department  sells a wonderful ( and  far less expensive) box of heavily frosted cinnabuns called Cinncredible, or something similar. Since they aren't "mini's" they'll be higher than  they should be ... I trimmed about an inch off the bottoms ... the icing is really thick so there's no chance I'd have trmmed that!  The buns shouldn't come more than  2/3 up the sides of your pan.

So here's the topping: Beat 3 oz cream cheese with 3 TB butter til well blended, 1-2 minutes. Gradually beat in 1 c. powdered sugar, then 1 TB milk, til smooth.  Refrigerate til you're ready to put in on the cheesecake.

The drizzle: In a small nuke-able bowl mix 2 TB packed dark brown sugar, 1 TB butter, 1/4 tsp  cinnamon.  Then nuke it on high in 15-second intervals, til it's melted and smooth; cool just slightly, it needs to  flow but  be cool enough to handle.  Place in a small ziplock bag, cut off the tip, and use it to make your design on the topping. Re-nuke if you wait too long and it hardens up.

Nov 30, 2011

Mahogany Balsamic Chicken


Robin Mather,   if  you're Googling yourself and come across this, I owe you  thanks for about 20 years of enjoyment for this recipe alone.   I like this because the color, as well as the  taste, is so  rich and dark and unusual. I've given it  a new name, because I no longer recall the original name, but  your recipe remains pretty much intact.

Robin Mather was the food writer for the Detroit News and Free Press in the 80's. Although it's  not a 'diet'  recipe at all, its low calorie, low carb, low sodium, low fat.  It's a can't - miss choice.

Dust 4 chicken breast halves in  2 TB flour. If you open the package and find thick or enormous breasts, consider cutting them in half horizontally, which will create cutlets and make cooking faster.  The flouring is an optional step that I frequently skip, or use soy flour, since I'm generally trying to be cognizant of carbs.  Pan fry in 2 TB hot olive oil in a skillet  over medium  heat til browned on both sides, about 8 minutes, total.  Add 8 oz sliced fresh mushrooms, cook and stir for a couple minutes, then stir in 2 cloves of garlic, chopped, 1/4 c. balsamic vinegar, 1/3 c. low fat/low sodium chicken broth ( of course you can use full fat if you choose), a large bay leaf or two, 2 pinches thyme.

Cover and cook about 6 minutes over medium heat.  Remove the chicken, raise the heat and cook uncovered over medium-high heat about 5 minutes while the sauce reduces.  Put the chicken back in the pan and  turn  a time or two.

Serve with the thin but incredibly delicious sauce.  Leftovers are wonderful warmed up.  I often make a larger batch and freeze individual portions in sandwich bags for a quick freezer-to-table dinner..

Nov 27, 2011

Orange-Glazed Salmon


The simple, spicy rub delivers that elusive rich heat & depth of flavor that  teeters precariously on the edge of  'hot' without quite going there....although if that's your desire, it's easy enough to do. The dark, sweet, caramelized  crust is packed with both  spice and sweetness, an intriguing combination that has this quick dish appearing on our table with some frequency.

Make  an effort to find  the Seville orange marmalade. Seville oranges have  more flavor and are more acidic  than the usual brands, such as Smuckers.There are several brands  of 'better-quality' marmalade.....among them,   Duerr's, and Crosse & Blackwell , and Trader Joe's carries a decent version as well.  If  you really must use  a non-Seville marm, be  aware  you'll need to increase the lime juice to offset the weaker, too-sugary brands.

I like to serve it with sweet potato fries  and  a green salad.

Make a rub with 2 TB salt-free Creole seasoning, 1 heaping TB brown sugar ( substitutes work fine), and 1/4 tsp kosher salt.  Rub over all sides of 4  6-oz salmon fillets, skin removed.   If you  like 'hot', use 3 TB of the Creole seasoning.   Heat a large non-stick skillet  with 2 TB canola oil ( not olive oil) over medium high heat. Be sure the oil is shimmering, then add the fillets.  Don't  attempt to move or turn them for about 4 minutes.   Then turn and cook an additional 2-3 minutes.

Blend 1/4 c. Seville orange marmalade with 1 TB fresh lime juice ( you'll need one lime); swirl  it around in the pan until it's melted, then carefully turn the fish in it to glaze on all sides.  When it flakes,and it should by this time, it's ready.  Garnish with lime and orange slices.



Oct 31, 2011

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Muffins




 
What makes a muffin a muffin, and not a cupcake?    It's usually the texture- a little denser and dryer. And we feel more virtuous for not eating 'cupcakes' for breakfast.   This muffin  recipe may actually be a cupcake trying to pass as  'morning' food,  but whatever.   I've made  various similar  recipes  and  purchased  others from bakeries, but this  is the   keeper....so moist they almost don't qualify for muffin status.   I sometimes drizzle the top with melted chocolate - not that they need it, but extra chocolate never hurts.  I'm a dark or semi-sweet chocolate person ordinarily, but in this instance, milk-chocolate  chips inside the muffins works best.

Preheat oven to 350. Lightly spray a muffin tin or  use  papers in a muffin tin.

In a large bowl mix  1 2/3 c. flour, 1 c. sugar, 1 TB pumpkin pie spice, 1/4 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp baking soda, 1/4 tsp salt.  Add 1 c. semi sweet or milk chocolate chips, &  toss to coat the chips so they don't  sink to the bottom. 

In a small  bowl, whisk together 2 large eggs, 1 c. canned pumpkin ( not p. pie mix) and 1 stick butter, plus 3 TB,  melted and cooled.  Combine contents of both bowls, don't overmix.

Fill  muffin cups 2/3 full.  Bake 20-25 min, til springy when touched.  Cool on a rack.

Apple- Cider Apple Crisp with Cider Sauce

If there's a bad apple crisp recipe, I've never come across it.. There are great ones and less great, but  a bad apple crisp is  hard to find.  This  one forgoes  oatmeal  and flour  and  uses cinnamon-graham cracker crumbs, adds a few raisins, and includes cider in both the base and  a delicious   sauce.   I like to delude myself into thinking I've done something healthy by avoiding white flour, and using brown Splenda.


Preheat oven to 350 . Peel  and slice about 8 c.  all purpose apples, and place in an ungreased 11 x 7 baking dish with 1/2 c raisins.  Pour 1/4 c. apple cider over the fruit.

Make the crumble topping: Mix together 1 c. of cinnamon graham cracker crumbs, 1 tsp cinnamon, 1/4 tsp nutmeg,  6 TB butter, melted, and 1/2 c. packed brown sugar.   Sprinkle evenly over fruit.  Bake about 50-55 minutes  til apples are  tender.

Apple Cider Sauce:   Place all ingredients in a small saucepan: 1/2 c. packed brown sugar, 4 TB butter, 1/4 c. cider, 2 TB heavy cream....... and probably a tsp. of cornstarch a little later on.
 Bring the first 4 to a rolling boil, reduce  heat slightly, cook about 3 more minutes, watching  carefully and stirring to avoid burning.  Take off heat and cool  in the pan.    I've made this  numerous  times and have yet to have the sauce thicken at all, as I assume it should - ( it starts to separate and shouldn't)  so after its cooled and  hasn't  thickened,  I mix about 1/3 of it with a tsp or so of cornstarch, reheat the rest, and stir  the cornstarch mixture back into the hot  sauce til it's thick.   Then let it cool til serving.  If there's sauce left after serving, refrigerate it and let warm to room temp before  topping the crisp.    Serve with a bit of ice cream or whipped cream, if you like.

Oct 21, 2011

Hedgehog Cookies

Our book club   discussion choice  not long ago was a quirky little book - The Elegance of The Hedgehog ---  which deserved a quirky little after-dinner treat.     These  hedgehogs were quite a hit  both for their uniqueness and  because they're  really  tasty little critters.

  The dough makes, essentially, pecan sandies, which are shaped appropriately, dipped in chocolate, and then in quills....er...sprinkles.   The recipe says to use a toothpick to make the eyes and snout,  but mine came out with tiny peaks, looking a little  more like chocolate chips than eyeballs.  Next time I'll try  an itty bitty pastry tip. And don't  make the snouts too pointy;  they're fragile and will break  easily.  There's nothing quite as sad as a disfigured hedgehog.

1/3 cup butter, softened

1/4 cup confectioners' sugar

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

2/3 cup all-purpose flour

2/3 cup ground pecans

1/8 teaspoon salt

1/2 cup chocolate  chips

1/4 cup chocolate sprinkles

In a small bowl, cream butter and confectioners' sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in vanilla. Combine the flour, pecans and salt; gradually add to creamed mixture and mix well. Shape 1 tablespoon of dough into a ball; pinch the dough to form a face. Repeat. Place 2 in. apart on a greased baking sheet. They don't spread.

Bake at 325° for 12-15 minutes or until lightly browned. Let stand for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.

In a microwave, melt chocolate; stir until smooth. Holding a hedgehog cookie by the nose, ( or wherever; I already explained the dangers in nose-holding)  spoon chocolate over the back (leave the face uncovered). Allow excess to drip off.  immediately roll the top in  chocolate  sprinkles. Place on waxed paper, parchment, or foil.

With a toothpick dipped in chocolate, make two eyes and a dot on the nose. Let stand until set. I like to put the tray in the fridge or freezer to get the chocolate set, for abut 10 min.     Store in an airtight container. Yield: 16 cookies.     I  love this and often  triple the ingredients  to make 'regular'  shaped pecan sandie cookies with  it, and half-dip them in chocolate.

One final note:  if you should  find  'The Elegance of The Hedgehog'  a little slow getting going, stick with it....we found it delightful.

Oct 3, 2011

Sugar-Crusted Puff Pinwheels

Make wonderul cinnamon puff- pastry  pinwheels in a flash.....every inch  is crusted with sugar crystals. Using a box of Pepperidge Farm puff pastry  sheets , these  gems are super-easy.  After thawing the pastry, by the time you preheat the oven your pinwheels are ready to bake. Be sure to use parchment paper or you'll be  spending quality time with your favorite chisel and the baking sheet.  The cinnamon -sugar  can't help but ooze out a bit as it bakes, and you've got better things to do than chip away at a cookie sheet.  Thaw the box of pastry on the countertop for  about 20- 40 minutes,  or overnight in the fridge,   but it should still be COLD...and DO NOT  UNROLL it! 

 There are two packs of rectangular-folded pastry in each box. Generally you'd unfold  the pastry sheets to use it, but not today. Mix 1 cup sugar ( preferably large-crystals) * and 1/2 tsp cinnamon.  Find a  clean worksurface or cutting board, and spread about half the sugar on it.  Lay the  folded sheet of  dough on it...top with some more cinnamon sugar, and roll it out to an 11x15 sheet...Keep adding more sugar to keep it from sticking as you roll ... you'll be rolling it right  into the dough.  Use lots!  Lightly brush off the excess, and starting from a short side, roll up jellyroll fashion. Slice in 1/2" slices and place 2" apart on a parchment lined cookie sheet.  Bake in a preheated 350 oven 20-25 minutes until the centers are baked through.  Immediately lift off the parchment and flip over onto a clean surface or  parchment.  Cool completely before serving. 
 What's great is that they get even crustier after a day or so.  Don't seal them in a closed container, let air get to them. I've made them with bigger-sugar crystals such as those made by Wilton, sometimes with colored sugar;  I've rolled  extra-tiny mini chocolate chips on them; I've mixed  a heaping  TB of dark cocoa  powder with the cinnamon sugar;  all  versions are  delicious. One sheet (package) makes about 15 'fancy cookies'.  




Jul 30, 2011

Rainbow Blueberry Salmon

What do crushed pineapple, brown sugar, anaheim chilies, green onion, red grapefruit, limes,  blueberries and chili powder have in common?  They make an amazing salmon entree - so good,  in fact,  that it won an Oregon blueberry  recipe contest some years ago.    I  once served it  as part of a red, white and blue-themed menu for the 4th of July.    It's an incredibly unusual  & good-for-you entree.

1 cup  fresh blueberries
2   salmon filets, 6-8 oz. each
½ fresh ruby red grapefruit  ( I've also  used both  refrigerated sections, and canned section successfully, and find the canned much less expensive  but just as good in the finished product)
½ cup crushed pineapple  -packed in juice, not syrup
Fresh ground black pepper
½ teaspoon chili powder
1 small Anaheim chile  - these are not hot.   They're pointed, curved, lime green , available
        everywhere and they're important  to the  flavor
2 fresh limes
2 tablespoons butter
¾ cup brown sugar  - I use  Brown Sugar Twin or brown Splenda

Generously butter a glass baking dish and spread pineapple in the dish. Sprinkle liberally with fresh ground black pepper. Slice the chile into very thin rings and arrange over the pineapple. Squeeze the juice of two limes over the chile slices, then  slice the limes & place over  the chile, then lay the salmon fillets over the sliced chile  & lime. Peel and trim the grapefruit, and cut it into bite-size chunks and arrange those over the salmon.   Top with  blueberries, sprinkle with brown sugar, and season generously with chili powder. Bake at 425°  till top is bubbly and salmon is opaque.  Serve with all the fruit.. because the pineapple will be tinted slightly blue-ish purple - it's as colorful  a dish as it is flavorful.

Jul 26, 2011

Buttered Radishes with Sea Salt

Maybe radishes deserve a little more respect than just hanging out on a relish tray, even dolled up as roses.

Today's garden surveillance revealed radishes just about ready to pick. Understand, I grow them for my husband.  Ordinarily I would not be especially interested in this radish harvest, or any other,  since I don't  like radishes. Not white icicle, not red, not daikon.    Just don't like the peppery taste. Don't try to convert me, this is a lifelong decision.     Raw, at least.

But this summer I'm  enjoying them in a new --and entirely unexpected way I discovered over the winter....... cooked!

It's true that at first I just thought of cooked radishes as a different   way to serve them....to my husband.
He thought they were great.   But I wasn't the least bit tempted to try them even when he mused that they don't  really taste like radishes at all,  and I might  like them.      Nuh-uh.  No thanks,   Not tempted  a bit;  that's how much I dislike radishes. 

Yet, as I was cleaning up after dinner, to my own surprise  I tried a small piece  and  thought it was quite......interesting.....and   tasty.       And not  a bit radish-y.     So I ate all  the pieces that were left.  And enjoyed them.  Imagine that.

You'd be able to identify them of course, if I served them to you. They look like radishes!   But what about blindfolded? I'd say  there'd be no  chance  of guessing what you were eating.  I have no particular  veg to compare the taste to so I'll let you  decide  if their flavor is  totally unique, or whether they remind you of   another garden taste.     I think I'll  serve them to guests sometime as a  good conversation-piece side dish.    "Cooked radishes?  Really?!"

Ready to give it a shot? 
Quarter  or halve red radishes, depending on their size, and saute  5 minutes in a little butter - let them begin to brown a bit.......sprinkle with coarse salt   or   sea salt,  and munch  happily away!  

Really.





Jul 18, 2011

Fast Fabulous Korean Steak with Kimchi Fried Rice

                                                                                                                                     
A  great  diversion from ordinary grilled steak, these  popular  Korean street vendor beef strips
will earn rave reviews.  With the  rice, it has become one of our favorite meals,  exceptionally flavorful on all levels  ~~~  and slightly addictive. 

The  thin strips  cook  so  quickly on the grill that you can  feed a crowd  in a flash.  It's best cooked on charcoal  but  any really hot grill will work fine,  & as long as you don't have Korean guests, no one will be any wiser about the missing charcoal flavor.  This recipe  will serve   4-6  people, who will  be  snacking on any  leftover strips  long after dinner's over.  Make a big batch, they're terrific  later in  sandwiches  or on salads.   It does need 90 minutes of marinating time in total.

Cut about  2  lbs flank steak in 1/4 inch  across-the-grain slices.....cut on a slant so they are wider than the piece of beef is high... combine in a large  shallow bowl with  1/4 c sugar. This is not a time to use splenda or  other substitute, as the granular sugar  creates the char/ caramelization.   Toss and let stand at room temperature for 1 hour. You could also use  flatiron steak.

Mix 3 green onions, cut in 2" slices & shredded,  2 TB minced fresh garlic,  1/4 c light soy sauce, 1/2 tsp black pepper, 3 TB sesame seeds, 1/8 c peanut ( or canola) oil......peanut is more authentic.     Turn the pieces to coat evenly and let marinate 30-60 minutes.   Do not marinate for long periods ( like all afternoon or overnight).

Grill strips about 5  inches from the heat source. Be sure the grill is very hot.  Take care to not let the steak strips slip off into the coals.  Pile on heaping platters, sprinkle with more toasted sesame seeds, and wait for the ooh's and ahh's of delight!  Best cooked  til  almost charred,  so the sugar caramelizes.


And the perfect accompaniment?  I  found  this rice recipe in  Food Network Magazine in a  feature about......Korean steak..  I like  my steak recipe much more ...but ooh, their  fried rice....excellent!!       Kimchi is a delicious   pickled Korean cabbage salad, found in jars in the refrigerator/produce section of many grocery stores, such as Meijer and Kroger.  I can't always   find   nori  locally, although Kroger has been consistently stocked recently... but  for that reason,  consider it an optional ingredient.  Get the steak ready to cook,  but  get a good head  start on  the fried rice first ----  it  should be nearly ready before you put on the steak. 

Cut 6-8 slices thick bacon in 1/2 inch pieces,   Toast 3 TB  sesame seeds.   Cut nori sheets in  thin 1/2" strips.  Heat an iron skillet to medium high, then add bacon, stir fry til almost done, 6-8 min.  Drain the kimchi, but keep the liquid.  Raise heat to high,  stir fry the kimchi til browned, about 8 minutes, then  add  4  1/2 - 5 c. cold cooked white rice ( chilled),    the reserved kimchi liquid,  all the oil, and half the nori.  Continue to cook, turning and flattening with a spatula til it forms a golden crust, about 8 minutes.   Sprinkle with a few sesame seeds and the remaining nori.

If you need another veg for this meal, throw some  mild frying peppers ( such as Anaheim or Poblano ) on the grill with  wedges of onion, and grill  them along with the meat.

Jul 16, 2011

Blueberry Spinach Salad

I'm on a blueberry kick this summer and we're enjoying this salad often.   It's  a bit sweet  with a tangy kick from the combination of berries,  pears and blue cheese.  Walnuts add  a delicious  crunch.

Make a vinaigrette dressing of 1/2 c extra virgin olive oil, 1/4 c. raspberry  or balsamic vinegar,  1 TB dijon mustard, 1 tsp honey,  s & p to taste.. Just whisk til well blended.

Salad:   1 ripe Anjou pear, peeled &  cubed, 16 oz baby spinach, no stems,   2 oz ( 1/2 c ) blue, feta,  or gorgonzola cheese crumbled,   4 oz chopped walnuts, 1 pint fresh blueberries.

For the salad, assemble the ingredients except for the berries and cheese 
Toss and add half the dressing,  toss to coat.
 Add blueberries and cheese, and drizzle the rest of the dressing over, toss again. 

Enjoy with anytihing!  It's  especially good  with  grilled  lamb or fish,   or add cold grilled chicken strips or salmon  for a cool  entree salad.

May 15, 2011

Pan-Seared Ponzu Scallops ~ and delicious sides

One of  the  shrimp-flipping , volcano-lighting  hibachi chefs at our favorite Japanese steakhouse/sushi bar tipped me off to the fabulous sauce he was squirting liberally on  all the dishes  they  prepare   on the sizzling hot  tables --- the rice, the veggies, the seafood &  steak --- revealing that  it  is  mostly soy sauce with lime juice and butter...

Aha!  Ponzu, more or less!  And  it's on your grocer's sauce shelf - yay!  I made my own for the restaurant because it's more economical  ---  you can make your own ponzu with fish sauce, mirin,  lemon and a few other ingredients.   But  for two of us,  I'm happy with  Kikkoman's brand Ponzu.     It's  made with lemon or lime,  and I often add a dash of (key) lime juice for an extra hit at the very end.    This is a  wonderfully fast and simple way to enjoy plump, sweet scallops.     The suggested  side dishes  make a  savory, and fresh tastng  combination  of low fat, low calorie, low carb foods..


Ponzu Scallops:  Rinse first,  then   pat dry about 12-16 good- size sea scallops,  and let them sit on a paper towel briefly to be sure they're  very dry.  Next ( this is optional but I like to be   sure there's a crisp sear) - dust  the tops and bottoms VERY lightly with cornstarch.  Very  lightly!   Heat  about 3 TB olive oil in a heavy skillet, and when the oil is shimmering, add the scallops, placing carefully so there is no opportunity to touch each other while cooking.  Cook at medium-high heat about 3 minutes per side - depending on size - and then remove from the pan.   Add about  8 TB  ponzu  ( I guesstimate about 1/2 TB per scallop) to the pan and deglaze.....scrape the bottom to loosen the crispy bits.  Let the ponzu bubble and reduce  to slightly thicken, about 2-3 minutes.  Add about   2-3 TB minced  fresh ginger  to the sauce, stir well.  Put the scallops back in the pan and stir  carefully to coat with sauce.  Add 3 TB chopped chives, & serve immediately to 2 or 3  scallop lovers.


We like  this served with  spaghetti squash ( cut in half, scoop out seeds, cover ends with Saran wrap, nuke for 10-20 minutes depending on size, scoop out the 'spaghetti' strands with a fork, toss with butter & lime  and/or a squirt of ponzu!) . and a slightly sweet-crisp  cucumber salad that tastes a lot like  bread and butter pickles  the older it gets. 

Cuke Salad:    In a large bowl, slice 3 large cucumbers  thinly,  unpeeled, Add one medium onion, thinly  sliced, and one green pepper, thinly sliced.  Add 1 TB celery seed, 1 TB salt, 1/2 TB pepper,  1 c Splenda or sugar dissolved in 3/4 c. cider vinegar.  Stir together, cover with plastic, and refrigerate at least 6 hours.

Will keep well for  2 weeks.

Apr 24, 2011

20-Minute Greek Gyro Dip with Pita Chips

 A  Mediterreanean version of the ubiquitous layered Mexican dip, this goes together quickly and is

uniquely delicious.   Use ground  beef if you must; but  lamb is authentic and does not have a "lamb-y" taste, no matter what  you've always heard.  ( what  is a lamb-y  taste anyway ?)

This is a  recipe  from  Food Network magazine and  their photo as well.  I find it curious, however, that they direct us to  assemble  the dip on a shallow dish,  but they photographed  it in a very deep dish, which would make dipping  totally impossible.   So take the photo with a grain of (sea) salt and enjoy this dip in a  low, shallow saucer or dish.   It's   wonderful.


1 14-ounce package pita bread
Olive oil cooking spray  or butter flavored Pam
4 teaspoons Greek seasoning,  (total)
_______________________________
1 pound ground lamb or ground beef
1 teaspoon garlic salt
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1 16-ounce container prepared hummus , any flavor
1 1/2 cups tzatziki (gyro sauce) - purchased, or use  recipe below
1 cup shredded iceberg lettuce
2 medium roma tomatoes, diced
1/2 diced red onion
1/2 cup kalamata olives, chopped
1 4-ounce container crumbled feta cheese

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Line 1 or 2 baking sheets with foil. Cut the pita rounds into eighths. Split each piece in two and place on the prepared baking sheet(s), with the inside of the bread facing up. Spray with the olive oil cooking spray and sprinkle with 2 teaspoons of the Greek seasoning. Bake 7 to 10 minutes, or until golden.
Meanwhile, in a large skillet, brown the ground lamb with the garlic salt and the remaining 2 teaspoons Greek seasoning. Drain and set aside. In a shallow 1 1/2-quart dish, spread the hummus on the bottom. Top with a layer of ground lamb, then the tzatziki. Layer with the lettuce, tomatoes, onion, olives and feta. Serve the dip at room temperature with pita chips.

 1 1/2 cups Tzatziki:      12 oz plain  yogurt, 1 1/2 c peeled, seeded,  diced cucumbers, 5 TB chopped red onion, 3 TB  chopped fresh mint leaves - don't skip them!, 1 1/2 tsp salt, 3/4 tsp minced garlic.   To seed the cukes, slice lengthwise in quarters and just cut a V shape slice to remove  the seedy centers.    Combine everything  and chill.

To make the dish lower sodium,  buy a low sodium hummus or make your own.  Use  a low sodium pita, reduce  or skip  the olives & salt, garlic powder instead of garlic salt, and use  crumbled goat cheese in place of the feta. 

Jan 24, 2011

Shrimp and Chorizo Stew

Sausage and seafood in a   one-pot  dinner  in less than 30 minutes, delicious!  Potatoes are pretty much nonexistent  at our house,  so I replace them  with extra kale and shrimp, and the calorie and carb   count drop dramatically.    Be sure to buy Spanish chorizo, not Mexican ~  they are very different in both taste and texture. And don't use bulk  chorizo.

Heat  1/4 c  EV  olive oil  in a Dutch oven- size -pan over medium heat. Add 1 large  diced Spanish onion, 4 cloves  peeled & smashed garlic, & cook til golden, about 15 minutes.  Add 4 oz  sliced Spanish chorizo, casings removed.  2 tsp smoked paprika, 1 tsp kosher salt.  Cook til the oil turns deep red, about 2 minutes.  Add  1 c.  roughly chopped canned whole plum tomatoes, ( reserve the juice) 2 bay leaves, 1/4 tsp each thyme and oregano.  Cook 1 minute.

Add 1 lb russet potatoes, peeled, in 1" chunks, 2 c. water, the reserved tomato juice and 1 tsp kosher salt. Bring to a boil then reduce heat, cover & simmer til potatoes are almost tender, about 15 minutes.  Add  1 bunch kale, stems removed and leaves roughly chopped.  Cook about 10 minutes, til both the potatoes and kale are tender. Stir in 1 lb medium  raw shrimp, peeled and deveined..Simmer just til they curl and turn pink, about 4 minutes,  Discard the bay leaves before serving.   Great with crusty bread for mopping up the broth.

'Flat Fudge' Wondrous Dark Chocolate Cookies

The 'fudge factor' of these cookies is very  high - there's a thin layer of  moist chewy fudge  hiding inside that  thin, glossy, crackled  top layer.  And what, exactly, is  the wonder?  So many things ~  no flour, no gluten,  hardly a bit of  fat, one bowl, one step ~ and  so fast that they're  ready to go in the oven by the time it finishes  preheating. There's no  point  waiting to see if your chocolate-deprivation crisis passes.  Get moving  quickly when the urge strikes, so there's no turning back.

  An easy way to toast the nuts is to put them in the oven on a baking sheet as   you preheat the oven..... at ten minutes, they're toasted.   Remove them from the pan to cool before  adding them, and if you are going to use that pan for  your cookies, let it cool completely. 
Preheat the oven to 300.   In a medium bowl,
 mix 1 3/4 c. powdered sugar, ( purchase faux powdered sugar if you'd rather skip sugar completely),  1/2 c. Dutch process cocoa powder, ( I use Hersheys Special Dark Chocolate Cocoa, which  is what's usually  on  hand.  Use better-than-ordinary cocoa)  2 tsp cornstarch, 1/4 tsp salt.   Gradually mix in 2 egg whites and 1 egg, then 1 c  toasted chopped pecans or walnuts.  Egg Beaters- ype  liquid egg whites work too, especially if you make multiple batches of these cookies -- no  extra yolks  to deal with. Remember,  recipes are  written based on LARGE eggs, to standardize the amount. Using other sizes may change results, particularly  in baking.

Stir until it's well mixed and no  white sugar is visible.    If it's too loose ( egg white volumes will vary) add a tiny bit more sugar  and cocoa, but don't exceed  3 or 4 TB.   Expect that the  'dough' will be  way more fluid than  normal - more the consistency of thin  frosting..    Using about  one big TB each,   just plop them down - about 15 all together -    on parchment paper,  and sort of round them off as they come off the spoon.  Se sure to use  a parchment-lined  baking sheet. They're  very moist and fudgy, and after they cool  you'll not be able to  peel them off a pan!     Bake 16-19 minutes, until the cookies are shiny and crackled.

  If they are not fudgy/chewy,  you've overbaked.  When done,  remove pan from the oven and just slide the whole sheet of parchment off the hot pan and onto a counter.  Cool completely --- they will firm  up a bit as they cool.   Don't even try to peel the cookies from the paper  until  cool !  Then pull the paper away from the cookies, instead of the reverse.

  Sadly, although  it's almost fat free,  this is  an almost  pure-carb cookie,  16 carbs   each,  unless you use the powdered-sugar substitute, which is available everywhere these days.  Make them on  a day when your chocolate craving  overrides your conscience.

Farmhouse Oatmeal Raisin Pancakes

Light-as-air?  No, they are  thick and heavy and  lovely, like a warm cloak of  comfort for your belly.  And because they're made with old fashoned oats, not heaps of white flour, they're  healthier, as well as  incredibly  delicious. Simple to convert to low-sodium too *   This is a plan-ahead  item  since the oats need to  languish overnight in the buttermilk.   Freeze any leftovers  with plastic wrap or parchment  between them, to nuke and  enjoy  again  as breakfast or warmed & topped  with a sprinkle of granulated sugar for a yummy snack. A scoop of peach ice cream  often appeared on pancakes on our family birthday mornings when the kids were here.


The night before:  mix 2 c old fashioned oats with 2 c. buttermilk in a large bowl, cover and refrigerate overnight.  When ready to cook, beat in 2 large eggs and 1/4 c. melted, cooled  butter.  Stir in 3/4 c raisins.  In another bowl mix 1/2 c flour, 2 TB sugar or substitute, 1 tsp baking powder, 1 tsp  baking soda, 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/2 tsp salt.     Add to the wet mixture and  stir briskly, just until moistened.  If practical, let this sit for 20 minutes before cooking.

Heat a lightly greased pan over medium heat. Don't get it too hot, because  these take longer to cook due to the dense ingredients Make a test cake with 1/4 c batter, and if  the batter seems too thick  add some more buttermilk, a TB at a time, until the consistency seems right.... not to exceed adding 3 or 4 TB --  this is supposed  to be a very thick batter, it will not 'pour'.   Cook pancakes until bubbles appear, turn  to brown. You'll probably turn a few times to make sure the interior gets cooked.   They are quite dense and take a little longer than ordinary thickness  pancakes. The centers should still be moist when cooked,  through. If they start to burn before they're ready, your pan is too hot.

Serve with  the syrup of your choice ~  cinnamon syrup is perfect for  these.    Makes about 18 small pancakes or 9  large.

*  For those watching sodium, make 'buttermilk' with the lowest  sodium milk you have, or any no-sodium coffee creamer. Put it in a cup and add 1 TB vinegar for each cup of 'milk'.  Don't stir, let sit for 5  minutes and presto: 'buttermilk'.    Use no-sodium baking powder & soda and use  unsalted butter. Use the salt or not, it goes a long way.

Jan 23, 2011

Blueberry Cobbler French Toast

 Say  'good morning' with this  easy, warm  casserole of bubbly blueberries crowning thick,  puffy golden french toast,  and have a little more than you might otherwise, since  it might be , depending on which ingredients you choose,   pretty  healthy  too.   It's best  when soaked overnight but in a pinch you can get by with  a 2-hour head start in the morning.
Use  an 8-oz loaf of French or whole grain french-type bread, sliced diagonally into 10-14  3/4" thick slices  placed on a rimmed baking sheet.  In a medium bowl, whisk  together 4 eggs (use Egg Beaters if you choose), 1/4 tsp baking powder, 1/2 c milk, 1 tsp vanilla.  Slowly spoon/pour  over the bread slices, turn to coat them completely.  Cover with plastic wrap and  refrigerate overnight or let sit at room temp for a couple hours.

Preheat oven to 450.  Butter (or spray) a 9x13  baking pan and dump in 2 1/2c   fresh or still-frozen blueberries into it.  Sprinkle with 1/2 c. sugar or splenda, 1 tsp cinnamon, 1 tsp cornstarch.  Stir to coat the berries. Fit the bread slices in the dish,  wet side up.  Wedge/squish tightly,  (even so,  you may not always get them all in).   Brush the tops with 2 tsp melted butter, and bake in the center of the oven for 20-25 minutes..the time may vary depending on the thickness and density of the bread..When the berries are bubbling around the edge, remove  from the oven, let it sit for 5 minutes  before serving.   Just lift the slices onto plates and spoon the berries over.  Sprinkle with 10x sugar if you like.

If  it's a birthday breakfast, top with a little vanilla ice cream for a decadently  melting  start to the day, and leftovers served chilled  can be presented as a delicious blueberry bread pudding.





Apr 24, 2010

Amazing Rhubarb Custard Cake

  

This is one of those  desserts that  produce  "OMG's"  of surprised  pleasure at the first amazing bite.

I admit to green-eyed envy of those with prolific rhubarb patches that produce all summer long. Mine is  struggling along.  A friend gave me a big bag of 'barb the other night, along with a cake recipe that is incredibly smooth and rich and wonderful....not to mention simple.

   The sugar  and  cream soak thorough the cake and  along with the rhubarb, end up on the bottom, forming a  firm, silky vanilla custard  that's infused throughout.   Since   I'm not a 'warm' dessert person (exception: hot fudge  sundaes, of course) I thought it was  good when  it was  still a little warm..... but once chilled,  it's  exceptional.

Heat oven to 350, grease and flour a 9x13 pan.  Make a yellow cake mix as  directed,  using a  'pudding added' mix if available.  Pour batter into the pan.  Top with 4 c chopped rhubarb. ( use still-frozen if   fresh is out of season).   Over that, evenly  sprinkle 1 c. sugar, and then over that, evenly  pour 2 c. heavy ( whipping ) cream, unwhipped.    Bake for 50-60 minutes before cooling and then refrigerating   til nice and cold.   It's  sliceable and memorable.    Thanks, Dianna,  for sharing your 'barb and your recipe.

Mar 29, 2010

Bubbling Jack & Clams on Pumpernickel

So, what's always on hand when you feel the craving for a cheesy, seafood-y  garlic-butter-y appetizer?  At our house, that would be a can of clams, some jack cheese, and some  pumpernickel bread.  Cutting the ingredients in thirds yields a nice serving  for 3 or 4.

Now and then, like today, I use co-jack  and there've been times it was shredded Swiss. And while  there's almost always a partial loaf of cocktail rye or pumpernickel in the freezer, a nice medium-thick slice of  soft, chewy, fresh pumpernickel can't be beat.  Five minutes to mix it up and maybe five or less  under the broiler  equal  almost-instant gratification.    Depending on the size of the bread base, this  may be finger food or fork food, and it's also  pretty broiled and served in individual ramekins with a knife and fork.

Combine 16 oz.  Monterey Jack cheese, shredded, 3 (6-1/2oz) cans chopped clams, drained, 2 Tbsp finely chopped parsley,  3 TB softened butter, 2 Tbsp chopped chives, 2 garlic cloves, minced, 1/4  tsp ground red pepper, 1/4  tsp  freshly ground black pepper

Spread on  8 slices pumpernickel bread for knife & fork eating or  about 30 slices cocktail  bread.    Broil until golden brown and bubbly. Garnish with parsley sprigs and lemon wedges. Enjoy  immediately.