By: Teri
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Rainy Day Woman
By: Teri
Sunday, November 1, 2009
lil pot pies, oh my!
2 cups cooked white rice
Start by roasting your squash. Assemble cubed squash on a greased baking sheet. Pour melted butter over cubes. Sprinkle with brown sugar, nutmeg, salt and pepper. Bake for 50-60 minutes, or until tender and caramelized.
While squash is roasting you can prepare the filling. In a nonstick skillet, melt butter on medium heat. Slowly whisk in flour to make a paste. After paste has browned slowly whisk in milk. Continue to whisk until paste and milk are incorporated. lower heat and add cheese. Stir until melted. If consistency is too thick add a little more milk. Stir in rice. Add salt and pepper to taste. After squash is ready, add to cheesy rice mixture.
In a separate mixing bowl, add flour and baking powder. Using a pastry blender or two knives, blend cold butter into flour. It is essential that the butter is cold and cuts into chunks. After the two are mixed stir in milk. Mix just enough to blend.
Using either a mini casserole, ramekin, or other oven safe dish, spoon in filling. I used an icing piper to apply the dough to the top of the casserole. You can use a Ziploc bag with the corner nipped off, or you can just slap it on there any ol' way. After it's on,throw those babies in the oven on a baking sheet at 375 for 30 minutes or until top is browned.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Hip Hip! Hooray.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Ole!
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Monkey Business
Friday, October 9, 2009
Cooking with wine....And using it in the food too.
By: Dayna
I had a craving for Cajun. I also had a craving for Italian. What to do?
After looking through the cabinets for about 20 minutes it hit me. Cajun Pasta! What what! Basically, I adapted my usual recipe for Shrimp Creole with the incorporation of pasta instead of rice. Nice change of pace and very satisfying.
Garlic Lime Shrimp Creole Pasta with
Italian Green Bean Ragout
Shrimp*** Marinade:
1/4 cup lime juice
1 tbs. garlic powder
1 tsp. cracked pepper
2 Lbs. fresh shrimp, peeled and deveined ***
Pasta:
1/4 cup oil (I use Olive)
1/4 cup all purpose flour
1/2 cup chopped onion
1 green bell pepper, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced fine
1 can of diced tomatoes
1 can tomato paste
1 tbs. lemon juice
1/2 cup heavy cream
2 tsp. worchestershire sauce
1/2 tsp. Paprika
1 bay leaf
Rotini Pasta
1/2 cup dry white wine
salt and pepper to taste
Ragout:
1/4 cup oil (I used Olive with this also)
1 1/2 cup onion, sliced
1 package frozen italian green beans
1 roma tomato, chopped
1/4 cup red wine, I used Tawny Port for a sweet accent
1/8 cup fresh basil (a handful is fine)
cracked pepper to taste
Marinade:
Pour lime juice in bowl and add shrimp. Sprinkle with garlic powder and pepper. Turn to coat and set aside to marinade.
Pasta:
Combine oil and flour in a large sauce pan. Cook on medium heat stirring frequently, until browned. Add onion, green pepper, and garlic and cook until vegetables are tender. Stir in tomatoes, tomato paste, wine, lemon juice, worchestershire, and bay leaf. Next stir in salt, pepper, and paprika. Bring to boil then reduce heat to simmer. Simmer 20 minutes stirring occasionally. Stir in heavy cream and allow to simmer 10 more minutes. While simmering, heat a non-stick skillet on medium heat with a little oil. Pat shrimp dry with paper towel and fry until opaque pink. Toss sauce with cooked rotini pasta and garnish with Shrimp.
Ragout:
Combine oil and sliced onion in a medium saucepan. Cook on medium heat until onions are bronze and carmelized. Add green beans and continue to saute on medium until beans are tender. Add chopped tomato and basil and cover. Cook until tomato is tender and basil is wilted. Add red wine and saute uncovered for 10 minutes til liquid has reduced. Serve.
***For a vegan or strict vegetarian version substitute shrimp with cubed tofu and heavy cream with Soyatoo Heavy Cream substitute
Thursday, October 8, 2009
One For The Road
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
It was a dark, stormy night...
I happened to have sour cream and chives laying around, leftovers from the weekend's chili, and I thought, why not? I've substituted the sour cream for milk in this recipe - it added a little extra fluffiness as well as flavor. I also added one tiny red chile pepper from our own garden, along with the chives. You don't have to do that unless you're feeling particularly brave. I was!
Yorkshire Puddings with Sour Cream and Chives
1 cup sour cream (full fat)
1 cup flour, packed
3 medium sized eggs
1/2 tsp salt
1 large stalk chopped chives, down to the whites
1 small red chile pepper, seeded and chopped finely
vegetable oil
Mix flour and salt, then add sour cream and eggs, blend well. Mixture will be a wet dough. Once blended, don't over-stir, as stirring too much will toughen the puddings. Add chives and chile pepper, stir lightly to incorporate. Add a small amount of vegetable oil to each cup of a muffin tin; just enough to cover the bottom. Spoon batter into the muffin cups. As it hits the cup, the vegetable oil should rise a bit and almost cover the dough. If this doesn't happen, add a bit more oil to ensure there is enough to cook the puddings. Bake for 20-25 minutes on 350 degrees, or until lightly browned on top.
I served these with a mild mushroom gravy (I'll save that recipe for another time), three-pepper dirty rice, and corn on the cob. The carnivore hubs had a steak and declared that the yorkshire puddings went perfectly with his meal. So I suppose if you insist on a slab of beef, this recipe could be adapted to meat-friendly once more. Just don't tell me about it!
These yorkshire puddings are easily suited to your own taste - you could substitute dill and cheddar, or even ricotta for the sour cream and a dash of cinnamon, and serve 'em for breakfast. The sky is the limit. I figure if you're going to be untraditional and make a standard staple your own, do it with gusto! Cooking is nothing if not an ongoing experiment!
As for a tasty beverage to serve with this meal - leave it to me to break with tradition on the second post and have a beer instead of a glass of wine! C'mon, its pub food! British food goes so well with a nice cold one, and these yorkshire puddings are no exception. I happened to have one of my favorite beers in the fridge and it worked perfectly.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
A little cheese with that wine, eh?
By: Dayna
I wanted to start the first post off on the lighter side. Something easy and simple.
On my and my husband's conquest to find the perfect dessert sipping wine we took a day trip to Habersham Winery in Helen, GA. This is one of the many quaint little wineries that sprinkle the North Georgia foothills. After tasting 4 different sweeties, including a Riesling, and three from their “Summer Harvest” line, ( i.e. sweet and cheap at $11 each!), we decided on the White Muscadine.
Muscadine is a variety of grapevine that orginates in the South. These little juicy treasures thrive in high heat so the south is where it at, yo.
Habersham Winery Muscadine is a translucent, golden color. At first sniff, your nose is enveloped in the sweet, smooth aroma of muscadine. Sweet is an understatement, actually...I'd like to bathe in this shit. Mmm hmm. Subtle notes of crisp fruitiness make this wine yum yum yum. It seriously tastes like you picked a muscadine off the vine. The finish was smooth and semi-dry and wonderful and I will drink again and again and again.
http://habershamwinery.com/main.html
Because this wine is so sweet and light, you want to pair it with something mild and creamy. A semi soft mild cheese works perfectly. Here I prepared an Herb Cheese that is simple and quick, and dern good.
Homemade Herb Cheese
1 gallon whole Milk
1 pint Half and Half
1 cup of white vinegar
¼ cup fresh chopped basil leaves
¼ cup fresh chopped Thyme
¼ cup chopped sun-dried tomatoes without oil
1 tablespoon Sea Salt
1 tablespoon white pepper
Olive oil to brush on before serving
Line a colander with cheesecloth or a flour sack towel and set in sink. Put milk and half and half in large pot over medium heat to a low boil. Remove from heat and stir in vinegar. I've used lime juice, lemon juice, and vinegar for this. Vinegar is the best if you do not desire a limey or lemony taste in the cheese. Stir until the milk separates in curds. Transfer mixture in cheese/towel and let it strain. When cooled enough to touch squeeze excess liquid out with hands. The more liquid you get out the better it will set. Once you have removed liquid open up the cloth and add basil, thyme, salt, and pepper Feel free to substitute dried herbs for the fresh ones. The flavor with be milder, so you may need to use more. Make sure that you mix these ingredients up well. Your hands work well for this. Next, transfer the cheese to a container that will work as a mold. I have a medium sized plastic container that works great for this. If you'd like, use a few small containers to make several servings. Press cheese into your container and close with a lid. If you notice liquid coming out as you are pressing into mold then you haven't released enough whey from your cheese. After molding the cheese pop in the refrigerator for 3-5 hours at minimum. When you are ready to serve, garnish with a little sprig of extra basil and brush with a nice light coat of olive oil and you are set.
We enjoyed this cheese with the Muscadine wine while watching the movie "Vacancy"...Holy shizzz, the wine was a perfect match with the light, creamy mildness of the cheese. It complimented the wine, while not overpowering it.
...And the movie was disturbing..yipes.