Tomatoes. Oh my gawd, the tomatoes. We've canned, dehydrated, canned some more, made soup, had salad, sliced them for BLTs, snacked on them right off the vine, canned some more... And now this. This is good. This is different. I like this. I really like this with tequila. That is called a Bloody Maria, by the way.
If you have loads of little half-pint jars, put this mix up in those...fill them three-quarters full. This allows exactly the right amount of room for a scant shot of liquor, an ice cube or two, and a ring of pickled jalapeno...put the canning lid/ring back on and shakeshakeshake...instant cocktail in its own serving cup. Package up two or four of these guys with a 4 oz jar of homemade spicy pickled somethings and a miniature bottle of vodka or three, and it's a darling holiday gift.
The original recipe is here. I used some jalapenos out of our garden instead of hot sauce and added lemon juice to each jar in the amounts recommended by the Ball Blue book (2 tbsp per quart, 1 tbsp per pint, 1/2 tbsp per half-pint) to insure that the tomato juice was acidified enough.
How much you get out of this recipe depends on how thick or thin you want your final product (i.e. how much water you add). We like ours fairly thin, so we got about 4 quarts worth. Your mileage may vary (YMMV)
If you don't want to use this as a cocktail mixer, it would also be an excellent tomato soup.
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Showing posts with label jalapeno. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jalapeno. Show all posts
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Sunday, July 7, 2013
Prosciutto Jalapeno Poppers
This is the quick'n'easy version of The Pioneer Woman's jalapeno poppers (which is delicious). I made these guys with half jalapenos and half sweet mini peppers to give my kids a non-spicy option. Worked very well.
The OR calls for a cheddar-cream cheese-scallion mixture that I circumvent by using herbed cheese such as Boursin or Laughing Cow, or when I ran out of that, sticks of Brie (yes, Brie is my "backup" cheese LOL)
The OR also calls for wrapping the poppers in pieces of uncooked bacon which is scrumptious. I happened not to have any bacon on hand, but I had prosciutto so I used that (yes, prosciutto is my "backup" pork product LOL). The nice thing about using the prosciutto is that it's already cooked so the cooking time for the poppers can be (read: needs to be) shortened from the hour originally called for. I think using long, narrow strips of thin-sliced ham could work too in lieu of prosciutto or bacon.
The OR also calls for brushing the poppers with barbecue sauce or jelly such as apricot jelly. I think beer jelly or garlic jelly would be OUTSTANDING here, but no sauce/jelly on top is good too (and is what I did this go-round).
I have made these in vast quantities for parties and you can absolutely make them ahead and freeze them. I dithered about whether to freeze them before cooking or after, and decided that after cooking was less likely to result in a squishy jalapeno shell (since freezing uncooked veggies tends to make them, well, squishy). I "revived" them for the party by baking them again for about 30 minutes to heat through and crisp the bacon back up. To make them in advance to freeze, pull them out of the oven about 10 minutes before the final cooking time. That way, the 2nd round of baking doesn't overbrown or burn them.
You can use toothpicks if you need to get the bacon/prosciutto/ham to stay in place, but it's a lot less time-consuming and easier to eat if you just wrap them so that the ends of the meat slice are on the bottom of the pepper. Gravity will do the rest to keep them in place.
Lastly, the OR offers a variation wherein you place a thin slice of peach on top of the cheese before wrapping in bacon. This sounds weird, but is ohmygawd good...I highly recommend it.
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The OR also calls for wrapping the poppers in pieces of uncooked bacon which is scrumptious. I happened not to have any bacon on hand, but I had prosciutto so I used that (yes, prosciutto is my "backup" pork product LOL). The nice thing about using the prosciutto is that it's already cooked so the cooking time for the poppers can be (read: needs to be) shortened from the hour originally called for. I think using long, narrow strips of thin-sliced ham could work too in lieu of prosciutto or bacon.
The OR also calls for brushing the poppers with barbecue sauce or jelly such as apricot jelly. I think beer jelly or garlic jelly would be OUTSTANDING here, but no sauce/jelly on top is good too (and is what I did this go-round).
I have made these in vast quantities for parties and you can absolutely make them ahead and freeze them. I dithered about whether to freeze them before cooking or after, and decided that after cooking was less likely to result in a squishy jalapeno shell (since freezing uncooked veggies tends to make them, well, squishy). I "revived" them for the party by baking them again for about 30 minutes to heat through and crisp the bacon back up. To make them in advance to freeze, pull them out of the oven about 10 minutes before the final cooking time. That way, the 2nd round of baking doesn't overbrown or burn them.
You can use toothpicks if you need to get the bacon/prosciutto/ham to stay in place, but it's a lot less time-consuming and easier to eat if you just wrap them so that the ends of the meat slice are on the bottom of the pepper. Gravity will do the rest to keep them in place.
Lastly, the OR offers a variation wherein you place a thin slice of peach on top of the cheese before wrapping in bacon. This sounds weird, but is ohmygawd good...I highly recommend it.
Labels:
appetizers,
bacon,
brie,
cheese,
garlic,
ham,
jalapeno,
jelly,
make-ahead,
party food,
prosciutto
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
The BEST vegetarian chili
Pictured with biscuits |
But I do not like vegetarian chili.
I have tried many a recipe...the ones that use frozen-then-thawed shredded tofu as a meat substitute, the ones that use TVP, the ones that refuse to even try to sub anything in for the meat and go all-out with beans and vegetables. They all lack something, well, *meaty*. The texture, the depth of flavor, the way the tomatoes and spices of the chili play together...it just doesn't quite work as well without meat.
And then I saw the recent Cook's Illustrated issue (December 2012). I adore Cook's Illustrated. Geeky and science-y and culinarily outstanding all at once. They have dedicated most of a 2-page spread to explaining why their newly developed Best Vegetarian Chili Recipe Ever works, but the important part is...it does work. It makes the thing that meat does to chili happen but without the meat. It also makes a vat of chili, which naturally makes it an ideal make-ahead sort of affair.
It's a good thing it makes so much (and that you can freeze some for another day) because, like everything Cook's Illustrated does, there are a lot of little steps that lead you to the perfection they offer. Aggravating, but absolutely necessary. The one step you could probably skip is toasted and grinding your own dry chile pods. In fact, they suggest substituting 1/4 cup ancho chile powder for the at-home roasted-ground chiles if you don't want to do that step. But everything else...grinding dry shiitake mushrooms, toasting and grinding walnuts, cooking a blend of dried beans from scratch...necessary.
They recommend a mixture of earthy beans (pintos, kidney, black beans) and creamy beans (navy, great northern). I used navy and pintos in equal parts. I also used 2 pasilla peppers and 2 sandia peppers (instead of ancho and New Mexico) because those are the dry peppers I have in my pantry, but next time I'll just use chile powder.
CI recommends cooking the chili in the oven to avoid having to stir the beans. I think it just makes it take longer and produces a thinner chili than I like, so I'll be doing it on the stovetop from now on.
The recipe below is rewritten to streamline the steps and make the ingredient list make more sense to me LOL I *hate* it when the ingredients are listed in a different order than you use them, so I've regrouped them into clusters that get added/handled all at once. I also think this makes a LOT more than the 6-8 servings CI suggests, hence the range of servings.
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Labels:
beans,
bulgur,
chile powder,
chiles,
chili,
freezer,
jalapeno,
make-ahead,
mushrooms,
tomato paste,
vegetarian,
walnuts
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Roast turkey breast three ways
My grocery had those 3 lb. boneless turkey breast roasts on sale this week. We're far enough away from Thanksgiving that I can safely put turkey on the dinner rotation without protest LOL Turkey makes an interesting change-up from chicken, is leaner than beef and this week was cheaper than pork. A 3 lb. roast is a lot o' turkey for 4 people though, so I'm roasting it once and making 3 meals out of it. Observe and be amazed :D
1st: Roasted turkey with rosemary-orange sauce and mashed mixed root vegetables (both recipes adapted from the 28 Day Diabetic Meal Plan available from 28daymealplan.diabeticonnect.com...you have to register with them to get it, but it's worthwhile! Lots of good recipes in this one!)
2nd: Turkey Tequila Fettucine (adapted from Guy Fieri's recipe )
3rd: Turkey Royale sandwiches
Meals #1 and #2 are prep-aheadable (and #1 is freezer kit-able too!). Meal #3 is a quick and easy no-prep meal. Tequila is optional for meal #2...substitute white wine, vermouth, sherry, chicken stock or orange juice if you wish. The flavors in Meal #3 seem weird but are Ah.May.Zing together...don't count this one out just because it looks unusual!
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1st: Roasted turkey with rosemary-orange sauce and mashed mixed root vegetables (both recipes adapted from the 28 Day Diabetic Meal Plan available from 28daymealplan.diabeticonnect.com...you have to register with them to get it, but it's worthwhile! Lots of good recipes in this one!)
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Turkey Tequila Fettucine with broccoli rabe |
2nd: Turkey Tequila Fettucine (adapted from Guy Fieri's recipe )
3rd: Turkey Royale sandwiches
Meals #1 and #2 are prep-aheadable (and #1 is freezer kit-able too!). Meal #3 is a quick and easy no-prep meal. Tequila is optional for meal #2...substitute white wine, vermouth, sherry, chicken stock or orange juice if you wish. The flavors in Meal #3 seem weird but are Ah.May.Zing together...don't count this one out just because it looks unusual!
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Labels:
fast,
freezer,
jalapeno,
kit,
leftover,
prep-ahead,
rosemary,
sandwich,
tequila,
turkey,
what do i do with
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