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 parsley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parsley. Show all posts
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Monday, July 9, 2012
Chicken Wellington
Chicken Wellington with Lemon Turnips |
Yum, yum, yum, yum! The kids like this even, and it's super-easy to throw together a double batch to freeze. I made a double batch of the OR's portions b/c it calls for half the usual package size of a couple of ingredients and I hate having extra bits hanging around. I used the leftover chicken from a whole roaster that we had for dinner one night here, but you could bake some chicken breasts to use just for this dish if you wanted. The original recipe has you separate the components of the filling into 3 distinct layers but I don't think that's necessary and only makes a lot of dishes dirty.
Be sure to wrap the wellingtons well in plastic wrap unless you'll be cooking them immediately. Puff pastry will dry out in the freezer or fridge, so keep them wrapped until just before baking.
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Shrimp Amatriciana
This is a Rachael Ray recipe originally. She wraps the shrimp in pancetta for beautiful presentation. I don't worry so much about that presentation crap. My less-attractive-but-still-delicious way of prepping this dish ahead also lets you organize it as a freezer kit, which I don't feel comfortable doing with shrimp that you've had to thaw and handle as you'll do if you wrap it with pancetta.
I've made this dish with regular ol' American bacon instead of pancetta and it's quite tasty. The difference between Italian pancetta and most conventional bacons is smoking...bacon is smoked, pancetta is not. Bacon is also usually cut much thicker than pancetta is. So if you want to use it to wrap the shrimp in, unless you have really big shrimp or really thin bacon, you'll need to halfway-cook the bacon first to keep from having overcooked shrimp with still-raw bacon wrappers. Of course, if you skip the wrapping (like I do), you don't need to worry about this at all.
To make a freezer kit, dice up your bacon/pancetta and wrap well. Dice the onion and put in a freezer container. Combine white wine and basil (I have basil puree already frozen and just take a lump out of that stash) in a freezer container. Package all together with shrimp and cooking instructions. Make sure to have some whole canned tomatoes in the pantry along with your pasta (I label the boxes and cans that belong to a kit so I don't forget and use them for something else).
If you're just prepping ahead for same day or next day cooking, you can use fresh tomatoes. I'm using 1 pint cherry tomatoes and 3 medium normal tomatoes cuz that's just what I have on hand. Chop/combine ingredients as suggested above and fridge.
Slap a note somewhere in your workspace when you start cooking that you'll need to grab 1/2 cup of pasta water before draining. I *always* forget this part.
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I've made this dish with regular ol' American bacon instead of pancetta and it's quite tasty. The difference between Italian pancetta and most conventional bacons is smoking...bacon is smoked, pancetta is not. Bacon is also usually cut much thicker than pancetta is. So if you want to use it to wrap the shrimp in, unless you have really big shrimp or really thin bacon, you'll need to halfway-cook the bacon first to keep from having overcooked shrimp with still-raw bacon wrappers. Of course, if you skip the wrapping (like I do), you don't need to worry about this at all.
To make a freezer kit, dice up your bacon/pancetta and wrap well. Dice the onion and put in a freezer container. Combine white wine and basil (I have basil puree already frozen and just take a lump out of that stash) in a freezer container. Package all together with shrimp and cooking instructions. Make sure to have some whole canned tomatoes in the pantry along with your pasta (I label the boxes and cans that belong to a kit so I don't forget and use them for something else).
Mise-en-place |
Slap a note somewhere in your workspace when you start cooking that you'll need to grab 1/2 cup of pasta water before draining. I *always* forget this part.
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Wednesday, June 6, 2012
Fez-Style Baked Fish
This is a new twist (for me) on flavors for fish...I love the combination of tomatoes and olives, potatoes and saffron, garlic and cumin but I've never applied it to fish. The original recipe calls for cilantro along with parsley, but I'm one of those people to whom cilantro tastes weird so I substituted garden mint (read: I can't remember what variety of mint it is anymore) for the cilantro. I also didn't have cherry tomatoes on hand, so I used a 15 oz. can of cut-up, drained whole tomatoes instead.
Here's what I did this morning...I mixed up the marinade for the fish (which is still thawing a leetle), parboiled the potatoes and put them in my baking dish, and sliced/assembled the rest of the veggies. I put the fish in the marinade (even if it's not totally thawed) later in the afternoon before we went out. When we got home, I put the 3 components together in the baking dish while the oven preheated and baked 30 minutes while wrestling the kiddos into a dinner-appropriate state of cleanliness. If I had been prepping the night before because I'd be gone all day, I'd go ahead and marinate the fish starting in the morning but not overnight due to the acid content of the marinade.
Another make-ahead thought...if you have leftover boiled potatoes from another meal, use those in this dish! A single layer of pre-cooked taters in a square baking dish will do you.
One more note...my husband liked this very well as a fish dish, but also thought it would rock as a chicken dish. Just bake 30-40 minutes for chicken breasts, until they're cooked through.
Adapted from http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/09/dining/baked-fish-fez-style-recipe.html
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Saturday, January 7, 2012
Spinach burgers with green bean casserole
I have new toys :D I was gifted a new cookbook for Christmas that I've already marked about 2 dozen recipes in called Fresh from the Farmers Market. It's a nice mix of single-ingredient and convenience-food recipes and many include directions for freeze-ahead and prep-ahead cooking. Keep tuned for a possible giveaway of this book and more recipes from it ;)
Tonight's dinner consists of two recipes from this book...spinach-ified burgers and Emmitt Smith's Green Beans. I'm tweaking (as usual) to suit ingredients on hand and to create less work (most notably the grilled turkey burgers are baked pork burgers tonight). Both are prep-ahead friendly; the burgers are freezer-friendly. Together, the recipes come in under 500 calories per serving (yes, we are counting calories as a New Year's resolution...sigh).
My husband declared these burgers his "favorite ever", and the green beans could totally sub in for a lower-calorie (but still very rich tasting) version of the usual holiday green bean casserole.
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My husband declared these burgers his "favorite ever", and the green beans could totally sub in for a lower-calorie (but still very rich tasting) version of the usual holiday green bean casserole.
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Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Deviled crab hors d'oeuvres
I did not plan to write a post about this one, but it was SO good and SO easy, I find that I can't resist sharing. This was, in my opinion, far and away the tastiest part of our Christmas dinner, baking up with a lighter texture than you might expect and just extraordinary flavor. As it prepped quickly the day before for no-work Christmas Day cooking, the dish falls easily within the purview of this blog :D
The recipe is from (where else?) the Reader's Digest A Family Christmas. It's a recipe from James Beard, though I've ofc tweaked it to accommodate food allergies and my cooking preferences. I used scallops instead of shrimp and omitted celery, adding more green pepper and onion in its place. I chose to use a pound of pre-picked crab claw meat, but if you have access to fresh crab, you can certainly pick your own. Real crab meat is not a cheap ingredient, but if you can catch a sale this would be a very special treat to make for your family.
This makes a LOT (a full 1 1/2 quart casserole), especially for appetizers, and you could halve the recipe or freeze it in smaller portions for future cooking. I'm thinking individual ramekins that you could bake off while making dinner for a quick starter course for 2...that sort of thing. You can serve it plain, with crackers, on lettuce leaves or, as I did, with thin slices of cucumber.
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The recipe is from (where else?) the Reader's Digest A Family Christmas. It's a recipe from James Beard, though I've ofc tweaked it to accommodate food allergies and my cooking preferences. I used scallops instead of shrimp and omitted celery, adding more green pepper and onion in its place. I chose to use a pound of pre-picked crab claw meat, but if you have access to fresh crab, you can certainly pick your own. Real crab meat is not a cheap ingredient, but if you can catch a sale this would be a very special treat to make for your family.
This makes a LOT (a full 1 1/2 quart casserole), especially for appetizers, and you could halve the recipe or freeze it in smaller portions for future cooking. I'm thinking individual ramekins that you could bake off while making dinner for a quick starter course for 2...that sort of thing. You can serve it plain, with crackers, on lettuce leaves or, as I did, with thin slices of cucumber.
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scallops,
shrimp
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Pepper Pot Stew
The authentic and original version of this recipe comes from the Frugal Gourmet Cooks American and dates from the 18th century. It may have been one of George Washington's favorites, and if it's good enough for a founding father, by golly, it's good enough for me.
Except...the protein in the original (and authentic) recipe is tripe. Cow stomach. I'm going to let you, dear reader, digest (haha!) that thought for a moment.
I am profoundly respectful of families and cultures that use "everything but the oink" (or moo) including organ meats (side note: how awful is it that the general term for organ meats, "offal", is a homophone of "awful"?). I wish I could count my family among their rank. But I've tried, and tripe is unfortunately never again going to grace our dinner table. It's one of the very, very few foods about which I say this.
I want to make it clear that the issue may have been that of inexperienced and inexpert cooking techniques (as it was the one and only time I've tried making tripe) rather than the meat itself, but until I meet a variety meat cookery expert who shows me both a delicious finished dish including tripe and also how to prepare it, it ain't happening. But if you know what you're doing with tripe, 1) please do use it and 2) call me.
Back to the stew recipe...the combination of aromatics for this stew is mouth-watering, tantalizing as it wafts from the stew pot. When you make this, be sure to open your windows and make your neighbors jealous. It's a fabulous base for a stew using any protein you want. Up until the addition of the (possibly improperly prepared) tripe, this was by far the best stew I've ever made. Now that I make it with stew beef, stew lamb, veal shoulder, beans, or cooked poultry, it IS the best stew I make. You could even make this is a wholly vegetarian stew by using oil in place of the bacon fat and rounding out the stew content with lots of hearty fall veggies like butternut squash and cabbage.
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Except...the protein in the original (and authentic) recipe is tripe. Cow stomach. I'm going to let you, dear reader, digest (haha!) that thought for a moment.
I am profoundly respectful of families and cultures that use "everything but the oink" (or moo) including organ meats (side note: how awful is it that the general term for organ meats, "offal", is a homophone of "awful"?). I wish I could count my family among their rank. But I've tried, and tripe is unfortunately never again going to grace our dinner table. It's one of the very, very few foods about which I say this.
I want to make it clear that the issue may have been that of inexperienced and inexpert cooking techniques (as it was the one and only time I've tried making tripe) rather than the meat itself, but until I meet a variety meat cookery expert who shows me both a delicious finished dish including tripe and also how to prepare it, it ain't happening. But if you know what you're doing with tripe, 1) please do use it and 2) call me.

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Monday, August 29, 2011
Piri Piri Chicken
This was meant to be a one-off recipe...some friends (thank you again, Jason and Michelle) had gifted us some homemade piri piri (a lightly spicy pepper and oil condiment) that I needed to use up. I marinated 2 spatchcocked whole chickens in it, grilled one, roasted another, and thought I was done with that. Well, it turned out to be the best chicken we had ever had, so I was obligated to get the piri piri recipe from our friends and make more.
I can't vouch for freezer-stability of this recipe for more than 2 weeks...there's a pretty high concentration of acid in the piri piri marinade which could begin to have a negative effective on meat quality after some point (how long? I dunno), but I can attest to 2 weeks' worth of frozen marination resulting in uber-tasty results.
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I can't vouch for freezer-stability of this recipe for more than 2 weeks...there's a pretty high concentration of acid in the piri piri marinade which could begin to have a negative effective on meat quality after some point (how long? I dunno), but I can attest to 2 weeks' worth of frozen marination resulting in uber-tasty results.
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chicken,
chiles,
citrus zest,
freezer,
grill,
lemon,
low carb,
mint,
paleo,
parsley,
prep-ahead,
spatchcock
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