Sunday, October 10, 2010

Maple and Black Walnut Ice Cream


This recipe is entirely sweetened with Agave Maple Syrup and contains no sugar, so it’s much better for you since it won’t raise your blood sugars like traditional ice cream. See the following link for details http://www.allaboutagave.com/agave-nectar-and-the-glycemic-index.php.

1 cup Trader Joes Agave Maple Syrup
2 cups Heavy Cream
1 cup whole milk
2 eggs
1 cup chopped walnuts

In a pot on medium high heat boil Agave Syrup and reduce by 1/3rd. Add heavy cream and ilk and bring up to a boil then immediately remove from heat. In a bowl whisk eggs together and slowly add warm cream mixture constantly stirring until it’s all incorporated. Add the mixture back to the pot and bring up to 170 degrees (just before a boil when custard starts to thicken).

Strain mixture to remove any custard lumps and chill in the refrigerator until ready to freeze. Add to any ice cream maker and toss in the nuts at the end. Serve immediately or scoop in bowls and freeze until ready to eat.

Yummy!

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Dungeness Crab topped Halibut with Hollandaise

I was lucky enough to get close to 30 lbs of Halibut from Alaska which we’ve been eating for months now and not one recipe has made it on my blog. When preparing Halibut I always go back to my Caper Lemon Butter sauce from an episode of Wolfgang Puck, but last night I was in a hurry and threw this recipe together and it was worth sharing. I even ate it for Breakfast this morning with a poached egg and fresh baked croissant; it was like a buttery Crab and Halibut Benedict, Yummy!

1 ¼ lbs halibut filets cut into 4 or 5 pieces
½ lb fresh Dungeness crab meat
2 TBS Butter / ¼ cup Olive Oil
½ cup grated parmesan
½ cup flour
Salt
Pepper
Trader Joes “Fresh” Hollandaise
White Wine or Lemon Juice (1 to 2 TBS)

In a small sauté pan place Trader Joes Hollandaise and heat on medium adding 1 to 2 TBS White Wine or lemon juice stirring occasionally till combined and starts to boil and then reduce to low or remove from heat entirely. Water could be substituted in lieu of wine or lemon juice. Do not microwave this as the butter instantaneously separate from the solids.

In a large sauté pan place Olive Oil and Butter and heat on medium to medium high. In a pie pan or shallow bowl place parmesan, flour, salt and pepper and dredge halibut filets in this mixture and pan fry until golden brown. Depending on thickness of the halibut the total fry time should be around 7 or 8 minutes. If you are using larger thicker pieces, you can place the sauté pan directly into a 350 oven until cooked through. This prevent the over browning of the fish as the oven cooks it from all sides.

Place the Halibut Filet on a plate, top with crab meat and drizzle hot Hollandaise sauce over it.

For those without access to Trader Joes you can always make a hollandaise sauce from scratch (butter, egg yokes, etc.) but it’s work. If you must use a mix, McCormack’s brand is way better than Knorr, but a little white wine is the ticket.

Many thanks to Deb for the fresh Dungeness crab and of course Howard for the abundance of Halibut.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Chicken with Broccoli Parmesan Pesto




Chicken:
3 or 4 Organic boneless / skinless chicken breasts
Kosher Salt
Pepper
Smoked Paprika
Lemon Pepper
Olive Oil
Citrus Mrs. Dash
2 cloves crushed garlic

Broccoli Parmesan Pesto:
2 cups broccoli
1 handful flat leaf parsley
3 cloves Garlic
½ cup slivered almonds
½ cup grated parmesan cheese
1 tsp sea salt
2 Tbls Lemon Juice
Zest of one lemon
1/3 (+ / -) cup extra virgin olive oil

Garnish: Shredded Parmesan cheese

Place chicken on cutting board between two pieces of saran wrap and pound out chicken. Remove top saran wrap and spread garlic, olive oil and sprinkle both sides with dry seasoning until evenly coated. Let rest at room temperature till grill pan or barbeque is at temperature.

Blanch broccoli in heavily salted water for 2 minutes drain / rinse. In a food processor place garlic cloves, flat leaf parsley and broccoli until smooth. Add almonds, salt, lemon juice and zest, parmesan and EVOO till desired consistency.

Grill Chicken on grill pan and serve broccoli pesto on top of chicken topped with additional parmesan cheese.

Picture seen with Honey Roasted Dijon Potatoes and Pineapple Spinach Salad with Cranberries (see previous postings).

Enjoy!

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Artichoke, Zucchini & Butter Bean Salad




I frequent Whole Foods on my lunch hour and typically go through the salad bar. I just can’t resist a salad bar especially the ones in gourmet grocery stores and don’t forget the olive bar! My three favorite ingredients are Butter Beans marinated in olive oil, Roasted Zucchini and Artichokes. Here’s my own rendition I made at the office. Typically I would have had Kosher Salt, Fresh Ground Pepper and used some fresh herbs but we have a limited supply of seasonings at the office.

1 can butter beans drained and rinsed
1 can small artichoke hearts sliced in half
6 compari tomatoes sliced in half (could substitute large cherry tomatoes)
4 green onion finely chopped
1 small zucchini cut into cubes
1 TBS Red Onion finely chopped
3 TBS Olive Oil
2 TBS Lemon Juice
1 TBS Red Wine Vinegar
1 TBS Balsamic Vinegar
Pepper to Taste
Salt to taste
Pinch of Sugar
Season Salt (a couple shakes)
Crumbled Feta Cheese (optional)

In a medium size bowl combine all the ingredients and season to taste. This should be served immediately or prepare everything except omit the butter beans until ready to serve.

I was half way through and remembered I had feta cheese crumbles and added this to at the end, truly Yummy.

Enjoy!

Friday, February 26, 2010

Muffaletta with Olive Salad


We had a Mardi Gras theme “Pot Luck” party at the office this week and we had quite the Cajun feast. My contribution was the famous New Orleans Muffaletta knowing most would have never tried this unless they visited this fine city. Serves 12 to 18 depending on other sides.

Olive Salad Mixture:

2 Green onions finely diced
Celery heart with leaves
1 large handful of Fresh Parsley leaves
1 10 oz Jar of Queen size Green olives with Pimento
1 cup Nicoise Black Olives
10 cloves roasted Garlic
3 TBS capers
2 Fire Roasted Red Peppers
3 TBS olive oil
1 TBS Balsamic Vinegar
1 TBS White Wine Vinegar
Pepper

Finely dice green onion and the heart of celery using only the tender stalks inside including chopping the leaves. Place this in a mixing bowl. In the food processor add parsley until it’s finely chopped and empty into the bowl. Add olives, capers, garlic and pulse till coarsely chopped empty into the bowl. Last add the fire roasted peppers to the food processor until coarsely chopped. After adding the roasted peppers to the bowl dress with oil, vinegar and pepper to taste.

Sandwich fixings:

Small Wooden Skewers
3 Large Round Italian Loaf Bread
½ Pound Genoa Salami Sliced
½ Pound Ham (I used nitrate free from Niman Ranch)
½ Pound Mortadella bologna
½ pound Mozzarella cheese sliced
12 oz Provolone cheese sliced

Assembly:

Cut large round loaf in half horizontally and add olive mixture to the bottom. Layer meats followed by cheese and top with more olive salad. Place short wooden skewers into 4 to 6 sections and cut with a bread knife.

Assemble on a serving tray and cover with plastic wrap for at least an hour, preferably two. These should be served at room temperature and is excellent with an assortment of salads.
Enjoy!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Pumpkin Thanks Auntie Tam for the Lamb Bone!


I like lamb but have always been intimidated by preparing it. My girlfriend Tamera raises Icelandic sheep and we were lucky enough to get one of her legs of lamb this fall. It’s been sitting in the freezer and she’s always asking “have you cooked your leg of lamb yet?”. I’ve planned to prepare it several times but finally decided Valentines would be the day.

After a conversation I had with my uncle yesterday, he mentioned a method of deboning and removing a gland which I now know is a popliteal gland. Apparently removing this is supposed to cut back on the gamey taste of lamb however many critics disagree. I’m ambitious so I sharpened my deboning knife and went for it, only referring to the internet mid stream twice for some visual aids.

I’m not sure if I found the gland or not but I removed everything that resembled glandular matter as well as any excess fat and surprisingly had a nicely butter flied leg of lamb. I’ve slathered it in Garlic, Rosemary, dried lemon peel, mustard seeds, olive oil and some of my home made seasoning mix. I call this mix my “friendship spice” which we will cover under another posting. Marcie, this is the spice you love on your pork chops!

It was getting rather late on Valentines day so we decided we would wait till Monday afternoon to roast this delicious meat and have ourselves a belated Valentines dinner. Robert decided to chew on the last of the left over vegetarian chili (below on my blog) and french bread pizza. What a combo, but now I have extra room in the fridge.

However Pumpkin wants to thank Auntie Tamera for the tasty bone. I slathered the bone just as I did the meat and roasted this early this morning. My house smells divine and Pumpkin is grinding away on the bone.

Tam, thanks for the lamb and can’t wait to help make cheese this spring.

Teri

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Chili Rubbed Steaks



In my previous post I mentioned the chili rubbed steak and this is something I don’t deviate much from. With little deviation, I have to admit it’s never exactly the same each time, but why? The answer is the chilies and the blend and ratio I use each time. Several times a year I go to the discount stores that have large Mexican bulk isles and purchase various chilies from Ancho, Pasilla, Chipotle, to New Mexico dried chilies. I pull out my coffee grinder (never used for Coffee anymore) and make my own blend and keep it in an air tight container and dive into it for various rubs, chili and other Mexican dishes. When I get low I buy more and add to the previous batch creating a different blend each time. You can use regular chili powder from the grocery store but it’s truly a different experience with freshly ground chilies. Penze Spices (store) carries various chili blends that are also high quality, but you’ll pay the price. I could whip you up a batch for pennies but you’ll pay at least $6 or $7 bucks to buy a good quality blend.
There is little or no measuring to this recipe. Open your beef (preferably grass fed) and lay it out on a cutting board or shallow pan, but I typically just use the butcher paper it came in (no dishes). Liberally slather the steaks with crushed garlic, my favorite are the frozen cubes at Trader Joes. Ratio would be 1 clove or cube per large steak. Next sprinkle chili powder (about a heaping tsp per steak), kosher salt and fresh ground pepper then drizzle with olive oil. Massage the wet rub into the steaks so that it is fully covered. Allow the steaks to remain at room temperature at least and hour, but preferably two. This will allow the steak to cook evenly and quickly. Fire up the Barbeque or Grill pan and cook to your desired doneness. What’s frequently missed is the resting time. It is imperative you allow the meat to rest at least 5 minutes before serving. Tent you plate or platter with aluminum foil or paper towels if you concerned about loosing the temperature.
What out Bobby Flay!

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Spinach, Pineapple and Blue Cheese Salad


When you look at this plate does your mouth water for the meat or the salad?
To me this dish showcased the salad as it was very unique, quick and easy. It pared well with smashed sweet potato and chili rubbed New York steak.
1 bag of Organic Baby Spinach
1 cup frozen pineapple tidbits (thawed but very cold)
½ cup diced Red Onion (could substitute a sweet onion in season)
½ pint cherry tomatoes cut in half (can use grape as well)
½ cup crumbled Blue Cheese
½ cup white wine vinegar
2 TBS Agave Sweetener
½ tsp poppy seeds
1/4 cup vegetable oil or grape seed oil
Salt & Pepper

Wisk vinegar, Agave (could substitute a small amount of Stevia), poppy seeds, Salt and Pepper and oil. Combine Spinach, pineapple, onion and tomato with dressing and serve. Sprinkle with Blue cheese.

Here’s to more veggies in 2010!

Teri

Smoked Salmon & Bay Shrimp Quiche


I can’t remember why 2009 seemed to be the year of the Quiche, but ask my friend Marcie I must have made a dozen of them. Maybe it was those yummy farm eggs she picks up for me on her way into town or possibly it was my way to clean out the fridge. Out of the dozen I made, not including the mini ones, my favorite was the peppered smoked salmon, baby bay shrimp with triple cheese quiche. It’s great for a brunch served with fruit and maybe even a glass of bubbly.

1 prepared pie crust (deep dish)
6 Organic Free Range Eggs (lightly whisked)
4 oz of Smoked Peppered Salmon
¾ cup Bay Shrimp
2 Green Onions chopped
1 Large Roma Tomato diced
3 oz Cream Cheese in Cubes
¾ cup Shredded Cheddar Cheese
½ cup Shredded Pepper Jack

Mix together all ingredients and fill pie pan.

Bake at 325 degrees for an hour checking every 5 minutes after that until the center is set. If you have extra filling spray ramekins with non stick spray and fill. These little pots are great for a quick breakfast in the morning or for me a midnight snack. The ramekins will cook in half the time.

Here’s to a lovely spring with many brunches!

Very Veggie Meatloaf

My friend Tam and I spit a grass fed beef this year and it was one of the best investments I’ve made. Not only to my health of not eating grain fed, hormone boosted, dye injected beef, but also to my pocket book. The only downside was the amount of Ground Beef we received so this recipe was brought on by my commitment to eat more veggies and using up my excess ground beef.

1 ½ pounds grass fed ground beef
½ cup white onion finely chopped
3 green onions finely diced
1 cup fresh spinach finely julienned
½ of a large carrot finely grated
1 small zucchini finely grated
1 tsp finely chopped parsley
2 garlic cloves pressed or finely chopped
2 Organic Free Range Eggs
½ cup gluten cracker crumbs
½ cup Organicville Agave Catsup
1 TBS Better than Bullion beef paste
½ cup Parmesan Cheese
½ tsp Ground Pepper
½ tsp Kosher Salt

You know the drill, put it all in a bowl and use the best tools in the kitchen “your hands” and to mix it together. Put this in a loaf pan and bake on 350 degrees for 50 minutes. Alternatively I preset my oven and baked mine on 250 degrees for an hour and twenty minutes and had it shut off automatically. When Robert and I returned several hours later from our outing, it was waiting for us still nice and warm and fully rested.

The veggies make it super moist and since they are finely grated you don’t even know they are there. You can fool the kids and maybe yourself and even go back for seconds.

Happy Cooking!





Sunday, February 7, 2010

Strawberry Rhubarb & Habanero Hot Wings







Sauce:

1/3 cup Organicville Agave Catsup
1/3 cup Organic Apple Cider Vinegar
1/3 cup Secret Aardvark Habanero hot sauce (Whole Foods)
½ cup Strawberry Rhubarb Jam (Other Berry Jam’s will work)
1/2 cup Franks Wing Sauce
1 tsp smoked Paprika

Wings:

2 Bags of Frozen Chicken Wings

Two cookie sheets lined with foil and liberally covered in olive oil to prevent sticking. Arrange wings on cookie sheets and lightly season with salt and pepper or Lawry’s season salt. I make my own seasoning blend that consists of sugar, salt, pepper, chili powder, chili flakes, dry mustard, paprika and Ms Dash.

Add all of the sauce ingredients to a small pan and heat till bubbly stirring occasionally to break down the jam. For Superbowl 2010, I used Strawberry Rhubarb Jam from a holiday gift box I received however I’ve made similar sauces using Blackberry and Raspberry Jam. Stay away from preserves because these tend to be too chunky for this application. Jellies will also work but sauce is a bit thinner.

Bake Frozen Wings on 350 degrees for 1 hour then reduce to 200 for another 30 minutes. Cooking time will vary depending on wing size, so once the wingette portions are tender it’s time to take them out.

Let cool slightly and toss in wing sauce and serve with blue cheese dressing. My favorite with this is Toby’s Fresh Gourmet. I’ve seen this at New Seasons and Whole foods in the vegan section.

Note: If you can’t find Aardvark sauce substitute another habanero sauce or even 1/4 cup of smokey Cholula and increase the Franks.

Go Saints!

Gazpacho with Shrimp

My Mom Cheri has served this for years and it’s always a hit. Last weekend we had our “Girl’s Day” and I made her recipe with a few twists. For those afraid to try cold soup, think of it as a Bloody Mary with bay shrimp, ad a shot of Vodka (who’s looking) and salute!

1 Quart Clamato Juice
8 oz fresh shrimp meat (baby bay shrimp)
½ c English cucumber seeded and finely diced
½ c green onion finely chopped
2 TBS Olive Oil
10 Dashes of Tapitio Hot Sauce
1 tsp sugar
1 TBS Dill Weed
3 TBS Orange Muscat Champagne Vinegar (Trader Joes or substitute Red WineVinegar)
2 Dashes of Worcestershire
3 Oz Cream Cheese
1 Semi Firm Avocado Cubed

Add all ingredients together except cream cheese and Avocado and store in the refrigerator until well chilled. Can be made a day ahead of time. Just before serviing add cream cheese and cubed avocado. Cream cheese needs to be very cold and cut into very small cubes about the size of a pea. I use dental floss to cut the cream cheese and Mom uses a wire cheese cutter. Remove the skin of the avocado and dice into 1 centimeter cubes.

I ate it so quickly I forgot to take a picture, Sorry.

Enjoy!

Almost Vegetarian Chili



Almost Vegetarian Chili

6 cups of assorted Organic Beans
Black Bean
White Navy Bean
Pinto / Pink Bean
Kidney Bean
Red Bean
White Lima / Butter Beans
Soak 4 hours and rinse
1 28 oz can diced Organic tomatoes
1 pint of frozen Organic diced fire roasted Green Chilies (Whole Foods)
One finely diced jalapeno pepper seeded and deveined
½ cup Organicville Agave Catsup
1 cup Organic RW Knudsen Spicy Very Veggie Vegetable Juice
½ 7 oz can Chili’s in adobo chopped finely (if you want it hot add the entire can)Sautee the following in Olive Oil:
1 medium red onion olive oil
10 to 12 small Organic baby carrots sliced
½ to ¾ of a pint of organic grape tomatoes (Red/Yellow/Purple) sliced in half
4 large garlic cloves (crushed or finely chopped)
½ small can Chili’s in adobo (chopped finely)
3 TBS Chili powder
2 TBS Smoked Paprika
1 TBS Coriander
1 tsp Smoke House Pepper (McCormack’s)
1 TBS Kosher Salt
1 Carton Beef stock or Beef flavored stock
2 TBS Better than Bullion beef
Garnish (optional):
Top with Shredded Yogurt pepper jack cheese
Chopped Red Onion
Avocado Slices

Soak beans for 4 hours and rinse and drain. Sautee onion, carrot, grape tomatoes in a pan with olive oil for about 5 minutes add garlic at the end to soften but do not burn. Add all the ingredients except garnish into an extra large crock pot. Cook covered for 6 hours on high until beans are tender and chili thickens. Serve with your choice of garnish.


This recipe is very versatile and can be tweaked to make it extra spicy or even substitute vegetable broth to make it truly vegetarian.

Enjoy, Teri