Last week I was watching the Today show before work and Mark Bittman was on whipping up savory breakfasts. Among which was a polenta breakfast pizza, which looked very yummy. I started thinking and got out HTCEV and saw that I earmarked the polenta pizza to make, and Angel said she'd try it.
So, I picked up some cornmeal, beans, salsa and cheese after work and got busy in the kitchen. It's a great method for a really filling, and frugal, dinner. Feel free to experiment with the toppings, add leftover grilled veggies, swap out different cheeses. Since my cornmeal was a little finer than coarse ground, it cooked up a bit quicker. Here's the recipe, adapted from Mark Bittman.
I liked that you can make the crust the morning or even the day before and just leave it in the fridge. The leftovers heated up great, sorry I ate them all. Just a little.
Time: About 45 minutes, plus one hour’s chilling
1/2 cup milk, preferably whole ( didn't use milk, cause we were out- just increased the amount of water)
Salt
1 cup coarse cornmeal
Freshly ground black pepper
Salsa
Can of refried beans
Mexican shredded cheese
1. Heat oven to 450 degrees; brush a layer of olive oil on a pizza pan or cookie sheet. (I just used a pie pan and a spray of Pam) In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, combine milk with 2 1/2 cups water and a large pinch of salt. Bring just about to a boil, reduce heat to medium, and add cornmeal in a steady stream, whisking all the while to prevent lumps from forming. Turn heat to low and simmer, whisking frequently, until thick, 10 or 15 minutes. If mixture becomes too thick, whisk in a bit more water; you want a consistency approaching thick oatmeal.
2. Stir 1 tablespoon oil (I used butter) into cooked cornmeal (polenta). Spoon it onto prepared pan, working quickly so polenta does not stiffen; spread it evenly to a thickness of about 1/2 inch all over. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover baking sheet with plastic wrap and put it in refrigerator until it is firm, an hour or more (you can refrigerate polenta overnight if you prefer).
3. Put polenta in oven and bake for 25 to 30 minutes, or until it begins to brown and crisp on edges. I mixed a can of refried beans and some salsa together (makes it easier to spread)
4. Take polenta out of oven, spread bean mixture on top and sprinkle with cheese. Put pizza back in oven for 5-10 minutes, or until cheese begins to melt . Cut into slices and serve hot or at room temperature.
Yield: 4 servings.
Variation: Before you put polenta in oven, top it with thin slices of fresh mozzarella, two or three thinly sliced Roma tomatoes or a bit of tomato sauce, and a handful of fresh basil leaves.
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Holiday hermits
I finally got the last of my holiday care packages sent out last week. I just got too busy over the holidays with moving, working and oh, everything to bake at least one thing to include with it. I had picked out a very classic recipe to make, which a form was displayed in Penzeys around Christmas: Hermit Bars.
As much as I adore new trendy stuff, the single orgin chocolate, mixing chipotle into chocolate chip cookies and espresso whatnot, there is something about the old-fashioned tried and true stuff that is just outstanding. And it seems to be going around- Rachel made just chocolate chip cookies this weekend- no pecans, raisins, bourbon, no ne plus ultra, just chocolate chip. And I had three.
I do confess, I did over bake this batch a wee bit as I was a bit leery about the underbaking instructions. But next time I am sticking exactly to the directions, because the bit that was underdone was quite yummy. A couple people who tried them remarked how they don't like raisins, but they liked these. When did raisins get such a bad rap? I used a great blend of three jumbo raisins, nice and plump.
This will definitely be a repeater for me every holiday season. It makes a huge batch of cookies and they keep pretty well. I did use all-purpose flour, and if you do - they recommend to increase the amount of water to 3/4 cup. And I may increase the amount of allspice and cinnamon. Hey, I'm a spicy girl.
The Very Best Hermit Bars Ever
Yield: about 8 1/2 dozen 1-inch cookies
For bars:
1 1/3 cups sugar
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons vegetable shortening
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/4 cup molasses
3/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon ground allspice
3/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
2 large eggs
5 cups cake flour, divided use
1/3 cup water
2 cups raisins, packed
For glaze:
3 tablespoons milk
1 cup powdered sugar
Procedure:
1. Prepare bars: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease 10-by-15-inch jelly roll pan.
2. In large mixing bowl, cream together sugar, shortening and butter, beating at medium speed until fluffy. Add molasses, salt, spices and baking soda. Mix 1 minute, then stop mixer and scrape down sides of bowl. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add half of flour. Once it’s mixed in, add water, then other half of flour. When batter is mixed completely, add raisins and stir until combined. Spread batter in prepared pan.
3. Bake bars 18-20 minutes, until edges are light brown. They’ll puff up in oven and top will get shiny. As soon as you see this, pull pan from oven. The top will fall back down and interior of cookies will have an almost fudgy consistency. Remove hermit bars from oven and cool them in pan on rack before glazing.
4. Prepare glaze: In small bowl, stir together milk and powdered sugar until smooth; glaze will be quite thin. Use pastry brush to brush it on top of hermit bars before cutting bars.
Source: “The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion”
As much as I adore new trendy stuff, the single orgin chocolate, mixing chipotle into chocolate chip cookies and espresso whatnot, there is something about the old-fashioned tried and true stuff that is just outstanding. And it seems to be going around- Rachel made just chocolate chip cookies this weekend- no pecans, raisins, bourbon, no ne plus ultra, just chocolate chip. And I had three.
I do confess, I did over bake this batch a wee bit as I was a bit leery about the underbaking instructions. But next time I am sticking exactly to the directions, because the bit that was underdone was quite yummy. A couple people who tried them remarked how they don't like raisins, but they liked these. When did raisins get such a bad rap? I used a great blend of three jumbo raisins, nice and plump.
This will definitely be a repeater for me every holiday season. It makes a huge batch of cookies and they keep pretty well. I did use all-purpose flour, and if you do - they recommend to increase the amount of water to 3/4 cup. And I may increase the amount of allspice and cinnamon. Hey, I'm a spicy girl.
The Very Best Hermit Bars Ever
Yield: about 8 1/2 dozen 1-inch cookies
For bars:
1 1/3 cups sugar
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons vegetable shortening
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
1/4 cup molasses
3/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon ground allspice
3/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
2 large eggs
5 cups cake flour, divided use
1/3 cup water
2 cups raisins, packed
For glaze:
3 tablespoons milk
1 cup powdered sugar
Procedure:
1. Prepare bars: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease 10-by-15-inch jelly roll pan.
2. In large mixing bowl, cream together sugar, shortening and butter, beating at medium speed until fluffy. Add molasses, salt, spices and baking soda. Mix 1 minute, then stop mixer and scrape down sides of bowl. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add half of flour. Once it’s mixed in, add water, then other half of flour. When batter is mixed completely, add raisins and stir until combined. Spread batter in prepared pan.
3. Bake bars 18-20 minutes, until edges are light brown. They’ll puff up in oven and top will get shiny. As soon as you see this, pull pan from oven. The top will fall back down and interior of cookies will have an almost fudgy consistency. Remove hermit bars from oven and cool them in pan on rack before glazing.
4. Prepare glaze: In small bowl, stir together milk and powdered sugar until smooth; glaze will be quite thin. Use pastry brush to brush it on top of hermit bars before cutting bars.
Source: “The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion”
Friday, February 13, 2009
Restaurant Reviews
See, this is me playing catch-up.
First: Zuzap
I adore Thai food. The complexity and freshness of it just calls to me. It's like my eating life was just in black and white before diving into my first dish of pad thai. But now, I just about know the menu by heart at my favorite place. It seems just a bit too familiar.
Enter Zuzap- also owned by Liam Anivat who opened and operates Cool Basil and Thai Flavors bring us something new to the Des Moines Thai scene. Wonderful curries and noodle dishes await. Frankly, it's been a while since we ate there- but my dish was wonderful. I didn't like too much the type of noodle I selected- a wide rice noodle, but since they have 5 or 6 different types- no worries next time. My only complaint- it's too far away from my house.
Next: Fong's Pizza
Yes, an asian themed pizza joint. How can you not be excited?
Well, it was their first week. And we ended up with a mishap in the kitchen. The table next to ours got our pizza instead- and we ended up with theirs later (at no charge- but we wanted ours!) and got our speciality like 45 minutes later. We had crab rangoons to start, which were quite good. They were wrapped in egg roll wrappers for a different twist. The mistake pizza was the happy family, which wasn't really my thing- fake krab just grosses me out after a while. Our pizza was the vegetarian with the hoisin bbq sauce, which was good.
The drink menu is worth a look see- it brings that tradition of Trader Vics to Des Moines. I had a Singapore Sling, a classic. Angel had a sip and remarked that at first it didn't seem there was any alcohol in it and then said "Oh wait there it is." Yep, and that's why froo-froo drinks are deceptively deadly and you end up wearing the tropical umbrellas in your hair by #3. And the Sling was the reason I wasn't too upset about the kitchen mishap- whee!
We'll try again- am very intrigued by the homemade pizza rolls. Totino's pizza rolls were a childhood treat, nice to see a homemade version of them. (Hey, why don't I do that?) http://www.fongspizza.com/
But not last: Sweet Binneys
I got an invitation to their Spring open house and tasting. WOW! We sampled a chocolate mousse cake with a cheesecake filling, white chocolate & apricot cheesecake with oreo crust, plum and almond tart, raspberry bavarian cream torte, and a cherry & almond cake which was enrobed with marzipan. Sugar rush, oh yes. My favorite was the chocolate- but of course, I love chocolate- within a group of equals, it always outranks them just by the virtue of being chocolate. The plum tart was my second fave (I love plums) and next was the white chocolate apricot cheesecake.
And since I was there on Wed. night, I have had peanut butter pie on the brain. They had it in the pastry case and it was singing to me. Maybe next week...
I love this bakery so much- everything I've ever gotten from there was been scrumptious, and I know my pastry. Angel is quite amused by the fact that I can spot a pastry shop from six blocks away- no fooling. I love their individual desserts, just the right size for a special occasion or just because it's Friday.
http://sweetbinneys.com/
First: Zuzap
I adore Thai food. The complexity and freshness of it just calls to me. It's like my eating life was just in black and white before diving into my first dish of pad thai. But now, I just about know the menu by heart at my favorite place. It seems just a bit too familiar.
Enter Zuzap- also owned by Liam Anivat who opened and operates Cool Basil and Thai Flavors bring us something new to the Des Moines Thai scene. Wonderful curries and noodle dishes await. Frankly, it's been a while since we ate there- but my dish was wonderful. I didn't like too much the type of noodle I selected- a wide rice noodle, but since they have 5 or 6 different types- no worries next time. My only complaint- it's too far away from my house.
Next: Fong's Pizza
Yes, an asian themed pizza joint. How can you not be excited?
Well, it was their first week. And we ended up with a mishap in the kitchen. The table next to ours got our pizza instead- and we ended up with theirs later (at no charge- but we wanted ours!) and got our speciality like 45 minutes later. We had crab rangoons to start, which were quite good. They were wrapped in egg roll wrappers for a different twist. The mistake pizza was the happy family, which wasn't really my thing- fake krab just grosses me out after a while. Our pizza was the vegetarian with the hoisin bbq sauce, which was good.
The drink menu is worth a look see- it brings that tradition of Trader Vics to Des Moines. I had a Singapore Sling, a classic. Angel had a sip and remarked that at first it didn't seem there was any alcohol in it and then said "Oh wait there it is." Yep, and that's why froo-froo drinks are deceptively deadly and you end up wearing the tropical umbrellas in your hair by #3. And the Sling was the reason I wasn't too upset about the kitchen mishap- whee!
We'll try again- am very intrigued by the homemade pizza rolls. Totino's pizza rolls were a childhood treat, nice to see a homemade version of them. (Hey, why don't I do that?) http://www.fongspizza.com/
But not last: Sweet Binneys
I got an invitation to their Spring open house and tasting. WOW! We sampled a chocolate mousse cake with a cheesecake filling, white chocolate & apricot cheesecake with oreo crust, plum and almond tart, raspberry bavarian cream torte, and a cherry & almond cake which was enrobed with marzipan. Sugar rush, oh yes. My favorite was the chocolate- but of course, I love chocolate- within a group of equals, it always outranks them just by the virtue of being chocolate. The plum tart was my second fave (I love plums) and next was the white chocolate apricot cheesecake.
And since I was there on Wed. night, I have had peanut butter pie on the brain. They had it in the pastry case and it was singing to me. Maybe next week...
I love this bakery so much- everything I've ever gotten from there was been scrumptious, and I know my pastry. Angel is quite amused by the fact that I can spot a pastry shop from six blocks away- no fooling. I love their individual desserts, just the right size for a special occasion or just because it's Friday.
http://sweetbinneys.com/
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Goodbye old friend
Well, last night was the untimely end of an old kitchen buddy. My Cuisinart bowl, broke, in a serious way, along with spilling tomato sauce all over the place.
It's had a great long life. Actually it was my Grandma's- and about 25 years old. Just thinking of how many veggies its chopped, batches of pesto made, soups pureed, made me a little sad.
So, I started looking for a replacement bowl on EBay today. Which hopefully I'll find one sooner than later. And not spend $60 for it- I mean, really, would anyone spend that much??
I think that she would of approved of the menu last night. I've been reading off and on, Mario Batalli's new book "Spain, on the road again" and had 7 eggs to use up. Solution? An easy frittata with spanish goat cheese, roasted asparagus and potatoes bravas. My family tends to be more into grazing than eating a huge meal, hence I love the Spanish tapas so much. What's not to love about small plates? You get to try more things!
Here's the recipe. I used a red pepper instead of a green and added a nice tsp of Spanish smoked paprika to the sauce. The potatoes themselves were a bit bland- next time I'll add more spice or come to terms that I am seriously addicted to Penzeys 4S.
Patatas Bravas
Spanish for "fierce potatoes," patatas bravas are a common tapas offering of crisp potato cubes served with a spicy sauce. If you like fiery food, use one-fourth to one-half teaspoon red pepper in the sauce. For the crispest potatoes, stir only every two or three minutes; frequent stirring can damage them.
Potatoes:4 cups (1-inch) cubed peeled baking potato (about 1 1/2 pounds)
1 tablespoon butter
2 teaspoons olive oil
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground red pepper
2 garlic cloves, minced
Sauce:1 teaspoon olive oil
1 cup diced onion
1 cup diced green bell pepper
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground red pepper
1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce
Parsley sprigs (optional)
1. To prepare potatoes, place potato in a medium saucepan; cover with water. Bring to a boil. Cook 1 minute or until crisp-tender; drain well.
2. Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add butter and 2 teaspoons oil to pan, swirling to coat bottom of pan; heat 30 seconds or until foam subsides. Add potato to pan; sauté 8 minutes or until browned, stirring twice. Stir in 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon red pepper, and garlic; sauté 1 minute. Remove potato mixture from pan; keep warm.
3. To prepare sauce, heat pan over medium-high heat. Add 1 teaspoon oil to pan, swirling to coat; heat 15 seconds. Add onion and bell pepper; sauté 5 minutes or until tender, stirring frequently. Add 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon red pepper, and tomato sauce; bring to a simmer. Cook 1 minute. Pour onion mixture into a blender. Remove center piece of blender lid (to allow steam to escape); secure blender lid on blender. Place a clean towel over opening in blender lid (to avoid splatters). Blend until smooth. Serve sauce with potato mixture. Garnish with parsley sprigs, if desired.
Yield: 6 servings (serving size: 2/3 cup potato mixture and 1/4 cup sauce)CALORIES 153 (26% from fat); FAT 4.4g (sat 1.6g,mono 2.2g,poly 0.4g); IRON 1.5mg; CHOLESTEROL 5mg; CALCIUM 31mg; CARBOHYDRATE 26.5g; SODIUM 416mg; PROTEIN 3.5g; FIBER 2.9g Cooking Light, APRIL 2008
It's had a great long life. Actually it was my Grandma's- and about 25 years old. Just thinking of how many veggies its chopped, batches of pesto made, soups pureed, made me a little sad.
So, I started looking for a replacement bowl on EBay today. Which hopefully I'll find one sooner than later. And not spend $60 for it- I mean, really, would anyone spend that much??
I think that she would of approved of the menu last night. I've been reading off and on, Mario Batalli's new book "Spain, on the road again" and had 7 eggs to use up. Solution? An easy frittata with spanish goat cheese, roasted asparagus and potatoes bravas. My family tends to be more into grazing than eating a huge meal, hence I love the Spanish tapas so much. What's not to love about small plates? You get to try more things!
Here's the recipe. I used a red pepper instead of a green and added a nice tsp of Spanish smoked paprika to the sauce. The potatoes themselves were a bit bland- next time I'll add more spice or come to terms that I am seriously addicted to Penzeys 4S.
Patatas Bravas
Spanish for "fierce potatoes," patatas bravas are a common tapas offering of crisp potato cubes served with a spicy sauce. If you like fiery food, use one-fourth to one-half teaspoon red pepper in the sauce. For the crispest potatoes, stir only every two or three minutes; frequent stirring can damage them.
Potatoes:4 cups (1-inch) cubed peeled baking potato (about 1 1/2 pounds)
1 tablespoon butter
2 teaspoons olive oil
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground red pepper
2 garlic cloves, minced
Sauce:1 teaspoon olive oil
1 cup diced onion
1 cup diced green bell pepper
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/8 teaspoon ground red pepper
1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce
Parsley sprigs (optional)
1. To prepare potatoes, place potato in a medium saucepan; cover with water. Bring to a boil. Cook 1 minute or until crisp-tender; drain well.
2. Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add butter and 2 teaspoons oil to pan, swirling to coat bottom of pan; heat 30 seconds or until foam subsides. Add potato to pan; sauté 8 minutes or until browned, stirring twice. Stir in 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon red pepper, and garlic; sauté 1 minute. Remove potato mixture from pan; keep warm.
3. To prepare sauce, heat pan over medium-high heat. Add 1 teaspoon oil to pan, swirling to coat; heat 15 seconds. Add onion and bell pepper; sauté 5 minutes or until tender, stirring frequently. Add 1/4 teaspoon salt, 1/8 teaspoon red pepper, and tomato sauce; bring to a simmer. Cook 1 minute. Pour onion mixture into a blender. Remove center piece of blender lid (to allow steam to escape); secure blender lid on blender. Place a clean towel over opening in blender lid (to avoid splatters). Blend until smooth. Serve sauce with potato mixture. Garnish with parsley sprigs, if desired.
Yield: 6 servings (serving size: 2/3 cup potato mixture and 1/4 cup sauce)CALORIES 153 (26% from fat); FAT 4.4g (sat 1.6g,mono 2.2g,poly 0.4g); IRON 1.5mg; CHOLESTEROL 5mg; CALCIUM 31mg; CARBOHYDRATE 26.5g; SODIUM 416mg; PROTEIN 3.5g; FIBER 2.9g Cooking Light, APRIL 2008
Wednesday, January 28, 2009
Look what I had after all!
Last night I uncovered a box of Kashi 7 grain and sesame pilaf that I haven't opened yet. I figured that since brown rice was one of the ingredients, that would make a great addition to the leftover stir fry I had slated for lunch today. And since, I love their frozen dinners- no problem.
What a great find! I am stuffed after eating one serving and have consumed by daily quota of recommended whole grains- so bring on the white bread!
I will definately have to play around with this some more.
And this morning in the shower, I think I caught a glimpse of Mischa tring to jump from the sink to the top of the door. It was a black blur slamming into the top of the door, followed by a thump, then a yowl and kitten footfalls running down the hallway. This was after he spent most of the morning on top of the refridgerator. He is the reason why we don't have lit candles in the open. He is voted most likely to set himself on fire.
I did finish Espersso Shot by Cleo Coyle, the most recent in the Coffeehouse mystery series which I really enjoyed. I just started Deadly Night by Heather Graham, the first in the Flynn Brothers trilogy. I haven't read any of her books before, but it is promising- a good paranormal mystery that takes place in New Orleans.
What a great find! I am stuffed after eating one serving and have consumed by daily quota of recommended whole grains- so bring on the white bread!
I will definately have to play around with this some more.
And this morning in the shower, I think I caught a glimpse of Mischa tring to jump from the sink to the top of the door. It was a black blur slamming into the top of the door, followed by a thump, then a yowl and kitten footfalls running down the hallway. This was after he spent most of the morning on top of the refridgerator. He is the reason why we don't have lit candles in the open. He is voted most likely to set himself on fire.
I did finish Espersso Shot by Cleo Coyle, the most recent in the Coffeehouse mystery series which I really enjoyed. I just started Deadly Night by Heather Graham, the first in the Flynn Brothers trilogy. I haven't read any of her books before, but it is promising- a good paranormal mystery that takes place in New Orleans.
Tuesday, January 27, 2009
Pantry Freezer challenge
I am a huge believer in a well stocked pantry and freezer. It's amazing to be able to come home with just some chicken and milk from the store and be able to whip up a great dinner. With a can of tomatoes you can go Mexican, Italian or Moroccan. You can make pasta in minutes.
Managing it, is another story.
I ran into this last night which I just picked up chicken and a couple of veggies for the kung pao chicken I planned for dinner. I was going to use up the rest of the veggies in the crisper and had brown rice to cook at home.
So, after cutting up the chicken, I opened the pantry door to discover I was dangerously low on soy sauce. So much so, I couldn't make the recipe. And no rice wine vinegar. How could I have fig balsamic and sherry but no rice? And brown rice, our rice of choice, nope- had about not even a half cup which would not be enough for the planned leftovers the next day. Luckily, I had a bottle of spicy stir fry sauce in the pantry so I used that instead. Enter the steam bag of frozen rice from the freezer. So, dinner went on as planned, and really who wants to back to the store when it's after 6pm?
I did a fair job of cleaning out the pantry & freezer before moving. But, I am a sucker for buying stuff on sale and clearance because I'll use it someday. I know a lot of it stems from those lean grad school days and under/unemployment days which are behind me. (Knock wood!) But in moving, I found out that I had a lot of duplicates- I mean who needs two huge containers of corn starch? Apparently I thought I did!
So, progress in cleaning out stuff? I used some leftover frozen turkey in the curry soup. The remaining of it is in the freezer (one step forward and, well) We have two more bags of turkey! I think a couple of casseroles may be in the mix or a batch of turkey noodle soup to send off to someone.
Frozen sweet corn- totally have to use that.
Roasted hatch chillies- tortilla soup- maybe with turkey? ;-)
Frozen cherries- yum
A slew of frozen meals.
Half open package of Morningstar Farms sausage crumbles
The cheeseball my Mom snuck home with me
Sloppy joes- may be my lunch tomorrow
Duck breast
Potstickers- may have these this week- with some asparagus-
Of course, this just scratches the surface!
And having this upcoming weekend off I was thinking about a couple of cooking projects to further stock my freezer- making chicken stock and bologonese sauce. Or maybe I should work around the house and eat black bean burgers for dinner and gain some more precious free cubic inches of freezer space. Hmmm....
One my things I will have to pay more attention to is the dreaded expiration dates. My baking plans around Christmas didn't work out- so had to end up ditching the heavy cream I bought. Ditto the overage of cottage cheese that we had. And since I bought yoplait yogurt on sale (5 for $2 at Dahls), I checked the dates and bought the one slated to die first with me for breakfast. I was really in the passion fruit mood- but had to settle for strawberry cheesecake- tough life. I did put my celery in one of those green bags that my Mom gave me- so we'll see how that works. I never ever use up a thing of celery. Ever. Too bad Mischa doesn't like celery.
Of course my Mom's freezer is infamous. My friend Jamie noted that once that lone package of eggrolls had been in there the entire time he'd known me. Years. So, Ma- up for the challenge?
Managing it, is another story.
I ran into this last night which I just picked up chicken and a couple of veggies for the kung pao chicken I planned for dinner. I was going to use up the rest of the veggies in the crisper and had brown rice to cook at home.
So, after cutting up the chicken, I opened the pantry door to discover I was dangerously low on soy sauce. So much so, I couldn't make the recipe. And no rice wine vinegar. How could I have fig balsamic and sherry but no rice? And brown rice, our rice of choice, nope- had about not even a half cup which would not be enough for the planned leftovers the next day. Luckily, I had a bottle of spicy stir fry sauce in the pantry so I used that instead. Enter the steam bag of frozen rice from the freezer. So, dinner went on as planned, and really who wants to back to the store when it's after 6pm?
I did a fair job of cleaning out the pantry & freezer before moving. But, I am a sucker for buying stuff on sale and clearance because I'll use it someday. I know a lot of it stems from those lean grad school days and under/unemployment days which are behind me. (Knock wood!) But in moving, I found out that I had a lot of duplicates- I mean who needs two huge containers of corn starch? Apparently I thought I did!
So, progress in cleaning out stuff? I used some leftover frozen turkey in the curry soup. The remaining of it is in the freezer (one step forward and, well) We have two more bags of turkey! I think a couple of casseroles may be in the mix or a batch of turkey noodle soup to send off to someone.
Mental Inventory
Frozen sweet corn- totally have to use that.
Roasted hatch chillies- tortilla soup- maybe with turkey? ;-)
Frozen cherries- yum
A slew of frozen meals.
Half open package of Morningstar Farms sausage crumbles
The cheeseball my Mom snuck home with me
Sloppy joes- may be my lunch tomorrow
Duck breast
Potstickers- may have these this week- with some asparagus-
Of course, this just scratches the surface!
And having this upcoming weekend off I was thinking about a couple of cooking projects to further stock my freezer- making chicken stock and bologonese sauce. Or maybe I should work around the house and eat black bean burgers for dinner and gain some more precious free cubic inches of freezer space. Hmmm....
One my things I will have to pay more attention to is the dreaded expiration dates. My baking plans around Christmas didn't work out- so had to end up ditching the heavy cream I bought. Ditto the overage of cottage cheese that we had. And since I bought yoplait yogurt on sale (5 for $2 at Dahls), I checked the dates and bought the one slated to die first with me for breakfast. I was really in the passion fruit mood- but had to settle for strawberry cheesecake- tough life. I did put my celery in one of those green bags that my Mom gave me- so we'll see how that works. I never ever use up a thing of celery. Ever. Too bad Mischa doesn't like celery.
Of course my Mom's freezer is infamous. My friend Jamie noted that once that lone package of eggrolls had been in there the entire time he'd known me. Years. So, Ma- up for the challenge?
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Inaugural Celebration
This week has been a long one it seems. I woke up this morning and felt like it should be next Tuesday. I think that peaceful transition of power that we've been waiting sooooooooo long for can do that to you.
I was impressed that President Obama placed a huge emphasis on a call to return to personal responsibility. The government alone can't bail us out or fix all of our problems. Its up to us to make changes in our lives that will get us back on track. To living within our means, planning ahead, eating better, losing weight, excising, driving more fuel efficient cars, making sure our kids do their homework and on and on.
Breaking out the White House napkins I bought one of the last times I was in DC, I cozied up to toast President Obama and Vice President Biden take the oath of office. In celebration, along with a Bellini to sip, I tried an excellent new recipe from Small Batch Baking (which every time I cook something from it, I wonder why don't I do this more often!) As much as I love cake, I don't need a whole cake sitting around the house all week.
I used raspberry jam for the filling and only used one croissant. I really can't help myself when it comes to croissants- am a sucker for the buttery treats. I prefer the richness of them and brioche to something that's sweeter. This was an excellent special occasion breakfast, not too sweet but rich. And easy!
Baked Raspberry Almond French Toast
Small Batch Baking by Debby Maugans Nakos
Makes two french toasts- serves 2
1/2 cup whole milk
1 large egg
2 TB sugar
2 TB amaretto or 1/2 tsp almond extract
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
1/8 tsp salt
3 TB raspberry preserves
2 large croissants, cut in half horizontally
1/4 cup sliced almonds
1 TB unsalted butter, melted
Honey, warmed or powdered sugar for garnish
fresh raspberries for garnish
1. Place the milk, sugar, egg, amaretto, cinnamon and salt in shallow baking dish and whisk to blend well.
2. Spread half the raspberry preserves over the bottom half of each croissant. Press halves together, and place in baking dish, turning to coat them with custard. Let them soak for 30 minutes to absorb the custard, turning frequently.
3. Preheat oven to 325. Grease a small baking sheet.
4. Remove croissants from baking dish. Coat with almonds and place on prepared sheet. Brush tops with melted butter. (Discard leftover custard mixture) Bake until croissants are puffed and brown and custard is set, about 25-27 minutes.
5. Remove from oven and transfer to serving plates. garnish with honey, powdered sugar or raspberries if desired.
Since Angel was out on Tuesday evening seeing Spring Awakening, our Inaugural celebration dinner was last night. I kept it a little lighter and turned to one of our favorite recipes. I have to leave the olives out for Angel (and I forgot to put them in mine again). I love stuffed chicken breasts, but sometimes they are a pain to make. Use a sharp knife and be patient. Take care not to overstuff the chicken or it will leak out and burn. You can also vary the flavor any which way- I used a nice shake of Penzeys Sunny Paris in mine- shallots and rich sweet herbs. I also roasted some asparagus and made mashed sweet potatoes. Enjoy!
Goat Cheese-&-Olive-Stuffed Chicken Breasts
Eating Well
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients
2 tablespoons creamy goat cheese
1 tablespoon chopped black olives
Freshly ground pepper to taste
4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves (1-1 ¼ pounds total)
1 large egg white
½ cup plain dry breadcrumbs
2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil (I used butter- I think it makes it richer!)
Instructions
1. Preheat oven to 400°F. Coat a rimmed baking sheet with cooking spray.
2. Combine goat cheese, olives and pepper in a small bowl with a fork.
3. Cut a horizontal slit along the thin, long edge of a chicken breast half, nearly through to the opposite side. Open up each breast and place one-fourth of the filling in the center. Close the breast over the filling, pressing the edges firmly together to seal. Repeat with the remaining chicken breasts and filling.
4. Lightly beat egg white with a fork in a medium bowl. Place breadcrumbs in a shallow glass dish. Hold each chicken breast half together and dip in the egg white, then dredge in the breadcrumbs. (Discard leftovers.)
5. Heat oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add chicken breasts; cook until browned on one side, about 2 minutes. Place the chicken, browned-side up, on the prepared baking sheet. Bake until the chicken is no longer pink in the center or until an instant-read thermometer registers 170°F, about 20 minutes.
Goat Cheese-&-Olive-Stuffed Chicken Breasts Nutrition Information
Per serving: 235 calories; 7 g fat (2 g sat, 3 g mono); 72 mg cholesterol; 10 g carbohydrate; 31 g protein; 1 g fiber; 248 mg sodium.1/2 Carbohydrate Serving
I was impressed that President Obama placed a huge emphasis on a call to return to personal responsibility. The government alone can't bail us out or fix all of our problems. Its up to us to make changes in our lives that will get us back on track. To living within our means, planning ahead, eating better, losing weight, excising, driving more fuel efficient cars, making sure our kids do their homework and on and on.
Breaking out the White House napkins I bought one of the last times I was in DC, I cozied up to toast President Obama and Vice President Biden take the oath of office. In celebration, along with a Bellini to sip, I tried an excellent new recipe from Small Batch Baking (which every time I cook something from it, I wonder why don't I do this more often!) As much as I love cake, I don't need a whole cake sitting around the house all week.
I used raspberry jam for the filling and only used one croissant. I really can't help myself when it comes to croissants- am a sucker for the buttery treats. I prefer the richness of them and brioche to something that's sweeter. This was an excellent special occasion breakfast, not too sweet but rich. And easy!
Baked Raspberry Almond French Toast
Small Batch Baking by Debby Maugans Nakos
Makes two french toasts- serves 2
1/2 cup whole milk
1 large egg
2 TB sugar
2 TB amaretto or 1/2 tsp almond extract
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
1/8 tsp salt
3 TB raspberry preserves
2 large croissants, cut in half horizontally
1/4 cup sliced almonds
1 TB unsalted butter, melted
Honey, warmed or powdered sugar for garnish
fresh raspberries for garnish
1. Place the milk, sugar, egg, amaretto, cinnamon and salt in shallow baking dish and whisk to blend well.
2. Spread half the raspberry preserves over the bottom half of each croissant. Press halves together, and place in baking dish, turning to coat them with custard. Let them soak for 30 minutes to absorb the custard, turning frequently.
3. Preheat oven to 325. Grease a small baking sheet.
4. Remove croissants from baking dish. Coat with almonds and place on prepared sheet. Brush tops with melted butter. (Discard leftover custard mixture) Bake until croissants are puffed and brown and custard is set, about 25-27 minutes.
5. Remove from oven and transfer to serving plates. garnish with honey, powdered sugar or raspberries if desired.
Since Angel was out on Tuesday evening seeing Spring Awakening, our Inaugural celebration dinner was last night. I kept it a little lighter and turned to one of our favorite recipes. I have to leave the olives out for Angel (and I forgot to put them in mine again). I love stuffed chicken breasts, but sometimes they are a pain to make. Use a sharp knife and be patient. Take care not to overstuff the chicken or it will leak out and burn. You can also vary the flavor any which way- I used a nice shake of Penzeys Sunny Paris in mine- shallots and rich sweet herbs. I also roasted some asparagus and made mashed sweet potatoes. Enjoy!
Goat Cheese-&-Olive-Stuffed Chicken Breasts
Eating Well
Makes 4 servings
Ingredients
2 tablespoons creamy goat cheese
1 tablespoon chopped black olives
Freshly ground pepper to taste
4 boneless, skinless chicken breast halves (1-1 ¼ pounds total)
1 large egg white
½ cup plain dry breadcrumbs
2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil (I used butter- I think it makes it richer!)
Instructions
1. Preheat oven to 400°F. Coat a rimmed baking sheet with cooking spray.
2. Combine goat cheese, olives and pepper in a small bowl with a fork.
3. Cut a horizontal slit along the thin, long edge of a chicken breast half, nearly through to the opposite side. Open up each breast and place one-fourth of the filling in the center. Close the breast over the filling, pressing the edges firmly together to seal. Repeat with the remaining chicken breasts and filling.
4. Lightly beat egg white with a fork in a medium bowl. Place breadcrumbs in a shallow glass dish. Hold each chicken breast half together and dip in the egg white, then dredge in the breadcrumbs. (Discard leftovers.)
5. Heat oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add chicken breasts; cook until browned on one side, about 2 minutes. Place the chicken, browned-side up, on the prepared baking sheet. Bake until the chicken is no longer pink in the center or until an instant-read thermometer registers 170°F, about 20 minutes.
Goat Cheese-&-Olive-Stuffed Chicken Breasts Nutrition Information
Per serving: 235 calories; 7 g fat (2 g sat, 3 g mono); 72 mg cholesterol; 10 g carbohydrate; 31 g protein; 1 g fiber; 248 mg sodium.1/2 Carbohydrate Serving
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