Archive for the ‘basics’ Category

Ringing In The New Year With Cabbage Rolls

Friday, January 15th, 2010

 

Last year I showed you one of my non traditional dishes for the New Year. I threw together a mean slow cooked black eyed pea and ham dish.

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Black Eyed Peas with Ham Hocks

This year I followed family tradition and made cabbage rolls smothered in sauerkraut. (My Grandmother would have been proud!)

I would love to give you a recipe for this dish, but the technique has been passed down from generation to generation in my family. It’s more of a technique than a recipe.

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I start with a large head of cabbage. I cut the core out and boil it on the stove until I can start peeling the individual leaves off. If I’ve learned anything from my family of cooks; it is to season every layer of a dish. I started with the cabbage water by adding a generous amount of Bells Seasoning. If you haven’t ever used Bells, I highly suggest finding yourself a box. Amazing stuff!

 

 

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As the cabbage cooks, I remove the leaves as the soften and set them aside to drain and cool. The leaves at the core of the cabbage are much too small to use for stuffing. I hate to waste anything so I take the left over cabbage and dice it up and throw it in with my sauerkraut.

 

 

 

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After the cabbage is cooked I get my stuffing and meats ready. For the stuffing I use freshly ground pork and beef. For the casserole there is pork country ribs and fresh handmade sausages. (See…I missed a string in the photo to the left)

To make the stuffing I combine the ground meats with a half cup of uncooked rice, one whole egg, sautéed onions and my house seasoning, Cavenders. I stuff and roll the cabbage rolls and begin the process of putting together the casserole.

 

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To start the casserole throw in a thin layer of sauerkraut into the bottom of the pan. Then you can start layering your meats and cabbage rolls. I season each layer as I go. Just a little kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper. When you get to the top layer, add your rinsed and drained sauerkraut. One day I will learn to crock my own sauerkraut, but until then I use bagged sauerkraut. Please don’t insult your good cooking by using the canned variety. It sucks! After you have the sauerkraut on top, pour on a cup of vegetable or chicken broth then sprinkle it liberally with brown sugar, fresh dill, house seasoning and fresh garlic cloves. Cover the casserole with a heavy lid and cook at 275 degrees for several hours. Normally I let them slow cook for 4 to 5 hours. This dish is perfect for the crock pot. Unfortunately all of my crock pots (4 of them) have been claimed by my soap making studio. They are fantastic for making hot process soaps!

I really wish that I had a photo of the finished dish to show you. As soon as the cabbage rolls came out of the oven I went to get my camera. When I got back to the kitchen the cabbage rolls were being devoured by the hungry folks waiting for dinner. Here’s a photo of right before they go in the oven. Still beautiful, aren’t they?

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Moon Bread

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

 

There is no way that I can take any credit for this recipe. I’ve adapted it slightly to my tastes, but the basic recipe stays the same.  I found this recipe on Recipezaar many years ago. The original recipe is called Beer Bread and was posted by Gerald Norman way back in 2003.

Moon bread is a quick bread. It is so simple that it can be mixed and baked right in the same pan. All you need are 4 simple ingredients. Self-rising flour, sugar, beer and butter. It doesn’t get any easier than that.

My version is called Moon Bread for two specific reasons. When making the Beer Bread I always use Blue Moon Belgian White Ale for the beer and before baking I take a fork and texture the top of the bread. Texturing the bread before baking makes it come out of the oven looking like the moon, covered with craters, earning my version the name of Moon Bread.

This bread is wonderful served along with your favorite soup. It toasts beautifully and is perfect for a Ploughman’s sandwich. I baked a loaf to specifically go with my Spinach Gnocchi Soup. There is nothing more soothing to the soul on a cold, rainy day that a bowl of thick, hearty soup and a fresh warm loaf of bread.

Seriously, this bread will take you all of 5 minutes to mix up and about 50 minutes to bake. You can have a warm loaf of bread on the table in under an hour. How great is that?! One word of advice before I share the recipe with you. You must (and I really mean it!) sift your flour before measuring. If you do not want to sift your flour, then please do not make this bread. If you don’t sift then your results will resemble a brick and nothing close to bread. Now that you have been warned (with love, of course) here’s the recipe…

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Moon Bread

3 cups self rising flour
1/4 cup sugar
1 (12 ounce) bottle Blue Moon Pale Ale
1/2 cup melted butter (1/4 cup will do just fine)

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
Mix dry ingredients and beer.
Pour into a greased loaf pan.
Pour melted butter over mixture.
Bake 1 hour, remove from pan and cool for at least 15 minutes.

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Do you have a favorite quick bread to share ?

Cheddar and Avocado Muffins

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

I had one of those weeks that just get away from you.  The kind that when Saturday night comes and you sit down and wonder where the days went.  One of the highlights of my week was getting some quality kitchen time to experiment with savory muffins.

I started with the fillings for my favorite sandwich. I love the combination of raw milk cheddar cheese and a juicy sweet onion served between two slices of fresh Italian bread. Next in line for a favorite sandwich is a nice ripe Haas avocado with crispy peppered bacon. These muffins combine the flavors of both sandwiches together. I was pleased with how well the flavors blended together. These muffins are perfect with a bowl of soup, your favorite salad or as a quick breakfast. I hope that you will enjoy them as much as I did.

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Cheddar Avocado Muffins

2 cups of flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 tablespoon honey
1 cup of cheddar cheese shredded
2 shallots, finely minced
6 slices of bacon
5 tablespoons butter, melted
1 egg
1 cup milk
1 ripe avocado, peeled and cut into small cubes
lemon juice
freshly ground black pepper

Toss the avocado cubes in lemon juice, set aside.
Mix together flour and baking powder in a large bowl.
Stir in the shredded cheese, pepper and shallots into the flour mixture. Mix well.
Chop the bacon finely and fry until crisp. Keep the bacon drippings, you will need them.
Add crisped bacon to the flour mixture, mix well.
Combine the butter, milk, bacon drippings, honey and egg together.
Stir avocado cubes into the milk mixture.
Add the milk mixture to the flour mixture.
Stir just long enough to combine.
Spoon into well greased muffin tins.
Bake at 375 degrees for 10-12 minutes.
Serve warm. No butter or toppings needed.

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What sandwich combination do you love that would make a great savory muffin?

Here’s Looking Forward to 2009

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

 

What is your “good luck” New Year’s Day food?

For my family it was always slow cooked sauerkraut and pork.

We would take a large pork roast, ham and sausages and smother them in sauerkraut, beef broth, garlic and brown sugar.

For years instead of the pork roast I would make cabbage rolls and smother them with the sauerkraut.

This  year I’ve thrown tradition out of the window. Okay…there is still pork and garlic involved, but those are the only two ingredients that made it into this year’s New Years Day meal.

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Take 2 leeks (whites only) and 4 carrots, roughly chop them and

 

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throw in the crock pot with 2 cups of ham broth and 2 cups of water

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add a ham hock and a small bag of dried black eyed peas. Throw in about 5 cloves of garlic and some freshly ground black pepper.  Cook on high for at least 6 to 7 hours.

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Serve over sour cream cornbread and garnish with chopped raw red onions.

Here’s to a fantastic New Year! May it bring you love, joy and hope.

It’s Pot Pie Weather!

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

 

Once in a while I give Phil a chance to pick what we are going to have for dinner.I’ll normally give him a call in the afternoon and run some ideas past him. If I go to him for ideas and ask him what he wants for dinner the standard response is “food!”  This time I helped him make his mind up. I gave him the choice between beef burgundy or chicken pot pie. There was pure silence on the other end of the phone. I thought that I dropped the call. Then I hear him say…”oooooo…pot pie!” You know how it is, when you can tell that someone is smiling when they are talking to you on the phone? Well by his response I could tell that he was grinning from ear to ear. So, chicken pot pie for it was.

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Chicken Pot Pie

2 medium potatoes, skins on, diced

1/2 large sweet onion, chopped

3 stalks celery diced

3 carrots, peeled and diced

1/3 cup melted butter

2/3 cup flour

1 3/4 cups chicken broth

1/4 cup white wine

1 cup half and half

1/4 teaspoon fresh ground pepper

1 teaspoon fresh thyme

4 cups chicken, cooked and chopped

pastry for a 2 crust pie

Saute vegetables in butter for 10 minutes. Add flour to vegetable mixture and cook for 3 minutes. Stirring constantly.

Mix together wine, broth and half and half and stir into vegetable mixture.

Cook over medium heat until thickened.

Stir in black pepper, thyme and chicken.

Pour mixture into the bottom pie shell. Top with second pie shell and seal edges, cut slits in the top pastry to allow steam to escape.

Bake at 400 degrees for 40-45 minutes. Or until pastry is golden and filling is bubbly.

Cool for 15 minutes before slicing.

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I admit, not the best looking food in the world. But this simple comfort food has to be one of the best tasting dishes around. Who doesn’t love an overstuffed pot pie straight from the oven?