Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Parisian Eggs



I found this is the newspaper. I googled to find other recipes for "Parisian Eggs" and honestly I couldn't find that recipe name out there. However, I've eaten this many times and it is excellent. As a bonus it is quick to make.

Parisian Eggs
Serves 1

Ingredients:
2 eggs
1 or 2 strips of bacon
shredded swiss cheese

Directions:
NOTE: You need a skillet that can be put in the oven on broil - no plastic handles!
  1. Pre-heat oven broiler (I use low broil.)
  2. Cook bacon in skillets on medium to medium-high until it becomes opaque but not fully cooked.
  3. Crack 2 eggs over the bacon and cook until whites are just opaque. (no clear parts)
  4. Sprinkle swiss on top of eggs. Be as generous as you like.
  5. Move skillet to oven on broil. Take out in 1-1 1/2 minutes promptly. Cheese should be just lightly browned. If you wait much longer the yellows will get too hard.
  6. Enjoy!

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Buttermilk Waffles



You can't beat buttermilk waffles for breakfast covered in blueberry or strawberry syrup. (Actually you can but we'll ignore that point for now.) You can use maple syrup if you want but I can't live without fruit syrup. So what's different about these waffles from all the rest... Well the corn meal gives it a very uniform yellow/gold appearance, it is crisp on the outside and moist on the inside like any good waffle should be. I tried them with semi-sweet chocolate chips to humor the kids and it worked. I just don't like cleaning the melted chocolate remnants from the waffle iron afterward. Enjoy!

Buttermilk Waffles
Based on a blog that I will credit when I find it again.
Serves 4

Ingredients:
3 cups All purpose flour
3 tablespoons corn meal
3/4 teaspoons salt
3/4 teaspoons baking soda
3 eggs
3 cups buttermilk
6 tablespoons melted butter or oil

Optional: dried fruit, citrus zest, chocolate chips

Directions:
  1. Add all dry ingredients to a bowl and mix together.

  2. In a separate bowl, lightly beat eggs then add remaining wet ingredients and mix.

  3. Pour the wet mixture into the bowel of dry ingredients and stir until just mixed together.

  4. Cook according to waffle iron directions.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Bacon and Cheddar Quiche





This is a favorite at my house. Real men, women and children do eat quiche. (You'll have to be an 80s fan to get that.)

Bacon and Cheddar Quiche
Based on some recipe I found on the internet and didn't keep track of.
Serves 4-6

Ingredients:

pre-made pie shell - (go fresh if you like)
1-1.5 cups cooked bacon (crumbled)
4 large eggs
1.5 cups half-and-half or whole milk
1/4 teaspoons dried leaf thyme
1/8 teaspoon pepper
1 cup shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
1-1 1/2 cups sliced mushrooms

Directions:
  1. Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees.
  2. Line pie pan with pre-made pie shell or fresh if you like and bake for 8 minutes.
  3. Remove from oven and put shredded cheddar and sliced mushrooms at the bottom.
  4. Beat eggs by hand and add milk/half&half, thyme, and pepper.
  5. Pour into pie shell.
  6. Evenly distribute crumbled bacon on top of egg mixture.
  7. Bake for 45 minutes or up to an hour until the center is firm.

Dry Rubbed Flank Steak

Some days you just don't have time to marinate the steak for a couple hours. This rub is extremely flavorful and can be done within 10 minutes of putting on the grill.
Dry Rubbed Flank Steak
Based on Food Network - Dan Smith and Steve McDonagh
Ingredients:
1 tablespoon ground mustard
1 tablespoon onion powder
1 tablespoon garlic powder
1 tablespoon salt
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon allspice
2-3 pounds flank steak
Directions:
  1. Pre-heat the grill to high.
  2. Combine all spices in bowl.

  3. Rub on both sides of steak. Depending on size of steak you may only need half of spice mixture.

  4. Let site for 10 minutes.

  5. Grill for 4-5 minutes per side depending on desired doneness and steak size.

  6. Let rest for 10 minutes before slicing.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Chicken Cutlets Sauteed in Lemon



This is one of my families favorite recipes. It's easy and so tasty. You can also create variations - try substituting white white for lemon. For sides, mushrooms cooked in red wine or a spinach recipe and pasta. Don't over cook the chicken!

Chicken Cutlets Sauteed in Lemon
Based on Carol Barrow's recipe from her time in Tuscany
Serves 4+

Ingredients:
Chicken cutlets (half a large breast per person sliced until 1/3 to 1/2 inch think)
flour (enough to dust both sides of cutlets; whole wheat or all purpose)
salt
pepper
butter (and/or olive oil)
lemon

Directions:
  1. Prepare your chicken cutlets by slicing in half or thirds depending on thickness of breast. Also cut breast in half lengthwise.
  2. Salt and pepper the cutlets then dredge both sides in flour.
  3. Melt butter in large skillet on medium high heat. The amount varies by the number of cutlets. 1/2 stick may be fine for 2 breasts. Just monitor how dry the bottom of the pan is and add more as needed. To make it a little healthier I use olive oil with a few pats (couple teaspoons) of butter for flavor. Because they cutlets are thin they cook pretty fast.
  4. Watch for the flesh to turn white with just a little pink on top and the bottom side to lightly browned.
  5. Flip them over for another minute or two. Immediately after flipping squeeze the lemon on the cutlets. I use the juice of one lemon for 2-3 breasts. You don't want to overcook or they will be dry.
  6. Serve!

Italian Stuffed Zucchini





This recipe is based on a traditional Italian recipe. I am not a big fan of typical squash and zucchini recipes so I am always searching for creative and interesting ways of preparing them. It gets back to the CSA where you get a box of veggies every week and you've got to figure out what to do with them and enjoy it. The good news is I've found lots of good uses for each.

This one is really good. The kids don't like the zucchini shell so in the second picture you'll see I've chopped up the zucchini with the filling and cooked it in a small round casserole dish. Sometimes I even do that for myself.

Italian Stuffed Zucchini
Based on Closet Cooking Blog recipe
Serves 4-5

Ingredients:
2-3 large zucchini
2 tablespoons olive oil
2-3 Italian sausage, mild or hot (remove casings)
1 medium onion (chopped)
2 cloves garlic (minced)
2 tablespoons white wine
2 Roma tomatoes (diced)
1/2-1 teaspoon oregano
salt
pepper

1 tablespoon basil (chopped or 1/3 teaspoon dried)
1/2 cup mozzarella (shredded)
1/4 cup parmigiano reggiano (grated)

Directions:
  1. Slice zucchini in half and scoop out the middle with a spoon.
  2. Bake zucchini's at 400 while you cook in the skillet (assuming ~10-15 minutes).
  3. Chop up scooped zucchini and set aside.
  4. Brown sausage in skillet at med/hi.
  5. Add onion and garlic and cook until tender.
  6. Deglaze the bottom of the skillet with the white wine.
  7. Add chopped zucchini, tomato, oregano, salt and pepper to the skillet. Cook until little liquid remains.
  8. Take off heat, add basil and half of both cheeses.
  9. Remove  zucchinis from oven and stuff with the filling and top with remaining cheese.
  10. Return to oven and bake another 10-15 minutes until cheese is brown and zucchini is tender.
  11. Take left over filling if there is any (I always have some) and put in small casserole dish and top with cheese.

Note: If you hate having to open a bottle of white wine just to squeeze out 2 tablespoons you may want to buy a four pack of white wine. If I want to drink white then I open the big bottle otherwise I use the little baby bottles.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Fusilli, Ham and Cheddar Cheese






Sometimes a kids dish can be transported into a great dish for more sophisticated palates. Think of it a meeting of the minds or compromise with the rug rats that will satisfy everyone. Pick any pasta - even plain old macaroni noodles. I like Fusilli Bucati - 'bucati' means the noodle is hollow. For cheese - go crazy and use white cheddar, or any other variation. I am biased towards lots of flavor - so the sharper the better. For the mushrooms, the regular white variety works but so does shiitake, etc.


Fusilli, Ham and Cheddar Cheese

Serves 4 to 6

Ingredients:
8-16 ounces fusilli bucati (or other pasta)
1 8-ounce package of sharp cheddar (shredded)
8 ounce diced ham
8 ounce mushrooms (sliced)
1 10 3/4 ounce can cream of mushroom soup
1/2 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup milk

Directions:
  1. Cook pasta according to directions.
  2. Stir it all together.
  3. Pour into lightly greased baking dish (2.5-3 quart).
  4. Bake at 375 degrees for 25 minutes.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Tuna Puttanesca with Fusilli



Pasta alla Puttanesca means something like "Pasta the way a whore would make it" and pays respects to the whores of Naples. There are many legends of how this came to be. One is that the name refers to the sauce's "hot, spicy flavor and pungent smell". Alternatively the dish was offered to prospects at a low price to entice them. However, the simplest answer is often the best one - that its name came from the fact that it was a quick, cheap meal to nourish the prostitutes' soul between customers.

For the diced tomatoes I like it best when I can find Muir Glen Fire roasted diced tomatoes but others will suffice.

Tuna Puttanesca with Fusilli
Adapted from a cooking class which adapted from Cooks Illustrated April 2002
Serves 4

Ingredients:
2 tablespoons olive oil
3-6 cloves of garlic (minced) (to taste)
0 to 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes (to taste)
28 oz can diced tomatoes (drained with liquid reserved)
2 cans tuna in olive oil (flaked)
2 tablespoons capers (rinsed)
1/2 cup kalamata olives (sliced or chopped)
Minced Fresh Italian Parsley leaves or dried
Parmesan cheese (Parmigiano-Reggiano if available) 

Directions:
  1. Heat olive oil over medium heat; add garlic, red pepper flakes until garlic is golden (not brown)
  2. Add tomatoes, capers, olives, flaked tuna and stim. Simmer until thickened.
  3. Add more  reserved liquid as needed and salt to taste. 
  4. Toss with pasta. Garnish with parsley and parmesan.