Friday, November 29, 2013

Sweet Potato Puree with bacon


  • 6 sweet potatoes or yams-cubed
  • water
  • salt and pepper
  • 6 tbs maple syrup
  • 3/4 cup of  orange juice
  • 1 stick of Butter
  • 1/2 cup of cream
  • one package of bacon-cut into small chunks and cooked till crispy

Place the sweet potato (or yam) cubes in seasoned water (salt and pepper) with just enough water to cover the pieces. Add in the maple syrup. Simmer over medium heat until the potatoes are soft and the water has reduced. Then drain the potatoes but reserve the liquid. Put the potatoes, butter, and cream in a blender or food processor and blend till smooth. If it ends up a little thicker than you like, add in some of the reserved liquid. Pour this mixture into a baking dish and top with the crispy bacon. To make this more like your traditional Thanksgiving sweet potato dish, you can top with marshmallows and bake at 350 till the marshmallows puff up and brown a bit on top.


The salt from the bacon works really well with the sweet from the potato cooked with that little bit of syrup. 




If you want to make it more of a soup to make into a main dish, add more of the reserved liquid or cream in and serve with rolls or crackers. 

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Cranberry Apple Salad-AKA the Pink Stuff


  • 5-6  granny smith apples-grated
  • 1 bag frozen cranberries, chopped finely in a food processor or blender
  • 1/2-1 bag mini marshmallows
  •  1 pint of cream-whipped with 4 tablespoons of sugar

Start by whipping the cream and sugar in a mixer on high. Once it has thickened to whipped cream, add in the apples, cranberry and marshmallow. Stir well and serve. 

If you want this dish a little sweeter, ad more marshmallows and more sugar to the cream. 

This dish freezes well and is also quite delicious slightly frozen. We serve it at Thanksgiving as a fruit salad but it would do for a dessert item as well. 





Friday, November 22, 2013

Beef soup


  • beef shank- about 1.25 lbs
  • 2 cans beef broth
  • 2 cups water
  • 1.5 Tbs. soy sauce
  • 1 cup diced carrot
  • 1/4 onion diced
  • 1/2 package udon noodles

Start by seasoning and searing both sides of the beef shank and sauteing the onion and carrot in a large pot. Once everything starts to brown, add in the water and stock and soy sauce. Simmer over medium low heat for about five hours. If the liquid reduces too much, add a little more water. About halfway through, cut the meat into large chucks and let it keep simmering. Before serving, remove any large pieces of fat and the bone from the pot and start breaking up the meat. It should just fall apart. Then add in the udon and cook for how long the package directions say.


Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Creamy Clam Chowder


  • 4 red or gold potatoes-diced into small bite size pieces
  • 1 potato minced in a food processor until very fine
  • 1 onion, minced finely
  • 2 cans clams with the juice
  • 1/2 package bacon, cut into small pieces plus half a slice
  • 1/2 pint of cream
Start by sauteing the onion to  in your medium pot with a little bit of oil. Once they have just started to brown, add in the potatoes, clams and juice, and enough water that everything floats a bit. 

Simmer on low for at least 1 hour or until the potatoes are cooked through and the liquid has thickened. Stir often. The finely minced potatoes help thicken the soup without using a flour base. Place the half a slice of bacon in the soup to help give the soup a bacon flavor without letting the bacon you will eat get soggy. 



While the soup is simmering, cook the bacon until crispy and set it to dry out of the oil on a paper towel off to the side. 



Discard the piece of bacon that has been simmering in the soup. Then add in the half pint of cream and stir until the soup is heated through again. 



Serve the soup and top with bacon. Butter crackers or rolls make a great addition.







Friday, November 15, 2013

Chicken Florentine

Ingredients
 Stuffing:

  • 1 bunch of spinach- remove the stems and chop the spinach inter somewhat smaller pieces. 
  • 1 cup of mozzarella cheese
  • 1 tablespoon of garlic
Start by quickly blanching the spinach in boiling water. Have a large pot of salted water boiling and using a metal colander, immerse the spinach in the water for about 10 seconds and immediately immerse it in ice water and set to drain. When it has drained, mix the three ingredients together and set aside. 



 Next, take the chicken breast and cup off the end that starts to taper in and get thinner so you only have a roughly rectangular piece of the same thickness. Do this for both breast pieces. Then start to slice the breast in half but don't cut quite all the way through and lay it flat as a larger rectangle. Put it in between two pieces of cellophane and use the flat side of a meat hammer to pound it thin. Season the inside with a little salt and pepper.

 Then place about half the filling on one half of the thin chicken...
 And fold the other half over the top and season both sides of the outside.
 Place it in a pan on medium heat with a little oil in at and cover. Cook for about 7 minutes on each side making sure it cooks all the way through to the center of the meat. Try to avoid opening the chicken or the filling will start to ooze out. A little will anyway and that's okay.
 Finally, slice the chicken and serve topped with hollandaise sauce and a side of roasted asparagus.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Hollandaise Sauce


  • 4 egg yolks
  • 4 tbs. butter-melted
  • 1 tsp cayenne pepper
  • juice of half a lemon or about 1-2 Tbs. lemon juice.
Start by heating some water in a pot and putting the egg yolk and lemon juice in a bowl that won't melt. Metal bowls with a rounded bottom work best. Keep the water over medium heat (simmer not rolling boil) and put the bowl over the top. Keep whisking for 5-7 minutes. The eggs with slowly cook and start to thicken. Scrape the edges often.


 Next, add in the butter slowly. Keep whisking until the butter is fully incorporated into the sauce.

Finally add in the cayenne pepper and serve over things like poached eggs, asparagus, salmon or my favorites, Chicken Florentine (seen below) and Eggs Benedict (recipes coming soon). 



Tip 1: If your eggs start to scramble or your sauce gets a bit lumpy or grainy, adding in a fresh egg yolk can help smooth it out a little bit. Just make sure to cook it a bit longer. 

Tip 2: don't just throw away the egg white. They can be frozen or kept for other uses like meringue cookies or baked Alaska. 

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Oven Roasted Asparagus

Start by trimming the ends off  a bunch on thin asparagus. Line a pan with tinfoil and spray it with pan spray. Then drizzle a little olive oil over them and sprinkle some slat and pepper. Roll them around until they are evenly coated. Bake at 375 for 15-20 minutes or until the tops are just starting to get crisp. This makes a great side dish. If you use thicker asparagus, you might want to peel some of the outer layer off the bottom of the stem, it tends to get a little woody. Also, the cooking time may take longer.