Thursday, August 28, 2008

My 100 Foods List

There is a lot of 100 list floating around on blogs lately. The 100 things you should eat if you are an omnivore, the 100 things you should eat if you are a vegetarian, the 100 things you want to accomplish in 1001 days.

So in that zeitgeist here is my 100 Foods I Want To Make:

Yeast Breads
~French Bread - completed
~Italian Bread - completed
~White Sandwich Bread - completed
~Parker House Rolls
~Popovers
~Donuts - completed
~Sourdough Bread - completed
~Bagels - completed
~Croissants
~Brioche
~Focaccia

Cakes
~German Chocolate
~Layered cake - completed
~Boston Cream Pie
~Cheesecake
~Flourless Cake
~Yellow cake with Chocolate Butter Cream Frosting - completed
~Cake with fondant

Cookies/Bars
~Dish Pan Cookies
~Peanut Butter Cookies - completed
~Snickerdoodles
~Brownies - completed
~Oatmeal Cookies
~Shortbread
~Palmiers
~Biscotti

Desserts
~Crème Bruleè
~Vanilla Pudding
~Chocolate Mousse
~Ice Cream - completed
~Coeur a la Crème
~Semifredo
~Sorbet - completed
~Truffles - completed
~Petit Fours
~Tiramisu - completed
~Marshmallows
~Fudge
~Caramels

Pastries
~Cheese Danish
~Éclairs
~Cream Puffs
~Turnovers
~Baklava

Pies
~Peach Pie - FAIL, will attempt again
~Double crust pie
~Lattice topped pie
~Cream Pie
~French Apple Tart
~Pecan Pie
~Tarte Tatin
~Mixed Fruit Tart

Ethnic Food
~Pad Thai
~Homemade noodles
~Canoli
~Refried Beans - completed
~Gyros
~Paella
~Summer Rolls
~Hummus
~Chicken Curry
~Sushi
~Potstickers
~Aioli
~Egg rolls
~Crab Rangoon
~Chicken Satay

Seafood
~Live lobster
~Clams
~Oysters Rockefeller
~Shrimp Scampi
~Smoked Salmon
~Crab Cakes

Entrees
~Beef Wellington
~Rack of Lamb
~Ribs
~Eggs Benedict - completed
~Homemade Sausage
~Chicken Condon Bleu
~Chicken and Noodles
~Liver and Onions
~Soufflé
~Pasta Carbonara
~Beef and Noodles - completed
~Lasagna - completed
~Quiche - completed
~Shepherd’s Pie
~Pizza - completed
~Whole Turkey
~Roasted Chicken
~Turkey Burgers

Soup and sides
~Minestrone
~Potato and Leek Soup - completed
~Stuffing - completed
~Beef Broth
~Vegetable Soup
~Gratin - completed
~Twice-Baked Potatoes
~Potato Skins - completed
~Cheese Straws

Updated: What good is it to have a list without a deadline? Well, this baby is good for one year, give a take a day. By Sept 1, I want to have finished everything on this list.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Eggs and 'Taters 2

I know I have eggs and 'taters already, but it is not the typical eggs and 'taters that The Good Husband eats. That version is a "low fat" version of this original recipe.

Cooking eggs and 'taters is really more about technique than anything else. It has taken me 6 years to finally master the 'taters so they are even in the same ballpark as The Good Grandma's 'taters. TGH was raised by TGG who made every single thing from scratch and also made eggs and 'taters better than anyone else.

You would think that frying 'taters wouldn't be all that hard, right? I mean you get those little "Southern Style Hash browns" or "Country Fries" when you go to any good diner (or after a night of drinking so heavily you will eat at Denny's). How hard can it be to cube and fry up some 'taters? Well, as it has taken me six years to finally get the 'taters how they should be, I can tell you that it is harder than it looks. Kinda like html code.

The trick to making 'taters the way TGH eats is to not really fry the 'taters. Seems odd, doesn't it? You mean you don't really fry your fried 'taters? Yes. Yes, I do.

See, I used to crank the heat up to high and wait for the cast iron skillet to get super hot and then I would fry those little suckers up until they were a deep golden brown and crunchy. But, alas, that was not the way TGH likes his eggs and 'taters. So after one weekend at TGG's I finally cracked the secret to good fried 'taters.

The trick is to keep the heat on medium and cover the skillet so that the 'taters sort of steam in the pan and only get slightly crunchy on the outside.

This is good for two reasons - 1.) It allows me to make the eggs in the same pan as soon as the 'taters are finished and 2.) I don't have to dirty up a different pan.

Before, when I would cook the 'taters on high, I couldn't cook the eggs in the same pan. If the heat is too high and you try to fry an egg, it will all bubble up and stick to the pan. You then can't flip the egg without breaking the yolk and ruining the whole dish.

But with cooking the 'taters on a lower heat and for a longer amount of time, you can just scoop out the 'taters and drop in the eggs.

So lesson learned on how to fry 'taters. Never did I think I would have to spend so much time perfecting something so easy as eggs and 'taters. But dish 1 out of 32,165,133,494 that TGG makes that I will have to learn to perfect.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Toast with Caramelized Sugar and Cinnamon

With all my French Bread leftover from the weekend, I decided to make a sweet treat. Lacking chocolate, the food I really craved, I decided to make cinnamon sugar toast. Not just cinnamon sugar toast, but, toast with caramelized sugar and cinnamon, pan toasted in butter. Oh heaven.


Ingredients:
3 slices thin slices French Bread
Butter (there is no such thing as too much)
Sugar (there is no such thing as too much)
Cinnamon (there is no such thing as too much)

Directions:
~In a medium cast iron skillet over medium heat, melt a pats of butter.


~Place the bread in the pan, allowing it to toast on each side for a few minutes.


~Sprinkle one side of the toast with cinnamon and sugar and flip it so that it will caramelize in the pan, about 1 to 2 minutes.


~Serve warm with a glass of milk or drizzle it with honey and enjoy with a cup of coffee.

recipe by: The Good Wife

The Good Wife Guide . . . to saving money

There are several things that TGH and I are trying to do to save money. One of the areas where we try to save is our grocery bill. There are several things that you can do that are small efforts that produce big results.

~Buy in bulk, especially meat. Look for family packs of meat and separate the meat into smaller, easier to use packages. Also, if you want to go organic, you might be able to find a local farm that will sell you a whole or half cow. Visit http://www.localharvest.org/ to find a farm near you. We are lucky enough to live rurally and have beef, chicken, lamb, pork and buffalo farms near us where we can buy meat. Dollar for dollar, we usually come out a head or break even in terms of saving money on meat.

~Buy in bulk for as many things as you can. Something that will save you money is buying cheese in blocks and then shredding it on your own. Buying blocks of cheese and shredding it can save me up to $3 dollars for shredded cheese. You can freeze the cheese, up to six months, so stock up.

The Good Wife Tip: Make sure the cheese is very very cold, if not partially frozen, before you shred it. I used my Kitchen Aid Stand Mixer with the shredder attachment to shred the cheese. The sharp cheddar became a little clumpy since the shredder had warmed. But I just unclumped it as best I could, stuck it in the freezer for an hour and then unclumped it again.

~Use coupons and look for stores that will double or triple the coupons. There are usually two, sometimes three, stores that I will go to every week. I try and go on Saturday morning since there are less crowds and it is usually the last day for sales. I check the ad to see what is on sale and then I check to see what coupons I have. There are some websites that do this for you (The Coupon Mom and The Grocery Game) so it might be the easiest way to start.

~Always have a grocery list with you when you shop. I like to sort my list by aisle (I have shopped at the same 2 stores long enough that I know what is in what aisle). I sort my list by aisle and then any item I have a coupon for, I star. I paperclip my coupons to the back of my list so I am ready to go when I get to the checkout.

~Meal plan. Using the coupons and the sales flyer, I try to come up with all the meals we will have that week. Most people and some shows (Quick Fix Meals with Robin Miller) suggest that you eat the same kind of protein three different ways during the week but TGH and I would get burn out. So every day of the week we have a different protein: Monday - Beef, Tuesday - Pork, Wednesday - Chicken, Thursday - Pasta, Friday - Veggie/Seafood, Saturday - FREE(we usually eat out this night) and Sunday - Chicken. I find that this way helps to eliminate the feeling of eating the same thing all the time.

~The freezer is your friend. I am too scared to jar and can but freezing your veggies are a good way to save. Buy in bulk when summer produce is cheap and freeze the extras. Some good sites for more tips and hints to what you can freeze and how: http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/nutrition/DJ0555.html

http://farmgal.tripod.com/Freezerbasics.html

Thursday, August 21, 2008

I'm a winner!

Joelen of Joelen's Culinary Adventrues hosts blogging events throughout the month and encouraged me to enter August's Tantalizing Tomatoes blogging event and I WON!

Woot! Woot!

This is like the time I won tickets to Sesame Street Live and a backstage pass to see Bird Bird, but because the usher sat us in the wrong section, we didn't get to go backstage. But this was way better than that.

Thanks Joelen!!!

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

French Bread

I saw this recipe over at the Brown Eyed Baker and thought I would give it a go. I have never made bread before but the recipe seemed simple enough. Even though it took about 5 hours to make, most of it is resting time for the bread. Mine didn't turn out as pretty as hers but I think I did very well for a first time bread maker.

I need to work on my slashing. I did it a little too deep so it is not so pretty. Also, my bread didn't have as many air bubbles in it as it should have but overall for my first bread making attempt, it was a complete success. I didn't burn it; you could eat it and it actually tastes like it is supposed to. So with practice, maybe I can make it better.


I halved this recipe and made only two loaves of bread.


Pain Ordinaire Careme (A Daily Loaf)
(Source: Bernard Clayton’s New Complete Book of Breads)

Yield: 4 baguettes, boules, or couronnes.

Ingredients:
6 cups bread or unbleached flour, approximately
2 packages dry yeast
2½ cups hot water (120-130 degrees F)
2 teaspoons each salt and water

Baking Sheet or Pans: 1 baking sheet, teflon or greased and sprinkled with cornmeal, or 4 baguette pans, greased.

By Hand or Mixer: (10 mins)
The early part of this preparation, beating a batter, can be done by an electric mixer. However, don’t overload a light mixer with this thick batter. If by hand, stir vigorously for an equal length of time.

Measure 3 or 4 cups of flour into the mixing bowl and add the yeast and hot water. The mixer flat beater or whisk should run without undue strain. The batter will be smooth and pull away from the sides as the gluten develops. It may also try to climb up the beaters and into the motor. If it does, push it down with a rubber scraper. Mix for 10 minutes. When about finished, dissolve the salt in the water and add to the batter. Blend for 30 seconds or more.

Kneading (10 mins):
If the machine has a dough hook, continue with it and add additional flour, ¼ cup at a time, until the dough has formed under the hook and cleans the sides of the bowl. If it is sticky and clings, add sprinkles of flour. Knead for 10 minutes.

If by hand, add additional flour to the beaten batter, ½ cup at a time, stirring first with a utensil and then working by hand. When the dough is shaggy but a solid mass, turn onto a work surface and begin kneading with an aggressive push-turn-fold motion. If the dough is sticky, toss down sprinkles of flour. Break the kneading rhythm occasionally by throwing the dough down hard against the countertop - an excellent way to encourage the development of the dough.

First Rising (2 hours):
Place the dough in a large greased bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and leave at room temperature for 2 hours. The dough will more than treble in volume - and may even be pushing against the plastic covering.

(If prepared with a new fast-rising yeast and at the recommended higher temperatures, reduce the rising times by about half.)

Second Rising (1½ hours):
Turn back the plastic wrap and turn the dough onto the work surface to knead briefly, about 3 minutes.

Return the dough to the bowl and re-cover with wax paper. Allow to rise to more than triple its volume, about 1½ hours.

Shaping (10 mins):
The dough will be light and puffy. Turn it onto the floured work surface and punch it down. Don’t be surprised if it pushes back, for it is quite resilient.
Divide the dough into as many pieces as you wish loaves. One-quarter (10 oz) of this recipe will make a baguette 22″ long and 3″ to 4″ in diameter.

Allow pieces of dough to rest for 5 minutes before shaping.

For boules or round loaves, shape the pieces into balls. Place in cloth-lined baskets (bannetons) or position directly on the baking sheet. For baguettes, roll and lengthen each dough piece under your palms to 16″ to 20″ , and 3″ to 4″ in diameter. Place in a pan or on a baking sheet or in the folds of a long cloth (couche).

This loaf’s characteristic couronne or “crown” can be made in several ways. One is to flatten the piece of dough, press a hole through the center with your thumb, and enlarge the hole with your fingers. Another is to roll a long strand 18″ to 24″ and curl into a circle, overlapping and pushing together the ends. Yet a third way is to take 2 or 3 shorter lengths of dough and join them together in a circle, not overlapping top and bottom but pressing the ends together side by side into a uniform pattern - this one will be irregular but attractive.

Third rising (1 hour):
Cover the loaves with a cloth, preferably of wool, to allow air to reach the loaves and to form a light crust. Leave at room temperature until the dough has risen to more than double its size, about 1 hour.

Preheat:
Before preheating the oven to 450 degrees F (very hot) 20 minutes before baking, place a broiler pan on the floor of the oven or bottom rack so it will be there later. Five minutes before baking, pour 1 cup hot water into the hot pan. Be careful of the burst of steam - it can burn. I use a long-handled cup to reach into the oven when I pour.

Baking (450 degrees F/25-30 mins):
Carefully move the loaves in baskets and in couches to the baking sheet. Make diagonal cuts down the lengths of the long loaves and tic-tac-toe designs on the boules.

Place on the middle shelf of the oven.

The loaves are done when a golden brown, 25 to 30 minutes. Turn one loaf over and if the bottom crust sounds hard and hollow when tapped, the loaf is done.

(If using a convection oven, reduce heat 50 degrees.)

Final step:
Place on a rack to cool.

recipe from: Brown Eyed Baker

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Poll Results

The poll is now closed and the results are in. The favorite thing about summer, in a landslid, is the days are longer. That is by far my favorite thing about summer. Where I live, it stays light out until 8 or 8:30. It makes for eating dinner on the patio so easy and fun.

Thanks everyone that voted!

Popcorn

One of my favorite snacks is popcorn. I have never been a fan of microwave popcorn so I learned how to make popcorn the old fashioned way - on the stove. The great thing about making popcorn on the stove is that you can flavor it a ton of different ways. My current favorite is Parmesan popcorn. I also like white popcorn better than yellow popcorn and always use white popcorn kernels.

Parmesan Popcorn
Ingredients:
3 tablespoons canola or vegetable oil
1/2 cup white popcorn kernels
2 tablespoons butter
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup Parmesan cheese

Directions
:
~Heat the oil in a large pot with a lid set over medium-high heat. I use my heavy bottom Dutch Oven.

~Pour in popcorn kernels and sprinkle with the salt. As soon as the kernels start to pop, shake the pan back and forth across the burner constantly until the popping slows down. Listen until the pops are about 2 seconds apart, remove from the heat and pour into a serving bowl.

~Add the butter to the pan and allow it to melt. Pour the melted butter over the popcorn and toss to coat. Add the Parmesan cheese to the hot popcorn and toss to coat. Serve warm.

Variations:
Minus the Parmesan cheese, the previous is my basic popcorn recipe. All the variations use it as a base and the different seasonings should be added to the popcorn after it has popped but is still warm.

Spicy Cowboy Popcorn
Ingredients:
1 recipe The Good Wife basic popcorn
1/2 tablespoon chili powder
1 teaspoon cumin powder
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1/4 cup pepper jack cheese

Directions:
~Pop popcorn according to recipe above but do not add the melted butter to the popped popcorn.

~Melt the 2 tablespoons of butter in a small bowl. Add the chili, cumin and garlic powder to the butter and stir to combine. Pour over the popcorn and toss to coat. Add the pepper jack cheese and serve warm.

Very Italian Popcorn
Ingredients:
1 recipe The Good Wife basic popcorn
3 teaspoons dried oregano
1 teaspoon dried basil
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
1/2 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 teaspoon dried rosemary
1/4 cup Parmesan cheese

Directions:
~Pop popcorn according to recipe above but do not add the melted butter to the popped popcorn.

~Melt the 2 tablespoons of butter in a small bowl. Add all the seasonings to the butter and stir to combine. Pour over the popcorn and toss to coat. Add the Parmesan cheese and serve warm.
recipes by: the good wife

Friday, August 15, 2008

Ingredient of the Week . . . Corn

The ingredient I choose this week is corn. I love corn. I think I could eat it everyday. But regular old corn can get boring. So the two dishes I made this week were Grilled Corn and Scalloped Corn.

Grilled Corn
Grilled corn is really simple. Just take an ear of fresh corn on the cob and drizzle it with oil or butter, salt, pepper and then grill until charred. Leave the husk on the corn when you grill it. Just peel back the husk, remove the silk and then spread with oil or butter.

The great thing about grilled corn is that you can season it a ton of different ways. You can rub some crushed garlic and cumin on it, grill it and then top with lime juice and Parmesan cheese. Or you could use some rosemary, thyme, garlic and lemon juice.

recipe by: The Good Wife

Scalloped Corn
Ingredients:
1/2 cup chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter
1 package frozen whole kernel corn, thawed
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 can cream-style corn
1 cup milk
3/4 cup coarsely crushed rich round crackers (about 20 crackers)
1/2 cup shredded cheddar cheese

Directions:
~In a medium saucepan cook onion in butter until tender. Add in thawed corn and salt. Remove from heat.

~In a large bowl stir together the eggs, cream-style corn, milk, and crushed crackers. Stir in the corn and onion mixture. Transfer to an greased 2-quart baking dish.

~Bake, uncovered, in a 325 degree F oven for 35 to 40 minutes or until center appears set. Top with cheese. Let stand for about 15 minutes before serving.

recipe modified from: better homes and gardens

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Trip to the State Fair

Every year The Good Husband and I go to the State Fair. And every year I act like Templeton the Rat. For the last few years, though we have been taking The Good Niece with us, who is five.

When you have a 5 year old with you, you get to see different parts of the fair then what two adults would normally see. This includes a lot of animals, mostly baby animals.

Chicks, a five day old calf and sheep

Pigs, horse and a sleeping goat
A sheep getting shorn, sheep in coats and yes, a life sized cow made entirely out of butter

But there is food at the fair, and arguably, it is the only reason to go. The first kind of food is award winning food.

Tomatoes, lettuce and a farmer's basket

Coffee cake, peach pie and German chocolate

And now for the great, mostly fried things, TGH, TGN and I had.
Pork skins, funnel cake and corn dogs.
Mini donut goodness


Tzatziki chicken, a fried snickers and a lemon shake-up to wash it all down.

Just to make sure you know you are in the Midwest - airbrush t-shirts, the God Mobile and Fried anything

I think TGN had a great time
Thank god the State Fair is only once a year. We need all that time to flush the grease out of our system, forget how hot it was, forget how much the pig barn smelled and how much money we spend. See you next year, butter cow!

Friday, August 8, 2008

Sweet Coconut Jasmine Rice

Since I had a lot of Thai basil from the Farmer's Market, I thought I would make Pad Thai. I looked up a recipe and made a grocery list and that's when I discovered there are little to no ingrdients at my grocery store to make Pad Thai. But I did find a package mix that said Pad Thai and I bought it. And it sucked. Big Time. Oh well, lesson learned - only have Thai food at a Thai resturaunt.

The good thing to come out of it though, was I made a killer dessert; sweet coconut Jasmine Rice. Coconut milk came up more than once in a recipe search of "Thai basil". I think it is all the curry you can make with coconut milk and Thai basil. But I wanted somthing sweet.


Ingredients:
1 cup Jasmine rice
1 can of coconut milk
10-12 Thai basil leaves, chopped
5-6 mint leaves, chopped
2 tablespoons sugar

Directions:
~Combine one cup of water and one cup of coconut milk with one cup of Jasmine rice and place in a pot over high heat. Once the mixture comes to a boil, cover with a tight-fitting lid and reduce the heat to low.

~Shimmer for 20 minutes. Do not lift the lid during the cooking process.

~Remove from heat and fluff with a fork.

~To serve, combine one cup of the cooked rice with the remaining coconut milk (about 2/3 a cup). Mix in the mint and basil and top with the sugar.

recipe by: The Good Wife

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Ingredient of the Week . . . Tomatoes

I thought I would start a new feature and highlight a certain ingredient each week, using it in two different ways. This week tomatoes are the highlight.

This is a nice salad for summer since there is no cooking. You can also add sliced cucumbers as well, but I didn't. This recipe makes enough for me to take to lunch for 2 days.

Panzanella (Bread Salad)

Ingredients:
1 loaf of good white bread, I used a sourdough bread bowl, cubed
1 large tomato, diced
1/2 large red onion, diced
1 80z fresh mozzarella, cubed
1 handful Thai basil, chopped
Zest of one lemon

Directions:

~Toast the bread if you wish. Combine all the ingredients, through the lemon zest and toss to combine.

~Top with lemon zest. You can also top the salad with any olive and vinegar dressing.


My mom used to make these when I was a kid, but she never really had a good track record of not giving me food poisoning, so I didn't like them then. I remember them being really really tart. But these were nice and mild and not tart at all. Overall, they were really good.

Fried Green Tomatoes

Ingredients:
2 medium green tomatoes
1/4 cup flour
Salt and Pepper

Directions:

~Slice the tomatoes into 4 or 5 slices each.

~Sprinkle with salt and let sit for 2 minutes.

~Combine flour and 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper

~Coat the tomatoes in the flour and transfer with a cast iron skillet with 1 inch of canola oil, over medium high heat.

~Fry the tomatoes 2 to 3 minutes on each side until golden. Drain them on a paper plate and serve hot.

recipes by: The Good Wife

**UPDATE** Joelen of Joelen's Culinary Adventures suggested I submit these recipes to her August Adventures Tomato blogging event. Thanks for the suggestion Joelen!

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Peach Pie or Proof Why I Don't Bake

Since The Good Husband loves peaches and I bought some nice Calhoun peaches at the Farmer's Market, I thought I would make a pie. I love making pies but I always make kinds I don't like to eat. Something about making the dough and crimping it and browning the crust are fun to me. Here is how the pie looked out of the oven.

Looks nice, doesn't it? Well don't be fooled by this peach Trojan Horse. I knew something had gone horribly wrong when the pie slice I placed on the plate, flattened and sort of spread out. That's when I knew: I didn't cook the bottom crust before I filled the pie. What a stupid mistake and I knew that as I was filling the unbaked pie crust with peach filling, something didn't seem right.

But I couldn't throw the pie away. After all, I used Calhoun peaches, the gold standard of peaches 'round here. It would be such a waste, and I would cry. I didn't feel like crying. I felt like a doctor. 'This pie can be saved', I told myself. 'After all, the top crust is just fine and it did look so pretty.'

So, I decrusted the pie. I removed the top crust; baked it in the oven for 15 minutes just to make sure it was cooked. I then scooped out the peach filling, careful not to scoop out the dough as well. I put the peach filling into a new pie pan and retopped it with the crust. That when into the oven again for 15 minutes.

The end result looks like this:

It's a shame I don't eat peach pie because I worked so hard on this that it would be awesome if it tasted great despite me almost ruining it. TGH will now have to eat this and wonder how a two crust pie now only has one. But I think it will taste the same and lesson learned: I need to work on my baking skills

Monday, August 4, 2008

Beef and Noodles

This recipe I stumbled upon by accident. It was supposed to be Boeuf Bourguignon, but I couldn't find pearl onions and The Good Husband is not a fan of cooking with wine. So after a few modifications I came up with what I call beef and noodles. My two main beefs (yes, I meant that) with the original (excluding the wine) were - the sauce was too runny and there was way too much fat in the recipe, by way of butter or oil or both. I think I cut out nearly most of the butter. So I thickened up the sauce and got rid of some of the fat. In the end, this is a pretty good recipe and easy to make. TGH is now a fan.


Ingredients:
3 slices bacon, chopped
16 white mushrooms, thinly sliced
1/2 cup white onion, chopped
2 pounds lean sirloin, 1-inch thick, trimmed and cubed into 1 inch pieces
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups beef stock
3 sprigs each sage and fresh thyme, chopped

Herbed, Buttered Noodles:
12 ounces wide egg noodles, cooked to package directions
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley leaves
12 blades fresh chives, finely chopped

Directions:
~Heat a large skillet over medium high heat.

~Add bacon to the pan and brown. Remove crisp bacon bits with slotted spoon. Add mushrooms to the pan and turn to coat evenly with bacon drippings (you might have to add up to 2 tablespoons of oil to coat the mushrooms). Season with salt and pepper. Saute mushrooms 2 to 3 minutes and add onions to the pan. Continue cooking onions and mushrooms 2 to 3 minutes longer, then transfer to a plate and return pan to the heat.

~While the mushrooms and onions cook, coat the beef cubes in flour. Add meat to the pan and cook for 10 minutes, turning the meat once.

~Add one tablespoon of butter and one tablespoon of flour to the pot. Allow the butter to melt and the flour to cook, turning the meat in the butter and flour. Add the stock and fresh sage and thyme, making sure to scrape all the browned bits off the bottom the of pot. When the liquid boils, reduce heat to medium and cook covered 5 minutes. Remove lid and add mushrooms, onions and bacon back to the pot. Simmer with the cover off until sauce thickens.

~Toss hot egg noodles with butter and herbs. Place a bed of noodles in a shallow bowl and pour beef burgundy over the noodles and serve.

recipe modified from: Rachel Ray

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Stuffed French Toast

Since two of the things I bought at the Farmer's Market were bread and candied pecans, I thought what better way to combine them than to make stuffed French Toast. Now, I have never had stuffed French Toast, but I had always seen it on IHOP commericals and thought that it looked tasty and easy to make so I tried it.


Ingredients:
3 oz cream cheese softened
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
1 1 ½ inch thick sliced bread, I used Country French bread I got at the local Farmer’s Market
1 egg
½ cup milk
dash cinnamon
dash nutmeg
2 tablespoon butter
¼ cup candied pecans

Directions:
~Combine cream cheese, vanilla, cinnamon and nutmeg in a small bowl. Mix to combine. Spoon cream cheese mixture into a ziplock bag, pushing the mixture into one corner. Cut one corner of the bag to form a pastry bag. You could also use a small pastry bag with a small tip.

~Cut a slit in the top of the bread. Gently insert the pastry bag and slowly fill the bread with the cream cheese mixture.

~In a shallow bowl combine the egg and milk. Add a dash each, cinnamon and nutmeg.

~Dip the bread into the egg mixture, letting it sit for about 10 seconds on each side, allowing for the mixture to be absorbed.

~Melt 1 tablespoon butter in a skillet over medium heat. Add the bread and brown on both sides, about 5 minutes per side.

~Remove the bread from the skillet. Add 1 tablespoon of butter and allow to melt. Add the candied pecans and toss in the butter. Top the bread with the pecan mixture.

Overall, it wasn't bad. The bread didn't hold that much cream cheese so what I think I will do next time is use two thinner slices of bread and make a sandwhich out of them, scooping out some of the bread to make more room for the cream cheese. But it was a yummy treat on a lazy Sunday morning.

recipe by: The Good Wife

Saturday, August 2, 2008

Trip to the Farmer's Market #2

One of the things I love about summer is the Farmer's Market. Our city has two different Farmer's Markets; one on Saturday and one on Thursday. While some vendors sell at both, the one on Saturday is the longer running market and tends to have more selections.

Flowers

Basil, Caesar and Serata - Dog treats

Okra and blackberries - Peaches

Chard and Carrots - Peppers and Turnips

We all can't be big, perfect and pretty. We like to be small, rough and ugly Heirloom Tomatoes

White Turnips - My haul



I took home some baby Yukon Gold potatoes, Calhoun peaches, green tomatoes, a cucumber, Kilbourn cantaloupe, Thai basil, Country French bread and candies pecans.
On the menu for this week:
~Buttered, Herbed Potatoes