Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Kentucky Derby fare~


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I don't know what it is about the Kentucky Derby; after all it lasts all of 2 minutes yet the party goes on all day and most of the night.  That means a lot of food is flowing in households that watch from a- far as well as in the state of Kentucky.  (I think even the Queen watches because she is an avid horse lover.) Excitement is in the air and food is being produced in many households.  Cook's Corner has provided many Derby Day recipes and I am giving you the chocolate-Bourbon pecan pie recipe.  But first here is a delicious looking bean salad from The English Kitchen.
  
This is A delicious and perky salad that is filled with lots of flavors and textures. It is served at room temperature so a buffet table is perfect for this recipe.  Tomatoes do not do well in the refrigerator any way,so these jewels make perfect fare for a long drawn out event. 

3 TBS olive oil
2 banana shallots, peeled and finely diced
1 large clove of garlic, peeled and minced
1 1/2 TBS fresh lemon juice
1 tsp caster sugar
1 TBS basil flakes
1 tsp dry parsley flakes
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
1/2 pound each yellow and red cherry tomatoes, halved
1  tin of white beans, drained and rinsed (15 ounce)
1 TBS chopped fresh flat leaf parsley to garnish 

Whisk the olive oil, diced shallots, crushed garlic, lemon juice, basil, parsley and seasoning together in a bowl.   Tip in the beans and halved tomatoes.   Toss to coat.  Let stand for at least half an hour for flavors to infuse. Scatter with fresh parsley and serve.

Chocolate-Bourbon pecan pie

1 unbaked pie crust
1 1/2 cups chopped pecans or walnuts
1 cup semisweet chocolate morsels
1 cup dark corn syrup
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1/4 cup bourbon
4 eggs
1/2 cup melted butter
2 teaspoons cornmeal
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon salt
Heat oven to325. Put the crust in a 9  inch pie dish.  sprinkle nuts and chocolate evenly onto bottom of pie crust; set aside.
Combine corn syrup, sugar, brown sugar and bourbon in a large saucepan, bring to boil over medium heat. Cook stirring constantly for 3 minutes.  Remove from heat.
Whisk together eggs, butter, cornmeal, vanilla and salt.  Gradually whisk about a quarter of the hot sugar mix into egg mixture whisking constantly so it does not scramble the eggs. Pour filling in prepared pie crust. Bake for 50 minutes or until filling is set.

If you are betting.  I hope your horse wins.

 photo Barbacoa Tacos 800 8288_zpsyratxq20.jpg

Closet Cooking had this delicious taco picture on today and it reminds me of our fare this evening.  Mike is 55 today and we are going with Mexican friends to a restaurant to celebrate Mike's birthday.  I hope they have a dish that looks as good as this one.  I will let you know how this Mexican restaurant is. Alegria's Seafood was a delightful surprise.  It is new, clean and really well run.  The food was delicious and plentiful.  The service was outstanding.  It is located on Bethel Road.

Monday, April 27, 2015

Spring plantings~Delicious dinner


I am having a problem with the adjustment of these posts lately. So just scroll down to the content.
The Recipe Critic's photo.



I am making this for dinner: slow cooker cashew chicken.



Doris Lechler's photo.
Doris Lechler's photo.





 


This is a busy time for all of us now that the weather has turned into glorious days.  We made a big trip to Oakland Nursery over the week end and filled a truck bed with flowers and herbs. Mike and Beth hauled and planted and Beth made a discovery.  It seems my husband had been using an antique sterling berry spoon in the bag of fertilizer for many years...as you can see from the picture.  I once found my favorite kitchen knife in the garden golf cart with dirt all over it and the tip broken.  Nothing is safe here. We usually have the pool open by now but we are waiting for the pergola and antique urns to be painted and the house given its bath.  So around the week of May 6th things will be hopping hopefully.




                             
Doris Lechler's photo.

We are not doing a big Memorial Day family party this year. So maybe we will have a lazy holiday for once.  We will miss the hub bub, but I am sure there will be action in some form.

Mike, Beth and I visited the most interesting Mexican market Sunday evening.  We were talking to the check- out- clerk and she says the store is open 7:30 to 11:00 at night seven days a week and there are no breaks.  She was happy to have the job and was not complaining.  We really enjoyed the store and bought several interesting items to try.  I want to go there again.  Their restaurant was not that good, however, but Mike's birthday is Wednesday and we have Mexican friends that are showing us a new place to treat Mike to a birthday celebration. Here are a few products we bought to try..

 

La Michoacana Mexican Market - Grocery 

Doris Lechler's photo.


I am really having a time posting things on this site now days.  It may be that I have taken up too much room with close to 400 postings.  Pictures are a particular problem and alignment too.For some reason it won't show the entire berry spoon picture, but you get what I am going through just from the handle shot. I'll have to capture a teenager to get help with this,  if help can fix this.  If not...

Doris Lechler's photo.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Goodies on my to make list~


I have found so many interesting recipes today and added them to my 'to make list.'  The Barefoot Contessa was really good today and not only did she make her famous granola which my family calls my famous crack.  (They cannot get enough of it.)  Any way, I ignored that because I've done it to death.  She did a honey vanilla pound cake which was glorious to see.  I adore pound cake.  I was a nanny when I was in high school and the southern lady turned out lovely loaves of pound cake quite often. So, I want to try Ina's honey vanilla recipe to see if it is up to snuff.  I have discovered people are getting cranky about sharing their food photos.  I mean IT's a cake! Get over it. I had to ditch my last post because trying to share the picture messed up the entire post. In this case you know what a loaf of pound cake looks like. So, here is the recipe.

Honey Vanilla Pound Cake:
1/2 pounds (2 sticks) unsalted butter at cool room temperature
1  1/4 cups sugar
4 large eggs, at room temperature
2 tablespoons honey
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1 teaspoon grated lemon zest
2 cups sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder

Preheat the oven to 350. Grease the bottom of a loaf pan and insert a paper liner.
In the bowl of an electric mixer cream the butter and sugar on medium speed for 3-4 minutes, until light.  Meanwhile, put eggs, honey, vanilla and lemon zest in a glass measuring cup but do not combine these ingredients.  With the mixer on medium-low speed, add the egg mixture, one egg at a time, scraping down the bowl and allowing each egg to become incorporated before adding the next egg.

Sift together the flour, salt, and baking powder.  With the mixer on low , add it slowly to the batter until just combined.  Finish mixing the batter with a rubber spatula and pour it into the prepared pan.  Smooth the top and bake for 50-60 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool and turn out.

Have you tried these little cups?


Do Nothing Cake is so easy it is embarrassing.  But look how good it seems. I am going to make this too. I have just taken it out of the oven.  I'll let you know how it is.  Did you notice there is no oil in this cake?

Note: It's good and fast, but not great.  If you need something in a hurry and don't want to pull out the mixer, this will do in a pinch.
Do Nothing Cake

Ingredients
2 cups sugar
2 cups flour
2 eggs
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. vanilla
16 ounces crushed pineapple, undrained

Icing
1/2 cup butter
1 cup sugar
3/4 cup evaporated milk
1 cup coconut
1 cup nuts
1 tsp. vanilla
Directions:
Place first 6 ingredients in a bowl and mix until blended with spoon.
Pour into 13x9 inch cake pan
bake 350 35-40 minutes
For icing:  Mix butter, sugar, and evaporated milk together and cook over medium heat until a little thickened. (This usually takes about 5 minutes at a boil.)

Home made mayonnaise (Barefoot Contessa's recipe)

Basil Mayonnaise takes 10 minutes

4 extra-large egg yolks, at room temperature
6 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 teaspoon minced garlic
2 tablespoons kosher salt
2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
2 cups vegetable oil
1 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 cup chopped fresh basil leaves
Put it in a food processor everything but the oils and process.  Then with it running pour in the vegetable oil; then pour in the olive oil. Add the basil last and store the mayonnaise in the frig.

She also made vanilla extract with a dozen or more whole vanilla beans with a bottle of vodka poured to cover the mixture in a jar and store for at least a month.  Start using but keep the mixture covered in a pantry. I've made this before and it is delicious.  After a month or so, you can use a bean by cutting off the tip and squeezing out the tiny specks of goodness for your cakes, ice creams, whipped creams--anything that calls for vanilla.  Ina was on today, at long last.


Friday, April 17, 2015

Monet's Table

I finally found Monet's yellow dinner ware.  I have looked for this yellow and blue dinner set since I bought and enjoyed Monet's Table.  The book is a cooking journal of Claude Monet and it has wonderful settings and recipes. It will take about a month to arrive from Haviland, but it will be worth the wait.  I have a large collection of table settings, especially dinner plates and I like mixing it up so there is a surprise each time there is an event.
                                                                                         
Doris Lechler's photo.

                                                                     
Doris Lechler's photo.

Doris Lechler's photo.
       

Doris Lechler's photo.






Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Shrimp and sausage jambalaya~



The last of the winter fare is shrimp and sausage jambalaya which serves 6-8 hungry people.  The recipe is long, but you have already put this together in various forms if you cook at all.  This just has more ingredients than usual, but once again you can't go wrong and can use pretty much what you like.  This is the Barefoot Contessa's recipe, so if you get on the food TV network, the recipe is there too.
She made it today and I started hankering for it because I have most of the ingredients on hand. I am going to do it Friday because Saturday is a work outside day getting the furniture out, moving things around, getting the new driveway ready to seal; getting the pergola ready for spray paint; getting the antique planters and urns painted and filled...it goes on and on but this year we have Beth who is a master container gardener.  She, along with Andy, will fill each and every pot with beauty.  Matt will be here for the heavy work, so I want to have something special for him to eat.

  Oh, Andy went to the back doctor today.  His back hurts every once in a while and he wants answers.  The doctor says what CAN'T you do that you want to do.  Andy said, "well, I can't run."  The doctor said, "you are 80 years old who is chasing you?" I got a good laugh out of that one.  Andy is the healthiest man for his age any one has ever seen and I think he feels like something should be wrong with him.  Thank God he is healthy.

Shrimp & Sausage Jambalaya (Serves 6 to 8 )

Copyright 2010, Amelia Durand, All Rights Reserved


Photo: Quentin Bacon
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 pound sausage, such as kielbasa or Andouille, sliced
1 pound smoked ham, cubed
1 tablespoon butter
1 medium onion, diced
1 cup celery, diced
1 green bell pepper, cored and diced
1 red bell pepper, cored and diced
1 cup seeded and diced tomato
3 garlic cloves, minced
1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and minced OR ½ teaspoon cayenne
2 teaspoons diced fresh oregano
1 teaspoon diced fresh thyme
2 tablespoons tomato paste
6 cups chicken stock, preferably homemade
3 cups long grain rice, rinsed
3 bay leaves
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
6-8 dashes Tabasco (optional)
½ cup chopped scallions divided
¾ cup chopped fresh parsley, divided
¼ cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
1 pound medium shrimp, deveined (20-24 count) 
Heat the oil in a large Dutch oven or black iron pot over medium heat, add the kielbasa and sauté for 8 to 10 minutes, until browned. Remove the kielbasa to a bowl, and set aside. Add the ham to the same pot and cook 8 to 10 minutes, until lightly browned. Remove to the bowl with the kielbasa, and set aside. Add the butter, onion, celery and peppers to the same pot and sauté for 8 to 10 minutes, until the onion is translucent. Add the tomato, garlic, jalapeno or cayenne, oregano, thyme, and tomato paste and cook until all the vegetables and herbs are blended well. Add the stock and bring to a rolling boil. Stir in the rice, and add the sausage, ham, bay leaves, salt, pepper and Tabasco. Return to a boil, reduce the heat to low and simmer, covered, for 20 minutes. Add ¼ cup of the scallions, ¼ cup of the parsley, the lemon juice and the shrimp, and stir well. Cover the pot, remove it from the heat and allow the jambalaya steam, for 15 minutes, before serving.

Garnish with the remaining ¼ cup scallions and ½ cup parsley, and a dash of Tabasco, if desired. 

Friday, April 10, 2015

Rose hams~ the very best.


A user's photo.



Sunday steaks on the grill with onions and peppers and smashed potatoes.


A user's photo.

                                                                       



Rose Spiral Sliced Bone-in Honey Cured Ham (I am trying this one next.)

Our delicious Spiral Sliced Ham is richly smoked, fully cooked and pre-sliced. Choose from a half spiral or a whole spiral. Weights are averaged.

Rose Spiral Sliced Bone-in Honey Cured Ham
Half spiral ham
half_spiral_ham_(7-9_lb_avg)
whole_spiral_(14-18_lb_avg)

pit_ham
Rose Pit Ham
10 - 12 lbs. This is the one we had for Easter along with a rib roast.


Rose Pork Shoulder Butt

Our smoked boneless Pork Shoulder Butts are lean, tender, and appetizing in appearance. Our “Private Stock” pork shoulder is 96% fat-free. 

Rose Pork Shoulder Butt

                                                                       If  you have read this blog for a long time, you will know this is the fallow period, that which is directly after a big food event such as Easter.  I can hardly look at the refrigerator from the outside let alone see what is there to scare me from within. One thing I cannot get out of my mind is the ham from this Easter event.  I bought it from the Rose company itself on line and it was the best ham I have ever served and I did nothing to it...nothing.  I have long bought from Giant Eagle the Rose shoulder or butt hams that are small, but expensive, but worth every penny.  So I thought I would see if the rest of their products lived up to the tiny offering that we have enjoyed for years and that which is not always available, but when it is I buy several for between $9.00  to $15.00 each.  I have tried others but they don't stand a chance in this household.


https://www.rosepacking.com/shop/
                       
                                                                   

Our delicious Spiral Sliced Ham is richly smoked, fully cooked and pre-sliced. Choose from a half spiral or a whole spiral. Weights are averaged. I am trying this next.

Rose Spiral Sliced Bone-in Honey Cured Ham
Half spiral ham
half_spiral_ham_(7-9_lb_avg)
whole_spiral_(14-18_lb_avg)

pit_ham
Rose Pit Ham
10 - 12 lbs. This is the one we had for Easter along with a rib roast.


Rose Pork Shoulder Butt

Our smoked boneless Pork Shoulder Butts are lean, tender, and appetizing in appearance. Our “Private Stock” pork shoulder is 96% fat-free. 

Rose Pork Shoulder Butt

Our delicious Spiral Sliced Ham is richly smoked, fully cooked and pre-sliced. Choose from a half spiral or a whole spiral. Weights are averaged.

Rose Spiral Sliced Bone-in Honey Cured Ham
Half spiral ham
half_spiral_ham_(7-9_lb_avg)
whole_spiral_(14-18_lb_avg)

pit_ham
Rose Pit Ham
10 - 12 lbs. This is the one we had for Easter along with a rib roast.
We used every scrap of this ham.  No waste at all.

Rose Pork Shoulder Butt

Our smoked boneless Pork Shoulder Butts are lean, tender, and appetizing in appearance. Our “Private Stock” pork shoulder is 96% fat-free. Giant Eagle carries these most of the time.

Rose Pork Shoulder Butt
2.25 - 3 lbs. avg.
daisy_rose_pork_shoulder_butt_225_-_3_lb_avg
$13.99 each

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

La Belle Pomme

The Beautiful Apple (La Belle Pomme) cooking school ran for two decades in Columbus and many of us received a degree in cooking passion from Betty Rosbottom, the teacher.Our wonderful Lazarus Department store was its last home and with its sad demise La Belle fell as well.  I was traveling to London and Paris every other month for two or three weeks at a time, but when I was home, those classes were scheduled and attended with gusto.  I have a binder of recipes that I still use and cherish from the splendid days of cooking with Betty and the special utensils were sold in the vast culinary display right outside the doors of La Belle Pomme school. It was difficult to get into the classes because they sold out as soon as they were posted with many famous chefs coming to cook there in Columbus.  I miss it even today.





The famed cooking school originated in a small storefront in Upper Arlington and later moved into prime space Downtown at the Lazarus department store.
During the run of La Belle Pomme, some of the most famous chefs in the country — Jacques Pepin, Marcella Hazan, Anne Willan, Giuliano Bugialli, Rose Levy Beranbaum and Sheila Lukins — passed through its doors to share techniques, recipes and a passion for well-prepared food.
Those doors closed 20 years ago this month.
The founder, Betty Rosbottom, didn’t start the school with the goal of creating a Columbus institution. The native of Memphis, Tenn., was transplanted to the middle of Ohio after her husband accepted a teaching position at Ohio State University.
Rosbottom, a French major, had been studying cooking in Philadelphia before the move. She initially began working as a translator for the Columbus Museum of Art.
“No one was giving cooking classes in Columbus” at the time, Rosbottom said, so she placed an ad in the Upper Arlington newspaper and started teaching in her home.
Before long, the classes outgrew her house and she faced a decision: pursue a master’s degree in fine arts and continue working at the museum or put all her resources into the cooking school.
“I loved art, and I loved food,” she said.
The museum curator helped Rosbottom make up her mind, telling her: “Do the food. We have lots of people getting an M.A. in art history.”With a $5,000 loan, Rosbottom rented a storefront on Northwest Boulevard at North Star Road in 1976 and opened La Belle Pomme — French for “The Beautiful Apple.”
The school attracted some of the biggest names in cooking.
Television had few cooking programs at the time, and chefs had to travel to make their names known. The school had a reputation for selling out classes — which meant cookbook sales for chefs.
“I think they really enjoyed coming to Columbus,” Rosbottom said. “People were anxious to learn; they were welcoming.”
When Pepin visited in 1978, the French chef taught standing-room-only classes for three days.
After Italian cooking legend Hazan visited the next year, Time magazine wrote about the school and the growing gourmet movement in Columbus.
The school was so popular that, in just a few years, Rosbottom expanded to a larger space — and, in 1981, Lazarus approached her about buying the school and moving it to the Downtown store.
She had been in business only five years, Rosbottom said, but she eagerly accepted the offer because she would remain the director of the cooking school. There were other benefits, too: The school expanded its kitchen space, and she obtained a budget for advertising and access to a housewares department filled with state-of-the-art equipment. Plus, Lazarus sent her to trade shows annually, allowing her to stay on top of trends.
Perhaps most important to Rosbottom, the sale meant that the school could accept more students.
At its peak, 5,000 students a year attended La Belle Pomme, filling the seats of more than 100 classes.
“The best part of the school was the people,” Rosbottom said. “They came from far and wide — not only from Columbus and the suburbs but Dayton and northern Ohio, too.”
Lee Ritchie, a German Village real-estate agent, still keeps a binder filled with the recipes she received from the classes she took, beginning in 1985, at La Belle Pomme.
“I feel like Betty Rosbottom kind of made a difference in my life,” Ritchie said. “Not only did I learn how to cook — techniques — but also how to source ingredients, where to shop. They introduced me to the North Market.”
Ritchie remembers Rosbottom as warm and gracious. The school’s teachers made the classes fun, and she later joined a wine-tasting group with some of them.
“It opened up my world, really, to food and wine, and I really thank her for that.”
Rosbottom put together a small, loyal staff of teachers — including Steve Stover and Rich Terapak, who have been teaching together for 35 years.
The school, Stover said, became a touchstone for central Ohio food enthusiasts — a small fraternity at the time.


“Betty deserves a lot of credit,” he said. “She really brought cooking to the masses in Columbus.”
The school’s closing, in 1995, was bittersweet for Rosbottom.
On the one hand, the closing allowed her to be in the same city with her husband, who several years earlier had accepted a teaching position in Massachusetts. (The couple were commuting between there and Columbus.)
Yet the school had propelled Rosbottom into a career in food that continues. For decades she wrote the syndicated cooking column “For the Gourmet,” which appeared for 20 years in The Dispatch; she is at work on her 12th cookbook.
Rosbottom still teaches — including an occasional class in Columbus, often at the Seasoned Farmhouse cooking school in the Clintonville neighborhood.
The class, owner Tricia Wheeler said, typically fills up in an hour.
Wheeler, an Akron native, had heard so much about Rosbottom when she moved to Columbus more than 20 years ago that she featured her in the first issue of Edible Columbus, a magazine she began publishing in 2010.
Before opening the Seasoned Farmhouse, Wheeler tapped Rosbottom for advice on how to run a cooking school.
“She really is a teacher at heart,” Wheeler said. “She really taught a whole generation to cook." 

Friday, April 3, 2015

Easter is here~


Andy and I married 56 years ago today.

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'Facebook'



Matt, our grandson, brought me flowers and Tim Horton's coffee this morning.  He has the day off and came to help with Easter preparations.  I have for him a big pot of corn beef, his favorite.  Some for today and the rest to take home.
 So far:
I have seventeen dishes ready for the two-meal
Easter day. Plus the rib roast is covered with marinade and ready for the oven. I just finished
a big pot of (creamed) wild mushroom soup.  The
way it is disappearing right now, that may be absent from the Easter meal.

I stopped in the middle of everything today to make
these as they appeared out of no where in my email.
Just marshmallows with melted white chocolate poured over the top.  I used Amish marshmallows in the form of baby ducks, but she used regular miniature marshmallows.

bunny bites PN



chicken and noodles



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orange chicken to top the fried rice

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To the doctor

We are off to the doctor to have Andy checked out since he has had two falls.  We thought to wait until his appointment on the 20th, but aft...