Archive for the ‘Appetizers’ Category

Chicken Enchilada Crisps

Friday, September 21st, 2007

So, the folks over at Chefs Like Me threw out a chicken challenge this week – here are the results:

I’ve been in the mood for something Tex-Mex-ish lately, and this popped into my head when I saw the challenge was chicken.

Not a difficult dish at all, but hit the spot tonight. Poached chicken breasts in 1:2 water/broth, shredded them and let them marinate in enchilada sauce overnight. Fried up the tortillas, put down some cheddar & monterey jack cheese, then the chicken and more cheese. Pop under the broiler just long enough to get the cheese melty. When I make these again, I need to figure out something else to put on top to give it a little more kick and color.

Swedish Meatballs

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

Yes, we did hit a high of 91 degrees today and yes, I did make Swedish Meatballs for dinner. I’ve wanted these for about a week now, but have also been on some antibiotics that have been doing a fantastic job of making me feel horrid, so I held off until I *knew* I’d feel good for dinner. And today I feel great, and still wanted them like nobody’s business. So, there you go.

My Mom used to make these with a packet mix from McCormick or Lowrys or one of those folks. Now, it was always tasty so I certainly can’t complain by any means. But, I’ve kind of gone a personal crusade for “packet-free food” – I truly think that just about anything you can make with a seasoning packet can be done just as well (if not better) on your own. The big hurdles I got over were chili & spaghetti sauce. (Don’t laugh!) Well, once I got those to a point where I was pleased with them, I decided it was time to tackle the Swedish Meatballs.

In scouring recipes across the internet, I found there are as many recipes for Swedish Meatballs as there are stars in the sky. (And I am still convinced if you asked someone from Sweden about them, they would look at you as though you’d lost your mind, the Ikea cafeteria menu notwithstanding.) My first go at it, I used this recipe from allrecipes.com, and of course had to make some variations on it…

It wasn’t bad by any means, but it was just ALL WRONG. I seem to recall throwing in a bit of beef stock in the sauce instead of water, and overall the sauce was just too “beefy” – like I said, not bad, but certainly not what Mom used to make. My brother ate it but readily admitted it just didn’t cut it for what we used to get. (And isn’t Mom always the yardstick by which we measure so many comfort foods?)

That night, I had the “OMG, I am such a dumbass” moment. Mom’s (and McCormick’s) sauce was a thickened *cream* sauce. I remember looking at my brother and saying, “Good lord, it’s nothing more than another variation on red-eye gravy, and I can do THAT.” I felt like an idiot.

So, tonight, it was me vs. the Swedes again. :) I stuck somewhat to the original meatball recipe I’d found, with more variations (it’s almost my meatloaf recipe, sans the 57 sauce, LOL.) and then when it came time for the sauce, it came out MUCH better than before, and damn close to what I remember my Mom making. Gotta love that. My brother says it’s not quite there, but very close, but neither one of us can quite figure it out (and I can’t find a damn McCormick package to see what other spices I’m missing in the sauce.)

So, here we go – Swedish Meatballs after the jump:
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Bacon-wrapped Scallops

Saturday, June 16th, 2007
bacon-wrapped-scallops

Just doesn’t get easier than this. Scallops, bacon, lemon juice drizzled over, and I went wild and tossed a bit of ground pepper & parsley on top. The scallops were a bit on the huge side, so I ended up slicing them in half. To be honest, next time I’ll cut them in thirds or even quarters, as they were still pretty big. 15-20 minutes @ 350 degrees, just depends on how long for the bacon to cook through. Also discovered that my cookie sheet warps in the oven.

My brother is going to kill me when he finds out that I made these when he wasn’t around. Damn, just have to make them again, I suppose.

Shrimp Satay

Saturday, June 9th, 2007

Thai meat on a stick! I’ve done chicken & beef, but decided to give shrimp a go this time. Usually it’s served on the skewers, but I have bad luck w/the bamboo skewers – no matter how long I soak them for, they have this tendency to catch fire.

1# chicken, beef, cut into strips (can also use flank steak), or shrimp

Marinade:
2t creamy peanut butter
1/2 c. soy sauce
1/2 c. lime juice (lemon can be used, lime is just a little better)
2t curry powder
2 cloves chopped garlic
1t hot pepper sauce (I just use thai chili sauce, could pretty much use any hot sauce)

Combine the marinade ingredients, dump in your protein of choice, cover and refrigerate for 2 to 24 hours.

Put chicken/steak on skewers, grill on high heat 5 minutes on a side. (Same if using broiler inside.) Shrimp, 2.5 minutes over a low fire.

Food weekend – Friday night goodies

Saturday, May 5th, 2007

So this weekend, I spent some time up at the Sanderling Inn for their “Cooking School Weekend” that their executive chef, Christine Zambito, put on. A very long time ago, the restaurant at Sanderling was the first place I really saw just how much impact changing chefs can have on a restaurant when they’re left to their own devices and allowed to do what they do best, so I found it oddly appropriate that my first ever formal cooking class would in the same place.

Friday night I arrived and they had a nice little reception upstairs at The Lifesaving Station restaurant. I figured it was just going to be a little meet & greet kind of thing, but no, it was better! Wine and hors d’oeuvres – and then Christine showed us how to make all the goodies we’d gotten to eat AND had recipes for all of them to take home. All of these were absolutely wonderful and easy as all get out to make, but look and taste fairly impressive. What we had:

- Sanderling Crab Dip – this is what they serve in the restaurant. This recipe is particularly good as far as I’m concerned because there is none of this adding artichokes or any other silliness – just lots of crab goodness.

- Roasted Red Pepper Hummus served on Belgian Endive – insanely easy and absolutely blows away anything I’ve ever bought prepared, ever. The presentation on the Belgian Endive looks great, and adds a great crispness to it.

- Smoked Salmon Canapés – Just your basic smoked salmon w/jazzed up cream cheese in pinwheels. Half on crackers, and the other half on cuke slices. I was really surprised at how good the ones on the cukes were – it wasn’t a combination I would have thought of (one of my biggest weaknesses w/food is being able to envision new combinations,) but I really liked it.

- Bruschetta w/the following toppings:
– Black Olive Tapenade – I’ve had this before and could kind of take it or leave it, but this was out of this world. Not sure if it’s the dry cured olives, the fact that it was fresh or what, but I could have eaten this with a spoon.
– Diced tomatoes with Garlic & Herbs – All I can say is this shows how much of a HUGE difference really nice, fresh, not-ripened-on-a-truck tomatoes make. SO good.
– Herbed goat cheese – this is in my list of recipes, but I’m pretty sure this either wasn’t in with what we ate, or I somehow missed it, but it looks good and I’ll be giving that a go at some point as well.

So, we got ourselves all good and noshed up to get things kicked off. Headed over to the Swan Bar in the restaurant and discovered that they have lost the recipe for Keoki coffee that I left them the last time I had drinks there (14 years ago…), so they now have that again, and I’ve got a new friend in the bartender, Jason.

Originally posted at Cafe Chat Noir on 4/30, so if it looks familiar, that’s why.