Showing posts with label Appetizers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Appetizers. Show all posts

Tuesday

Food | Deviled Eggs

My camera is currently away at the manufacturer being fixed; so rather than allow this blog to remain idle while they mend the problem, I have decided to turn this blog into one big about me page!


Deviled EGGS

My family loves a good party; which explains my affinity for parties now. I have vivid childhood memories of being at my grandparent’s house, the kids downstairs, adults upstairs and music blaring everywhere. The food was always plentiful; and although I was far too young to indulge in all the vices, I know now that the alcohol was plentiful as well! I used to think that all families had gathering as boisterous as mine- I learned very soon that that wasn’t the case. After attending a family dinner at a friend’s house, I remember thinking “goodness, either my family is really loud or these people are really quiet”, the answer of course being the former- which explains my voices’ propensity to carry.

My mom always tells the story of when she was younger and my grandparents would be having one of their legendary parties, and her and my aunt would have to help my grandmother prepare food. Hours spent devilling eggs, rolling dates in bacon and mixing punch; and as the guest arrived, my aunt and mother were relegated to their rooms to watch television and stay out of the way. Past 8pm children were not to be seen or heard. My mother still claims that the worst torture was having to prepare all the food and then being forced to look through a crack in the door only to see adults enjoying the fruits of her labor. But despite that, she looks back on those times with fondness- I’m told my grandparents and their friends were a hoot in their day!

Deviled eggs are quintessentially old school and were a mainstay on my grandmother’s party menus. But despite their nostalgic roots, they are making a roaring comeback with very nouveau renditions; gone are the days of bland filling. Today people are deviling their eggs with chives, bacon, curry and everything but the kitchen sink.; and when a deviled egg is good, holy crap is it good. Eggs are so wonderfully versatile and their demonic renditions are no different- these little devils are positively heavenly. Every time I go to a party and see deviled eggs I get excited and a bit nostalgic- thinking of my mother, aunt and grandmother in my grandparents 70’s kitchen making deviled eggs.

Deviled Eggs
c/o Simply Recipes

1 dozen eggs
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
1/3 cup mayonnaise
1 Tbsp minced onion or shallot
1/4 teaspoon Tabasco
Salt and pepper
Paprika
First hard boil the eggs. Fill up a large saucepan half-way with water and gently add the eggs. Cover the eggs with at least an inch of water. Add a teaspoon of vinegar to the water (this will help contain egg whites from leaking out if any of the shells crack while cooking). Add a pinch of salt to the water. Bring the water to a boil. Cover, and remove from heat. Let sit covered for 12-15 minutes. Drain hot water from pan and run cold water over the eggs. (At this point if you crack the egg shells while the eggs are cooling, it will make it easier to peel the shells.) Let sit in the cool water a few minutes, changing the water if necessary to keep it cool.
Peel the eggs. Using a sharp knife, slice each egg in half, lengthwise. Gently remove the yolk halves and place in a small mixing bowl. Arrange the egg white halves on a serving platter. Using a fork, mash up the yolks and add mustard, mayonnaise, onion, tabasco, and a sprinkling of salt and pepper. Spoon egg yolk mixture into the egg white halves. Sprinkle with paprika.

Makes 2 dozen deviled eggs.



Wednesday

Food | Feeling Super Natural~ White Bean Dip with Rosemary and Toasted Almonds

White Bean Dip 1

If you live under a rock then you probably haven’t heard of Super Natural Every Day. Otherwise you would know that it is the latest book from Heidi Swanson- blog famous for her online tome 101 Cookbooks.

I remember when the book was in preorder and reading about the unpalpable excitement coursing through the blogosphere and then it was released- the internet blew up with recipes ripped straight from the pages. I was jealous. I wanted the book; but a new computer purchase tying up every spare dollar to my name meant that I had to wait. Sigh.

Sigh no more.

Quickly my Google reader began filling up with posts from Super Natural Everyday- Pita chips on Lara Ferroni’s blog, macaroon tarts made by Sweet Tartlette, white beans and cabbage on the Steamy Kitchen, white bean spread with rosemary and toasted almonds on the Travelers Lunchbox; and seriously so many more. I could take it no longer.

White Bean Dip 2

My desire for this book hit a fever pitch when we started brainstorming recipes for the summer menu at the restaurant where I work; immediately my mind wandered- “what out of Heidi’s cook book should I try?” Every single recipe I’d peeped looked amazing, but I ended up deciding on the white bean spread with rosemary and toasted almonds- a dip trio would be nowhere without a cannellini bean spread.

Honestly I knew I was going to love it before I even began- Heidi is just so damn good. With that said I did alter the recipe slightly; in Heidi’s rendition solely the rosemary/garlic oil, with the actually garlic and rosemary removed, goes into the mix; I decided to add the garlic, rosemary and oil sans draining- - what can I say, I’m a rebel- that likes garlic. In any event, it was phenomenal- creamy, garlic-y and rich- no doubt because of the almonds. I repeat- Heidi is damn good.

White Bean Dip 4

White Bean Spread with Rosemary and Toasted Almonds
Makes about 2 cups/500ml
Adapted from Heidi Swanson's Super Natural Every Day

1/4 cup (60ml) extra-virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon chopped fresh rosemary
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
2 cups (12oz/340g) cooked white beans, or 1 (15oz/425g) can, rinsed and drained
3/4 cup (70g) sliced almonds, toasted (I used whole natural almonds; they were great too)
sea salt
1 tablespoon lemon juice, plus more to taste
1/4 to 3/4 cup (60-180ml) hot water
grated zest of 1/2 lemon

In a small saucepan, combine the olive oil, rosemary and garlic. Over medium-low heat, slowly warm the mixture until the oil just barely starts to sizzle, 1 to 2 minutes. Remove from the heat and set aside for 10 minutes.

In a food processor, combine the beans, two-thirds of the almonds, 1/2 teaspoon salt, the lemon juice and two-thirds of the rosemary mixture. Pulse a couple of times to bring the ingredients together. Add the water 1/4 cup (60ml) at a time, pulsing all the while, until the mixture is the consistency of thick frosting. You might not need all the water; it really depends on how starchy your beans are and how thick you want your spread to be. Taste the mixture and add more salt and/or lemon juice to taste.

Scoop the beans into a small serving dish and make a few indentations in the top. Sprinkle with the lemon zest and the remaining almonds and drizzle with the remaining rosemary oil. Serve at room temperature.

Food | Edamame Hummus

EdamameHummus

As I sit here and write, my belly is full from a late night reward of Pho and deep fried ice cream; and I am reminded of the days when I was deep in a cleanse rut- looking for something new and fresh to eat. After many, many days of deprivation in the name of health; I needed something healthy, delicious and DIFFERENT.

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Although I ate well on my cleanse, I hit a wall- eating salads, no matter how delicious the fixins will do that. I wanted something that felt bad but was good. I had seen Edamame hummus elsewhere, but none of those renditions felt bad enough to me. Also I have no idea why I am drawn to being bad.

EdmameHummus2

I wanted guacamole. I have no idea where my mind decided that it wanted guacamole; but it did. And honestly this compared to real thing. Days on from the end of my 21 day cleanse, and I am still eating this hummus with carrots, pita and pretty much anything that can support its weight.

Edamame Hummus
1cup shelled soybeans
3 cloves garlic
1 tsp chopped cilantro*
1 tsp chili hot sauce
1/3 cup olive oil
Salt and Pepper to taste.
In a pot of boiling salted water, cook the soybeans and garlic cloves for 5 minutes. Drain and place in a food processor. Add the cilantro and hot sauce. Turn on the processor and slowly add the olive oil. Stop the processor once the oil is all incorporated, taste and add salt and pepper by ¼ tsp increments. Serve with grilled multi grain tortilla cut into triangles.


*In the nature of full disclosure, I did not photograph this with cilantro; but the very first- and best- rendition I created included cilantro.

Food | Shrimp Cakes

shrimpcakes5

I spent the better part of last week lamenting about my boredom with food; the first week of cleansing went well, I was coming up with some amazing food ideas. But in week two, I lost the zest, if you will.

They say that week one is the hardest part of a cleanse; but I think “they” have never done a cleanse for longer than a week. Week two was filled with slip ups- cake, chocolate, chips- and plateaus- I went 3 days with no weight loss. Yes this cleanse is for my health but it’s also in the name of vanity, I will admit that free and clear. So yeah, I wanted to quit; but it’s a journey. And having been overweight as a child, I know that that for me personally, this will be a lifelong journey.

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I went to a movie on Saturday and I had a whole bag of popcorn, not just 15 kernels; and Sunday I woke up feeling like I needed to dig myself out of this cleanse rut. So I thought to myself, what do I want to eat- REALLY want to eat? I initially thought of pasta, but then I thought, I could really go for a crab cake with spicy aioli- why a crab cake? I have no idea. But I set out to make this classically heavy, mayo laden, and creamy dish into something that even we cleansers can enjoy.

shrimpcakes3

For the dressing, I swapped out the mayo for Greek yogurt. I made homemade ancient grain breadcrumbs from toast and I used egg- not mayo- to bind the cakes together. Although a bit time consuming, because of the shrimp peeling, breadcrumb making, shrimp cake resting- it was the most satisfying meal I’d in had in a week. It was new, it was fresh, and it was cleanse friendly. Just call me Stella, because I’ve got my groove back!

shrimpcakes1 shrimpcakes2


Shrimp Cakes
16 cooked large shrimp (about 1 pound), peeled, deveined
1 large egg
1 green onion, sliced
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 tablespoon minced cilantro
1/2 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
1/2 teaspoon salt
Pinch of ground black pepper
4 pieces of flax bread, toasted
1 tbsp canola oil

Dipping Sauce
1 cup Balkan style yogurt
¼ cup minced cilantro
1 tsp hot pepper sauce
½ tsp lemon juice

To make breadcrumbs, toast 4 pieces of bread until really toasted. Cool and then crumble into crumbs. Easy, no? Yes.

In a food processor add 1 cup of breadcrumbs and the rest of the ingredients and pulse until incorporated, but still chunky. Roll into balls and flatten. Refrigerate for 10 minutes. Meanwhile, in a bowl combine the yogurt, cilantro, pepper sauce and lemon juice. Set aside. Heat oil in a non stick skillet on medium high heat. Roll the chilled shrimp cakes in the breadcrumbs and cook for 3 minutes on each side. Serve with a dollop of yogurt sauce.

Sunday

Food | Oscar Quiche

“A girl should be two things- classy and fabulous”
Coco Chanel

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When I was in culinary school and we made Quiche Lorraine- the classic quiche of bacon, green onions and cheddar- it made me think of the Nat King Cole song " Sweet Lorraine"; I know I annoyed my teachers and classmates by singing "My quiche Lorraine, Loooraine"; likely because I sound nothing like Nat King Cole and because I only know the hook. Repetition can be rather annoying, and I think a belated apology is in order- sorry guys.

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And Quiche, like the King himself, is a classic. When I was in the catering business, my partner and I catered a luncheon for my Nan, my 89 year old Nan and all her college sorority sisters; and what is a classy luncheon with the golden girls without quiche? As we prepped the quiche Lorraine, I quietly hummed the Kings song to myself!

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But I digress.

When my friends and I decided to have an Oscar party, without hesitation I declared that Quiche would be my contribution; classy, bite sized and always a star- the perfect addition to a classy Oscar affair.

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For our gala gathering, I decided to make the classic Lorraine and to be a little nouveau a kale and feta rendition. And as expected, they were stars; bite sized, classy and effortlessly delicious. And because Quiche Lorraine has such a catchy name, I thought my vegetarian option deserved the same- so I named it Quiche King Cole. Cute and completely fitting!

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Quiche Lorraine
6 rashers of bacon, cooked and crumbled
½ cup cheddar cheese, grated
6 green onions, sliced
12 mini tart shells

Quiche King Cole
1 head of Kale, chopped
½ cup feta cheese
12 mini tart shells


Egg mixture
6 eggs
¼ heavy cream
½ cup chives, chopped
1 ½ tsp salt
1 tsp pepper

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a bowl, whisk the eggs, cream, chives, salt and pepper together.

Quiche King Cole
Heat 1 tsp olive oil in a pan on medium high heat; add the kale and toss for 1 minute or until the kale is wilted. Remove from heat and toss with feta cheese. Allow to cool- about 5 minutes- then fill each tart shell halfway with the kale mixture. Fill with the eggs mixture.

Quiche Lorraine
Combine the cheddar, crumbled bacon and green onions together. Fill each tart shell halfway with the bacon mixture; then fill with the egg mixture.

Brush the edges of the tart shells with heavy cream. And arrange on a baking tray and bake for 14 minutes, or until the eggs have set. Remove from the oven and cool- Quiche can be served at warm or at room temperature.

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Speaking of Oscar, Melissa Leo stole the show- the F bomb was legendary! And best dressed, hands down, Michelle Williams; she looked like an angel!