Tuna Croquettes

Ingredients:
1/2 cup chopped onions (white finely diced, or scallions)
1/4 cup chopped red bell peppers
1/4 tsp. crushed red pepper
2 cups mashed potatoes (best if you use chilled leftovers)
2 cans (5 oz. each) tuna, drained, flaked (important to purchase albacore tuna or use fresh flaked white fish)
1/2 cup Shredded Colby & Monterey Jack Cheeses
1 egg, beaten
25 RITZ Crackers, crushed (about 1 cup)
2 cups oil

Method:
COOK onions, bell peppers and crushed red pepper in skillet sprayed with cooking spray on medium-high heat 10 min. or until onions are tender, stirring occasionally. Mix with potatoes, tuna and cheese; cool completely.

SHAPE tuna mixture into 12 (3-inch-long) logs. Dip in egg, then roll in cracker crumbs to evenly coat all sides of each.

HEAT oil in large saucepan to 375°F. Add tuna logs, in batches; cook 6 min. or until evenly browned, turning occasionally. Drain on paper towels. Serve warm.

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Spring Green Salad with Shrimp and Avocado

Spring Mix Greens
Cucumber peeled and sliced
Lime Ceviche Shrimp from Costco – this is so good!
Avocado
Olive oil
White Balsalmic Vinegar

Arrange on your plate, drizzle lightly with olive oil and balsalmic.
Grab your fork!
Salt and Pepper to taste

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Pork Rib Roast Herbs de Provence with Mashed Potatoes and Mango Sauce

Bring the Rib Roast to room temperature.
Preheat oven 400 degrees
Wash and pat dry with paper towels.
Place on roasting rack.
Rub with olive oil, salt, pepper and herbs de provence

Place in oven uncovered in 400 degree oven for 15 minutes, then turn down to 350 degrees until it reaches 145 degrees on your instant read thermometer. Remove from oven, cover with foil. Let rest for 10-15 minutes.

Gravy:
To pan drippings, add brown gravy mix. I use one that you mix 1:4 ratio. 1 cup of mix and 4 cups of liquid. And I like to make a wonderful gravy sauce, so instead of all water, I use half in fruit juice. Usually, I use apple juice for pork, but I happened to have mango and this made a lovely sauce. So, on the stovetop bring the gravy mixture to a simmer while whisking in the 2 cups of water and 2 cups of juice.
Season to taste with salt and pepper and I also used a tsp of cardamom.
You will love this sauce.
< Plating: Ladle gravy on bottom of plate, top with mashed potatoes and then, the piece of pork chop. Perfection! Awesome bite!

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Grilled Cheese – Brie and Pineapple Jam

Ingredients

•Fresh egg bread
•Slices of brie ( a little goes a long way)
•Pineapple jam
•Butter
Method

1.Butter the bread on the outsides and spread a thin layer of pineapple jam on the inside
2.Place on a skillet on medium high heat and place something heavy on top of the sandwich to weigh it down. I use a cast-iron pan, this will ensure even and direct heat
3.Cook on both sides until the cheese starts to melt, total cook time was about 6 minutes

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Apricot Pineapple Walnut Conserve


Not too long ago, I put out the word that I wanted the recipes or the favorite foods that everyone remembered growing up. My husband’s brother Jon asked if I had the recipe for his mom’s Apricot
jam and he remembered it having pineapple and walnuts in it.
I didn’t have the original recipe, but this one I am making to give to him to see how close it is to his memory. I remember Jacque did like her jam with a few nuts, a conserve.

Ingredients
——————————————————————————–
3 cups apricots ; pitted and chopped
20 ounces crushed pineapple in juice
1/2 cup lemon juice
1 package pectin
1/2 teaspoon butter
8 cups sugar
1 cup finely chopped walnuts

Method:
——————————————————————————–
Measure apricots into 6-8 qt. saucepot.
Add pineapple and lemon juice.
Stir pectin into fruit mixture.
Bring mixture to a full rolling boil, stirring constantly.
Add butter.
Stir in sugar quickly.
Bring back to a rolling boil and boil exactly 4 minutes, stirring constantly.
Remove from heat.
Add 1/8 cup walnuts to each jar.
Ladle hot jam mixture into prepared jars, filling to within 1/8 inch of tops.
Wipe jar rims and threads.
Cover with two piece lids. Screw bands tightly.
Invert onto a clean towel.
After 5 minutes, turn upright, check for seals.
Makes about 9 cups of jam.

Posted in Grandma Jacque's Favorites, Jams and Jelly, My Cannery | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Pear Tart

I seem to love rustic, artesian presentations and to me, this tart is just that. I think you could make this in a dutch oven while camping and the crowd would go silent.

ingredients

5 william pears

90g butter

90g caster sugar

2 vanilla bean

1 sheet all butter puff pastry (rolled out to about 20cm diameter)

1 ovenproof saucepan.

Melt butter and sugar and vanilla bean in saucepan. Add your pears that have been peeled, cored ana d halved. Add pears to mixture core side up. Place your puff pastry on top of the pears and tuck them in. As the sugar and butter melt together spoon over puff pastry. Cook for 5 minutes or until sugar carmelizes and turns golden brown.
Put the pan in the oven for 15-20 minutes until the puff pastry turns golden brown.
The tricky part, remove from the oven and flip it onto a serving plate. Careful, the sugar carmel stuff it very hot.

I would like mine with a scope of vanilla bean ice cream please.

Posted in Dessert - Eat dessert first, Life is uncertain | Leave a comment

Poached Pears Muscat Beaume de Venise Sabayon

The first time I ever had sabayon was at a cooking class at the tower club in Oxnard. The chef served Champagne Sabayon with fresh berries. I practically licked my dessert plate! So, being a fan of Sabayon and pears, I was at another wonderful cooking class in Westlake Village, Let’s Get Cooking and Tim McGrath shared this recipe.

6 servings:

6 Bosc Pears, uniform in size, not too large, stems intact
1 bottle Muscat Beaume de Venise
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 vanilla bean, split not scraped
1 cup water
5 egg yolks

Method:
Peel and core pears keeping the stem intact.
Combine wine, sugar, vanillabean and water in saucepan. Bring to boil. Then lay pears in 2-3 saucepan about 5 inches in width and 6 inches deep. Arrange the pears to submerge them in liquid. Place a cirlce of parchment over pears so it is flush with the fruit. Cover pan and cook on medium heat for 15-20 minutes until tender enough to be penetrated with a pairing knife.
Gently remove pears, keeping stems intact. Remove vanilla bean. Reduce the poaching liquid until half remains.
In a bowl whisk egg yolks with some of the poaching liquid to temper the yolks. Add remaining liquid to eggs. Make sure to use a balloon whisk as it will speed up the process. Whisk over direct heat until mixture is triple the volume. You will need to slide bowl off heat repeatedly to prevent the eggs from curdling. Once misture resembles a finished hollandaise sauce it’s done. It will also have a high sheen to it.
Arrange pears in serving bowls or dishes and spoon sabayon over pears.
Serve with shortbread cookies, or biscotti, tuiles are also a nice touch.

You can keep the sabayon warm on a double broiler until ready to serve or plate immediately.
Take chocolate bar and shave curls on top of poached pears. Yum! Now that is an awesome bite!

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Manilla Clams with Coconut Lemon Grass, Thai Curry and Ginger


2 T Canola oil
2 inch piece of ginger, smashed with back side of knife
1 stalk lemon grass, remove first layer and cut on bias into 2 inch pieces
Lime zest
1 tsp Thai Red Curry Paste (gonlongol)
2 cloves garlic, smashed
1 cup chicken broth
2 pounds manilla clams, make sure they are all closed, rinse in cold water right before cooking
1 12 ounce can coconut milk
1 generous tablespoon Thai Chili Soya Paste (Look for sugar, tamarind, shrimp paste and fish sauce in the ingredients)
Thai Fish Sauce to taste (Squid brand with shrimp on label or three crabs)
2 Tablespoons each cilantro adn mint, chopped
Cilantro Sprigs for garnish,

In a soup or braising pot over high heat add oil, ginger, grass thai curry paste, and garlic. Fry over high heat until all ingredients have releases their flavor. Please note, curry paste is very hot. Use in a well ventilated area and according to your taste.

Add lime zest and broth. Bring just to a boil. Add clams and give pan a good stir. Cover with tight fitting lid and cook for 5 minutes over high heat. Remove opened clams with slotted spoon.
Add coconut milk, chili paste and fish sauce. Blend well and bring to a boil. Cook for 2-3 minutes.
Season to taste with 1/8 cup sugar and more Thai Red Curry Sauce.

Divide clams among soup bowls, ladle sauce over clams then garnish with cilantro.

Serve with fresh bread and butter and lemon wedges. You can also serve over noodles.

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Sugar Cinnamon Black Walnut Muffin Donuts

I was watching food network the other night and this was one of the “most favorite things to eat”. This recipe is by Kathleen Stewart of the Downtown Bakery & Creamery in Healdsburg, CA. The recipe appeared in Fine Cooking Magazine, January 2001.

These sugar doughnut muffins are baked and then dipped in butter and sugar coated. They must sell these by the millions.
This makes a large batch of muffins, but the recipe may be cut in half very easily.

12 ounces (1 1/2 cups) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 3/4 cups granulated sugar
4 large eggs
6 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 3/4 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
(not in the original recipe, but I like it.)
1 teaspoon cardamom (optional)
1 cup finely chopped black walnuts (optional)
1 2/3 cups milk
1/4 cup buttermilk*

Sugar/Cinnamon Topping (see recipe below)

* If you find yourself short of buttermilk for your recipe, you can make your own by adding 1 teaspoon of vinegar to 1/4 cup of whole milk.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Place rack in middle of the oven. Generously grease and flour muffin tins. NOTE: Also grease the surface between the muffin cups to prevent the muffin tops from sticking to the pan.

Using your mixer on medium speed, cream the butter and sugar together until mixture is light and fluffy. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, until fully incorporated into the batter; set aside.

In a bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and nutmeg; set aside. In another bowl, combine the milk and buttermilk; set aside..

Alternately add flour mixture and milk mixture to the egg batter, starting and ending with flour mixture. Mix until all ingredients are fully combined and batter is smooth. Don’t over mix.

Scoop enough batter into each muffin tin so that the batter is even with the rim of the cup. For regular-size muffin tins, about 1/2 cup – for mini-size muffin tins, about 1 heaping tablespoon.

Regular-size Muffin Tins: Bake 30 to 35 minutes until the muffins are firm to the touch. Remove from the oven and let cool just enough to be able to handle.

Mini-size Muffin Tins: Bake 12 to 15 minutes until the muffins are firm to the touch. Remove from the oven and let cool just enough to be able to handle.

When muffins from cool enough to handle, carefully remove them from the muffin tins, dip them into the melted butter (or brush them all over), and then roll them in the Sugar/Cinnamon mixture.

Make-Ahead Directions: Fully bake and cool these muffins without adding the toppings. Store them in a plastic freezer bag in the freezer for up to 1 month. To serve, thaw muffins to room temperature before applying the toppings.

Makes 24 medium-size muffins or 52 mini-muffins.

Sugar/Cinnamon Topping:
1 cup unsalted butter (more if needed)
2 cups granulated sugar
2 tablespoons ground cinnamon

In a small bowl, stir together sugar and cinnamon.

Variation:

Powdered (confectioner’s) Sugar – Omit dunking the muffins in melted butter. Instead roll them in 1 cup sifted powdered sugar.

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Awesome Crab Cakes

Crab Cakes with Watermelon Salad

A friend from Maryland invited us to a crab boil exlusively from Harbour House Crabs.  We spread newspapers out on the table and crack open the crabs with our Old Bay seasoned hands, savoring the tender white morsels from the crab. I have never had so much fun eating crab. Crabcakes offer a more refined way of eating crab,  make wonderful appetizers if you make them small, or a nice light dinner served with a salad.

Crab Cakes

Tips on making crabcakes: Costco has great lump crab in one pound tubs.

1) The best crabcakes are mostly crab, so I recommend not using too much bread. You only need enough to help hold everything together. In terms of a ratio, if I had 1 1/2 cups of crabmeat, for example, I would use about 1 1/2 cups of freshly made bread crumbs. I do not use dry breadcrumbs that come in a cardboard container at the grocery store, which are much too finely ground and dusty for this use.
2) Many people add worcheshire sauce, and I do not because it has anchovies in it and makes your crab taste fishy.
3) Use regular mayonnaise, not the squeezable stuff because it is too thin.
4) Mix the mayonnaise and other seasonings together first, so you can taste it and adjust the seasonings before you add the mayonnaise dressing to the crab and breadcrumbs.
5) Use a light hand when mixing the cakes together. You don’t want to break up the crab too much.
6) You can use a mix of shrimp with your crab cakes and even white fish. All are good.
7) You can mix up your crab cakes and shape them, keep covered in the refrigerator until party time and then fry them.
8) You can serve these with tartar, shrimp cocktail, or remoulade sauce, but I like them with just a squirt of lemon or lime juice and I love them with a ceasar salad.

Makes about 24 crabcakes

2 16 oz. cans of jumbo lump crabmeat (you can replace part of the crab with cooked shrimp or cooked white fish)
1 1/2 cups fresh breadcrumbs made from good bread, crust removed. (use a food processor to make crumbs; you may need a little more or a little less)
3 small scallions, finely chopped (the white and the green tops)
1/4 cup Fresh cilantro or parsley chopped
2 T Old Bay Seasoning
Salt and pepper
3/4 cup mayonnaise (if you use the squeezable mayo, reduce to 1/2 cup)
3 eggs
2 tsp. dijon mustard
Squeeze of fresh lime or lemon juice
Optional: Splash of tabasco or you can use finely diced jalapenos (no seeds)
Salt and pepper

In a bowl, mix all the seasonings and mayonnaise. Then add crab being careful not to break it up. Lastly add breadcrumbs until the crab will let you shape it into 1/4 cup balls, form small patties and roll into any remaining breadcrumbs. Place on a non-stick sheet pan and cover with plastic wrap. Place in the refrigerator for one hour to set. You can make this up to 24 hours in advance.

Heat a skillet over medium-high heat. When hot, add a thin film of olive oil into the pan. Add crabcakes to the pan, being careful not to break them. Turn down heat to medium and cook 3-4 minutes on each side until golden brown. If you’re cooking in batches, put the finished crabcakes in a 200 degree oven so they stay warm.
Serve on top of herb salad with a lime vinegarette.

Crab Cakes and Shrimp - Awesome Bites!

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