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Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES
Comments (1)* Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Tue, Nov 17, 09 at 20:26 I am getting so hungry reading all these recipes and posts! Here's the potato-fennel soup recipe I mentioned earlier. It was posted on this forum back, oh wow, exactly 3 years ago today, November 17, 2006, by Lynnalexndra. She said in the post that it was an Ina Garten recipe. Roasted Potato-Fennel Soup 4 pounds red potatoes, unpeeled and quartered 1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons good olive oil 1 tablespoon minced garlic (about 3 cloves) 1 tablepspoon kosher salt 2 teaspoons fresh ground pepper 4 cups choped yellow onions (4 onions) 4 cups chopped fennel bulb (about 2 pounds) 3 quarts chicken stock or water 1 cup heavy cream Pre-heat the oven to 400 degrees. In a large bowl, toss the potatoes with 1/4 cup olive oil, garlic, salt and pepper. Spread on a baking sheet and roast for 30 minutes, until cooked through. Saute the onions and fennel with 2 tablespoons olive oil in a large stock pot on medium heat until translucent, 10 - 15 minutes. Add the roasted potatoes (including the scrapings from the pan) and the chicken stock. Cover and bring to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer uncovered for 1 hour, until all the vegetables are very soft. Add the heavy cream and allow the soup to cool slightly. Pass the soup through the largest disk of a food mill or chop coarsely in batches in a food processor fitted with a metal blade. (I use an immersion blender). Taste for salt and pepper. Reheat and serve hot. This past weekend I made a different roasted potato soup which combined this cookalong with the squash one. I just made it up as I went along. I made a mistake or 2, but it ended up tasting quite good. One of the mistakes I made was cutting the squash up into too small of pieces. I tried peeling it before roasting, but the scalloped shape made that too frustrating, so I decided to roast it first, then scrape the squash out. Well, it was a pain to do since I had cut it up into small pieces. My goal was to get all the vegetables cut into fairly equal sizes. The second mistake was just not having the equipment. I didn't have my trusty immersion blender with me (we were at our Oklahoma house), so I couldn't puree the veggies. I was never able to smash up the onions, so they remained in pretty big pieces. We just called it country style. Next time I make this, I'll experiment with the size of squash pieces and use a blender. Roasted vegetable soup Pre heat oven to 375 degrees 1 acorn squash 2 russet potatoes 2 onions 1 bulb of garlic Olive Oil Salt and pepper to taste dried sage, around 1/2 to 1 teaspoon or to taste Cut up the potatoes and onions into similar sizes. If you can peel the squash ahead of time, that's great, otherwise, just cut it in half, scoop out the seeds, and place along side the other vegetables on a large baking sheet. Coat the veggies with olive oil, and sprinkle with the salt, pepper and sage. Bake until the veggies are barely tender, around 40 minutes to an hour, stirring them every 15 or 20 minutes. Towards the end of roasting time, in a large soup pan, bring some water to a boil, enough water to cover the vegetables. When the veggies are done roasting, add them into the boiling water. Scrape the squash pulp out of the skins and add to the pot, too. Stir and let simmer till the veggies are tender. Turn off heat and puree using an immersion blender if you have one, or just smash them with your spoon as best you can, which is what I did. That makes it more "country style." Enjoy. Sally o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by lakeguy35 (My Page) on Wed, Nov 18, 09 at 0:03 Nancy and all, glad to see the cookalongs are back!! Lots of great recipes above that I'll be saving and working my way through. I've loved these pancakes for years and finally found a copy cat recipes that I've been playing with. I add at least twice as much onion and double the parsley. Sour cream and applesauce are my choices to go on top of them. Perkin's Potatoe Pancakes Ingredients: 1 cup all-purpose flour 1 cup whole milk 4 eggs 3 tablespoons butter, melted 3 tablespoons sugar 1/4 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley 1 tablespoon minced onion 4 shredded fresh potatoes -or- 2 1/2 cups frozen hash browns (defrosted) Directions: Combine all of the ingredients, except for the potatoes, in a large mixing bowl. Beat by hand until smooth. Add the potatoes to the batter and mix by hand until the potatoes are combined. Let the batter rest while you preheat a skillet to about medium heat. Grease the pan with some butter. Ladle 1/4 cup scoops of batter into the pan. Cook as many at a time as will fit comfortably into your pan. Cook each pancake for 1 1/2 to 2 minutes per side until brown. David o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Thu, Nov 19, 09 at 22:20 Looking through the recipes that have been posted already, I can see that I will be using this thread many, many times. It's a good reminder of some of the very best uses of potatoes. Then I got to thinking that I didn't notice any basic potato salad recipes..... and what potato collection would be complete without potato salad. I also wanted to share a favorite soup, I make a double batch of this and take to my DM in 8oz freezer containers, every few months.... she loves it! I usually cut back the milk a bit so that it is almost like a side dish. Loaded Baked Potato Soup 4 lg baking potatoes, baked (Note: Plan ahead and bake the potatoes when convenient) 2/3 C butter 2/3 C flour 6 C milk 3/4 tsp salt 1/2 tsp black pepper 4 green onions, chopped and divided 1 1/4 C grated cheddar cheese, divided 12 slices bacon (thick is best), cooked, crumbled and divided 1 8-oz carton sour cream (can use plain yogurt) ~Cut potatoes in half, scoop out the pulp and set aside. Discard skins (or make some potato skin snacks) ~Melt butter in a heavy saucepan, add flour, stirring until smooth. Cook 1 min., stirring constantly and gradually add milk. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until thick and bubbly. ~Add potato pulp, salt pepper, 2 tbsp of the green onion, 1/2 C bacon and 1 C cheese. Cook until thoroughly heated and stir in sour cream. Add extra milk for desired consistency. ~Garnish with remaining onion, bacon and cheese. Yield: about 10 cups. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Backwoods Basic Potato Salad 3# cooked and cooled red potatoes, chopped 4 hard boiled eggs, chopped 2 lg stalks of celery, chopped 6 green onions, chopped ¼ C sweet pickle relish Dressing 1½ C Hellman's (Best Foods) mayo 1 tsp celery seed 1 Tbsp vinegar 1 Tbsp sugar ½ tsp garlic powder 1 tsp salt ½ tsp pepper 1 tsp dry mustard Combine dressing ingredients and toss with potato mixture. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Backwoods Deli Style Potato Salad 3# red potatoes, cooked, cooled and chopped 2 stalks of celery, chopped 6 green onions, chopped ½ C chopped red pepper ½ C thin sliced radishes Dressing 1½ C Miracle Whip 2 Tbsp vinegar 2 Tbsp sugar 1 tsp celery seed 1-2 Tbsp prepared mustard Combine dressing ingredients and toss with potatoes and vegetables. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Blue Cheese Potato Salad 3# cooked red potatoes, cooled and chopped ¼ C dry white wine ½ tsp salt ¼ tsp pepper ½ C mayo (Hellman's) ½ C sour cream 1½ Tbsp Dijon mustard 4 oz. blue cheese, crumbled 3 green onions, chopped fine 1 C coarsely chopped celery In a large bowl combine potatoes, wine, salt and pepper. Let sit until the wine is absorbed by the potatoes, about 30 minutes. Combine mayo with remaining ingredients. Add to potatoes and stir well. Allow about 30 minutes for flavors to combine before serving. This blue cheese salad is great with a good steak or grilled tenderloin. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ranch Potato Salad 3# cooked red potatoes, cooled and chopped 5-6 green onions, chopped 6-8 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled ½ C shredded cheddar cheese 1 envelope dry ranch dressing mix 1½ C Hellman's Mayo (sometimes I use part sour cream if I have it on hand) Toss together the potatoes, onions, bacon and cheddar. Combine the ranch dressing mix and mayo, pour over the potato mixture and stir to combine. Nancy o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Sun, Nov 22, 09 at 22:55 Was this the weekend to do the cookalong? Did anybody else do it this weekend? I tried Lori's Gnocchi. It was the first time I've ever eaten them, and certainly the first time to make them, but that was half the fun! I think I need more practice, but DH really enjoyed them, so I don't think he'll object to me practicing on him. I did the sage butter sauce that she recommended. Very simple but quite delicious. On the side, I served a spinach salad with dried cranberries, shallots, shredded carrots and toasted almonds, and a vinaigrette made from Trader Joes Orange Mango Vinegar sauce and olive oil. Photobucket Sally o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Nov 23, 09 at 1:14 I'll be here tomorrow, to draw a name. Got caught up in watching the AMA awards tonight... LOL Nancy o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Nov 23, 09 at 10:45 Just drew a name.... Sherrman....hope you check this thread! Please pick a new topic and post it here asap. I'll be checking. Nancy o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Nov 23, 09 at 12:03 TTT so Sherrman can see :) o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by chase (My Page) on Mon, Nov 23, 09 at 13:42 I'm way late posting but ;last night I made Potato and cheese pierogi for the cook a long. Sauted the pierogi in butter and onion after boiling. Served with cabbage roll's, sour cream and sauerkraut. It was so good! Can't wait to hear what Sherrman has up her sleeve! o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by annie1992 (My Page) on Mon, Nov 23, 09 at 14:40 Sharon, I'm late too. I was in Toledo, Ohio, I took my mother to the library there to do her geneology stuff, she was looking for birth/death/marriage records, etc. Anyway, while I was at Elery's I made potato bread using the King Arthur Flour recipe. I made it Friday evening and baked it on Saturday to take to Mom's cousin for dinner on Saturday night. I forgot my camera, so no pictures, but here's the recipe: Potato Bread 1 tablespoon dry yeast 9 tablespoons (1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon) granulated sugar 1 1/2 cups lukewarm (110°F) potato water (water in which potatoes have been cooked) 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) butter, softened 1 1/2 tablespoons salt 2 eggs 1 cup mashed potatoes (5 small potatoes, 2 medium or 1 large) 6 cups (approximately) King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour Boil unskinned potatoes until easily pierced with the tip of a knife. Remove potatoes from water (reserving water), and let sit till they're cool enough to handle. Peel potatoes and mash them. Set aside. Dissolve yeast and 1 tablespoon of sugar in lukewarm potato water. Beat in butter, remaining 1/2 cup sugar, salt, eggs and potato. Stir in enough flour to make a dough suitable for kneading. Turn dough onto a lightly floured work surface and knead until smooth and elastic, about 10 minutes. Or, knead in a mixer equipped with a dough hook for 5 minutes, or in a food processor for 90 seconds to 2 minutes. Place kneaded dough in a greased bowl, turning to coat all sides. Set bowl in the refrigerator overnight; for maximum flavor, we like to refrigerate it for about 16 hours. Remove dough from refrigerator and shape to fit 3 medium-sized (8 1/2 x 4 1/2-inch) loaf pans, or 1 medium-sized and 1 large (10 x 5-inch) loaf pan, or 8 mini (6 x 3 1/2-inch) loaf pans. Let rise until doubled in bulk, about 4 hours (remember, dough is cold from refrigerator, and will take longer to rise). Bakes loaves in a preheated 375°F oven for 45 minutes, or until bread tests done. Remove from oven and cool on a wire rack. Annie o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Nov 23, 09 at 19:59 TTT...still waiting for Sherrman.. o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Tue, Nov 24, 09 at 7:07 TTT o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Tue, Nov 24, 09 at 9:44 Annie, I'm glad you posted that potato bread recipe, because when I made the gnocchi, I boiled one too many potatoes. They were very large, so I decided I didn't need 3. I'm wanting to make potato bread with the 3rd potato. Thanks. Sally o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Tue, Nov 24, 09 at 12:03 I have to go out for the rest of the day but I'll check back this evening. Sherrman......where are you???? Nancy o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Tue, Nov 24, 09 at 23:23 TTT o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Wed, Nov 25, 09 at 11:48 Sherrman? o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by kathleen_li (My Page) on Wed, Nov 25, 09 at 15:37 I bought a 50 lb bag of potatoes at the farm and I have been trying to find 50 ways to use them on my blog.. I cut them with fall shaped cutter, tossed them in oil and s and p and baked till browned.. I intend to do them with star cutters for Christmas. The gkids loved them.. Photobucket So many excellent potato recipes from all of you here..thank you! Here is a link that might be useful: LOTS of POTATOES... o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by woodie2 (My Page) on Wed, Nov 25, 09 at 17:29 Kathleen - they're beautiful! What a cool idea. o RE: Cookalong #15 ------------ POTATOES clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Thu, Nov 26, 09 at 8:02 How cute! I can't imagine trying to use up 50# of potatoes before they start growing. I see you don't have the limited imagination I do. Sally...See MoreCookalong #18 - Mushrooms
Comments (0)Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Dec 28, 09 at 14:34 Doucanoe has chosen MUSHROOMS for our next Cookalong. Nice pick Linda! Please post your favorite mushroom recipes to this thread This will run until Jan 9 2010. Anyone interested in actually doing a dinner around mushrooms on Jan. 10? Could be fun..... Nancy Here is a link that might be useful: Cookalong #17----------Walnuts Follow-Up Postings: o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by caliloo (My Page) on Mon, Dec 28, 09 at 15:56 Oh great ingredient! I love mushrooms! In keeping with the season, I am posting one of my fav holiday sides...... Alexa ****************************************************** Brandied Steakside Mushrooms Recipe courtesy Paula Deen Recipe Summary Difficulty: Easy Prep Time: 10 minutes Cook Time: 20 minutes Yield: 4 to 6 people User Rating: 3 pounds fresh mushrooms, sliced lengthwise 8 tablespoons butter Seasoning salt ) 1/4 cup Worcestershire sauce 1/2 cup brandy In a large skillet, saute the sliced mushrooms in the butter until brown. Sprinkle liberally with seasoning salt. Add Worcestershire sauce and simmer until almost all sauce is absorbed by the mushrooms. Add the brandy and continue to simmer until mushrooms are tender. Serve with steak or roast beef. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by booberry85 (becky@leadsafe.us) on Mon, Dec 28, 09 at 17:11 Psari Sto Filo This is my knock off of Symeons recipe. Symeons is a great Greek restaurant in Utica, NY. This serves 2-4. 2 boneless fillets of Tilapia, haddock, or other mild white fish 4 sheets of filo dough 1 can cream of mushroom soup (or equivalent) 1 cup milk 1 package of raw spinach 1 package or can of sliced mushrooms (fresh or canned) 2 cups cooked rice Take two sheets of filo dough and lay them on a clean surface. Place several spinach leaves on the filo dough (enough spinach so that the bottom of the fish will be covered). Place one fish fillet on top of the spinach. Cover the top of the fish with more spinach leaves. Top that with sliced mushrooms. Wrap in the filo dough. Repeat the procedure for the second fish. Grease a 9x9 baking dish. Place the rice in the baking dish. If there is leftover spinach, layer the spinach on top of the rice. Place the wrapped fish on top of the rice and spinach. In a sauce pan, heat cream of mushroom soup with 1 cup milk until warm and smooth. Pour over the fish. Cover the baking pan with tin foil. Bake at 350 degrees F for 30 minutes or until fish is cooked through. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by aliceinmd (My Page) on Mon, Dec 28, 09 at 21:21 As you can see, this is an older recipe, one we have used several times over the years. Hough Caterers in Cleveland frequently served it as a side dish at large buffet dinners. Unfortunately, they are now out of business, but some of their recipes live on. MUSHROOM PIE From Menu Planning for Every Occasion, by Robert S. Pile, President of Hough Caterers, Inc., Cleveland, Ohio (1968) 2 cups sautéed mushrooms (measured after cooking) 2 Tablespoons butter 2 Tablespoons flour Liquid from mushrooms and enough milk and cream to make 2 cups ½ teaspoon salt Dash white pepper 1 Tablespoon sautéed onion 1 8-inch unbaked pie shell and dough for top Drain mushrooms and save liquid. Make a cream sauce of the butter, flour, liquid, and milk or cream. Add salt, pepper, and onion. Add mushrooms to cream sauce and put into pie shell. Cover with pie dough. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 45-50 minutes. Serves 6. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by doucanoe (My Page) on Mon, Dec 28, 09 at 21:45 I love, love, love fungus! LOL Some of my favorites.... This one makes a really nice light lunch or is great for breakfast, too! Croutes Aux Champignons 4 slices bread 1/2 c butter, divided 12oz fresh mushrooms, sliced 1 small onion, chopped 1T flour 1/2c stock (I use beef) 1/2c dry white wine 1/4c heavy cream parsley Saute onion in half the butter until tender. Add mushrooms and cook until liquid has evaporated. Stir in flour, gradually add stock and wine. Stir in cream and simmer until thickened. Meanwhile, butter both sides of bread, and toast on griddle until golden brown on both sides. Spoon mushroom sauce over bread slices, serve warm sprinkled with chopped parsley. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sherried Brie and Mushroom Soup Makes 8 cups 1 lb. Brie cheese 2 cups dry sherry 1 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter 1 pound crimini mushrooms, sliced 1/2 cup minced shallots 1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice 2 tablespoons flour 4 cups low-sodium beef broth 1 3/4 cups half and half 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 1/2 cup roughly chopped fresh chives, for garnish Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste Trim the rind from the brie and then roughly tear it into 2-inch pieces. (It is easy to trim if you first place the cheese in the freezer for 30 minutes or until it is sufficiently hard.) Set aside. In a small saucepan, reduce the sherry over medium-high heat to 1 cup. Set aside. in a medium stockpot over medium-high heat, melt the butter. Add the mushrooms, shallots, and lemon juice and cook for 4 minutes, stirring constantly. Remove from the heat, add the flour, and stir until the flour is fully incorporated. Return the mixture to heat and add the beef broth and reserved sherry. Raise the heat to high and bring the mixture to a boil. Reduce the heat and simmer for 15 minutes. Add the trimmed Brie, stirring until the cheese has melted. Add the half and half and pepper and continue to simmer without boiling for 5 minutes. Taste for salt and pepper. To serve, ladle the soup into separate bowls and garnish each with 1 to 2 tablespoons of the chives. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Crockpot Beef Stroganoff 1-1/2 lb stew meat cut into cubes 1T cooking oil 1 lb fresh mushrooms, sliced 1/4c minced onion 2 cloves garlic, minced 1/2 tsp dried oregano 1/4 tsp salt 1/4 tsp pepper 1/8 tsp dried thyme, crushed 1 bay leaf 1-1/2c beef broth 1/3c dry red wine 1 c sour cream 1/2c flour 1/4c water 4c hot cooked noodles or rice In large skillet brown the beef in hot oil, drain. In crockpot combine beef, mushrooms, onions, garlic, oregano, salt, pepper thyme and bay leaf. Pour in broth and wine. Cover and cook on low 8-10 hours or on high 4-5 hours. Discard bay leaf, and turn crockpot to high heat. Mix together sour cream, flour and water. Stir about 1 cup of the hot liquid into the sour cream mixture, return all to crockpot and stir to combine. Cover and cook on high heat for 30 minutes or until thickened and bubbly. Serve over noodles or rice. Serves 6 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ INA GARTENS PORTOBELLO MUSHROOM LASAGNA Kosher salt Good olive oil 3/4 pound dried lasagna noodles 4 cups whole milk 12 tablespoons (11/2 sticks) unsalted butter, divided 1/2 cup all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg 1 1/2 pounds portobello mushrooms 1 cup freshly ground Parmesan Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Bring a large pot of water to a boil with 1 tablespoon salt and a splash of oil. Add the lasagna noodles and cook for 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Drain and set aside. For the white sauce, bring the milk to a simmer in a saucepan. Set aside. Melt 8 tablespoons (1 stick) of the butter in a large saucepan. Add the flour and cook for 1 minute over low heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon. Pour the hot milk into the butter-flour mixture all at once. Add 1 tablespoon salt, the pepper, and nutmeg, and cook over medium-low heat, stirring first with the wooden spoon and then with a whisk, for 3 to 5 minutes, until thick. Set aside off the heat. Separate the mushroom stems from the caps and discard the stems. Slice the caps 1/4-inch thick. Heat 2 tablespoons of oil and 2 tablespoons of the butter in a large (12-inch) saute pan. When the butter melts, add half the mushrooms, sprinkle with salt, and cook over medium heat for about 5 minutes, until the mushrooms are tender and they release some of their juices. If they become too dry, add a little more oil. Toss occasionally to make sure the mushrooms cook evenly. Repeat with the remaining mushrooms and set all the mushrooms aside. To assemble the lasagna, spread some of the sauce in the bottom of an 8 by 12 by 2-inch baking dish. Arrange a layer of noodles on top, then more sauce, then 1/3 of the mushrooms, and 1/4 cup grated Parmesan. Repeat 2 more times, layering noodles, sauce, mushrooms, and Parmesan. Top with a final layer of noodles and sauce, and sprinkle with the remaining Parmesan. Bake the lasagna for 45 minutes, or until the top is browned the sauce is bubbly and hot. Allow to sit at room temperature for 15 minutes and serve hot. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And a super simple appetizer... Balsamic Mushrooms 1/4 c olive oil 12 oz button mushrooms 3 T balsamic vinegar 1 tsp coarse salt 1/4 tsp red pepper flakes fresh ground pepper Heat oil in skillet over medium high heat. Add mushrooms and cook until golden brown, about 7 minutes. Stir in vinegar, salt and red pepper flakes, season with pepper. Cook one minute more. Transfer to serving dish, serve hot or at room temperature. Linda o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Mon, Dec 28, 09 at 22:23 DH makes those sherried mushrooms fairly often, and they are soooo addictive I don't have a recipe, but I do have a request. I'd love a nice mushroom soup that does not contain cream/milk or cheese and will freeze well. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by rachelellen (My Page) on Tue, Dec 29, 09 at 9:32 Sorry, this one has cream, but it is our very, very favorite soup. Rachel the Mushroom Fiends Cream o Shroom Soup Ingredients: 1 lg. Onion, chopped 2 lg celery stalks, chopped 1 c minced mushrooms 2 c sliced mushrooms ½ t dried savory 4 c rich chicken stock 3 lg cloves garlic ¾ t black pepper 1 t salt 1 pt heavy cream 1 pt milk 9 T butter 3 T white flour ¼ c dry white wine (or dry sherryNOT cooking wine or cooking sherry) ½ c Secret Ingredientshhhh!* In a dutch oven, saute half the onion and celery, all the garlic & 1 c minced mushrooms in 3 T butter until onions are translucent. Add savory, pepper & salt and saute until you smell the savory. Add the Secret Ingredientshhh! and saute until the Secret Ingredientshhh! absorbs enough liquid to turn dark and unappetizing looking, while smelling very mushroomy. Add the rich chicken stock and simmer until the vegetables are quite soft. Using an immersion blender (stick blender), or a traditional blender, puree the stock and veggies until smooth. Add the cream and milk and bring to a slow simmer. In the meantime, make a blonde roux from 3 T butter and the white flour. When your roux is ready and the soup simmering, whisk the roux into the soup briskly. Saute the rest of the onion, celery and the sliced mushrooms in 3 T of butter until onions are translucent. Add the white wine and simmer for a few minutes to intensify the flavors. Stir mixture into the soup and simmer until the veggies are tender. If youve planned far enough ahead, and the aroma hasnt driven you crazy with mushroom lust, set the soup off the heat to completely cool. If it can sit in the fridge overnight, so much the better. The flavors "moogle" together as those of so many soups do with time, and the soup becomes even tastier upon reheating. *Secret Ingredient.shhhh! Using a coffee/spice grinder, make a powder of equal parts dehydrated button mushrooms and dehydrated shiitake mushrooms. It should be as fine as talcum powder. This is the secret! It imparts a wonderfully rich mushroom flavor and helps to thicken the soup at the same time. I also use this in stews that include mushrooms. Make these in the morning, so they can chill in the fridge all day and let the flavors "moogle". Marinated Mushroom Salad Mince a small onion and several cloves of garlic. Saute them in a couple of T of olive oil until they soften and the room smells wonderfully of garlic & onion. Then sizzle a half a cup of white wine (not sweet) for half a minute or so and add a T of tomato paste, 1/2 c of water (or, if you've got some really, really good garden tomatoes, sub a small minced tomato sans seeds and reduce the water to 1/4 c), a pinch of ground cloves or nutmeg, and if you're feeling wealthy, a pinch of saffron strands. Cover, and simmer the mixture for half an hour or so. If the mixture gets too dry, you can add a bit more water, but what you're shooting for is a pasty sort of sauce, and remember that the mushrooms will add water when you cook them. Clean, trim & dry about 1/2 pound of button mushrooms. I like to use bite sized. Add these to the sauce and simmer for about 5 minutes, until cooked through. Remember though, that the residual heat will keep cooking them once you take them off the stove, and you don't want them squishy. Salt & Pepper the sauce to taste, cool to room temp and put into the fridge. Just before serving, sprinkle with chopped fresh parsley, or other fairly mild herb like chives, marjoram or tarragon. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by dishesdone (My Page) on Tue, Dec 29, 09 at 10:32 Renee, this has no cream and it's a fabulous soup. Delicious. It has butter, but I suppose you can use a nice olive oil! Mushroom Soup (posted SusanQ at GB's ~ I found this on Epicurious and posted some of the reader's comments as well. One comment suggests making parmesan croutons which I used and were a wonderful addition) Makes 4 servings. By Anthony Bourdain with Jose de Meirelles and Philippe Lajaunie Bloomsbury 6 tablespoons butter 1 small onion, thinly sliced 12 ounces button mushrooms 4 cups light chicken stock or broth 1 sprig of flat parsley Salt and pepper 2 ounces high-quality sherry (don't use the cheap grocery-store variety; it's salty and unappetizing and will ruin your soup) Equipment Medium saucepan Wooden spoon Blender (I used an immersion blender) In the medium saucepan, melt 2 tablespoons/28 g of the butter over medium heat and add the onion. Cook until the onion is soft and translucent, then add the mushrooms and the remaining butter. Let the mixture sweat for about 8 minutes, taking care that the onion doesn't take on any brown color. Stir in the chicken stock and the parsley and bring to a boil. Immediately reduce the heat and simmer for about an hour. After an hour, remove the parsley and discard. Let the soup cool for a few minutes, then transfer to the blender and carefully blend at high speed until smooth. Do I have to remind you to do this in stages, with the blender's lid firmly held down, and with the weight of your body keeping that thing from flying off and allowing boiling hot mushroom purée to erupt all over your kitchen? When blended, return the mix to the pot, season with salt and pepper, and bring up to a simmer again. Add the sherry, mix well, and serve immediately. To astound your guests with a Wild Mushroom Soup, simply replace some of those button mushrooms with a few dried cèpes or morels, which have been soaked until soft, drained, and squeezed. Not too many; the dried mushrooms will have a much stronger taste, and you don't want to overwhelm the soup. Pan sear, on high heat, a single small, pretty, fresh chanterelle or morel for each portion, and then slice into a cute fan and float on top in each bowl. And if you really want to ratchet your soup into pretentious (but delicious), drizzle a few tiny drops of truffle oil over the surface just before serving. Why the hell not? Everybody else is doing it. reviews cookykamp on 12/06/06 This soup was an awesome surprise. Imagine, a mushroom soup with no cream that is absolutely to die for! And so easy too. I topped mine with home-made garlic roasted croutons and fresh grated parmesan. Can't wait to try this with Portobellas and beef broth. YUM-O! akalish from New York, NY on 10/30/06 This recipe is amazing, but a few changes are imperative. I used portobello mushrooms because I had them on hand, and I allowed the onions to brown to deepen the flavor (and because I knew the portobellos would darken the soup anyway). I did not bother with the sherry since I didn't have any on hand, nor the parsley because my chicken broth was already quite flavorful. I used a hand blender to make the process a bit easier, and allow it to cool so I could de-fat it the next day since my guests prefer lighter foods. Most importantly(!!!), I finished the soup with a few drops of black truffle oil, which was pungently delicious. I also took a baguette, sliced it and topped each slice with some freshly grated parmesean. I melted them in the oven, inevitably making frico alongside the croutons, until the bread was nice and crusty. I put a crouton in each soup (serving as a garnish) and served a plate of extra croutons and frico on the table alongside the soup. The black truffle oil and the parmesean-croutons MADE this soup. It was phenomenal. This is at the top of my list for my next dinner party. Delicious! And FYI: when I say crouton, I do mean baguette slices, not cubes--more like crostini but without brushing them with oil and baking them first. A Cook from Palo Alto, CA on 10/27/06 wonderful flavor! I doubled the recipe and added one half ounce dried porcini mushrooms, soaked and added the strained mushroom liquid to the broth. I was very glad I doubled the recipe! malby from NYC on 01/16/06 Made this for my second Christmas in a row--guests actually requested it before RSVPing! We loved it again, and I played with it this year by picking up a dried wild mushroom stir-fry mix. Re-moistened the mushrooms as the package instructed and used the reserved water in addition to the chicken stock. Wow! Adina A from Philadelphia, PA on 11/13/05 A very simple yet elegant and complex soup. One way to make it even easier to make is to put the mushrooms and onions in the cuisinart before you fry them. That way you don't have to whiz them after the soup is hot. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by angelaid (My Page) on Tue, Dec 29, 09 at 11:05 Ranch Mushrooms 1 stick butter 1 lb mushrooms 1 envelope ranch dressing mix put all in crockpot, cook on low for 4 hrs. I add some thinly sliced onions, sometimes green, sometimes white or yellow, sometimes both!!! o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Tue, Dec 29, 09 at 15:23 Thanks, Carol! Butter's fine, I like some cream soups, but the leftovers don't freeze well. This is a timely thread. We bought a bunch of mushrooms, thinking we'd use them for Christams dinner and changed our minds. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by suzyqtexas (My Page) on Wed, Dec 30, 09 at 12:57 Myra's Marinated Mushrooms 1 pound butter 4 pounds extra large whole fresh mushrooms 1 quart burgundy or other red wine 1 1/2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce 1 teaspoon dill weed 1 teaspoon ground black pepper 1 tablespoon flavor enhancer (Accent) can leave out 1 teaspoon garlic powder 2 cups boiling water 4 beef bouillon cubes 4 chicken bouillon cubes Combine all ingredients in large pot Bring to a slow boil on medium heat Reduce to simmer and cook 5-6 hours with the pot covered Remove top and cook another 3-5 hours until liquid reduces to barely cover mushrooms Serve hot o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sherrmann (My Page) on Wed, Dec 30, 09 at 14:23 My youngest is a vegetarian. She (and all the rest of us, too) love these. She eats them as her main course. STUFFED MUSHROOMS 2 large portobello mushroom caps, stems removed and saved bread crumbs, seasoned with salt pepper garlic powder 1/2 tsp minced garlic chopped parsley red pepper flakes Put a bit of extra virgin olive oil in a pan with a lid. Add the mushroom caps, gills down, cover and steam a few minutes until softened but not mushy. Turn them over, lightly salt the gills, finish cooking the mushrooms without a lid. Meanwhile, finely chop the stems and saute with the other ingredients in evoo. When finished, this should be fairly dry, yet with a little bit of stick-to--it-ness remaining. Pile this into the cooked mushroom caps, bake at 350 for a few minutes to brown and crisp the crumbs. Absolutely delish! We have also used this recipe to stuff small mushroom caps to serve as appetizers, but I'm lazy, and it's "putzier" to do little caps. Sherry o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by denise8101214 (My Page) on Wed, Dec 30, 09 at 20:43 Link to the other cookalongs below. Here is a link that might be useful: Cookalong Links o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by chase (My Page) on Mon, Jan 4, 10 at 14:19 Woo Hoo now that the "season" is behind us I actuallthink I can play this time. Here is my recipe for Stuffed Mushrooms. Simple but tasty. Stuffed Mushrooms 20 large white mushrooms 1/3 Cup butter (maybe a bit more) 4 or 5 green onions chopped fine 2 1/2 cups grated cheddar 1/3 Cups bread crumbs more or less if needed salt Clean mushrooms and carefully remove stems. Chop stems and onions finely (I use the food processor). Melt butter in a saute pan. Saute mushroom stems and onions over medium heat until soft but not browned and the stems have given up their juices. Mixture should be quite moist. Add the bread crumbs, only enough to absorb the liquid. Add the grated cheese and stir just until it has melted. Don't worry if the oil separates from the cheese.~ Stuff the mixture into the caps and sprinkle with a bit of salt (or you can salt after they come out of the oven...which is what I usually do). Bake at 375 for 12-15 minutes or until the caps are nice and soft. The Stuffed Mushrooms are in the forefront of this pic. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Mon, Jan 4, 10 at 15:06 I'm glad this thread came up, because I lost track of it over the holidays. Was it supposed to have been this past weekend? I totally forgot. As I mentioned in the thread about fennel, I made Alice Water's Shaved Fennel with Mushroom salad for part of Christmas dinner (Actually, I delegated that to my son, and he did it beautifully.) I'll post a link to that thread rather than repeating the recipe here. I want to try one of the mushroom soup recipes. I'm eager to try a cream of mushroom soup, as I usually used canned. I'd love to try the real thing. The only thing wrong with doing that is I'll be spoiled, I'm sure, and never want to use canned again. But then, what's wrong with that? lol Sally Here is a link that might be useful: The fennel thread o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by kathleenca (My Page) on Mon, Jan 4, 10 at 19:28 Asparagus with Creamy Mushroom Dressing 8 servings 3 lb asparagus, bottoms trimmed 1/2 lb mushrooms, very thinly sliced 3 Tbsp fresh lemon juice 1/2 c. whipping cream 2 Tbsp Dijon mustard 1/3 c. olive oil 1 tsp. packed chopped fresh tarragon or 1/2 tsp dried Cook asparagus until just crip-tender, about 3 minutes. Drain; rinse under cold water to stop cooking. Drain; pat dry. (Can be prepared a day ahead. Wrap in paper towels & plastic bags & refrigerate.) Toss mushrooms with lemon juice in medium bowl; season with salt & pepper. Whisk cream & mustard in small bowl to blend; gradually whisk in oil. Let mushroom mixture & cream mixture stand 30 minutes, or cover & refrigerate up to 2 hours. Arrange asparagus on platter. Whisk tarragon into cream dressing. Add salt & pepper to taste. Drain mushrooms well & return to bowl. Mix cream dressing with mushrooms. Spoon dressing over asparagus & serve. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by bob_cville (My Page) on Tue, Jan 5, 10 at 11:48 The first ever recipe that I call my own is for stuffed mushroom caps. About 18 years ago, I had to make a hot appetizer dish for a company Christmas potluck and remembered an appetizer I had had a few weeks earlier at a restaurant, and tried my best to recreate it for the party. It was such a smashing success that for a couple of years after that I was automatically assigned to bring the mushrooms. 2 8oz packages of White Mushrooms. about 10 oz cream cheese (softened) 3 tbsp butter (melted) 1-2 cloves garlic (crushed) 1-2 green onions (chopped) 2-3 slices provolone cheese Remove stems and lower fringe of mushroom. Mix green onion into softened cream cheese. Mix crushed garlic into melted butter. Spoon cream cheese mixture into each mushroom cap, then dip the top of the mushroom into butter/garlic mixture, and place in glass baking pan. Cover cream cheese in each mushroom with pieces of provolone cheese. Bake in oven at 375 deg F for 10-12 minutes, until provolone is melted, and mushroom is slightly softened. I made these a few days ago for a New Year's Eve party, and once again they were a big smash. Although since there was so much food, and since several people couldn't make it to the party, there were some left at the end of the party. I discovered that they also really work well the next day sliced up to use as omlette filling. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Tue, Jan 5, 10 at 11:52 Last night I made Anthony Bourdain's mushroom soup that Dishesdone posted. As was suggested, I made cheese croutons to top it off. It was delicious! Thanks for the recipe. (If Bourdain was the one to write that recipe, I'm convinced to read his book now.) Sally o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Tue, Jan 5, 10 at 15:18 Sally (and Carol), I made it, too, and it was really good. The only book I read of his was Kitchen Confidential, and I nearly sprained muscles laughing at it. He's very rough around the edges, but, man, he really told it like it is. I immediately bought copies for several of the people I used to work with, and they were all saying, "Yeah, that's what it's like." o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by dirtgirl07 (My Page) on Tue, Jan 5, 10 at 17:43 Here's a simple mushroom spread. Note, I'm not a mushroom eater so I can't tell if it's good or not. Saute a couple of minced garlic cloves with a minced shallot in olive oil. Add mushrooms and saute a couple more minutes. Salt and pepper to taste. Add a little chicken stock and simmer down. Then add a couple of tablespoons (till you get a consistency you like) of cream cheese. Mix well and serve with crackers. Makes a good appetizer to serve along with the spinach/artichoke spread. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by trixietx (My Page) on Tue, Jan 5, 10 at 18:38 Oh, all of your mushroom recipes sound so good. We love mushrooms. I saute mushrooms and chopped garlic in butter to serve with grilled steaks. Next time I am going to try the brandied mushrooms. This is another good recipe for stuffed mushrooms. 20 large mushrooms (white button mushrooms) 8 ounces cream cheese (chopped into small cubes) 1 lb pork breakfast sausage 1 bunch green onion (chopped) parmesan cheese Brown pork sausage and crumble well. Drain sausage from skillet leaving a little grease from sausage and sauté chopped onions until limp. Return sausage to pan with onions and add cream cheese. Over low heat stir sausage, onions, and cream cheese until well blended. Remove stems from mushrooms and stuff each mushroom cap with the mixture. Bake at 350°F for 20-25 minutes until heated through and the mushrooms are beginning to wilt. Top with parmesan. I usually have enough filling left to stuff a few more mushrooms! o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by mikes100acdreamfarm (My Page) on Wed, Jan 6, 10 at 0:49 Here you go BTDT ! This is a favorite of ours. Ive canned it before. But I leave the pasta out and add it when we get ready to eat it. Ive also frozen it with and without the pasta. Both were good. Shitake Mushroom and Leek Soup 2 oz Shitake Mushroom (rehydrate and sliced, remove tough stems) (or about 1-½ to 2 cups fresh sliced mushrooms) 1 c. finely chopped leeks (White and light green parts only) 2 Tbsp butter ¼ c. dry sherry 2 - 10 ¾ oz. cans double strength beef broth with 2 cans water added (6 c. home made beef broth) ½ tsp fresh ground pepper ½ c. orzo pasta Cook and stir mushrooms and leeks in butter until leeks are tender. Add sherry and cook until liquid is reduced by half. Add broth and water (or stock) and pepper. Bring to a boil. Add pasta and boil for 10 min. * Note you can use any type of mushrooms but its very good with Shitake --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You can substitute these mushrooms for the eggplant in your favorite Eggplant Parmesan Recipe. *Very meaty tasting. They grow wild here and we collect them for this dish in Oct. Nothing else looks like them so there isnt a chance of getting a lethal wild fungus on this one. Puff Ball Mushroom Parmesan 1 large Puff Ball Mushroom Or perhaps a few large Portabellas ? Italian Seasoned Bread crumbs Egg and water wash EVOO Your favorite Marinara Sauce Mozzarella and or Provolone Cheese Slice the mushroom s ¾" thick. Dip in egg and water wash then in bread crumbs. Brown in EVOO. Remove to a lightly greased baking dish. Pour Marinara Sauce over. Top with Cheese. Bake in 350* oven for 30-35 minutes until tender and sauce is bubbly and cheese is melted. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Or simply use Portabella Mushrooms Marinate in your favorite Italian Dressing. Grill over a low fire turning several times until tender. Slice and serve with Grilled, chicken, steaks or burgers. Mike o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by lpinkmountain (My Page) on Sat, Jan 9, 10 at 16:03 As usual I am behind. Only cook on weekends. Hopefully I will be making this over the weekend. Dried Mushroom Barly Soup from "Moosewood Restaurant Lowfat Favorites" 1/2 ounce dried mushrooms (you can go fancy here like shitake, morels, porcini, chantrelles). Apparently that's about 2/3 cup. 6 cups boiling water 1 tsp. olive oil or canola oil 2 cups chopped onions (that's a lot for my taste!) 1 cup finely chopped carrot 1 cup finely chopped celery 2 garlic cloves, finely minced or put through a garlic press 3 cups sliced fresh mushrooms 1/4 cup soy sauce or tamari pinch dried thyme and dill 1/4 tsp. black pepper 1/2 cup raw barley 1/4 cup dry sherry or 2 tsp. honey (I'll use white wine, I don't have sherry) salt to taste Soak the dried mushrooms in boiling water and simmer for 15 minutes. Take off the heat and let sit for another 15 min. at least. Meanwhile, saute the chopped veggies in the olive oil in the bottom of a large heavy bottomed soup pot. Frankly I think you'll need at least 1 TBLSP EVOO but this is from a lowfat cookbook so do your best to skimp I guess. Saute until everything is translucent. Drain the dried mushrooms, reserving the broth. Chop off the tough stem ends. Dice and add to the fresh veggie mixture. Strain the mushroom broth through a coffee filter or some layers of cheesecloth in a lined strainer. Pour the mushroom broth into the soup pot along with the sauteed veggies. Add the seasonings and the barley. Bring to a boil and simmer for 45 minutes. I would taste to see if it needed a pick me up and then add some veggie broth paste or powder if needed. Soup should be brothy so add more if the barley hogs it all up. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by chase (My Page) on Sat, Jan 9, 10 at 16:04 Yikes I forgot it was this weekend...I'm on it! o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by katiec (My Page) on Sat, Jan 9, 10 at 16:12 Here's one more stuffed mushroom and a different kind of quiche: * Exported from MasterCook * Mushroom Crusted Quiche Recipe By :Katie (adapted from a recipe found in a magazine, 1975) Serving Size : 6 Preparation Time :0:00 Categories : Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method -------- ------------ -------------------------------- 3/4 pound mushrooms -- finely chopped 2 tablespoons butter crushed saltine crackers -- 1/2-2/3 cup 3/4 cup sauteed onion -- or green onion 2 c monterey jack cheese -- shredded (approx) 3 eggs 1 pint cottage cheese 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper Saute mushrooms in butter. Add enough crushed saltines to absorb juice. Press into pie pan. Sprinkle crust with onion. Heap jack cheese over onion; don't pack down. Whirl eggs, cottage cheese and cayenne in blender. Pour into crust. Bake at 350°F 45 minutes, until a knife comes out clean. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - * Exported from MasterCook * Stuffed Mushrooms Recipe By : Katie, adapted from the Joy of Cooking Serving Size : 12 Preparation Time :0:00 Categories : Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method -------- ------------ -------------------------------- 12 large mushroom caps 1 tablespoon butter 1 1/2 cups bread crumbs 1/2 cup pecans or other nuts -- finely chopped 2 cloves garlic -- minced 1 1/2 tablespoons basil, chives, or tarragon -- chopped 2 tablespoons dry white wine salt and paprika grated fresh Parmesan cheese Brush mushroom caps with butter or olive oil. Chop mushroom stems and saute in butter. Add bread crumbs, nuts, garlic, and herbs. Season with salt and paprika and bind with wine, using more wine if necessary. Fill mushroom caps and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese and a little paprika. Broil about 5 minutes. They can also be baked. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Sat, Jan 9, 10 at 16:51 Thanks, Mike. Glad I checked this thread again. :) I remembered one more we like, Mique's turnovers. Haven't made these in a while because I just haven't had the people around to help eat them. Must remedy that soon and make a batch. I warn you, they are addictive. MUSHROOM TURNOVERS Makes about 2 dozen turnovers To Make Mushroom filling: 3 tablespoons butter 1 large onion, finely chopped 1/2 pound mushrooms finely chopped 1/4 teaspoon thyme 1/2 teaspoon salt Freshly ground black pepper to taste 2 tablespoons flour 1/4 cup sweet or sour cream 1. In a skillet, heat the butter, add the onion and brown lightly. Add the mushrooms and cook, stirring often, about three minutes. 2. Add the thyme, salt and pepper and sprinkle with flour. Stir in the cream and cook gently until thickened. To Make Dough: 3 three-ounce packages cream cheese at room temperature 1/2 cup butter at room temperature 1 1/2 cups flour 1. Mix the cream cheese and the butter thoroughly. Add the flour and work with the fingers or pastry blender until smooth. Chill well, for at least thirty minutes. 2. Preheat oven to hot (450° F.). 3. Roll the dough to one-eighth-inch thickness on a lightly floured surface and cut into rounds with a three-inch biscuit cutter. Place a teaspoon of mushroom filling on each and fold the dough over the filling. Press the edges together with a fork. Prick top crusts to allow for the escape of steam. 4. Place on an ungreased baking sheet and bake until lightly browned, about fifteen minutes. Source: MQ on CF o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by moosemac (My Page) on Sun, Jan 10, 10 at 8:32 Here's a favorite. I apologize for the lack of measurements but I tend to cook by the seat of my pants a lot when I'm not baking. I'm a taster not a measurer. :-) Caprese Stuffed Mushrooms Fresh Mozzarella, ¼" dice Plum Tomatoes, seeded, ¼" dice Prosciutto, ¼" dice Fresh Basil, ¼" dice Roasted Garlic, mashed Ciabatta Bread, ¼" dice (This is optional just be sure not to use too much bread.) Balsamic Vinaigrette (I used Newmans Own) Mushroom Caps (I usually uses baby portabellas/criminis.) Mix cheese, tomatoes, prosciutto, basil, garlic and bread together. Dry mushroom caps and place on cookie sheet. Put a tiny splash of vinaigrette in each mushroom cap. Top with a ball of stuffing. Bake at 400 until the filling is melted and just starting to brown on the top. Or you can par cook mushroom caps by microwaving for about 1-2 minutes. Do not over cook the mushrooms. You want them still firm not soft and juicy. Preheat broiler. Broil mushrooms until cheese is just melted. These can be prepared ahead, then brought to room temperature and broiled just before serving. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by bizzo (My Page) on Sun, Jan 10, 10 at 9:23 I think I'll have one of my favorite simple lunches... sauteed mushrooms and onions on toast :-) Thanks everyone for all the GREAT mushroom recipes! Several I want to try... o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Sun, Jan 10, 10 at 14:17 Decisions, decisions, decisions! I'm wanting stuffed mushrooms, and I'm wanting to make the fancy pasta that my co-worker gave me for Christmas, and I'm wanting to make those turnovers that Beanthere_dunthat posted. Here's what I have on hand that I thought I could incorporate into stuffed mushrooms: Goat cheese that I bought on sale, shallots, and a quarter loaf of home made bread that's a little stale. I think I have a package of cream cheese, too. I think I can combine or use some of the recipes y'all have posted for stuffed mushrooms. Sally o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by mustangs (My Page) on Sun, Jan 10, 10 at 15:42 Love 'shrooms! I've gotten some good "must tries" from this thread-thanks. Here is my late entry: Creamy Mushroom Sauce For Steak # 2 tablespoons butter # ½ onion, minced # 1 clove garlic, finely minced # 2-3 cups sliced fresh mushrooms # ¾ teaspoon kosher or sea salt # Ground black pepper # 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg (optional) # 3 tablespoons whiskey # 1 tablespoon balsamic # ½ cup heavy cream # 1 tablespoon finely minced fresh herb of your choice (chives, parsley, tarragon, basil) Heat butter in sauce pan over medium heat. When butter starts bubbling, add onions and sauté until onions are just, translucent, and just slightly golden; about 3 minutes. add garlic and sauté for an additional minute until the garlic is fragrant. Turn heat to high and add mushrooms all at once. Immediately start tossing so the onion garlic butter mixture is evenly distributed among the mushrooms. Sauté mushrooms until they are browned and softened, about 3- minutes. Season with salt, pepper, and nutmeg. Pour in whiskey and balsamic and let mixture bubble a bit to burn off some of the alcohol. Turn heat down just a bit and add in heavy cream. Let bubble for another 30 seconds and then taste to adjust the salt. Stir in the freshly minced herbs and pout over just grilled steak. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by doucanoe (My Page) on Sun, Jan 10, 10 at 17:18 I have Wild Mushroom Flan in the oven right now, to go with Sue's Roadhaouse Ribs which are almost ready to go on the grill. I'll let you know if the flan is a keeper recipe in a bit... Linda o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Sun, Jan 10, 10 at 22:37 Guess what....Times up!!!!!! You are welcome though, to make comments and add any new recipes at any time. I just drew a name from those that posted to this thread. ************* Chase ****************** Please pick the next Cookalong ingredient. Just post it here and then I'll set up the next thread. Can't wait to see what you pick! Nancy o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Jan 11, 10 at 9:31 TTT....waiting for Chase o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Mon, Jan 11, 10 at 9:32 I got ambitious and decided to make a stuffed pasta dish called Mushroom and Goat Cheese Fagottini. (Really, that's what it's called - I didn't make it up!) I found a recipe on line that used mushrooms, goat cheese and shallots, all of which I had on hand, plus I could use my pasta maker that DH gave me a year ago Christmas, but I haven't used much because the knob that holds it on was cracked and wouldn't hold. I got a replacement knob, so I decided to try my hand at making pasta. I definitely need more practice. It always looks so easy when they do it on TV. One problem was that the recipe didn't indicate how large to make the squares of dough. Then I realized that I didn't roll the dough thin enough, as I had way more stuffing than dough. Finally, when I got all the little, uh, fagottinis ready to go into the water, they were stuck to the plate I had put them on. I couldn't get them off without tearing them. Well, I was able to fix them up and get enough of them cooked to make a meal for DH and I. We had a nice salad of mixed greens, sliced pear and dried cranberries with a lemon-tangerine vinaigrette. The pasta was way too thick and tough, but it was passable and edible, and tasted pretty good, but certainly could have been better. I need to practice more. I'm determined to learn how to make home made pasta, and to make things like ravioli and other stuffed pastas. It was fun trying, in spite of the frustrations. I love playing with dough! Here's the recipe from a blog I found in my search. Wild Mushroom and Goat Cheese Fagottini by Joseph Erdos from blog July 2009 For the pasta dough: 1-1/2 cups all-purpose flour 1/4 teaspoon salt 2 large eggs 1 large egg yolk For the filling: 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 tablespoon butter 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped 1 large shallot, finely chopped 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme 8 ounces cremini mushrooms, cleaned, trimmed, and sliced 8 ounces shitake mushrooms, cleaned, trimmed, and sliced 1 8-ounce log goat cheese 1/4 cup grated Pecorino Romano cheese coarse sea salt freshly ground black pepper 1 large egg white To make the dough, combine the flour and salt in a large bowl. Create a well in the center and add the eggs and egg yolk. Using a fork, beat the eggs while mixing in the flour a little at a time. Once the dough has come together, if it is too dry and crumbly, a little water can be added. Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured work surface. Form into a ball and knead until the dough takes on a smooth surface, about 10 minutes. Form the dough into a disk and wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Let it rest for about 20 to 30 minutes at room temperature. To make the filling, heat oil in a large heavy-bottomed pan over medium-high heat. Add garlic and shallot; cook until translucent, about 5 minutes. Add thyme and mushrooms. Cook, stirring constantly, until all moisture is lost, about 5 to 10 minutes. Once slightly cooled, add the mushrooms to a food processor and pulse until finely chopped. Turn out into a medium bowl. Add goat cheese and Pecorino; season with salt and pepper. Add egg white and stir to combine. To make the pasta, cut the disk into about 4 to 6 pieces. Work with only one piece at a time and keep the remaining pieces wrapped in plastic wrap. Form the piece into a flat disk, lightly flour, and feed it into the machine starting with the largest setting. Fold the dough in half and roll it through again. Now start moving onto the next setting and so on until the next-to-last setting is reached. The pasta should be silky smooth and less than 1/16-inch in thickness. Lay the long sheet of pasta on a lightly floured work surface. Cut off the rounded ends. Using a decorative pastry cutter or a sharp knife, cut the sheet into small squares of equal size. Using a teaspoon, drop balls of filling onto each square. Brush around the filling with a bit of water. Take the square in hand and bring all the corners together, firmly pressing the edges to seal the dough while removing as much air as possible. Place onto a lightly floured tray or towel. Repeat with the remaining pieces of dough. Scraps of dough can also be reformed and rerolled on the machine. Bring a large pot of liberally salted water to a rapid boil. Add the fagottini in small batches and cook until al dente, about 5 minutes. Stir now and then to prevent sticking. Serve drizzled with olive oil and grated Pecorino. Yield: 4 to 6 servings. Here is a link that might be useful: Gastronomer's Guide by Joseph Erdos - Mushroom and Goat Cheese Fagottini o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by chase (My Page) on Mon, Jan 11, 10 at 9:57 I actually did play a long last night. I made Cathy's creamy mushroom sauce for steak and served it over filet mignon. Thanks Cathy it was lip smacking good. I'm trying to find new ways of incorporating veggies in our meals so I think I'll pick spinach as my ingredient. o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Jan 11, 10 at 10:28 Link to the next Cookalong Here is a link that might be useful: Cookalong #19-----SPINACH o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by lpinkmountain (My Page) on Mon, Jan 11, 10 at 10:42 Well, the best laid plans . . . . I didn't make the mushroom soup because before I could do the soup I needed to go grocery shopping to get the the 'shrooms, and I have a rule that I can't go grocery shopping until I have cleaned out the fridge for the week. Upon doing that I found that one of the tomatoes I bought for tomato jelly had gotten smooshed and was rotting and causing the others to rot, so I had to quick make the jelly. It was not so good actually, but I ended up with a fresh tomato/dried tomato balsamic basil slurry that I didn't want to throw out, so I made cream of tomato soup. Also used up what I could salvage of my rotting celery on that. So the mushroom soup is definately out since I am now missing two of the ingredients and I have a ton of tomato soup to eat. Ah the trials of being a single foodie. I guess I'll have to move on to spinach and save the dried mushrooms for another day. Actually, the dish I want to make for spinach has mushrooms! o RE: Cookalong #18----------------MUSHROOMS clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings * Posted by mustangs (My Page) on Mon, Jan 11, 10 at 10:49 Sharon, Thanks for the "feed"back; I'm glad that you liked it....See MoreCookalong - #33- Cinnamon
Comments (0)Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Tue, Aug 10, 10 at 23:54 Ready for another Cookalong? Joanm looked in her pantry to come up with this next focus ingredient and it's something that everybody uses.... Cinnamon!!!!!!!!! Without even looking it up, I'm sure it's the most popular, well used spice in the world. I can't wait to see your favorite T+T recipes. Nancy Here is a link that might be useful: Cookalong #32 ---------- PEACHES! Follow-Up Postings: o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lindac (My Page) on Wed, Aug 11, 10 at 0:04 Cinnamon and ground red pepper...mixed half and half makes an awesome rub for a grilled pork loin! And we have cinnamon rolls apple dumplings any kind of crisp...apple peach, rhubarb blue berry is nothing without cinnamon. And a lovely Greek tomato sauce with as trong whiff of cinnamon. I need to make a Penzey's run! Linda C o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by claire_de_luna (My Page) on Wed, Aug 11, 10 at 14:29 This is my ''go to recipe'' when I need something quick! Forgive me for not posting something new, but this is an old favorite. One Bowl Chocolate Cupcakes With Cinnamon Buttercream Frosting Makes 2 dozen 3/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour 1 1/2 cups sugar 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda 3/4 teaspoon baking powder 3/4 teaspoon salt 2 large eggs 3/4 cup warm water 3/4 cup buttermilk 3 tablespoons vegetable oil 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line cupcake pans with liners; set aside. In a large mixing bowl, sift together cocoa, flour, sugar, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Add the eggs, warm water, buttermilk, oil, and vanilla; mix batter until smooth, about 3 minutes. Scrape down the sides and bottom of bowl to assure batter is well mixed. Divide the batter evenly among liners (use an ice cream scoop), filling each about one-third full. Bake until tops spring back when touched, about 20 minutes, rotating pan once if needed. Transfer to a wire rack; let cool completely. Cinnamon Buttercream 1 cup butter 1 T. vanilla 1 T. ground cinnamon (Penzey’s Vietnamese Cinnamon) 1 lb. powdered sugar 3 T. Half and Half or cream o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by terri_pacnw (My Page) on Wed, Aug 11, 10 at 14:39 My favorite thing to do with cinnamon.. "ornaments" Drain a cup of applesauce well overnight in a coffee filter lined wire strainer. Mix enough cinnamon in to make a moist but firm dough. Roll out to between an 1/8"-1/4" and cut out with cookie cutters or form into small "buttons" with your hands. Let dry in a low oven, dehydrator or tight weaved cooling rack until dry.. I like to use them as "package" decorations as well as garlands on the Christmas tree..or even in a glass vase, with christmas lights...(the warmth scents the room)... I'll be back with a few "edible" recipes. LOL o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Wed, Aug 11, 10 at 15:22 Some favorites... Cinnamon Swirl Quick Bread 2 cups all purpose flour 1 1/2 cups sugar, divided 1 tsp. baking soda 1/2 tsp salt 1 cup buttermilk 1 egg 1/4 cup vegetable oil 3 tsp. ground cinnamon Glaze: 1/4 cup confectioner' s sugar 1 1/2 to 2 tsp. milk Combine flour, 1 cup sugar, baking soda and salt. Combine buttermilk, egg and oil; stir into dry ingredients just until moistened. In a small bowl, combine cinnamon and remaining sugar. Grease the bottom only of a 9 x 5 inch loaf pan. Pour half of the batter into pan. Sprinkle with half of the cinnamon sugar. Carefully spread with remaining batter and sprinkle with remaining cinnamon sugar; cut through batter with a knife to swirl. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 to 50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean. Cool completely. Combine glaze ingredients and drizzle over loaf. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Apple Harvest Breakfast Bake 3/4 cup quick-cooking oats 3/4 cup warm apple juice 2 tablespoons oil or applesauce 2 large egg whites 2 teaspoons vanilla 1 tablespoon margarine , melted 1 cup packed brown sugar , divided 1 large granny smith apples , peeled and thinly sliced (about 1 1/2 c.) 1 1/4 cups flour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg Preheat oven to 350°F Combine oats, apple juice, and oil or applesauce in a small bowl; let stand for 10 minutes.Stir in egg whites and vanilla. Pour margarine in the bottom of a 9" round cake pan coated with cooking spray.Sprinkle 1/4 cup brown sugar.Arrange apple slices spoke-like on top of brown sugar, working from center of pan to edge. Combine 3/4 cup brown sugar, flour, baking soda, cinnamon, salt, and nutmeg in a large bowl; stir with a whisk.Add oat mixture and stir just until moistened.Pour into prepared pan. Bake at 350°F for 40 minutes or until wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean.Cool in pan 10 minutes Place a plate upside down on top of cake; invert onto plate.Cut into wedges. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Apple Cinnamon Crepes Serves: 6 to 8 (generously) / Preparation time: 45 minutes Total time: 1 hour 45 minutes Don't let the long list of ingredients discourage you. All the ingredients can be prepared a day ahead and combined the day you serve. These make generous portions, enough to share. CREPES 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour Pinch of salt 3 large eggs 1/2 cup sugar 1 1/2 to 2 cups milk 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 4 tablespoons clarified butter CREAM FILLING 1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese, softened 1 cup confectioners' sugar SAUCE TOPPING 1 1/2 cups light brown sugar 1/2 teaspoon flour 1 cup water 1 tablespoon butter 1 teaspoon maple flavoring APPLE FILLING 4 Golden Delicious apples, peeled, cored, shredded 2 teaspoons cinnamon 1 tablespoon sugar GARNISH Whipped cream Maraschino cherries Confectioners' sugar Whisk together the flour and salt in a medium bowl. In a separate large bowl, whisk together the eggs and sugar. Whisk in 1 1/2 cups of the milk, the vanilla and the flour until combined. If the mixture is too thick, add the remaining milk. Cover and refrigerate batter for 30 minutes. Heat a crepe pan or an 8-inch skillet over medium heat for about 1 minute. Cover the surface of the pan with 1 tablespoon of clarified butter and heat until it sizzles. Ladle about 1/2 cup of the batter into the middle of the pan and immediately start swirling the pan to move the batter over the surface. Cook for 45 seconds or until the crepe is lightly golden brown. Flip the crepe over and cook the other side for 20 seconds. Remove the crepe to a plate and repeat with the remaining batter, adding more clarified butter to the skillet as needed. Place wax paper between the crepe layers. The crepes can be refrigerated for up to 3 days. Makes 6 to 8 crepes depending on how thick you like them. To make the cream filling, in a medium bowl, beat the cream cheese until it's smooth. Add the confectioners' sugar and beat until it's incorporated. Set the cheese aside. For the sauce topping, in a saucepan, combine the brown sugar, flour and water. Cook over medium heat until the mix becomes slightly thick. Remove it from the heat and whisk in the butter and maple flavoring. Set the sauce aside. To make the apple filling, place the shredded apples, cinnamon and sugar in a covered microwave dish. Heat on high for 1 minute. Remove and stir. Microwave on high for another 1 minute, then remove and stir them. Continue until the apples are heated through. To serve: Place a warm crepe on a serving plate. Place 2 heaping spoonfuls of the cream filling in the center of the crepe. Spread it the length of the crepe. Add about 1/2 cup of the heated apple filling. Fold both sides of crepe toward the center of filling. Top with 2 spoonfuls of the heated sauce. Top with whipped cream and a maraschino cherry. Sprinkle with confectioners' sugar. From Frances Gurk, Garden City. Tested by Susan Selasky for the Free Press Test Kitchen. Analysis based on generous servings. 730 calories (31% from fat), 25 grams fat (15 grams sat. fat), 117 grams carbohydrates, 12 grams protein, 300 mg sodium, 174 mg cholesterol, 191 mg calcium, 3 grams fiber. Copyright © 2006 Detroit Free Press Inc. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Nancy o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caliloo (My Page) on Wed, Aug 11, 10 at 15:33 I definitely need to make those ornaments. I will be searching the dollar store for cheap-o cinnamon though, I am not using my Vietnamese stuff for that! LOL! And Nancy - I am so making that Breakfast bake for tomorrow AM! That is one of the few benefits of being an insomniac, I can bake at 4 AM and not heat up the house LOLOLOL! IT sounds fantastic! Here are a couple of favorites at our house: Spice Rubbed Lamb Chops (Morocco) From Food Network Kitchens 2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus extra for seasoning 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, plus extra for seasoning 1 teaspoon freshly ground cloves 1 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon 8 loin lamb chops Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F. Mix the 2 teaspoons salt, 1 teaspoon pepper, cloves, nutmeg, and cinnamon together. Brush each lamb chop lightly with the olive oil and season with the spice mixture. Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Cook the chops in the skillet, without crowding until brown and crisp on both sides, about 3 or 4 minutes for both sides. Finish chops in the oven for 1 minute for medium rare, or to desired doneness. ********************************************************* Greek Meatballs 1 egg, beaten ½ cup soft breadcrumbs 2 tbsp raisins, snipped 2 tbsp pine nuts, toasted 4 cloves garlic, minced ½ tsp salt ½ tsp ground cinnamon (or more to taste) 1 lb ground lamb EVO In a large bowl combine egg, bread crumbs, raisins, pine nuts, garlic, salt and cinnamon. Add lamb, mix well. Moisten hands with water and shape lamb mixture into 32 meatballs. Preheat oven to 400F. Lightly brush a 15 x 10 pan with oil. Place meatballs ½ inch apart on pan. Brush lightly with EVO. Bake about 20 minutes or until cooked through (160F). Drizzle with additional EVO if desired and serve immediately. Yogurt Feta Sauce 4 oz. Crumbed feta cheese ¾ c. plain yogurt (Preferably Greek) 2 T. milk 1 clove minced garlic 1/3 c. seeded cucumber, chopped or shredded 1 t. fresh dill (optional) Place cheese, yogurt, milk and garlic for sauce into food processor using steel blade and process until smooth. Put it in abowl and gently mix in the cukes. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by doucanoe (My Page) on Thu, Aug 12, 10 at 9:14 I am kinda picky about what I like cinnmon in. Don't care for it much in savory dishes, or with chocolate, but I do like it in breads and rolls and things with apple or pumpkin. Here is a Lebanese dish from my son-in-law that my daughter raves about. I am going to try it, and hopefully it will change my mind on the savory issue! Stuffed Zucchinis 5 med. zucchinis with centers cored out Stuffing: 1/2 cup short grain rice that has soaked in water for a half hour 1/2 - 1 lb cooked ground beef (depending on your affinity for meat) 1/4 tsp. allspice 1/4 tsp. cinnamon 1tsp. salt ------- 8 oz. tomato sauce (or crushed tomatoes) 3 cups water 6 tbsp lemon juice 1 tsp. dried mint 2 cloves crushed garlic Drain rice and mix with the rest of the stuffing ingredients. Fill each zucchini 3/4 full and place standing up in a stock pot. In a separate bowl, mix the remaining ingredients and pour over zucchinis. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and cook for an hour or until rice is tender. Eggplant may be substituted for zucchini and if you don' t want the hassle of coring the vegetables, just cut in slices and cook in sauce and serve over rice. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And here is a T&T dessert recipe. I have subbed cream for the evaporated milk with no problem. Apple Walnut Cobbler Source BH&G January 1997 5 c tart apples, peeled and thinly sliced 3/4 c chopped walnuts 3/4 c sugar, divided 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon 1 c all purpose flour 1 tsp baking powder 1 egg, beaten 1/2 c evaporated milk 1/3 c butter or margarine, melted Half & Half or light cream (Optional) Preheat oven to 325F. Lightly grease an 8x8 square baking dish. Spread the apples in prepared baking dish. Sprinkle with 1/2 c walnuts, 1/4 c sugar and the cinnamon. In medium mixing bowl, stir together the flour, 1/2 c sugar and baking powder. In small bowl, combine the egg, milk and melted butter. Stir egg mixture into the dry ingredients until smooth. Pour evenly over the apples, sprinkle with remaining walnuts. Bake 50-55 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Serve warm, cut into squares. If desired, serve with half & half or cream. 9 servings Linda o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by tracey_oh (My Page) on Thu, Aug 12, 10 at 10:57 I'd say these are more of a cross between a scone and a biscuit than a regular biscuit. Found this recipe when I was looking for a way to use up some extra plain yogurt I had. Cinnamon Biscuits Bon Appetit Yield: Makes about 12 biscuits 2/3 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar 2 cups all-purpose flour 2 cups cake flour 4 teaspoons baking powder 3/4 teaspoon salt 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1/4 teaspoon baking soda 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) chilled unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch pieces 2 large eggs 1 cup chilled plain yogurt Blend 2/3 cup sugar, flour, cake flour, baking powder, salt, cinnamon and baking soda in large bowl. Add butter, rub in with fingertips until mixture resembles coarse meal. Beat eggs in medium bowl. Transfer 1 tablespoon beaten eggs to small bowl; reserve for glaze. Whisk yogurt into remaining eggs in medium bowl. Stir yogurt mixture into dry ingredients. Gather dough into ball. Gently knead dough on lightly floured surface until dough just holds together, about 6 turns. Roll or pat dough into 1-inch-thick round. Using 2 1/2- to 3-inch-diameter heart-shaped cookie cutter, cut out biscuits. Gather dough scraps, reroll to 1-inch thickness and cut out additional biscuits. Place biscuits on ungreased baking sheet. (Can be prepared 1 day ahead. Cover biscuits and reserved egg glaze separately and refrigerate.) Preheat oven to 400°F. Brush biscuits with reserved egg glaze. Sprinkle with remaining 2 tablespoons sugar. Bake biscuits until puffed and light golden, about 18 minutes. Cool 10 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by ruthanna (My Page) on Thu, Aug 12, 10 at 16:30 I probably use cinnamon as often in savory dishes as in sweet ones but never in overpowering quantities. I make this often in summer, when green beans and tomatoes are ready in the gardens. BEEF AND GREEN BEAN STEW " 4 servings 1 lb. lean beef 1 Tbs. olive oil 1 large onion, peeled and coarsely chopped 2 vine-ripened tomatoes, peeled, diced 1 cup tomato juice 2 Tbs. lime juice 1/4 tsp. curry powder 1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon 2 Tbs. chopped fresh mint salt and pepper to taste 1 clove garlic, minced 1 pound fresh green beans, tipped and cut Cut the beef into 1 1/2 inch cubes. Brown the meat cubes in the oil in a Dutch oven. Stir in remaining ingredients except green beans. Lower heat to simmering. Cover tightly and simmer over low heat until beef is tender â" about one hour. Stir in green beans. Cover and cook five minutes. Uncover and continue to cook, stirring frequently, until green beans are tender-crisp and liquid is reduced to a thick sauce. Good served with cooked orzo or small boiled potatoes. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by mustangs (My Page) on Thu, Aug 12, 10 at 16:55 Cognac Fruit Dip This makes a lot; I half the recipe below and itâs plenty for the family Christmas brunch. 12 ounces cream cheese 1 cup confectioners sugar, unsifted 7 ounces marshmallow creme 1 cup sour cream 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 2 teaspoons almond extract 2 teaspoons cinnamon 2 tablespoons cognac whole fresh strawberries for dipping In small bowl of electric mixer, cream the cheese until soft and smooth. Add the confectioners sugar and beat until well-blended. Add the sour cream and the rest of the ingredients. Blend just until well-combined. Cover and chill several hours before serving. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lowspark (My Page) on Fri, Aug 13, 10 at 10:01 I'm hoping for recipes for Cinnamon Ice Cream and Cinnamon Babka. Here's my ultra lame-o contribution to this thread. My kids LOVED this for dessert when they were little. Haven't made it in a long time. Spread a tortilla with butter. Sprinkle generously with sugar and cinnamon. Broil till bubbly (maybe 2-3 minutes). Eat. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by joanm (My Page) on Fri, Aug 13, 10 at 10:39 I am hoping for a cinnamon ice cream recipe too. I had it at a restaurant once and it wowed me. I tried mixing some cinnamon into store bought vanilla once with mixed results. Now that I have an ice cream maker I should try it again. Here is a recipe that I saw Cat Cora make once. It looked really good and she said she makes it for her family. I haven't tried it yet, but maybe I can give it a shot during the cook along. Cinnamon stewed Chicken Cat Cora Prep: 20 minutes Cook: 1 hour, 15 minutes Makes 6 servings Ingredients: 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 2 teaspoons kosher salt 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper 1 (2 1/2- to 3-pound) whole chicken, cut into 8 pieces 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil 2 coarsely chopped yellow onions 5 garlic cloves, minced and divided 1/2 cup dry white wine 1 cup water 1 cup chicken broth 1 (6-ounce) can tomato paste 1 tablespoon chopped fresh oregano 1/2 cup ricotta salata cheese, grated Instructions: 1. Mix cinnamon, salt, and pepper in a bowl. Pat chicken dry with paper towels, and rub with cinnamon seasoning. 2. Heat olive oil in a deep skillet over high heat. (Donât overcrowd chicken, or it will steam rather than brown.) Brown chicken in oil for about 4â"5 minutes on each side. Turn frequently with a spatula. Remove chicken when nicely browned on all sides; set aside. 3. Lower heat to medium-high. Add onions and 3 minced garlic cloves and cook, stirring constantly, for about 3 minutes or until onions are soft and golden brown. Add wine to pan, scraping up any browned bits with a spatula. 4. When wine has evaporated, add water, broth, tomato paste, oregano, and remaining 2 garlic cloves. Return chicken to pan. (Liquid should cover the chicken about three-fourths of the way.) Cover and simmer over low heat about 1 hour or until chicken is tender and cooked through. Add salt and pepper to taste. 5. Serve chicken topped with sauce and sprinkled with cheese. Remove skin before eating. (Serving size: about 1 piece of chicken with sauce) Nutrition: Calories 336; Fat 15g (sat 4g, mono 6g, poly 2g); Choles¬terol 98mg; Protein 35g; Carbohydrate 11g; Sugars 5g; Fiber 2g; Iron 3mg; Sodium 796mg; Calcium 94mg o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by claire_de_luna (My Page) on Fri, Aug 13, 10 at 13:50 You know, I may be in the minority, but I've tried Cinnamon Ice Cream twice now, and didn't care for it much. It was gritty, and didn't have a great texture. If someone knows how to make it without being gritty, I'd love to know the secret. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lpinkmountain (My Page) on Fri, Aug 13, 10 at 14:29 I love cinnamon in savory dishes. Here are 3 I like. I'll most likely be making a version of one of them this weekend, as I have lots of veggies to use up. As for sweet, this time of year I'm most likely to use cinnamon ina fruit pie or cobbler. But those things aren't good for my figure so I don't make them unless I know I'll have enough company to help me eat them up before they mold. I might make something this weekend since I am going visiting, and if so I'll report back with the recipe. Influenced Vegetable Stew (From "Enchanted Broccoli Forest" by Molly Katzen) 3/4 cups raw kidney beans, cooked as per your favorite method, or one can of dark red kidneys 3 TBLSP olive oil 4 med. cloves crushed garlic 1 1/2 cups chopped onion 1 1/4 tsp. salt 1 cup thinly sliced potatoes 1 tsp. cinnamon 1 tsp. ground cumin lots of fresh black pepper crushed red hot pepper to taste juice from 1 large lemon 2 large carrots, sliced 1 small cauliflower, broken into small flowerettes 4 med. sided fresh, ripe tomatoes, cubed (I tend to use a can of diced tomatoes here) 2 tsp. honey In a very large skillet, saute the onions and garlic in olive oil, with salt, for 5 minutes, or until the onions are soft and transluscent. Add potatoes, spices and lemon juice. Coer and cook 8-10 minutes, stirring occasionally. (Note: I parboil potatoes, or I add some of the tomato liquid, because otherwise in my experience, starchy potatoes stick to the pan unless you use more olive oil which I don't like to do). Add remaining ingredients except for the beans. Cover, and let stew over med. heat about 30 min, stirring occasionally. Add the cooked beans, stir, cover and let it simmer about 10 more minutes. Serve with tsatsiki (cuke salad with yogurt or sour cream), greek olives and crusty bread. Picadillo (from the "Three Guys from Miami Cook Cuban" Web site) Olive oil for frying 1 large onion, diced 1 large green bell pepper, seeded and finely chopped 4 garlic cloves, minced 2 lbs. ground beef or ground round (I sub one lb. fake meat crumbles. You can also use marinated tofu, carribean or smoked style) 3 tomatoes, peeled, seeded and chopped (again, I'll use canned diced ones unless I have a plethora of fresh ones) 1/2 tsp. ground cumin 1/8 tsp. cinnamon 1/8 tsp. ground cloves 1/2 tsp. oregano 1/2 cup chopped green olives or 1/4 cup capers (optional) Salt and pepper to taste Saute onion, green pepper, and garlic in large frying pan. Fry about 5 min., until they are softened, then add the ground beef. Mash the veg. ingredients into the frying meat. Add the tomatoes, cumin, cinnamon, cloves and oregano and cover. Reduce heat to low and simmer for about 15 minutes. Add olives and raisins and simmer 5 min. longer. Adjust seasonings to taste. Serve over rice or polenta. Optional: instead of serving over rice, you can add potatoes into the mix, 3 cups peeled and diced. Fry with meat and then simmer in tomato sauce. Parboil potatoes if you wish. Add a dash of dry red wine to the final stew. This one is a big hit with kids, like sloppy joes over spaghetti. Not traditional Cinci chili but better, IMHO. More subtle. Cincinnati Style Chili (Recipe courtesy "Gourmet" magazine) 2 TBLSP veg. oil 2 med. onions, chopped 5 cloves garlic, minced 2 lbs. ground beef chuck (I use 1 lb. fake meat crumbles and a can of dark red kidney beans) 4 TBLSP commercial chili powder 1 TBLSP sweet paprika 1 tsp. cumin 1/2 tsp. allspice 1/4 tsp. cinnamon 1/4 tsp. ground cloves 1/4 tsp. ground coriander Salt and fresh ground black pepper 1 bay leaf 1 TBLSP red wine vinegar 1 TBLSP molasses 1 cup tomato sauce 1 1/2 cups water or bouillon (I don't add it all at once and only add as needed to get the desired chili thickness) Spaghetti cooked and drained, kidney beans (If not adding them instead of meat), grated cheddar, chopped white onion and oyster crackers as traditional accomaniments for "Five Ways" chili. I omit the crackers and onions, but heap on the cheddar. In a large heavy pot, heat the oil over med. heat and cook the onions and garlic until softened. Add the ground beef (or veggie equivalent of fake meat and kidney beans), stirring unil the beef is no longer pink. Drain off any excess fat and discard. Add the spices, stirring to combine and cook 1 min. Add the bay leaf, red wine vinegar, molasses, tomato sauce and water/bouillon. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer chili covered for about 1 1/2 hours, adding additional water if necessary, to achieve a thick and soupy consistency. Discard bay leaf and adjust salt and pepper. Serve the chili over cooked spahgetti with the traditional accompaniments. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by hawk307 (My Page) on Fri, Aug 13, 10 at 15:55 One of my favorites, Cinnamon Bunns, East Coast Style, ( not Cinnamon Rolls ). If anyone would like the Recipe, I'll post it. Thanks Lou o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by nightnurse1968 (My Page) on Fri, Aug 13, 10 at 22:53 This is a great recipe that I make during the holidays but they would be good any time. I never drizzle the icing but I'm sure they are great like that. CINNAMON BUN COOKIES from VANILLA COOKIE DOUGH ½ cup (2 ounces) powdered sugar ¾ cup (1½ sticks, 6 ounces) unsalted butter ½ tsp salt 1½ tsp vanilla extract 1½ cups (6¼ ounces) unbleached all-purpose flour MIDDLE: 1 large egg white 1 Tbs water ¼ cup granulated sugar 1½ tsp ground cinnamon ICING: ½ cup powdered sugar 2 Tbs heavy whipping cream ½ tsp vanilla extract ½ tsp ground cinnamon 1. Prepare dough: In a medium-sized mixing bowl, cream together the sugar, butter, salt and vanilla. Add the flour, stirring to make a cohesive dough. Flatten the dough into a disk, wrap it in plastic wrap, and refrigerate until youâre ready to use it. 2. Roll the dough: Transfer chilled dough to a lightly floured piece of parchment or waxed paper. Roll it into a 9Ã12-inch rectangle. In a small bowl, whisk together egg white and water until foamy. Brush onto rolled out dough. In another small bowl, whisk together sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle it evenly over the dough. Starting with a long edge, carefully roll the dough into a log, sealing the edge (if dough sticks to parchment, gently use a metal spatula to guide it off of the paper). Wrap in plastic wrap or parchment, and freeze until firm. 3. Bake the cookies: Preheat oven to 350°F. Lightly grease (or line with parchment) two cookie sheets. Remove the dough from the freezer and unwrap it. Using a sharp knife, gently cut it into ½-inch slices. Transfer them to the prepared baking sheets. Bake the cookies for 12 to 15 minutes, until theyâre a light golden brown. Remove them from the oven and transfer to a rack to cool. 4. Ice the cookies: Sift or strain the powdered sugar into a medium-sized bowl to remove any lumps. Whisk the cream into the sugar to make a smooth icing. Drizzle or spread icing onto cookies (or serve alongside in a bowl for dipping). Yield: 2 dozen cookies Read more: o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by gardengrl (My Page) on Sun, Aug 15, 10 at 18:35 This recipe is from Bon Appetit and promises to solve that "strange texture" cinnamon ice-cream can have if the cinnamon powder is added too early in the recipe. I'm sure if you just want cinnamon ice-cream, you can omit the rum. Cinnamon-Rum Ice Cream Makes 1 1/2 quarts 6 large egg yolks 1 1/2 cups heavy whipping cream, divided 1 1/2 cups whole milk 3/4 cup sugar Pinch of salt 2 tablespoons dark rum 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon Whisk egg yolks to blend in medium metal bowl. Pour 1 cup cream into another medium bowl; set fine strainer over bowl with cream. Whisk milk, sugar, pinch of salt, and 1/2 cup cream in heavy medium saucepan; bring to simmer, stirring until sugar dissolves. Gradually whisk hot milk mixture into egg yolks. Return mixture to same saucepan and stir constantly over medium-low heat until custard thickens slightly and instant-read thermometer inserted into the custard registers 160° (do not boil), about 5 minutes. Pour custard through strainer set over bowl with cream. Whisk mixture to blend; then whisk in rum and cinnamon. Chill custard until cold, about 2 hours. Process custard in ice cream maker according to manufacturer's instructions. Transfer ice-cream to container; freeze until firm, at least 4 hours or overnight. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by terri_pacnw (My Page) on Sun, Aug 15, 10 at 22:39 Alexa, yep $$ store cinnamon...:) o cinnamon recipes clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by terri_pacnw (My Page) on Sun, Aug 15, 10 at 22:53 Okay here's 2 in my arsenal. Roselin's Chocolate Snickerdoodles 1c buter 1 1/2 c sugar 2 eggs 2 1/4 c flour 1/2 c cocoa 2 t cream of tarter 1 t baking soda 1/2 t salt 1 t vanilla Topping 2T sugar 2 t cinnamon Combine butter, sugar, vanilla and eggs. Cream well. Sift dry ingredients except Topping. Add to egg mixture and chill dough for at least 1 hour. Roll dough into walnut size balls and roll in cinnamon sugar. Place on ungreased cookie sheet and bake at 375F for 8-10 minutes. Makes 4-5 dozen. Applesauce Cake 3/4 c butter, softened 1 1/2 c sugar 3 eggs 2 3/4 c flour 1 1/2 t salt 1 1/2 t baking powder 3/4 t baking soda 3/4 t nutmeg 3/4 t cinnamon 1 14oz can of sweetened applesauce (I use homemade barely sweetened and also have used pear sauce.) 3/4 c chopped nuts (optional) 2 greased loaf pans (8x4) Preheat oven to 350F. Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add in blended dry ingredients, alternating with applesauce. Stir in 3/4 c chopped nuts before pouring into 2 loaf pans. Bake for 1 hour or until done. (start checking at 50 minutes) Remove and cool for 10 minutes and then remove from pans and cool on rack. Optional Sugar Glaze: Mix 1/2 c icing sugar with 1 T water, pour over cake. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by canarybird (My Page) on Mon, Aug 16, 10 at 3:49 I will look for what I have in my recipe file, although I lost so much of it when my computer crashed in April. When I was kid and wanted a snack I would make some... Cinnamon Toast Mix equal parts of cinnamon and icing sugar (confectioners' sugar) in a cup. Spread freshly made toast thickly with soft butter. Then sprinkle the sugar/cinnamon mix on top. Eat...Yum...and don't tell your mom or your dentist! SharonCb o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by terri_pacnw (My Page) on Mon, Aug 16, 10 at 11:21 oooh icing sugar..I never heard of that...it would be meltier..(spell check doesn't like that word) LOL I keep a sugar jar/dispenser full of cinnamon sugar for the boys. But use granulated. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lowspark (My Page) on Tue, Aug 17, 10 at 21:53 Nancy, I made your Cinnamon Swirl Quick Bread. It came out of the oven 10 minutes ago. Delicious!!! This one's definitely a keeper!! o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Wed, Aug 18, 10 at 11:02 I don't have any recipes to share that feature cinnamon that wouldn't basically repeat what's already been posted, but I can see I'm going to be adding many of the above recipes to my arsenal. As far as ornaments are concerned, when my children were small, we painted santa faces on cinnamon sticks, and glued wires to them to make Christmas ornaments. They turned out quite cute. They make long, skinny Santas. We actually still have a few left. Sally o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by ci_lantro (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 7:59 Lou, I would love to have a recipe for the cinnamon buns. Those look so yummy! Please post the recipe!! o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by ann_t (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 10:09 You can't go wrong wtih the Joy of Baking's Cinnamon Rolls. I top mine with a cream cheese frosting. Sometimes I pack them into the pan so that they touch and they end up looking like this: Or I bake them on a cookie sheet, spaced so they don't touch and they look like this: Home Cookin Chapter: Recipes From Thibeault's Table Cinnamon Rolls (Buns) ===================== From Joy of Baking Dough: 4-1/2 to 5 cups all-purpose " flour 1 package active dry yeast 1 cup milk 1/3 cup "" butter 1/3 cup sugar 1/2 teaspoon salt "3 eggs Filling: 3/4 cup packed brown"sugar 1/4 cup all-purpose " flour 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon 1/2 Cup" butter 1/2 cup light raisins (optional) 1 tablespoon half-and-half 1 recipe Powdered Sugar Glaze Powdered Sugar Glaze: In a bowl stir together 1 1/4 cups sifted powdered sugar, 1 teaspoon light corn syrup, 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract and enough half-and-half (1 to 2 tablespoons) to make the glaze thin enough to drizzle over cinnamon rolls. . In a large mixing bowl combine 2 1/4 cups of the flour and the yeast. In a small saucepan heat the milk, the 1/3 cup butter, 1/3 cup sugar, and salt just till warm (120 degrees to 130 degrees)and butter is almost melted, stirring constantly. Add to flour mixture. Add eggs. Beat on low speed for 30 seconds, scraping sides of bowl. Beat on high speed for 3 minutes. Using a wooden spoon, stir in as much of the remaining 2 1/4 to 2 3/4 cups flour as you can. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface. Knead in enough of the remaining flour to make a moderately soft dough that is smooth and elastic (3 to 5 minutes). Shape into a ball. Place in a greased bowl, turning once. Cover; let rise in a warm place till double (about 1 - 1 1/2 hours). For filling, combine brown sugar, the 1/4 cup flour, and cinnamon. Cut in remaining butter with a pastry blender until mixture is crumbly. Set aside. Punch dough down. Turn onto a lightly floured surface. Cover and let rest for 10 minutes. Roll the dough into a 12 inch square. Sprinkle filling over dough square; top with raisins (if desired). Roll up jelly-roll style; pinch edges to seal. Slice roll into eight 1 1/2 inch pieces. Arrange dough pieces, cut side up, in a greased 12 x 9 x 2 inch baking pan. Cover dough loosely with clear plastic wrap, leaving room for rolls to rise. Refrigerate dough for 2 to 24 hours. Uncover and let stand at room temperature for 30 minutes. (If you are making the cinnamon rolls immediately, donât chill dough. Instead, cover loosely, let dough rise in a warm place till nearly double, about 45 minutes.) Break any surface bubbles with a greased toothpick. Brush dough with a half-and-half. Bake in a 375 degree oven to 25 to 30 minutes or till light brown. If necessary to prevent over-browning., cover rolls loosely with foil the last 5 to 10 minutes of baking. Remove rolls from oven. Brush again with half-and-half. Cool 5 minutes. Invert onto a baking rack and invert again onto a plate. Can drizzle with Powdered Sugar Glaze. Serve warm. Makes 8 rolls. Note: I prefer a Cream Cheese icing. 1/4 cup butter 1 cup cream cheese Cream together and add enough icing/powder sugar to make a creamy icing. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caliloo (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 10:12 OMG Ann - those photos are absolutely drool worthy and since I have made that recipe before I know for a fact that it turns out the best product ever! Ci_Lantro - you need to look no further - this IS the Holy Grail of Cinnamon Buns! Alexa o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by annie1992 (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 10:59 I don't care for cinnamon with tomatoes, otherwise I love it nearly any way. These cookies are a King Arthur Flour recipe, but I seldom cut them out, I roll them into logs and slice and bake when I want them. I never have cinnamon oil and I sprinkle them with cinnamon sugar before baking. Cinnamon Snaps 1/2 cup (1 stick, 4 ounces) unsalted butter 3/4 cup (5 5/8 ounces) brown sugar, packed 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon 1/8 teaspoon cinnamon oil, optional 1 large egg 2 tablespoons light corn syrup (1 1/2 ounces) 1 2/3 cups (8 1/2 ounces) King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour To prepare the dough: In a medium-sized mixing bowl, cream together the butter, sugar, baking soda, salt, ground cinnamon, and cinnamon oil. Beat in the egg and syrup. Add the flour, beating until smooth. Divide the dough in half, and shape each half into a smooth-edged disk (like a hockey puck). Wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour, or overnight. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease (or line with parchment) two baking sheets. To shape and bake the cookies: Working with one half of dough at a time, roll the dough 1/8" thick. Use a cutter to cut the shapes of your choice, and transfer them to the prepared baking sheets. Bake the cookies for 12 to 13 minutes; this will make a cookie thatâs crisp, but not hard. (If you have any doubts about your ovenâs temperature or baking time, bake one cookie first, allow it to cool, and see if itâs the texture you like.) Remove the cookies from the oven, and cool them on the pan for 5 minutes before transferring to a rack to cool completely. Yield: about 7 dozen 2" to 2 ½" cutout cookies. annie o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 12:47 Ann, you would have to post that recipe. I haven't made those rolls for awhile and now I have a very strong craving. Those are the best unadulterated cinnamon rolls. Just the way I like them. Annie, the cookies would be great too! Nancy o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by rosewitch (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 15:41 To me Cinnamon Buns/Rolls are what Ann posted. I love those and that recipe is wonderful. The picture Lou posted is what I know as Sticky Buns. I just can't eat them for all the toothache inducing sticky stuff. I like cinnamon buns sometimes with the cream cheese drippy frosting! But I admit to also eating them plain hot from the oven when I can't wait just for the warm yeasty roll. I hate cold weather but I am so ready for a long baking day when it cools off a bit. Kat o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by annie1992 (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 15:53 Kat, we've always called them "sticky buns" or _sticky rolls) too, because they're...well...sticky. (grin) I like the frosting on cinnamon rolls but when I was a kid they were never frosted, we ate them hot from the oven with butter on them, like any other bread. I still love them that way the best. Annie o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by rosewitch (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 16:13 Annie, So glad to hear that I am not the only one that likes them with butter and almost plain. I think the cinnamon taste is the best that way! My favorite days growing up were the ones spent in my grandmother's farm kitchen on baking day. She would bake bread, dinner rolls and make apple dumplings and cinnamon rolls; enough for the week. I couldn't wait for the cinnamon rolls to come out of the oven. Oh and there were always chewy oatmeal raisin cookies too. As she aged the oatmeal cookies became the only baking she did; but boy she didn't lose her touch with them. Anyone around would fight over those cookies! She sure didn't have the kitchen equipment we have today, but what she turned out of that kitchen was wonderful. Kat o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caliloo (My Page) on Thu, Aug 19, 10 at 16:43 I was all set to make Ann T's Cinnamon Buns and then as I was gathering ingredients I realized I was out of yeast! No idea how that happened but in any case, I was still in the mood for something cinnamon-y and I found this recipe in my "to try" file. It is in the oven right now and smells heavenly! And I think I will make the white glaze from Ann cinnamon Buns instead of the brown sugar one listed here... or maybe I'll cover half with one and half with the other. Alexa Apple Coffee Cake with Crumble Topping and Brown Sugar Glaze Cake: ⢠1 stick plus 2 teaspoons unsalted butter ⢠1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar ⢠2 large eggs ⢠2 cups all purpose flour ⢠1 teaspoon baking soda ⢠1 teaspoon ground cinnamon ⢠1/2 teaspoon salt ⢠1 cup sour cream ⢠1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract ⢠2 cups peeled, cored and chopped apples Crumble Topping: ⢠1/2 cup packed light brown sugar ⢠1/2 cup all purpose flour ⢠1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon ⢠4 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened Brown Sugar Glaze: ⢠1/2 cup packed light brown sugar ⢠1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract ⢠2 tablespoons water Directions Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Lightly grease a 13 by 9-inch glass baking dish with 2 teaspoons of the butter. In a large bowl, cream together the remaining stick of butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs 1 at a time, beating after the addition of each. In a separate bowl or on a piece of parchment, sift together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, and salt. Add to the wet ingredients, alternating with the sour cream and vanilla. Fold in the apples. Pour into the prepared baking dish, spreading out to the edges. To make the topping, in a bowl, combine the sugar, flour, cinnamon, and butter, and mix until it resembles coarse crumbs. Sprinkle the topping over the cake and bake until golden brown and set, 35 to 40 minutes. Remove from the oven and let cool on a wire rack for at least 10 minutes. To make the glaze, in a bowl, combine the sugar, vanilla, and water and mix until smooth. Drizzle the cake with the glaze and let harden slightly. Serve warm. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by denise8101214 (My Page) on Sun, Aug 22, 10 at 17:45 All the Cookalong Links Here is a link that might be useful: All the Cookalong Links o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Sun, Aug 22, 10 at 22:08 I'll be out of town until Wednesday night. Will draw a name upon my return... Keep adding cinnamon recipes.....I love cinnamon! Denise...thank you for keeping track of the threads! Nancy o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by dancinglemons (My Page) on Mon, Aug 23, 10 at 2:51 Baked Beans (semi-homemade) 2 large cans Bush*s Vegetarian Beans 1/2 cup ketchup 2 tablespoons dark brown sugar 1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper 2 tablespoons mustard (yellow) 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 cup chopped onions Put all in large pot and simmer for 20 minutes or Bake in 350F oven for 45 minutes Enjoy! DL o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Mon, Aug 23, 10 at 10:04 I'm a little late to the party, but I made this last night for DS's and my combined birthday dinner. DH, who says he hates cake, loved it. The best part about it is that it's easy and quick. DH had made some chocolate chip ice cream, and the comments about cinnamon ice cream got me to thinking this would be a perfect match to go with the ice cream. It was. I didn't make the frosting - partly due to time constraints, but also because I figured the ice cream would serve that purpose. I'm not much of a frosting lover. I'll post the recipe for it, anyway. From: Baking, From My Home to Yours by Dorie Greenspan Cinnamon Squares For the cake: 1 1/4 cups plus 2 tablespoons sugar, divided 1 tablespoon plus 2 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon, divided 1 1/2 teaspoons instant espresso powder 1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour 2 teaspoons baking powder Pinch of salt 3/4 cup whole milk (I used 1%, which is all I had, and it turned out fine) 2 large eggs 1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract 1 stick plus 2 tablespoons (10 tablespoons) unsalted butter, melted and cooled 3 ounces bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped, or 1/2 cup store-bought mini chocolate chips For the frosting 6 ounces bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped 2 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter, cut into 4 pieces Getting ready: Center a rack in the oven and preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter an 8-inch square baking pan and line the bottom with parchment or wax paper. Place the pan on a baking sheet. To make the cake: Stir 2 tablespoons of the sugar, 2 1/2 teaspoons of the cinnamon and the espresso together in a small bowl. In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, the remaining 1 1/4 cups sugar, the baking powder, salt and the remaining 1 tablespoon cinnamon. In another bowl, whisk together the milk, eggs and vanilla. Pour the liquid ingredients over the flour mixture and gently whisk until you have a homogenous batter. Now, using the whisk or a rubber spatula, fold in the butter with a light touch, just until the butter is absorbed. You'll have a smooth, satiny batter. Scrape half of the batter into the pan and smooth the top. Sprinkle the chocolate over the batter and dust with the cinnamon-sugar mixture. Cover with the rest of the batter and smooth the top again. Bake for 35 to 40 minutes, or until the cake is puffed and beginning to pull away from the sides of the pan; a thin knife inserted into the center will come out clean. Transfer the cake to a cooling rack and let it rest for 15 minutes before un-molding it onto another rack. Peel off the paper, invert it onto the first rack, and cool to room temperature right side up. To make the frosting: Put the chocolate and butter in a heatproof bowl and fit the bowl over a saucepan of simmering water. Cook, stirring gently and often, just until they melt. Be careful not to overheat the mixture so much that it thins out; the chocolate should be smooth, very shiny, thick and spreadable. (If it thins, leave the frosting at room temperature for a bit, until it thickens a little.) Using an offset metal icing spatula or a table knife, spread the frosting in generous sweeps and swirls over the top of the cake. Allow the frosting to set at room temperature, then cut the cake into 9 squares, each about 2 1/2 inches on a side. Boy, after typing out that frosting recipe, I'm wondering why I didn't want it! Sally o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by hawk307 (My Page) on Mon, Aug 23, 10 at 18:14 ci lantro: Sorry I haven't been Posting much, plus I've been away to AC, NJ. Below is the Recipe for the Cinnamon Bunns and Dough. rosewitch: Far as I know Cinnamon Bunns are mainly an East Coast name. Anything West of N.Y. , N.J. and Pa. they are called Sticky Bunns. *********************************** Louâs Cinnamon Buns ------ SS Pan ,9 ½ in by 12 in by 2 ½ in deep Or Pyrex baking dish 3/4 stick of butter and 1 tablesp. Of Vegetable oil Pancake syrup , Brown Sugar and a little granulated sugar Cinnamon and Raisins Melt the butter in the pan and let it cool ( put it in the refrig. a few minutes) Level it across the pan and back into the refrig to harden. Take it out and Sprinkle very little oil and move it around with the back of a spoon. Dribble some pancake syrup all around the pan , then a little gran. Sugar Then lay in some brown sugar . Donât be chincey , leave some lumps. Last sprinkle ( good bit ) of Cinnamon and Raisins. You can also add some walnuts, If you want to. If you donât want to , donât do it but donât blame me , if you didnât Do and wish you had done , etc. Take half + of the recipe of the Braided Bread dough and roll it out to about 3/16 in thick ( 3 pennies ) You can do the dough in 2 pieces if it is easier. Try to roll them out to at least 16 in long. x 12 in. Sprinkle some pancake syrup, Sugar and cinnamon on the dough , then some raisins. Roll the dough up loosely, Making a 12 in. long Roll and cut into 1 in. pieces. Mark the roll ,at half way and half again before cutting., into 8 pieces. Do the same to the other piece of dough Place these pieces in the pan that you prepared , leaving spaces in between , because the dough will grow. Push them around with your fingers, to fill the pan evenly. When the dough is doubled , bake in a 320 degree oven , on a shelf near the top, for about 25 to 35 minutes or golden brown. You can Baste , with an egg milk mix, while baking. When it is removed from the oven , place a piece of aluminum foil over it and a large cutting board or cookie tin and then flip it over and remove the pan. If some of the goodies stay in the pan take them out right away and patch the Buns while the goo is still hot. WARNING !!!! Get away from them until they cool. !!!!!!!! You will burn your lips Now you can see if you used enough brown sugar and gooey stuff. ************************************************* Everyone has their own way to do this, which is better. But! I like to cook and bake using easier ways, long as the end results are the same. I've used this recipe since I got out of the Army, a very long time ago and converted it from Army Baking (Large amounts )to Home Baking. It wasn't easy going from 4 Quarts to 4 cups , etc. But I worked it out. I got the results that I wanted and I'm passing it on to everyone . Here is the recipe: ************************* Louâs - - - Braided, Plaited Bread or Dough for Cinnamon Buns , Bagels, Etc. ************************* 2 cups of milk, (warm ) - - Sometimes I sub Powdered Milk 1 1/3 cup of Sugar 3 large eggs- beaten (save ½ egg w. a little milk for basting ) 1 tablesp.+ of Vanilla - - ½ cup + of oil - - 1/2 teasp. Salt 2 packs of Fleischmans Active dry yeast AP Flour - 3 cups to start ( probably about 6 total ) enough to knead into a soft ball that doesnât stick to your hands. I now substitute a cup of WW Flour. Makes a nice texture and tender. Stir the yeast in a 1/3 cup of warm water w. 1/2 spoon of sugar, to test it for raising. In a large mixing bowl, or (KA mixer) place the warm milk ( not hot ) add the sugar ,vanilla , salt & eggs Beat until the sugar is dissolved and add the Yeast and mix well. Add 1 cup of WW flour and 3 cups of AP flour and mix with mixer a few minutes. Add flour until you make a " soft " Ball of dough that doesnât stick to your hands. Donât make it too stiff , try to keep it a "soft dough." On the Work Top, Sprinkle some flour under the ball and Knead it until smooth. Place it in a large bowl, Rub some oil on top. Cover with a damp towel and place in a warm spot ( until double.) I usually turn my oven on for a few minutes to warm and shut it. Place a pan of hot water on the bottom shelf. Then place the dough bowl in the oven to rise. When ( doubled ) deflate and put it out of the bowl onto a floured worktop. Punch it down and knead the dough again. Then cut into 2 pieces ( 2 loaves ). Divide each piece into 3. Roll each of these 3 pieces into the shape of a sweet potato ( about 12 in long ). With the basting ( egg ) mixture and wet the tips of the 3 pieces and stick them together at one end . Then spread the other end the shape of an arrow While keeping the stuck ends down and away from you , twist each piece clockwise about 8 times and lay them down so you can Platt or Braid them and stick the other ends together There are other ways to Braid ( 6 Strands ) but I take the fast easy way to do things. Place the 2 shaped loaves on lightly oiled cookie tins, or in loaf pans. Preheat the oven to 400 deg. Spray some Pam on the loaves or brush with oil. This will keep them from drying while raising. When doubled in size (about 20 min.) place in the oven , top shelf and bake until slightly tan. Baste them with the egg mix and rotate them back into the oven and ( Turn temperature down to 325 deg.) Baste again when they are a dark tan. Cook till a rich brown, mahogany color. Take them out of the pans onto a rack to cool. Control yourself !!!! Let them cool !!! This sounds like a lot to do but it is easy and should take only 10 minutes to mix and shape. The most time is in the waiting for the dough to rise and for the bread to cool . But it do look great !!! & Professional This dough can also be used for Cinnamon Buns . I use it for Bagels too. I like the Subtle , sweet taste. o PS - Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by hawk307 (My Page) on Mon, Aug 23, 10 at 22:03 Should have read thru the Recipe. Didn't know all the Braided Bread was in there too. Lou o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Aug 30, 10 at 10:20 Whew...it's been a busy week, I'm late in getting this next Cookalong started. Here we go....... drawing a name.....it is >>>>>>>> Terri pacnw Terry, please pick out next subject, check the FAQ for the list of what has already been covered. Then post to this thread and I'll set up the new one. Thanks all, there are many good recipes here. Nancy o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by terri_pacnw (My Page) on Mon, Aug 30, 10 at 11:19 WOW...me...a winnner... Well, every thing I could think of..was already chosen.. BUT Chocolate, Chicken(we did years ago, could do a redo), Coconut or Coffee... Ummmm I'm picking Chocolate...cocoa, cocao nibs, milk, dark, semi, white, cocoa butter..bittersweet, unsweetened.. o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by therustyone (My Page) on Mon, Aug 30, 10 at 11:36 Whether they are called 'Cinnamon Buns', Cinnamon Rolls', or 'Sticky Buns'. I can vouch for Lou's recipe. The grandsons love them! For us, I go light on the syrup, heavy on the cinnamon. Also add lots of walnuts. And 'plump' the raisins in hot water. Addictive! Rusty o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Aug 30, 10 at 11:57 Thanks Terri! What a wonderful choice, there are very few who dislike chocolate. I'll set up the new cookalong.... Here is a link that might be useful: Link to Cookalong # 34 - Chocolate o RE: Cookalong #33 ----------Cinnamon! clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by hawk307 (My Page) on Mon, Aug 30, 10 at 22:33 Rusty: Thanks for the Plug !!! I appreciate it. Almost too late ??? Terri: I have all of them Chocolates, Now I'll have to think of how to use them , besides eating them . Lou...See MoreCookalong - #22 Eggplant
Comments (0)iVillage GardenWeb iVillage GardenWeb THE INTERNET'S GARDEN & HOME COMMUNITY ADVERTISEMENT Blogs Forums Photo Galleries Ask The Experts Tools & Directories SEARCH Return to the Cooking Forum : Post a Follow-Up o Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 15:53 Lorijean44 has chosen Eggplant for this Cookalong. Guess we are on a real veggie kick! I don't do eggplant, so maybe there will be a recipe that will tempt me to try it. Please check this thread after March 6th if you have posted....you maybe the one to pick the next subject. Now, let's dig out those wonderful eggplant recipes! Nancy Here is a link that might be useful: Link to Cookalong # 21---Beans Follow-Up Postings: o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jessyf (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 15:59 Cold Spiced Eggplant - Craig Claiborne & Virginia Lee 2 medium young eggplants (about 1.75 lbs total, Japanese work well) 3 Tbsp light soy sauce 2 Tbsp red wine vinegar 2 Tbsp sugar 2.5 tsp dry sherry or shao hsing wine 1 Tbsp sesame oil 1 Tbsp oil 1 Tbsp minced garlic 1 Tbsp chopped ginger 1 Tbsp toasted sesame seeds 1. Steam eggplant for about 30 minutes, or until tender to the core. Let cool. 2. Combine Soy sauce through sesame oil. 3. Over a high flame, heat the tablespoon of oil in a saucepan and add the garlic and ginger. Cook about ten seconds, then stir in the soy sauce mixture. Bring to just a boil and remove from heat. Let cool. 4. Cut or pull the cool eggplant into shreds. Pour the sauce over, and sprinkle with sesame seeds. Serve - better the next day. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by annie1992 (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 16:04 Oh yeah, I love eggplant. This is one of my favorite snacks, from Eating Well, and it's low enough in fat and calories to go on the Slimmer Dinners thread. Elery will grill the eggplant if he's here, otherwise I just slice it and roast it and the garlic in the oven on baking sheets. Baba Ganouj 2 medium eggplants, (about 1 pound each) 4 cloves garlic, unpeeled 1/4 cup lemon juice 2 tablespoons tahini, (see Note) 1 1/4 teaspoons salt Extra-virgin olive oil, for garnish Ground sumac, for garnish (see Note) Preheat grill to high. Prick eggplants all over with a fork. Thread garlic cloves onto a skewer. Grill the eggplants, turning occasionally, until charred and tender, 10 to 12 minutes. Grill the garlic, turning once, until charred and tender, 6 to 8 minutes. Transfer the eggplants and garlic to a cutting board. When cool enough to handle, peel both. Transfer to a food processor. Add lemon juice, tahini and salt; process until almost smooth. Drizzle with oil and sprinkle with sumac, if desired. Make Ahead Tip: Cover and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Per serving: 32 calories; 1 g fat (0 g sat, 1 g mono); 0 mg cholesterol; 5 g carbohydrates; 1 g protein; 2 g fiber; 245 mg sodium; 163 mg potassium. Annie o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by canarybird (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 17:06 Eggplant may be used in this recipe instead of bubango. There are close links between the Canary Islands and Venezuela, thus there are many customs and recipes shared by both countries. Here is one of them. Bubangos are a type of small, pale green zucchini. STUFFED BUBANGOS - Bubangos Rellenos "( Venezuela) 2 bubangos - (small pear-shaped zucchini) 1/3 cup soft breadcrumbs 1/3 cup milk 1/4 cup grated white cheese - (I used parmesan) 1 beaten egg 1 teas butter a sprinkle of fine dry breadcrumbs or fine cracker crumbs 1. Cut the bubangos in half lengthwise and steam or boil until soft but not mushy. Scoop out the pulp, leaving a little next to the skin. 2. Soak the breadcrumbs in the milk and add the other ingredients and the pulp. 3. Refill the skins, cover with the fine dry crumbs and brown in the oven. Source: "Buen Provecho - Caracas Cookery" - Caracas, Venezuela. SharonCb o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by mustangs (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 17:39 I love eggplant too. My favorite is plain ole roasted with rosemary, k-salt, and EVOO. I eat it like popcorn! o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by cloudy_christine (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 19:12 Here's a great moussaka recipe, from Craig Claiborne's New York Times Cookbook. It makes an enormous amount. I always make half the recipe, and that fills an 11 x 11 Corningware baking dish. Make the meat sauce the day before, so you can lift the chilled fat off the top. Moussaka à la Grecque * 3 medium eggplants * 8 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil * 3 onions, chopped * 2 pounds ground lamb * 3 tablespoons tomato paste * 1 1/2 cup red wine * 1/2 cup chopped parsley * Pinch cinnamon * 6 tablespoons unsalted butter * 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour * 1 quart whole milk, heated * 4 large eggs, beaten * Pinch nutmeg * 2 cups ricotta * 1 cup fresh bread crumbs * 1 cup freshly grated Parmesan Peel the eggplant and slice it crosswise 1/2-inch thick. Sprinkle both sides of each slice lightly with salt, arrange in 1 layer on paper towels and let drain for 30 minutes. In a large skillet heat 2 tablespoons of the oil over moderate heat; add as many slices as will fit in 1 layer and brown on both sides. Repeat the procedure with 4 tablespoons of the remaining oil and the remaining eggplant. Drain the eggplant as they are cooked on paper towels. Add the remaining 2 tablespoons oil and the onion to the skillet and cook until the onions are brown. Add the ground meat and cook, stirring occasionally, until the meat is no longer pink. Combine the tomato paste with the wine, parsley, and cinnamon. Add this mixture to the skillet and simmer over low heat, stirring often, until all the liquid has evaporated. Add salt and pepper, to taste. In a sauce pan, over low heat, melt the butter, add the flour and whisk for 5 minutes. Turn up the heat to moderate and add the milk in a stream, whisking. Simmer for 5 minutes, add salt and pepper, to taste, and remove from the heat. Cool slightly and stir in the eggs, nutmeg, and ricotta. Grease and 11 by 16-inch pan and sprinkle the bottom lightly with bread crumbs. Arrange alternating layers of eggplant and meat sauce in the pan, sprinkling each layer with Parmesan and bread crumbs. Pour the egg sauce over the top and bake one hour in a preheat 350 degree oven, or until top is golden. Let cool twenty minutes before slicing. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by doucanoe (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 20:21 Yeah...I'm gonna have to pass on this one. Have not tried an eggplant dish that I have liked. But as Nancy said, maybe someone will post something that will change all that! I'll be watching! Linda o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by ruthanna (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 20:38 I never really liked caponata that much until I tried this recipe about 25 years ago. It became a favorite for packing for lunch. CAPONATA 1/2 cup olive oil 3 cups diced eggplant (3/8" cubes), about 1 medium 1 1/2 cup coarsely chopped onions 1 cup celery in 1/4 " slices 2 cups chopped fresh tomatoes 3 Tbs. minced garlic 2 Tbs. tomato paste 1/4 cup red wine vinegar 12 small stuffed green olives, sliced into thirds 12 black olives, pitted and sliced into thirds 1/4 cup small capers, drained 3 Tbs. sugar 1/4 â" 1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes 1/2 cup lightly packed minced parsley 1/2 tsp. salt 1/2 tsp. pepper In a large skillet, heat the oil. Add the eggplant and saute several minutes until partially soft. Add the onions, celery, tomatoes and garlic and cook for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat, add the remaining ingredients, and toss lightly. Chill until ready to serve. Serve chilled or at room temperature. Notes: Chopped anchovies can also be added. Diced zucchini can be substituted for half of the eggplant. Diced yellow peppers make a colorful addition. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by althetrainer (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 21:07 Oh I love, love, love eggplants! My favorite is pork-stuffed eggplants cooked in oyster sauce. Used to eat it back in Hawaii. Unfortunately, my two boys wouldn't touch eggplants, not even in ratatouille. :-( So I cook eggplants for myself; don't bother to spend a lot of time and efforts for just one person. I steam, grill, stir fry eggplants then season with salt, pepper, and oyster sauce. Still love it that way! :-) Al o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caliloo (My Page) on Tue, Feb 23, 10 at 21:14 This is absolutely hands down my favorite way to eat eggplant.... Eggplant caviar From Kyraâs Secrets of Russian Cooking 1 large eggplant 1 large onion, chopped very fine 1 small can tomato paste 1 green pepper chopped very fine 1 tsp vinegar (or slightly more) 2 tablespoons olive oil 1 tsp powdered sugar salt & pepper to taste Bake the eggplant until tender. When cool, skin it and chop very fine. Saute onion and pepper in 1 tbsp of olive oil. Add tomato paste and simmer 4-5 minutes, add in the remaining oil. Add vinegar, sugar, salt, pepper and chopped eggplant. Cook very slowly over low heat for 20 minutes, adding more oil if needed. Remove from heat and put in a container in the refrigerator. Serve very cold with thin sliced black pumpernickel, unsalted butter and ice cold vodka. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by ruthanna (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 7:49 Alexa, I have made your eggplant caviar recipe and it's delicious. I also make a recipe called eggplant caviar but it's a different flavor. EGGPLANT CAVIAR â" makes about 5 cups 4 large eggplants 1 Tbs. kosher salt 1 cup EV olive oil 4 cloves garlic, chopped 1 Tbs. Dijon mustard Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste Halve eggplants, lengthwise, score with a knife, and sprinkle lightly with the kosher salt. Cover with a heavy plate and weigh down the plate to press out the moisture for one hour. Preheat the oven to 375. Oil a baking sheet. Squeeze out any excess water from the eggplants. Place the eggplant halves, skin sides up, on the baking sheet. Bake until the meat is completely soft, 35 to 45 minutes. Set aside to cool. When cool enough to handle, skin the eggplants. Chop the pulp and tie in a large square of dampened cheesecloth. Let hang above the sink or a bowl until most of the liquid has drained off, about 15 minutes. (Note: I sometimes just drain the eggplant mixture in a colander instead of the cheesecloth but it's better with the cheesecloth method.) In a medium bowl, whisk together the olive oil, garlic, mustard, salt and pepper. Add the eggplant pulp and stir to mix. Cover and refrigerate for one day before serving. Serve with breadsticks or pita chips. EGGPLANT SOUP (serves 10-12) 2 TBL olive oil 2 TBL butter 1 medium onion, chopped 1 lb lean ground chuck (I use sweet Italian sausage) 1 medium eggplant, peeled & cubed 1 clove garlic, crushed 1 cup finely sliced carrots 1 cup chopped celery Two 16 oz cans whole tomatoes 3 1/2 cups beef broth 1/2 tsp. nutmeg (I use 1/4 tsp. nutmeg and 1/4 tsp. ground coriander) 1 tsp. sugar 1 tsp. salt 1/2 tsp. pepper 1/2 cup macaroni 2 TBL minced parsley Parmesan for garnish Heat the oil & butter in a 6-8 qt Dutch oven. Add the onion & saute until lightly browned, about 8 minutes. Add the meat & cook, stirring until it begins to brown. Add the eggplant, garlic, carrots, celery, tomatoes (break up the tomatoes), broth, nutmeg, sugar, salt & pepper. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat, cover & simmer 2 1/2 hours. 10-15 minutes before serving, add the macaroni & parsley to the soup & simmer until the macaroni is tender. Serve hot sprinkled with Parmesan.~~ Source: Ginger@ Recipe Exchange o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caboodle (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 10:37 I really like eggplant. Did you know that there are male and female eggplants? This, from The New Food Lover's Tiptionary: Male eggplants have fewer seeds (which are often bitter) and have a rounder smoother blossom end. The blossom end of a female eggplant is typically slightly indented. A recipe we like: Eggplant - Asian Style ====================== 1 medium eggplant (will serve 2) Prepare by peeling and slicing or cutting into sticks. I sometimes salt it, let sit for a while and squeeze out water. 2 scallions clove garlic, smashed T minced ginger, opt Sauce: 1 1/2 T soy sauce 1 T vinegar 1 T sugar or 2 T hoisin sauce 1 t cornstarch something to add heat, to taste Saute eggplant along with scallions, garlic, and ginger if you are using it. When tender add sauce and cook until raw cornstarch taste is gone and sauce is translucent. Judi o RE: Cookalong #22 ------another recipe EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caboodle (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 10:44 We also love this: Eggplant Parmesan (America's Test Kitchen - modified) ===================================================== 1 globe eggplant, I like to peel it salt flour 2 cups bread crumbs 3 beaten eggs or buttermilk (or both) pepper up to 2 cups marinara or meatless spaghetti sauce 1 cup mozzarella cheese parmesan cheese Slice the eggplant into about 1/4 (or so) inch rounds, lightly salt it and let it sit in a colander for an hour. This sweats some of the moisture out of it and supposedly some of the bitterness. Squeeze or pat on it gently to remove more liquid. To begin breading, lay a few pieces at a time on a clean kitchen towel and press down to get any extra moisture out. Dip each piece in flour, then in beaten eggs, and then in peppered bread crumbs. Lay them on a rack or waxed paper as you work. Spread a few T oil on a rimmed baking sheet. Pop this in a 425 degree oven to get it really hot and then take it out and lay the eggplant on it. Pop it back in the oven and bake for 20 minutes or until nicely browned; remove from oven and turn pieces over and bake 10 or so more minutes. Remove from oven and top each piece with warm marinara sauce and a little mozzarella cheese and a sprinkling of parmesan cheese. Place back in oven and heat until cheese melts. You can also place the oven-fried eggplant in a casserole dish and put the marinara sauce and cheeses on top. Pop back in the oven to melt the cheese. Judi o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by sally2 (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 10:57 We're not real big eggplant eaters here, but every summer my co-worker gives me eggplants from her garden. I quit growing them because they were too successful - I had more eggplants than we could eat! I'll be glad to learn from this thread how to prepare them so we like them. I did watch Michael Chiarrelo the other day, and he explained that the reason for pre-salting the eggplant is not only to release the liquid, but by doing so, it removes the bitterness. I always thought that step was a bother, but now I'll not skip that step, and maybe we'll like them better. Sally o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by denise8101214 (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 11:10 Here is the link to all the previous Cookalongs. Here is a link that might be useful: All the other Cookalong Links o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by beverlyal (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 15:28 I see there are several of us who do not "do" eggplant. I too, hope I see something to change my mind here. Beverly o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lpinkmountain (My Page) on Wed, Feb 24, 10 at 21:52 I am not a huge eggplant fan either, but being a fan of middle eastern cooking and mediterranean cooking, I eat it often, but mostly in the summer. I have found that eggplants vary tremendously in flavor and texture. I don't know how to choose a good one, but maybe this male/female thing might help. I know I heard the bit a bout presalting. I might be game to try caponata again. I ADORE and LOVE ratatouille so I keep thinking I will like its racier cousin caponata, but so far I haven't found a recipe I really like. I roast eggplant and mix it with roasted red pepper for dip with pita chips and hummus. I also love eggplant parmesean but don't often make it due to it's being time consuming and then if the end results are really good it's probably fattening. I have two recipes for eggplant in my "to try" folder, an eggplant stew and eggplant rolatini, but I doubt I'll get to them in the next few weeks. Possibly the stew. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Thu, Feb 25, 10 at 0:00 Ah, Judi, that Asian-style recipe sounds, good. I find I don't like the globe eggplants, but I like the long, thing, Japanese egglants, espeically with a spicy or sour sauce. This recipe claims to serve four. Meal for two is more like it. We sprinkle cilatro and a little minced pineapple on top. Thai Red Curry Soup with Chicken and Vegetables Yield: Makes 4 servings Ingredients; 2 tablespoons corn oil 1 tablespoon Thai red curry paste 12 ounces skinless boneless chicken breast halves, cut crosswise into 1/2-inch-wide strips 4 ounces green beans, cut into 1-inch lengths 2 small Japanese eggplants, cut into 1-inch pieces 3 cups canned low-salt chicken broth 3 cups canned unsweetened coconut milk 1 tablespoon fish sauce (nam pla) 1/4 cup chopped fresh basil Method: Heat oil in heavy large saucepan over medium heat. Add curry paste; stir until fragrant, about 1 minute. Add chicken; stir 2 minutes. Add green beans and eggplant pieces; stir 1 minute. Add broth, coconut milk and fish sauce; bring to boil. Reduce heat; simmer until vegetables are tender, about 12 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Stir in basil and serve. Bon Appétit -- September 1997 ========= I have NOT tried this one yet. I'm waiting for summer and the farmer's market. That's the only time i can find any eggplant around here. The groceries don't carry it. Turkish Baked Eggplant with Chile, Feta, and Mint Ingredients: 4 eggplants Olive oil Salt and pepper 2 onions, thinly sliced 6 cloves garlic, thinly sliced 2 medium fresh red chiles, halved, seeded, and thinly sliced Juice of 1/2 lemon 4 ounces feta cheese, crumbled 3/4 cup Greek-style yogurt A handful of fresh mint leaves, torn Extra virgin olive oil Method: 1. Preheat the oven to 400°F (200°C). Halve the eggplants lengthwise and then score a diamond pattern into the flesh of each half on the cut surface, being careful not to cut all the way through. Pour about 10 tbsp olive oil over them and season with salt and pepper. Turn them over to make sure they are well coated. Roast for 40 to 45 minutes. 2. While the eggplants are cooking, saute the onions in 1/4 cup olive oil until soft and golden. Add the garlic and chiles and cook for another 2 minutes, until they are soft as well. 3. When the eggplants are tender put them on a serving plate, cut-side up, and squeeze lemon juice over them. Gently press the cooked flesh down to make a bit of room for the onions. Fill the eggplant cavities with the onion and sprinkle the feta on top. 4. Dab the yogurt over the eggplants and throw on the mint leaves. Drizzle extra virgin olive oil over the top before serving. You can serve this warm or at room temperature. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Fri, Mar 5, 10 at 21:19 The name translates to The Imam Fainted. Presumably he swooned upon tasting this dish. For real eggplant lovers, that would be understandable. There are other stories of its origin, but I like that one best. This recipe is adapted from Recipezaar. IMAM BAYALDI 2 medium eggplants 2 medium onions, chopped 3/4 cup olive oil 2 garlic cloves, crushed 3 medium tomatos, peeled and chopped salt and pepper Saute the onions in a little oil. Add the garlic, tomatoes, salt, and pepper. Cook until it comes together as a very thick stew (no liquid). Cut the stem ends from each eggplant and cut eggplants in half lengthwise. Make 3 lengthwise slits, almost from end to end, cutting into the flesh about 1 inch deep. Heat 1/2 cup olive oil in a large saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the eggplant, cut side down, and fry gently, until dark golden-brown on cut side. Turn over and fry on skin side a couple more minutes. Remove from oil (most of it will have been absorbed) and place on paper towels to drain for atleast 15 minutes before proceeding with recipe.. Preheat oven to 350°F. Hold each slit apart and spoon as much of the vegetable mixture as possible into each cavity. The slits won't hold much. Don't worry. Spread any remaining vegetable mixture on top of the eggplants. Arrange eggplants in a baking dish just large enough to hold them. Drizzle with the remaining oil. Bake for 40 minutes, or until tender. Let cool and serve at room temperature. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Fri, Mar 5, 10 at 21:24 This eggplant dish will be enjoyed by everyone. You don't need to be an eggplant afficianado to enjoy it. This is my own recipe for papoutsakias. The name is Greek for "little shoes", which describes the eggplant halves, filled with a mixture of chopped eggplant, ground meat, sauce and seasonings, then roasted. I like to roast them covered in a Weber type grill for the smoky flavor, but they are very good done in a regular oven. PAPOUTSAKIAS 3 medium eggplants 1 lb ground beef or ground lamb 1 (16 ounce) can tomato sauce 1/3 cup olive oil 4 garlic clove 2 tablespoons grated parmesan cheese basil salt and pepper Cut eggplants in half lengthwise. Scoop out flesh of eggplants using a large spoon, leaving 1/2 inch of thickness to the shells (four halves are to be stuffed, the third eggplant is for extra flesh). Smear four shells with olive oil and roast, flesh side down, on grill or in 400 degree F oven until lightly brown, about 10 minutes. While the shells roast, brown the meat in a LARGE skillet, about 10 minutes. Remove meat and set aside. Meanwhile, chop eggplant flesh coarsely and the garlic finely. Add olive oil to the skillet and cook the chopped eggplant and garlic until the eggplant is well done and soft, about 30 minutes. Add all ingredients, except shells, to the skillet and cook until everything is nicely combined, about 10 minutes. Fill the shells with the mixture. Sprinkle with grated cheese. Roast until bubbly and brown, about 10 minutes. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 14:05 I don't know the protocol for choosing topics but I have a suggestion for one. While reading food photography tips from dcarch and SharonCB, and perusing Sharon's excellent food photography tuturials, it occured to me that it might be fun to have FOOD PHOTOGRAPHY be a Cookalong topic. It would be motivation for many of us to take a step toward better food photography. It might helo some to get around to posting a photo for the first time. In the long run we might see more posts illustrated with photographs, which is always a good thing. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by kathleen_li (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 15:23 This is a simple one, but a good and easy appetizer... Eggplant Mini Pizza . Photobucket o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 16:26 Jim, just to answer the implied question, Nancy usually picks a name randomly from those who repsonded to the current cookalong and that person picks the next topic. Isn't it about time for that? So you may get your wish. :) I guess the reasons I don't post pictures is that my experience with Photobucket was more annoying than conducive to photo-sharing, so I haven't tried out any of the other free services. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by canarybird (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 18:09 Jim this part of the forum is still about discussions of food, and in the Cookalongs a member chooses an ingredient or food item, and those who wish to participate then post recipes using that ingredient. Discussions about photography can take place over on The Gallery, (it is a photo gallery) or in Conversations, where we can talk about off-topic subjects but would be out of place on the Cookalong thread. SharonCb o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 18:51 I understand that it would it would be out of the ordinary as a Cookalong topic. It is about food though just in a different way. The idea would be to engage the attention of those who wouldn't otherwise get involved with photography. I won't press the point however, if others think it is going too far afield. Odds are against my being chosen at random anyway, so my suggestion probably will not be an issue. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 19:01 I'm neither for nor against it. That papoutsakias recipe looks yummy. Would that be fresh or dried basil? o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 19:20 Bean, Ordinarily it would be dried basil because that's what I always have on hand. When fresh basil is in the garden I use it. I didn't specify an amount. I'll leave that to your judgement. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by fearlessem (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 19:24 This eggplant gratin from Ina Garten is one of my favorites... Its basically eggplant and some marinara in a creamy ricotta-based bechamel type sauce... SO good! Here is a link that might be useful: Eggplant Gratin o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lpinkmountain (My Page) on Sun, Mar 7, 10 at 20:16 Well, I didn't make what I had planned on making, which was eggplant with pasta, mushrooms, fake bacon bits and a fontina cheese sauce. I have rice languishing in the fridge so I needed to make something that I could eat with rice. This dish has been on my "to try" list for a long time. It was yum! Eggplant and Chickpea Stew with Tomatoes, from the Williams and Sonoma "Vegetable" cookbook. Says it serves 4, but I would say 4 big eaters. You might get away with serving 6. I halved the recipe, except for the chickpeas, which I forgot to halve, which is why it is kind of chickpea dominant. 2 small to med. eggplants about 1.5-2 lbs. total weight 4-5 TBLSO EVOO 1 red onion cut into wedges 3-4 cloves garlic, coarsely chopped 1 lb. (500 g) fresh tomatoes, pureed with a grater/shredder (yeah right, I used a can of petite diced tomatoes) 1 1/2 cups canned chickpeas 1 lb. canned diced tomatoes with juice Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste 1/4 tsp. sugar 1/8 tsp. thyme pinch of ground cinnamon 1/2 cup dry red wine 2 TBLSP chopped fresh leaf italian parsley (I used a scant TBLSP dried, I hardly ever have fresh parsley on hand) Juice of 1/2 lemon (I used a dash of reconstituted lemon juice which is what I usually have on hand) Cut the eggplant crosswise into sections about 1/2 inch thick (I like thicker ones) Heat a heavy frying pant over med. high heat. When it is hot, add 2 TBLSP of the olive oil, then add the eggplant slices and fry until they are browned on the first side, about 5 min. Turn and brown the second side, adding 1-2 TBLSP EVOO to the pan as needed. Remove eggplant and set it aside. (What I actually ended up doing is salting the eggplant for an hour or so, rinsing and patting dry, peeling it and then basting it with the EVOO and roasting it in the oven for about 10 min. on each side. Roast at 400. It would be great grilled too, I think, but I don't have a grill and wouldn't fuss with one if I did). Heat 1 TBLSP of olive oil in the pan over med. heat. Saute the onion with the garlic until the onion becomes transluscent, 5-6 min., then add the tomato puree, fresh tomatoes (if using), chipeas, salt and pepper and otherspices. Cook gently to thicken the sauce a bit. Then add the eggplant and the wine, and simmer 10-15 min. more to thicken some more and combine flavors. Add a squeeze of lemon juice and adjust the flavors to taste. Serve with crusty French bread and a feta cheese salad, or spoon over boiled pasta or a simple rice pilaf. o post script clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by lpinkmountain (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 0:18 I have to tell you that stew was excellent. I think the secret, (for you eggplant skeptics) to good eggplant is to realize it is kind of like tofu, it has texture but not much flavor, although under the wrong conditions it can acquire a bitter one. But it also has the plus of absorbing and reflecting flavors very well, and matching that with a creamy texture. If the eggplant has likely sat around for a while, by all means peel it, and salt and sweat it. Then, be generous with the olive oil and spices when you're fixing it. If it's a garden fresh eggplant you can afford to be more haphazard about preparation. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 0:28 It was Sunday when I remembered that I needed to draw a name but the Oscars ran late and now it's Monday already! Anyway... I drew a name just now of those who posted on this thread. Jimster...I drew your name! Please pick our next Cookalong ingredient and post it to this thread. I saw your idea about pictures and I think it might be a good idea but..... for the same reason I didn't want to use meat, poultry, fish or seafood, I think it could leave too many members unable to participate. Remember, not everyone has a digital camera and some members are on dial up. Those who do enjoy posting pictures, post them when appropriate. I'll be watching for the next ingredient...Thanks to all the contributors. Oh, by the way, I can still live without eggplant :) Nancy o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 9:56 Jimster??? I'm heading out for a whole day of shopping. I'll check this thread as soon as I get back on later. Nancy o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 12:40 OMG! Now I'm in a predicament. I like my idea of the food photo theme but I would hate for it to be a turn-off for a lot of us, if that's what it would be. I'm sure I can come up with a good theme along more conventional lines if need be. There already have been a couple of comments, one neutral and one against. If I could get just a few more I would have a better sense of the feelings out there in CF land. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by caliloo (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 12:48 I vote for an ingredient. Photo stuff belings in the gallery IMHO. Alexa o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 12:57 Jim, why not do both? There's no reason the cookalong thread can't have a companion thread in the photo gallery. Folks can post the recipe here and a link to their dish there where others can make suggestions on how to improve the photographic aspects of it. Then, those who are interested in photography can post their pics without causing problems from those on slower connections, and those of us who aren't interested can scroll on by. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by ruthanna (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 13:08 I usually participate in the Cookalong threads and probably will in the next one, whatever you select. However I'm not a food photographer and have no desire to be one. The only reason I post food photographs is that we have a family cookbook disc that we keep updating and if I make one of the recipes in the "book", I'll take a snapshot of it and add it to the recipe. If I post a recipe here that already has a photo with it, sometimes I include it. I wouldn't cook a separate meal for the purpose of photographing it for the Cookalong thread. o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 13:27 When I was suddenly faced with the reality of choosing a theme, I reviewed previous Cookalongs and thought deeply about it. That, plus a few additional comments, has convinced me that the food photo theme would be too much of a break from the Cookalong concept. I like bean's suggestion of running a parallel thread on photography, if we can figure out how to best organize that. I will forward an ingredient choice to Nancy real soon now. Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by jimster (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 21:06 I Emailed Nancy with my choice but maybe it didn't get through or maybe she is extra busy right now. Anyway, I will spill the beans here (oops, beans was #21 wasn't it?) and she will set up the thread whenever she can. Cookalong #23 will be (tah dah): CRANBERRIES! Jim o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by wizardnm (My Page) on Mon, Mar 8, 10 at 21:20 Jim, I think we can have some fun with cranberries!!! Thanks! Nancy Here is a link that might be useful: Cookalong #23-------Cranberries o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by beanthere_dunthat (My Page) on Tue, Mar 9, 10 at 2:36 Psst...eggplant lovers, Pllog put a recipe on the Passover thread that looks yummy. Uses Tamarind with Japanese eggplant! o Bon Appetit cover clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by susytwo (My Page) on Tue, Mar 9, 10 at 16:19 This month's Bon Appetit featured eggplant rolls which I made this week for dinner. They were good but a tad dull. I left out the mint, so that could be why. Next time I make them I will add garlic, chilies or some pesto. Here is a link that might be useful: Eggplant Rolls with Swiss Chard o RE: Cookalong #22 ------ EGGPLANT clip this post email this post what is this? see most clipped and recent clippings Posted by tmd15 (My Page) on Sat, Mar 13, 10 at 9:10 susytwo, Fresh Basil instead of mint might be nice along with the garlic and maybe a splash of crushed red pepper flakes. iVillage GardenWeb: The Internet's Garden & Home Community Join : Garden Forums : Home Forums : Exchanges & Trading : Member Pages : Contact Us © 2006 iVillage Inc. All Rights Reserved. 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