Category — Holiday
soup with leftover wild rice
Nothing is more comforting than a big bowl of hearty soup and a slice of warm crusty bread. This chunky soup has a long list of ingredients but actually comes together quickly. Especially if you use the leftover wild and brown rice (from the Rack of Lamb dinner post on October 2 on this site) and meat from a rotisserie chicken. As usual, I use Costco’s rotisserie chicken, which yields about 1 3/4 pounds of meat, after discarding the skin and bones. Chop up the dark meat for the soup and refrigerate the breast meat for salads or sandwiches for another day. The chicken Andouille sausage used here was found at Trader Joe’s but any cooked sausage you prefer (such as kielbasa) is fine. Although the sausage is fully cooked, it is sautéed with the vegetables to lend them more flavor before the liquid is added to the pot. Today was my first opportunity to use my new “Elite” Cuisinart, and I must say, it was amazing, can’t wait to really put it to the test with a big ol’ day of cooking! With the holidays fast approaching, that will be very soon! Speaking of the holidays, this would be a perfect soup to make with leftover turkey meat and turkey stock made from the turkey carcass from Thanksgiving, so keep it in mind.
1 3/4 pounds of meat from one Costco rotisserie chicken; breast meat on the left, dark meat on the right
November 5, 2009 2 Comments
mulled cider time
For me, once November hits, it is cider time. Even though it’s still not quite fall temperatures during the day (today’s high is predicted to be 87 degrees!), the evenings are nice and cool, so I’m ready for a hot beverage! Here’s one of my favorites – spicy and just a little sweet. [Read more →]
November 1, 2009 No Comments
jack-o-lantern pumpkin seeds
One of my favorite things about Halloween is toasting and eating the pumpkin seeds once the family is done carving their Jack-O-Lanterns. Each year, I try a different seasoning, this year it’s southwest. I used the Mexican Lime Olive Oil from our wonderful Queen Creek Olive Mill, but regular extra virgin olive oil is fine too. And instead of the chili powder, you find at the grocery store, I love the Ground Ancho Chili Pepper from Penzey’s Spices, but again regular will work as well. One of the important steps is to be sure the seeds are well dried after they are rinsed and cleaned. If they are not dry, the oil will not coat them as well and they will not crisp up. I find it easiest to just toast them in a dry skillet for a couple of minutes before seasoning and placing them in the oven.
Hope you saved your seeds! P.S. Happy Halloween Marissa and Connor, miss and love you both!
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October 31, 2009 No Comments
stress free Halloween hord’oeuvres
Have you been so busy worrying about, shopping for, or (gasp!) making your Halloween costume that you don’t think you have time to make hor d’oeuvres to bring to the Halloween Party? I have just the thing for you, Ghost Toast Bites. These could not be easier: a few slices of bread, a cookie cutter, the broiler, raisins, Boursin cheese spread, and about 15 minutes and you’re ready to go!
Ghost Toast Bites
October 30, 2009 No Comments
grown-up spiderweb cake
I had a lovely birthday, thank you for all your sweet birthday wishes. My wonderful friends, Ronnie, Amy, and Lori took me to the Queen Creek Olive Mill for lunch; it was a gorgeous afternoon that we spend under the olive trees enjoying wine, antipasto, and sandwiches. Afterward, we headed off to the Pork Shop, and unfortunately, we discovered that they are closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, so no amazing bacon, sausages, or chorizo for us to take home…next time we’ll remember that!
For my birthday dinner, Dave took me to Prado at the InterContinental Montelucia Resort and Spa where we shared a bottle of wine and Paella with mussels, clams, and scallops. It was tasty, but I have to say my paella is really much better; I include sausage, chicken, and shrimp plus peas. I’ll have to make it next time the kids come home and post the recipe. Until then, we have Halloween to contend with, so here is a fun Spider-Web cake that is fun for kids but has an adult taste, with the addition of Espresso in the frosting.
You will find the Medaglia D’Oro instant espresso powder at any Italian Deli or locally at A.J.’s or on the web at this link. (I’ve even seen it recently at Target) I use it often in baking and once you try it you will too, so invest in a jar now and I promise I’ll be posting more recipes using it in the future. I am working tonight, and certainly don’t need to have a whole cake around the house, so I’ll be dropping it off at our monthly neighborhood Bunko night for the ladies to enjoy.
For the 7-minute frosting, or anytime you are beating egg whites, be sure the bowl and the beaters are completely clean and free of any grease. The egg whites will not beat up and increase in volume with even a trace amount of fat, such as from the egg yolk, present. Also, eggs separate much easier when they are cold, straight from the refrigerator, but they whip up best when they are at room temperature, so separate them a little bit ahead of time. Finally, ever wonder what my kitchen looks like after I’m done cooking and taking all these pictures and ready to put up a new post? You’ll see at the bottom of this recipe – scary indeed!
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October 28, 2009 5 Comments
Chef Tim McGrath’s phenomenal green olive “pesto”
Goat Cheese and Green Olive-Almond Pesto Crostini
The guest chef-instructor at Barbara Fenzl’s Les Gourmettes Cooking School this week was Chef Tim McGrath of Cook’s Gathering Catering in Long Beach, California. Tim is one of the most creative, sharing, and knowledgeable chefs I’ve ever met. I am constantly being asked for a recommendation for a caterer here in town and each time, I wish that Tim was in Phoenix, because he would always be my very first choice, hands down! When I told Tim that, he let me know that he would be willing to fly to Phoenix to cater a party, so if you ever have a need for something really special, he’s your man! For class, he served Mini Ahi Tuna Kabobs with this outstanding “pesto”. One of the best things about Tim’s classes is that he’ll be teaching you a dish and then give you a dozen other ideas of what to do with that recipe. When he suggested using this olive pesto on a crostini with goat cheese… well, that is right up my alley! A great bonus… it’s “Easy – Breezy” and the colors lend themselves perfectly to the upcoming holiday season.
What is it that makes this recipe so “Easy – Breezy”? Well, besides using the food processor to make the pesto and the fact that it is a quick and delicious appetizer, every single ingredient can be found at Trader Joe’s! The roasted piquillo peppers are sold in a 10.4-ounce jar, and you can’t find a better price on the almonds, goat cheese, or olive oil anywhere in town. You will notice this recipe does not call for salt, that is because the olives and their brine are salty enough. The brine is used to thin out the pesto. Unlike traditional pesto that uses basil, the olives and almonds do not have a high water content, thus the brine is needed to create the perfect consistency.
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October 22, 2009 No Comments
sweet potato or yam?!?
tan-skinned sweet potato, red-skinned sweet potato, russet, red-skinned potato, Yukon Gold, and white-skinned potato
Is it a sweet potato or is it a yam? Often in our grocery stores, reddish-skinned sweet potatoes are labeled as yams. In truth, it is extremely rare to find a true yam in a standard market, just about the only place you may be able to find them is in a Latin American market. There is no need to worry though, if you have a favorite yam recipe, sweet potatoes will fit the bill, because in all honestly, that’s probably what you’ve been using all along.
A true yam is the tuber (or bulb) of a tropical vine and is not even distantly related to the sweet potato. Slowly becoming more common in US (Latin) markets, the yam is a popular vegetable in Latin America and the Caribbean. Yams are revered as religious objects and have ceremonial status, one reason may be because they can become amazingly huge. On the Pacific Island of Ponape, the size of yams is described as 2-man, 4-man, or 6-man, indicating the number of men need to lift the thing! In fact, a 650-pound, 7-foot-long yam has been recorded.
October 16, 2009 4 Comments
perfect mashed potatoes with a food mill
Mashing potatoes into the pot with food mill, with green onion mixture in skillet on the right.
There is a kitchen tool that many of you don’t have, but should invest in… a food mill. I swear by it, there is not better way to make lump-free, perfectly textured mashed potatoes. The food mill consists of three parts: a slanted bottomless bowl, interchangeable disks with holes in various sizes, and a crank with a bent metal blade which mashes the food and pushes it through the disks as you turn it. There are generally three corrugated feet on the bottom of the bowl to old the mill in place on the rim of a pot or pan. The bowl may be plastic, stainless steel or aluminum and the disks and blades are usually made of stainless steel. I prefer the style with the plastic bowl, for easier clean-up. Not only is the food mill used to make perfect mashed potatoes, but also removes the sees when making tomato sauce from cooked tomatoes or to remove pulp from other cooked foods when making a sauce or puree.
Prices range from $20 to $100, I own several (because of the cooking school), but almost always use the $20 plastic model. You can find a food mill at most well-stocked kitchen stores or online.
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October 4, 2009 No Comments



