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Brussel Sprouts in a Salad…

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Attention!!!

Do Not Tell People This is a Brussel Sprout Salad!

Don’t do it…just give it to them, have them tell you how amazing this salad tastes and then hit them with the news…They will be amazed!

Case in Point…

Earlier this week I took this salad to a Pot Luck a friend of mine was hosting.   I was quite nervous that no one would give it a go, so I happened to “forget” what I made this salad out of.  The eating started and I heard or was told my most people there that this was a delicious salad.  It was tangy, sweet and crunchy all at the same time.  The flavors were unexpected and wonderful.

Then I told them, they just ate raw Brussel Sprouts…

As one person put it…I just flipped his whole world, because until that moment he was sure he hated Brussel Sprouts.

That made my night!!!  I converted a non-believer and he didn’t even know…he didn’t even know!

I actually got the inspiration from a salad that I had in Chicago this past summer…I couldn’t believe that you could eat Brussel Sprouts raw and that they would be so fantastic!  I knew if you added bacon, garlic and shallots to them and caramelize them in the bacon fat that they were spectacular, but to have a healthier, lighter option was a culinary breakthrough in my opinion.

So, give this one a try…I wanted to name it, “Don’t tell them there are brussel sprouts in this salad, salad,” but that was just a little too long.

Instead, enjoy the combination of tangy, tart, sweet and salty…of chewy, crunchy and refreshing.  It really is quite yummy!

My Yummy Brussel Sprout Salad

My Yummy Brussel Sprout Salad

Brussel Sprout Harvest Salad

  • 1 ½ pound of Brussel Sprouts, shredded
  • 1 Granny Smith Apple, diced small
  • ½ cup Dried Cranberries
  • ½ cup Roasted and Salted Marcona Almonds
  • Shaved Pecorino Romano Cheese

Honey Lemon Vinaigrette

  • Zest of one Lemon
  • Juice from ½ of a Lemon
  • 2 tbsp Apple Cider Vinegar
  • 1/3 cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1 tbsp Dijon Mustard
  • ¼ cup Honey
  • Salt and Pepper to Taste

1 – Mix to combine in a small bowl the zest of the lemon with the juice of ½ a lemon, the vinegar, Dijon mustard, honey, salt and pepper.  Slowly drizzle in the olive oil, mix till combined.  Taste and adjust seasonings if needed.  Set Aside.

2 – Cut Brussel Sprouts in half and then cut them into small shredded pieces, making sure not to shred the core.  Then add the diced Granny Smith Apple, Cranberries and Marcona Almonds.  Toss with the dressing to combine.

3 – Let the salad sit for about 20-30 minutes either at room temperature if you will serve it right away or in the fridge if you will serve later.  This way the flavors will have a chance to meld.

4 – Right before service, shave some Pecorino Romano with a potato peeler.  I shaved about a cup of it, but you can adjust to your taste, I just really love a lot of cheese in my salad.  Take ½ of the shaved cheese and mix it into the salad and then take the other ½ and sprinkle on top.

Serves about 6-8 people

Tip:  If you want to make this a meal, served some grilled chicken breast over this and it would make about 4 main entrée servings

Happy Eating!

Look at the Amazing Textures In this Brussel Sprout Salad

Look at the Amazing Textures In this Brussel Sprout Salad

FYI:  Here are a couple of other salad recipes made from Brussel Sprouts to help inspire you!

Shaved Brussel Sprout Salad with Fresh Walnuts and Pecorino

Brussel Sprout Salad

Warm Brussel Sprout Salad

The Magic of Truffle Butter…

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

Are you all ready for this???

I don’t know all there is to know about cooking and food!

Take a minute to digest this…I know, it’s a hard one.

How I lived my whole life and didn’t know that there was Truffle Butter?  Well, I don’t think I was quite living…I was in a fuzzy non-truffle haze.

I actually have only recently tasted truffles…Since they are about 20 bajillion dollars a pound, you don’t see them that often…By the way bajillion is a word…Google that s&%$!

Now I am not talking about the chocolate truffles…I am talking about the pig sniffing them out in the forest truffles…Do you know what they are?

Well, in-case you don’t here is a small lesson…

These are Black Truffles

Truffles are in the fungi family, which means it is the wealthy, distant cousin of the button mushroom.   They are found in Europe and they grow under ground near the root system of certain trees like birch, oak chestnut and pine. They are extremely hard to find and are hard to cultivate.

They are usual found by the use of Truffle Hogs, pigs that naturally have a keen sense of what truffles smell like or by trained dogs.  People started training “truffle dogs,” because the female pigs who are used to find the truffles usually eat them once they are discovered.  This doesn’t help people in the harvesting when the product is getting eaten by the one finding it.  The pigs desire them because it has a compound in it that is similar to a sex hormone called pheromone that is in boar salaiva, and these pigs are wildly attracted to this androstenol pheromone.

Anyway, truffles are hard to find, low in quantity and high in demand.  Therefore, the cost a pretty penny…I myself have only seen tiny shavings on my dishes or had some truffle oil drizzles over the finished dish…I have yet to see a whole one.  Now Wikipedia states that in2005 at a charity auction in Italy a truffle that weighed 2.6 pounds sold for $112,000…that is $2,693.31 an ounce.  The Black Summer Truffle usually goes for about $670 a pound.  I did find some black truffles at Amazon.com that sell for $111.30 an ounce.  They are typically sold in a brine and not sold fresh.  But, this is how retailers preserve them and really they taste fabulous anyway!

There are a few types of truffle.  There is the black truffle which grows in France and only under oak trees and the white truffle that grows in Northern Italy under poplar, beech, oak and hazel trees.  These two are the most famous and most desired truffles in the world and are harvested in the fall.  There are also Summer Black Truffles, Chinese Truffles, Scorzone Truffles and Oregon White Truffles.

People use truffles as sort of a garnish.  You can shave it over eggs, pasta or anything else that you want.  They are typically served raw, but you can put it under the skin of poultry to infuse the bird with flavor.  There are cheeses that also have small bits of truffles in it and then there is the truffle butter that I found at my local AJ’s.  If you are not from Arizona, then see if you can buy some at your local fine food store.

I bought my truffle butter for around $11.00 and it is a very small amount, but sooooo very worth it.  My favorite is to slather it on two pieces of bread and make a grilled cheese and granny smith apple sandwich…heaven!

Here is the recipe

Million Dollar Grilled Cheese Sandwich

-         Truffle Butter

-         2 Slices of Crusty Bread (any bread will do)

-         A few thin slices of Granny Smith Apple (or any apple will do)

-         1 oz Sharp Cheddar

-         1 oz White Cheddar

-         Dijon Mustard

Set your pan on Medium heat.  Put Dijon Mustard on one or both sides of the bread.  On one slice of bread put the Sharp Cheddar, thinly sliced Apples and White Cheddar on in that order.  Top with second slice of bread.  Put the Truffle Butter on one side and put in pan butter side down.  Butter the top slice of bread and once the bottom slice is golden and the cheese is starting to melt, flip over.  Cooked till the cheese is melted and both sides of the bread are golden and toasted.

Serve Immediately and it Serves One Very Happy Person

NOT MINE BUT WONDERFUL

I came across truffle butter by watching Barefoot Contessa.  She did a Fillet Mignon Sandwich with Truffle Butter and I just had to make it at home.  It was fantastic!  I would though add some Boursin Herbed Cheese or any soft Herbed cheese to one side of the bread, because it made it taste all that much better.  And I would cook a Fillet Mignon roast this way all the time, it was the best beef I have ever made in my house.  I am going to post her recipe…remember it’s not mine…I just want to share the wealth.

My Fillet of Beef with Truffle Butter Sandwich

My Fillet of Beef with Truffle Butter Sandwich

Fillet of Beef Sandwiches on Baguette with Truffled Butter – by Ina Garten

Ingredients

nocoupons

  • 1 1/2 to 2 pounds fillet of beef, trimmed and tied
  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • Kosher salt and coarsely ground black pepper
  • 2 French baguettes, 18 to 20 inches long
  • 3 ounces black truffle butter, at room temperature
  • 1 (2-ounce) chunk good Parmesan cheese
  • Fresh baby arugula

Directions

Preheat the oven to 500 degrees F. (Be sure your oven is very clean!)

Place the beef on a sheet pan and pat the outside dry with a paper towel. Spread the butter all over the beef with your hands. Sprinkle the beef evenly with 1 1/2 teaspoons salt and 1 1/2 teaspoons pepper. Roast for exactly 22 minutes for rare and 25 minutes for medium-rare.

Remove the beef from the oven, cover it tightly with aluminum foil, and allow it to rest at room temperature for 15 minutes. Remove the strings and slice the fillet about 1/4-inch thick.

Open the baguettes lengthwise but not all the way through. Spread the bottom halves generously with the truffle butter. Top with a layer of sliced beef and sprinkle it with salt and pepper.

Using a vegetable peeler, shave the Parmesan into thin shards and scatter the shards over the sliced beef on each sandwich. Finish with a sprinkling of arugula leaves. Fold the tops of the sandwiches over, cut each baguette diagonally in 3 or 4 sandwiches, and serve right away.

HOW I SERVED THESE SANDWICHES

Filet Sandwiches with Kettle Chips and Caprese Salad

Filet Sandwiches with Kettle Chips and Caprese Salad

I served them small so everyone could have one or two.  I also served them with store bought kettle chips and I made a homemade caprese salad with purple and red heirloom tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, fresh basil, very good extra virgin olive oil, salt, pepper and a reduced balsamic vinegar.  I reduce my vinegar by putting it in a small saucepan and boil it till the liquid is cut in half.  This makes for a much more flavorful salad in my opinion.

WHAT ABOUT TRUFFLE OIL?

In my research, I found out that most commercially sold truffle oil has no “truffle” in it.  So, when you buy truffle oil, be aware of what you are buying.  Although, these oils are just olive oil with infused artificial flavors, they still taste a lot like the flavor of truffle, so cooks and chefs still use it as an inexpensive way to infuse the flavor of truffles into a dish.   I personally have some black truffle oil in the house and it’s okay, but not nearly as good as the truffle butter.

So go out and experiment with truffle butter, you won’t be disappointed!

Happy Eating!

The Struggle Within…

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

I have a body issue…I think we can all agree on that.  I wish I could just be satisfied with who I am, but it’s embedded deep within me.  Years and years of self-loathing.  We all have our hangups and mine is the size of my jeans.  I really think it started from when I was a kid, but those voices should have vanished by now.  That teasing should no longer be an issue…if I could just break away from that past.

I hate that I could possibly give this trait to Brook.  Sometimes I know I am doing a great job promoting a positive body image, but then there are times with the words diet, calories and weight pop out of my mouth too often.  They are NEVER said about her, but it doesn’t matter.  Me saying it about myself is just as dangerous.

So, the funny thing is when I post my Tuesday Night Dinner line up later, you all are going to laugh and call me a freak.  It’s okay, I am fully aware of my strangeness :) .

Here is the thing…I go to the gym constantly…but, I also cook and eat so I never get anywhere.  Then I feel extremely guilty when I get off the wagon and eat things that I know negatively counter act all the good that I did at the gym earlier that day.  I just wish I could say “no” to good food.  I can’t though, because cooking really makes me feel wonderful.  It really is my calling…I know it is.

Argh!  I wish I could have my cake and eat it too…

At least I do go to the gym.

Okay, here is the other thing…I LOVE to entertain.  I love having the house bursting out at the seams with friends and family gathered around my table…I love the conversations, the laughter the wine and the food.  I love the whole package…why can’t I just focus on that?  I mean right now I am sitting in a kitchen that desperately needs to be cleaned because I had an amazing meal with my friends and family last night.  It was wonderful.  I should just focus on the wonderfulness of it all.

Internal struggles are so crappy.  I should just choose to be happy.

But, is happiness being a fantastic cook or fitting into a pair of size 8 jeans?  And, where is the balance I am longing to find?

This is one of those moments when I realize that I still have so much to learn about myself.  That and the realization that I should go out for a run today…I feel like moving my body.  This is my struggle within.

French Mushroom Soup with Roasted Garlic Croutons…

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

So the apple cheesecake was not a winner, but what happens when you fail?  Get up , dust yourself off and try again.

This week focused on Mushroom soup.  Well, cream of mushroom is obvious, but I was trying for something different.  I was listening to Martha Stewart Radio when they suggested making a French Onion Soup to a listener.  That reminded me that my Mom requested that I make something like French Onion Soup soon and my brain started going to work.  If I added tons of different mushrooms and caramelized them along with a bucket load of onions, maybe I could make a fabulous French Mushroom Soup.  I added a touch of cream to the broth for body and flavor and well, for a wonderful mouth feel.  Then, I thought I would add roasted garlic to the soup, but then had a great moment and thought it would be fun to spread roasted garlic on the croutons before you add the cheese.  This technique is from one of our favorite restaurants in Burlington called BJ Wentker’s.  They always serve a bowl of roasted garlic with their bread bowl…it’s fabulous!

The Bounty of Mushrooms

The Bounty of Mushrooms

So, this past Tuesday everyone got to taste the experiment…if the women at Food 52 will just give my soup a taste, I think they would agree with my friends and family that it is one of the most delicious things you can put into your mouth.  Here’s to hoping!

French Mushroom Soup with Roasted Garlic Croutons

French Mushroom Soup with Roasted Garlic Crouton and Gruyere Cheese

French Mushroom Soup with Roasted Garlic Crouton and Gruyere Cheese

For the Soup:

  • 4 tbsp Butter
  • 2 tbsp Olive Oil
  • 4 Large Sweet Onions, sliced
  • 8 oz Cremini Mushrooms, sliced
  • 8 oz Oyster Mushrooms, sliced
  • 1 lb Button Mushrooms, sliced
  • 6 oz Shiitake Mushrooms, sliced without stems
  • 1 tbsp Granulated Sugar
  • 2 cloves Crushed Garlic
  • 2 tbsp Flour
  • 6 c Beef Broth
  • ¼ c Vermouth
  • 2 tbsp Balsamic Vinegar
  • ½ c Heavy Cream
  • 2 Bay Leaves
  • 1 tsp fresh Thyme, leaves only
  • 1 tsp fresh Rosemary, chopped
  • Salt and Pepper to Taste

For the Crouton and Topper

  • 2 heads of Garlic
  • ¼ cup Olive Oil
  • Kosher Salt
  • 8 oz shredded Gruyere

How to Make the Soup

    1. In a large soup pot melt the butter and add the olive oil on medium high heat.  Add all the sliced onions and mushrooms to the pot and sauté until well caramelized, about 30 to 40 minutes.  Add the crushed garlic, granulated sugar, salt and pepper.  Continue to cook for another 10 minutes.
    2. Add the flour and stir.  Add the vermouth, balsamic vinegar and beef broth to the soup pot.  Stir and then add the bay leaves, fresh thyme and fresh rosemary.
    3. Bring to a boil and then turn the heat to low and cook for 15 more minutes.  Then turn off the heat and add the heavy cream.  Stir and test soup, add more salt and pepper if needed.
    4. Turn on your oven broiler to high.  In oven proof crocks pour soup into the crocks.  Place roasted garlic crouton on top of soup and put 1 oz of Gruyere cheese on top.  Put into oven till cheese is melted and toasted.  Serve immediately.

How to Make Roasted Garlic Crouton

  1. Turn oven on to 400 degrees
  2. Create an aluminum foil pouch.  Cut off the top of the garlic head and discard.  Place both garlic heads in the foil pouch and pour ¼ cup of olive oil into the pouch.  Salt the garlic and place in oven.
  3. Roast for 30 to 40 minutes.
  4. Take out of oven and let cool.  Reserve the olive oil for the bread
  5. Slice 8 pieces of rustic bread around ½ inch thick
  6. Spread the garlic olive oil on the pieces of bread.  Then sprinkle with kosher salt.
  7. Broil the bread till they are toasted…about 5 to 10 minutes.  Keep an eye on them.
  8. Take bread out and spread the roasted cloves of garlic on top of the croutons.  Use these for the soup topper as described above.

Serves 8

Bowl of Fench Mushroom Soup

Bowl of Fench Mushroom Soup

Enjoy this on a crisp fall day with friends and family…Come together around the table!  Remember the family table is a great place to connect.

Happy Eating!

Brook and I Making Cheesecake for the Apple Cake Contest…

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

I finally have guts…

I’ve thought about making food for contests for awhile now, but have always been chicken to do it.  There is a lot of professional and home cook talent out there and I just don’t know how I compare.  Well, I am finally taking a chance, cross your fingers, I may have a winner.

There is a new site called Food 52 and they are trying to make a cookbook based off of food bloggers recipes.  Every week they have two contests you can enter and if you win your recipe goes into a published cookbook…It would be my 15 minutes!

This weeks contest is making an apple cake or a potato gratin.  I chose to go after the apple cake.  At first I was thinking about making a Upside Down Apple Caramel Cake, but once I looked over my competition, I realized that there were quite a few people who already came up with that idea.  So, I put my thinking cap on and tried to come up with a cake that no one else would think about making.  I came up with an apple cheesecake!

Apple Spiced Cheesecake with Rum Caramel Sauce

Apple Spiced Cheesecake with Rum Caramel Sauce

I actually had a hard time with the engineering of this cake.  Originally I wanted to put the apple mixture at the bottom of the cheesecake so it would be like this…Gingersnap crust layer, apple spice layer, cheesecake layer, caramel drizzle with walnut layer.  I thought it would look amazing this way and in retrospect, I am going to try that next time I make this.  To be on the safe side though, I put the apple spice layer on top of the cheesecake…It did the trick.

Brook got into the action.  She helped me chop apples…

Brook Chopping the Apples with Her Safety Knife

Brook Chopping the Apples with Her Safety Knife

She also helped me pour each egg into the cheesecake batter and she put all the pre-measured ingredients in…

Brook with the Cheesecake Mixture...She Helped Pour in the Measured Ingredients and the Eggs

Brook with the Cheesecake Mixture...She Helped Pour in the Measured Ingredients and the Eggs

After we mixed everything…we poured the cheesecake on to the gingersnap crust…

Brook and I Making Cheesecake

Brook and I Making Cheesecake

Then I placed the spiced apple mixture on top of the cheesecake base…it looked like this before it went into the oven…

Apple Spiced Cheesecake Before Going Into the Oven

Apple Spiced Cheesecake Before Going Into the Oven

So, this puppy baked forever…It’s okay though, I needed that time to clean up the kitchen…this cake is time consuming and messy to make, but I have to say after trying it out today, it is well worth it.

The cake took so long to bake in the oven, that I asked my neighbor Scott to come by our house to take it out of the oven.  We promised Brook we would go to a movie and the cake was going make us miss the start time unless someone could help us out…so Scott, thanks!  You helped a four year old and her family get to the movies on time.

Well, if you have read this far down, you must want the recipe.  It’s an all day event, but sooooo worth making!

Here it is…

Close up of Finished Apple Cheesecake on a bed of Caramel

Close up of Finished Apple Cheesecake on a bed of Caramel

Spiced Apple Cheesecake with Caramel Rum Sauce

Spiced Apples

  • 4 Medium Granny Smith Apples, Diced
  • ½ c Brown Sugar
  • 4 tbsp Butter
  • 1 tbsp Flour
  • 3 tbsp Heavy Cream
  • 1 tbsp Vanilla
  • ½ tbsp Cinnamon
  • ½ tsp Nutmeg
  • 1/3 tsp Ground Ginger
  • ¼ tsp Ground Clove
  • Pinch of Salt

In a heavy saucepan melt the butter and add apples.  Stir for two minutes and then add the brown sugar, cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, clove and salt.  Stir for another two to three minutes then add heavy cream and vanilla.  Continue to stir for another 3 to 5 minutes.  Add the flour and stir for a final 2 to 3 minutes.  Take mixture off the heat and let cool before adding to cheesecake mixture.

Gingersnap Crust

  • 2 cups Gingersnap Crumbs
  • ½ cup Sugar
  • ½ cup (1 stick) Butter
  • Pinch of Salt

Grind gingersnaps in food processor till they turn into crumbs.  Put two cups of gingersnap crumbs into a bowl.  Add sugar and salt, stir to combine.  Melt the butter and add melted butter into gingersnap mixture.  Stir till combined.  Press gingersnap crust into cheesecake pan, making sure the crust is even and slightly going up the sides.  Put into the refrigerator to set.  Take out once cheesecake mixture is made.

Cheesecake

  • 4 (8 ounce) Packages of Cream Cheese, Room Temperature
  • 5 Large Eggs, Room Temperature
  • 1 cup Sugar
  • 1/3 cup Heavy Cream
  • 3 tbsp Flour
  • 1 tbsp Vanilla
  • Zest of 1 Lemon
  • Pinch of Salt

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. With a standing mixer or a bowl with beaters, mix cream cheese, sugar, salt and flour until smooth.  Scrap down the bowl and then add eggs one at a time.  Don’t add a new egg until the previous one is well mixed in.  Scrape down the bowl as needed.  Finally, add heavy cream, vanilla and lemon zest.  Mix until combined and scrape down the bowl once more.

Remove the cheesecake pan with the crust from the fridge.  Add cream cheese mixture into springform pan.  Take cooled spiced apple mixture and spoon onto the top of the cream cheese mixture.

Put cheesecake into the 350 degree oven for 15 minutes.  After 15 minutes turn down the oven to 250 degrees and bake for another two and a half hours.  Cheesecake is done when the outer part is firm and the center is slightly soft.

Take out of the oven and let it cool on a rack.  Once cooled you can cover and refrigerate.

Rum Caramel Sauce

  • 1 cup Brown Sugar
  • 6 tbsp Butter
  • ½ cup Heavy Cream
  • 1 tbsp Spiced Rum
  • 1 tsp Vanilla
  • Pinch of Salt
  • Chopped Toasted Walnuts (optional)

Put brown sugar, salt and butter in a medium saucepan.  Stir until melted.  Keep stirring until mixture comes to a boil.  Turn the heat off and slowly stir in the heavy cream.  Be careful because mixture will expand and foam up.  Once it is combined, add spiced rum and vanilla.  Turn heat back on and once mixture returns to a slight boil, turn stove off and remove from heat.  Transfer to a glass or ceramic container and cool.  Can store in the refrigerator.  Caramel will thicken when cold.  To soften, place container into the microwave for 10-20 seconds.  Stir caramel.

To present cheesecake, slice cake and place on plate.  Drizzle the rum caramel sauce on top of the cheesecake and if you want sprinkle some roasted chopped walnuts on top.  You can also place the cheesecake over a small pool of caramel that is put on the serving plate first.

Serves 12-16

Happy Eating!