Italian Pork Chops and Pasta Prima Vera

February 28, 2013

Made a great dinner last night, after posting on facebook my friend Dan asked me to post the recipe so here it is Dan

Ingredients

6 center cut pork chops about a 1/3 inch thick

1 cup of your favorite italian dressing

1 1/2 lb of spaghetti or your favorite pasta

1 14 ounce can diced tomatoes

1 14 ounce can crushed tomatoes

1 cup of white wine

1 cup of chicken stock

2 cups of broccoli diced

1 large red and 1 large yellow pepper thinly sliced

1 large onion sliced

1/2 lb of sliced mushrooms

1 cup of frozen peas

2 clove garlic minced

salt and pepper

dried thyme, marjoram, basil, oregano

olive oil

Parmesan or Romano Cheese

Sprinke chops with salt and pepper,  place in zip lock back add italian dressing and marinate at least 4 hours. toss all vegetables together but peas and mushrooms. Bring a gallon of water together with about 4 tbl of salt to a low boil.  Saute chops right out of bag in large pan with about 2 tbl of olive oil for about 4 minutes a side. Remove to a plate and reserve for later.  Add 2 more tbl of olive oil and toss in all the veggies except the mushrooms and peas. Add salt and pepper and 2 tsp of each of the dried herbs and garlic and saute for 5 to 6 minutes. Add wine and cook until pan is dry. Add stock and tomatoes and cook for 8 to 10 minutes. Taste and adjust seasoning to your taste. Place the chops in the sauce, turn down to simmer and cook for 5 to 6 minutes. Cook pasta to desired doneness and drain, do not rinse. Remove chops and set aside. Add peas and mushrooms to sauce then toss in all the pasta and mix together.  Toss with Parmesan or Romano and serve.  I serve it with a large salad and garlic bread. You don’t have to use any of the veggies I did, use whatever you like. Sometimes I use green bean and spinach instead of broccoli and peas and use any mushroom you like or none at all.  You don’t even need pork chops, use some boneless chicken thighs or breasts or even chicken legs, As I always stress make it to your taste, make it so you like it.

Eat Well and Enjoy

Chef Tim

 

Getting the bird thawed

November 19, 2012

If you haven’t taken that bird out of the freezer, you better do it now. If you have a bird bigger than 16lbs it is really too late to thaw in the fridge. Today I will show you how to cure that. Get your largest pot or deep pan and place the turkey in it’s packaging into it. Place pot in your laundry tub and and remove the tubs drain and place something under the pot to keep the drain clear. Turn on the cold water and fill pot then turn down and let water run so there is a constant stream so the pot will continually overflow and the water runs down the drain. After about 6 hours remove the bird, dry off the package and place in a pan on the bottom shelf of the fridge to let finish thawing for at least a day. If you are thawing last minute keep in pot with water running for about 10 hours. Hope this helps. Have a great holiday.

Eat Well

Chef Tim

Thanksgiving is here let’s cook

November 15, 2012

With Thanksgiving just around the corner and over 50 emails and messages for recipes I am posting this chapter of my cookbook. Please enjoy the recipes I have here, everything from the bird to sides and desserts. Any questions just drop me a note.

Chapter 13

Happy Thanksgiving

Does any one single meal during the year say Family more than Thanksgiving Dinner. It was my Dad’s favorite holiday and he showed it. My folks had a rule, no one spends a holiday alone and our house was usually loaded up on Thanksgiving. One of our best was when no one could reach my Grandparents in Kentucky on the phone and they arrived just before dinner as a surprise. My folks would really put themselves out for the holiday. They would try to make sure everyone had their favorites at dinner. We would have 3 or 5 types of vegetables several types of sides and 3 or 4 different desserts. One  of the great things about Thanksgiving was that it was an opportunity for all of us to work in the kitchen together. We cleaned veggies, broke up bread for the stuffing,(my sister Cheryl made it an art form) helped my Mom make the desserts. My Dad’s favorite line was many hands make light work. I know a lot of people get intimidated making such a big meal, but I am going to solve that for you in this chapter. I am going to give you a menu and tell you how to prep for it so you are not so bogged down on the Holiday. There is still going to be a lot of work to do. So get your Family ready. Let them know it is at your house this time and let many hands make light work.

Thanksgiving Menu

ROASTED TURKEY

RICH LUCIOUS GRAVY

MASHED POTATOES

OLD FASHIONED DRESSING

CORN BREAD DRESSING

BROWN RICE DRESSING

BAKED CARAMELIZED SWEET POTATOES

SWEET POTATO SOUFFLE

HOMEMADE CRANBERRY SAUCE

AUNT NANCY’S BROCCOLI CASSEROLE

BUTTEREED CARROTS AND CORN

SWEET SAUTEED BRUSSEL SPROUTS

PUMPKIN PIE

MARLBOROUGH PIE

APPLE CINNAMON SPICE CAKE WITH MAPLE ICING

Ambitious, yes, but don’t worry you don’t have to make everything here. These are choices for you and if there is something here you don’t want,  don’t make it or substitute it for something you really want. It is important for you to know to cook what you like or don’t do it. I try to instill this into people I teach. You will never be good at cooking if you don’t like what you are making. That is what separates a Chef from a home cook. A Chef must learn to work past preferences while cooking. When you are cooking for family and friends you are cooking from your heart. If your heart is not in it you are not giving of yourself. That is the essence of cooking. Giving of yourself to others in the form of your food. It is why a Chef may be able to make anything and make it taste good, but when a Chef opens his own restaurant we cook our food what symbolizes us. This is what  I have been trying to give you throughout this book. My  food, what it is that represents me and my Family.

Just a note before we start, several of the recipes I have for Thanksgiving I developed for my Brother-in Law Mike. He is on a zero carb diet and he has done incredible with it, therefore I made several of the sides so he would be able to still enjoy the holiday. These recipes also work well for people on a gluten free diet or are diabetic.

ROASTED TURKEY

First thing we need to do is what kind of turkey do we want. I come from a family of white meat eaters. I purchase a couple of large turkey breasts, cook them 2 to 3 days before Thanksgiving, and slice them right away. I lay the slices out in the pan and reheat them on Thanksgiving day itself. I will usually roast a few turkey legs on that day so you get the smell in the house and have the legs for those that want them. I also do this with a whole turkey. It saves a lot of work and mess on the holiday.

If you want to cook your turkey on Thanksgiving go ahead. I would recommend not stuffing it. Stuffing it lengthens the cooking time and can dry out the breast meat. It also is a bacterial hazard if the stuffing does not get up to 170 degrees inside the center of the bird.

I am going to give instructions on roasting turkey whether a breast or whole turkey and the instructions on reheating if you so desire.

Ingredients

1 large whole Turkey 16-18 lbs or 1 to 2  10-12lb breasts

2 to 3 sticks of melted butter

Salt and pepper

2 large sliced onions

4 ribs of large diced celery

6 large carrots diced large

Olive oil

1 cup of chardonnay

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Toss veggies in olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Wash turkey or turkey breasts in cold water inside and out.  Sprinkle salt and pepper on the inside of the turkey, if using breasts salt and pepper the back cavity. Brush roasting pan with butter. Toss veggies in pan and spread out evenly. Brush bottom of whole turkey with butter and season with salt and pepper. Place whole turkey or breast in pan and coat with butter and season liberally with salt and pepper. Pour the rest of the butter into the pan. Cover the breast on a whole bird with foil reflective side down. Place in oven and reduce heat to 325 degrees. Bake the whole bird or the breast for 15 to 17 minutes per pound. Let roast for 1 hour and pull the bird or breast out to baste with pan juices. Place back in oven and baste every 20 minutes. After another 40 minutes take the foil off the bird so the breast can brown. Pour the wine over the breast of the turkey. Cook for the remaining time continuing to baste every 20 to 25 minutes. Pull from oven when breast meat is 155 in the turkey breast and the thigh meat is 165 degrees. Let stand in the pan to set for 10 minutes and then move to a cutting board. If you are cooking on Thanksgiving Day cover with foil and let bird rest for ½ hour before carving. If you are cooking ahead of time leave uncovered and let cool for about and hour.

Carve meat and move to platter and serve if you are cooking for that day. If you are pre-cooking. Carve meat and arrange in a large disposable pan. Cover and chill in fridge. To reheat on Thanksgiving Day, remove and uncover turkey for about and hour. Pour 2 to 3 cups of boiling turkey stock over the turkey. Cover tightly and place in a 350 oven for 40 minutes for piping hot turkey.  Plate and serve.

RICH LUCIOUS GRAVY

Ingredients

Approx 1 ½ gallons of turkey stock

12 ounces of turkey fat rendered

12 ounces of flour

Pan drippings and fond

Depending on how you made your turkey will depend on how we make our gravy. If you are cooking the turkey early save the carcasses of the turkey or breasts and cut them up with a cleaver and put into a stock pot. Add 1 ½ gallon of  chicken stock to it. Pour the fat off your roasting pan and save. Deglaze the pan with 1 quart of the chicken stock and pour all the brown bits and vegetables into stock pot. Add bay leaf, peppercorns, and several cloves of garlic that have just been peeled(stock spices) and cook for 2 hours strain and chill.

Use 2 cup of  the stock for reheating the turkey on Thanksgiving Day.

If  making your bird on Thanksgiving Day make your stock a week before hand. Purchase a couple of turkey wings and roast with vegetables like the whole turkey. When they are done add to a pot of hot chicken stock and deglaze the pan as you did before. Add stock spices and cook for 2 hours strain and chill. On Thanksgiving Day pour off fat from pan and deglaze and strain into the stockpot for the gravy. Package and freeze when cool defrost the day before.

To finish gravy take 12 ounces of the rendered turkey fat from the pan( add melted butter if you don’t have enough) and mix with the flour to make a roux and cook for 5 minutes to remove pasty taste. Add about 80% of the roux to the boiling stock and whisk in let cook and thicken and adjust taste with salt and pepper. Add more roux if needed. Remember gravy will continue to thicken the longer it cooks.

If you have a friend or family member that cannot have gluten starch take 2 cups of hot stock and mix 1 ½ tbl of arrowroot with cold water and whisk in. Bring to a boil to thicken. This is how I make it for my Brother-In-Law.

MASHED POTATOES

Ingredients

5 lbs Idaho russet potatoes or Yukon gold, peeled and diced into 1 inch cubes

1 medium onion pureed

1 1/2 sticks of butter melted

1 1/2 cups hot heavy cream approx.

Kosher salt

Place diced potatoes in large pot cover with cold water and add 4 tbl salt. Bring to boil and boil 4 minutes. Drain the potatoes in a colander and rinse with water till cool. This first step removes the soluble starch  from the potatoes which makes them taste pasty and can give them a gluey texture. Rinse out pot add potatoes back in and cover with water add 4 tbl salt and bring to boil. Simmer at a low boil until potatoes are tender and fall apart but are not mushy. Drain potatoes in colander and do not rinse. put potatoes back in pot and cook over low heat 1 or 2 minutes to steam off excess water. If you have a ricer or food mill pass the potatoes through them into a large bowl if not mash by hand in pot until all potatoes are mashed. Add in butter and onion and 2 tbl salt and stir gently until incorporated add hot cream as needed to make creamy. Place potatoes in bowl cover with plastic wrap and set over a pot of simmering water to keep warm. If you added too much milk keep potatoes in pot over low heat to cook off milk being careful not to scorch. Before serving check potatoes for seasoning and add salt if needed and more butter if desired.

OLD FASHIONED DRESSING

This is the recipe my family has been using for years I hope you enjoy it.

Ingredients

12 to 14 cups of dry white bread cubes about ¾ of an inch square, try to tear bread up by hand it possible, need to do 2 to 3 days ahead of making dressing so it can dry

2  ½ cups of finely diced onions

2 ½ cups of finely diced celery

½ cup of finely minced carrot

1 lb of melted butter

¼ cup of dry parsley flakes

2 tbl of Vegeta (optional)

3 cups hot chicken stock/ approx.

Salt and pepper to taste

Poultry seasoning to taste

This dressing like all others can be a time saver. Cut your veggies and cook up to 3 weeks ahead of time and freeze. Warm up on Thanksgiving Day and mix with bread and seasoning and stock. I also like to bake mine in disposable pans. When you are done pack up the leftovers and through away the pans. I follow these procedures for all my dressings. It saves time and cleanup. Make sure to reheat veggie mix completely if you made it ahead of time.

Melt butter in large pan. Heat stock and  preheat oven to 350. Cook veggies in butter until soft and add Vegeta and parsley. Pour mixture over bread cubes and toss with a couple of tbls of poultry seasoning and some salt and pepper. Add stock about a cup at a time until dressing is nice and moist. Adjust seasonings to taste. Grease a disposable baking pan with oil and fill with the dressing. Coat a piece of parchment paper with butter and press down over dressing. Bake for 35 to 45 minutes until hot. Uncover and bake for 10 more minutes to brown and serve.

CORNBREAD DRESSING

With this recipe you can again cook your veggies ahead of time and freeze and you can make the cornbread up to a month in advance. I have a variation on my cornbread recipe just for making dressing in Chapter 2. Make sure to completely reheat veggie mix if you made it ahead of time.

Ingredients

2 batches of cornbread mix(chapter 2) crumbled and dried

1 lb of Jimmy Dean breakfast sausage(regular flavor)

1 ½ cups diced onions

1 ½ cups diced celery

1 tbl dry parsley

1tbl dry chives

1 stick of butter

2 tbl of  Vegeta

1 egg beaten

Salt and pepper to taste

1 to 2 cups of chicken stock

Crumble and brown sausage. When cooked add butter, veggies, herbs and Vegeta. Cook until vegetables are soft. Cool and freeze to use later or proceed. Crumble cornbread into a large bowl and add warm vegetable mix. Blend and add egg and 1 cup of stock. Mix well and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. If too dry add more stock. Preheat oven to 350 and grease a disposable pan. Put dressing in pan and cover with a buttered sheet of parchment paper. Bake for 35 minutes. Remove parchment paper and cook another 10 minutes to brown.

BROWN RICE DRESSING

I developed this dressing for my Brother-in-Law so he could have a dressing with his turkey dinner. It also works for anyone on a gluten free diet.

Ingredients

3 cups cooked brown rice

1 lb of bulk Italian sausage (chapter 6)

1 cup diced celery

1 cup diced onion

1 large roasted red pepper seeded and diced

2 cups of diced and dried gluten free whole grain bread

1 stick of butter

1 cup of stock

Salt and pepper to taste

Crumble and brown sausage. When cooked add butter and vegetables. When soft you can freeze for later or proceed to make dressing. Make sure to completely reheat mix if you made it ahead of time. Toss rice and bread cubes with mix and add stock. Adjust seasoning with salt and pepper and pour into a greased disposable pan. Cover with a buttered parchment sheet and bake for 30 to 35 minutes. No need to brown.

BAKED CARAMELIZED SWEET POTATOES

Ingredients

3 large sweet potatoes

Butter

Brown sugar

White sugar

Cook sweet potatoes in a large pot of water unpeeled. When you can stick a knife in without resistance remove from pot and place on a pan to cool. When cooled remove peel and slice to desired thickness. Line a cookie sheet with foil and oil lightly. Lay out slices of potato and dot with butter. Cover and refrigerate for up to 2 days before baking. To bake preheat oven to 400 degrees and sprinkle with white sugar and brown sugar. Bake approx 20 minutes until sugar caramelizes and potatoes are hot

SWEET POTATO SOUFFLE

This is another option for people on restrictive diets.  You can make the base up to 2 days in advance and then fold in the egg whites just before baking.

Ingredients

2 large sweet potatoes

1 stick of soft butter

3 tbl of Splenda +extra for the top

Salt and pepper to taste

3 egg whites

Peel and cut sweet potatoes into large dice. Place in pot and cover with water and add 1 tbl of salt. Bring to a boil and cook until soft  but not mushy. Drain potatoes in a colander and dump back into pot and cook under low heat for a minute to cook off excess water. Mash potatoes by hand and stir in butter, Splenda, and salt and pepper to taste. You can chill it and hold for 2 days or make right away. If pre-making  mash, reheat in a pot with some heavy cream until hot. Beat egg whites until semi stiff and fold gently into the mix. Pour into a buttered casserole dish and sprinkle with some Splenda and bake at 350 for 20 minutes until light and puffy.

HOMEMADE CRANBERRY SAUCE

I like to make this 3 to 5 days in advance so the flavors really get a chance to blend together.

Ingredients

5 cups whole cranberries

Juice and zest of 2  large oranges

1 tbl of lemon juice

2 cups of sugar

1 cup of cranberry juice

1 ounce of Grand Marnier(optional)

1 ½  tbl of unflavored gelatin.

Put cranberries and juice in a heavy bottomed pot over low heat and cover. Cook until cranberries start to pop and break down. Smash cranberries with a potato masher and add the other ingredients except gelatin. Stir and cook until thick and syrupy. Sprinkle gelatin over ½ cup of water and let become solid. Heat gelatin in micro for 45 seconds to melt. Stir into the cranberry syrup and cook for 3 to 5 minutes. Cool in ice bath and refrigerate. Let set at least overnight.

AUNT NANCY’S BROCCOLI CASSEROLE

When I was a kid I was not a fan of broccoli as most kids aren’t. However my Aunt Nancy made a broccoli casserole every holiday no matter who was hosting that I always looked forward to. For years it was the only way I would even eat broccoli though now I love it anyway it’s made. I asked her if I could use it and she gave me the recipe. I hope you like it as much as I do. Thanks Aunt Nancy

Ingredients

Crust

1 stick butter melted

1sleeve Ritz crackers crumbed

pinch of pepper

Casserole filling.

2 10 ounce packages of cut up frozen broccoli

2 tbl sugar

2tbl salt

1 stick butter

1/2 lb Velveeta cheese diced up

salt and pepper to taste

Mix melted butter pinch of pepper and cracker crumbs and set aside. Preheat oven to 350 and lightly butter a casserole dish. Cook broccoli in water with salt and sugar and cook till tender. Drain and return broccoli back to pan. Add cheese and butter and melt and stir until combined. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Pour into casserole and cover with crumbs and bake at 350 for 30 minutes or until casserole is hot and gooey.

It so easy to make it’s scary but it is delicious. If you want you can add some Swiss or cheddar to the mix or even some parmesan. You can saute some onion or shallots or mushrooms in the butter before you add the Velveeta and broccoli. Twist it up however you want make it your own. Get the kids to help and let them add something they want to it. If they cook it they are more likely to try it. You can even stir in cooked cut up chicken and pour it over rice or noodles and make a whole meal out of it. But I promise you making it this way your kids will eat broccoli.

BUTTERED CARROTS AND CORN

As I wrote earlier in the book certain vegetables are sometimes better frozen than fresh. Corn and Carrots are 2 of them and make a quick delicious and easy traditional side dish for the holiday. I like mine salty and a little sweet. I hope you enjoy.

Ingredients

1 lb of frozen corn

1 lb of frozen sliced carrots

1 stick of butter

1 tbl fresh chopped parsley

Salt

Sugar

Melt butter in a sauce pot that will hold all the vegetables. Pour frozen corn over the butter and add 1 tbl of kosher salt. Cover and simmer under medium heat. Bring a pot of water to boil for the carrots. Add 2 tsp each of salt and sugar to the water. When boiling add carrots and cook until they are just a little underdone. Drain carrots and add to corn. Stir together and  cook until carrots are done. Stir in chopped parsley and serve.

SWEET SAUTEED BRUSSEL SPROUTS

Ingredients

1 ½ lbs of  brussel sprouts

1 large pot of boiling water with salt and sugar added

Large bowl of ice water

Butter

Sugar

Salt and pepper to taste

Blanch the brussel sprouts in salted sugared water and immediately plunge into an ice bath to stop the cooking. When cooled slice in half. Heat butter in a pan  with 2 to 3 tbl of sugar and lay sprouts in cut side down. Saute until cut side starts to brown. Spoon butter from pan over the top of sprouts while cooking. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste. Remove and serve when sprouts have picked up a nice caramel crust to the cut side. These will be so addictive your kids will ask for them.

PUMPKIN PIE

Nothing quite finishes a Thanksgiving Day meal like Pumpkin Pie. You can serve it with whipped cream or ice cream or just ice cold by itself. The crisp flakey crust and rich spiced custard is soul satisfying. This is my recipe a twist on the one off the can of Libby Pumpkin. I have a recipe for homemade pie crust, but if you want to save the work go ahead and purchase a pre-made frozen one. Chef Pierre is probably the best one out there.

Pie Crust

Pie crust is very easy to make nowadays with the help of a food processor. It mixes and brings it together perfectly. Just be careful not to over mix.

Ingredients

1 ½ cup of all purpose flour

1/3 cup of powder sugar

1/8 tsp of salt

½ stick of butter cut into little cubes and frozen

3 ounces of ice water or vodka that has been in freezer for an hour

I know what is with the vodka. The less liquid in a pie dough the flakier the crust. Vodka evaporates so fast when baking and leaves no residual taste. Give it a try you will be surprised with the texture.

Place dry ingredients in food processor and pulse 3 to 4 times to aerate the flour. Add butter cubes and pulse until you get a crumbly mixture that looks like tiny peas. Add vodka or water an ounce at a time and pulse until a ball starts to form. You may not need all of the liquid. Be careful not to over mix. Turn ball and any crumbs out onto a counter and place in a large Ziploc bag. Press the pieces together to form a ball. Place in fridge and rest 1 hour. Take dough out and place on floured surface. Cut in half and place  1 half back in the fridge. Roll other piece out into a 12 to 14 inch circle. Gently fold in half and then half again. Lift dough up and place gently in a 9 inch deep dish pie pan. Unfold so pan is covered and gently lift and tuck edges so they are flush with the pan. Crimp around the edge of the pan if making a single crust pie. If not fill pie with desired mixture and follow same procedure for rolling our top crust. Place over the filling and unfold. Crimp edges and bake. Makes 1 -2 crust pie or 2 single crust pies.

For the Pumpkin Custard

1 open face pie shell 9 inch

1  15 oz can of Libby Pumpkin

1  12 oz can of evaporated milk

¾ cup of sugar

2 eggs

½ tsp salt

1 tbl of cinnamon

½ tsp ground ginger

½ tsp ground clove

½ tsp ground nutmeg

Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Whisk together and pour into prepared pie shell. Bake at 425 for 15 minutes, lower heat to 350 and bake for 40 minutes until a knife comes out clean from the center. Cool and serve with homemade whipped cream(chapter 8) or crème anglaise(chapter 8)

MARLBOROUGH PIE

What is it you ask, it is an apple custard pie. It is creamy and delicious and a neat surprise when people find out there is apple in the pie.

Ingredients

3 cups of finely chopped apples(peeled and cored)

1 tbl lemon juice

2 eggs

1 cup of heavy cream

1 tbl vanilla

¾ cup of sugar

3 tbl melted butter

½ tsp cinnamon

1 open face 9 inch pie shell

Cinnamon sugar(chapter 5)

Mix apples with lemon juice so they do not brown. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Mix the rest of the ingredients together to form custard. Drain apples and add to custard. Pour into shell and bake for 15 minutes at 425 and then reduce to 350 and bake approx 30 minutes until a knife comes out clean. Sprinkle with cinnamon sugar while warm and chill pie. Serve with whipped cream or ice cream or crème anglaise(chapter 8)

APPLE CINNAMON SPICE CAKE WITH MAPLE ICING

This is one of my favorite cakes at the holidays.

Maple Icing

1 lb of powder sugar

2 tsp vanilla

Maple syrup

Add vanilla to powder sugar and drizzle in maple syrup a little at a time until icing becomes smooth and flows so it can be poured over the cake.

Apple Cinnamon Spice Cake

Ingredients

2 sticks of butter

2 cups of sugar

1 tbl vanilla

4 eggs beaten with the vanilla

3 cups of flour

1 tbl baking powder

½ tsp salt

1 ½ cups of applesauce

1 tbl cinnamon

½ tsp clove

½ tsp nutmeg

Preheat oven to 350. Spray a 10 inch tube pan with baking spray. Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs gradually and mix well. Sift all dry ingredients together and add in 1/2 of the flour followed by half of the applesauce. Add in the rest of the flour, mix and the rest of the applesauce and blend well. Pour into pan and bake for approx 35 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool in pan 10 minutes and then turn out and invert to upright position. Cool on cooling rack over cookie sheet. When totally cooled pour icing over the cake and let it run down the sides.  Serve with whipped cream , ice cream or crème anglaise.

If you have someone on a special diet I have a sugar free cheesecake in chapter8 with lots of variations like a pumpkin cheesecake.

Dinner for Dan and the Boys

March 23, 2012

I haven’t written for a while but my friend Dan wanted a recipe he could make for his boys. I am posting the recipe for my one of my Dad’s favorites, it is a twist on the boned and buttered perch dinner from the old Phil Schmitt’s in Hammond.

 

Ingredients

Small yellow lake perch fillets, 2/3 of a pound per person

flour

salt, pepper, paprika(preferably hungarian hot)

Butter about 2  1/2 sticks at room temp

Olive oil

1 large shallot

1/2 cup chicken stock

1/2 cup white wine

1 tbl each of chopped chives, parsley,

bowl of lemon wedges

 

Take the fillets and pat dry with paper towel then sprinkle with salt and pepper.

Mix 3 cups of flour with 1/3 cup salt 1/4 cup pepper, and 2 tbl of paprika and mix well and pour into shallow pan

Heat a couple tablespoons of butter and olive oil in a frying pan.

Dredge the fish in flour, shake off excess and fry in pan for 2 to 3 minutes a side, don’t overload the pan.

When fish is done place on a rack over a cookie sheet and place in an oven on the warming setting or about 150 to 200 degrees.

While fish is cooking mince the shallot and place in small pan with stock and wine and reduce until there is only about 2 to 3 ounces of liquid left and shut off.

When fish is finished cooking, bring the wine liquid back up to heat, take the soft room temp butter in small pieces and whisk them into the liquid 2 to 3 pieces at a time until they melt in. Must whisk constantly and never allow to boil, will use about 1 1/2 sticks.  When sauce is done stir in the fresh chives and parsley and serve the sauce on the side. Fish goes great with some fried potatoes or french fries, and cole slaw. with a squeeze of lemon over the fish.

Dan even someone who is not a fish fan will enjoy this.

Sicilian Stuffed Sardines over Vegetable Ragu

April 21, 2011

If you like fish, you will love this recipe. I had a version of this many years ago at the Rosebud on Taylor Street, and about a week later came up with this version. It was a favorite of my Dad’s. The presentation is vivid and colorful, and goes great with some orzo, an arugala salad and a crisp Italian white wine. Hope you enjoy. This recipe is for 4 people. Please always remember, buy your fish from a fish store never a supermarket.

Ingredients

16 large sardines cleaned and butterflied( a good fish shop will do this for you)

for the stuffing

3 cups of panko breadcrumbs or fresh breadcrumbs

3 cloves of garlic

Extra Virgin Olive Oil

salt and pepper to taste

2 minced shallots

1/4 cup white wine

juice of 1 lemon

1 diced red bell pepper

dash of tabasco

In a saute pan heat up about 3 to 4 tbl of olive oil and add shallots and pepper and cook till just soft. Add garlic, cook for 1 minute and add white wine and reduce by half. Add breadcrumbs, lemon juice, and tabasco. Adjust to taste with salt and pepper and set to side.

For the Ragu

1 each of yellow, red and green bell pepper

1 large red onion slice thinly

3 cloves crushed garlic

4  fresh Italian plum tomatoes diced

1 eggplant diced

1 zucchini diced

1/2 cup red wine

2tbl tomato paste

olive oil

salt and pepper to taste

red pepper flakes

In a large pan heat up olive oil and add peppers, onion, zucchini, eggplant and saute on high until just soft. Add garlic, tomato paste, and pepper flakes cook 1 minute. Add tomatoes and wine and a pinch of salt and pepper.  Cook about 5 to 6 minutes adjust to taste and pour into a large casserole dish.

Take the sardines and open them up and sprinkle liberally with salt and pepper and drizzle with some olive oil. Divide stuffing among the fish and and fold over to close. Lay the sardines side by side over the hot vegetable ragu and again sprinkle with salt and pepper and drizzle with olive oil. Bake in a 350 degree oven for 20 to 25 minutes until the fish are fully cooked. Serve immediately.

Scampi ala Pesto

April 20, 2011

My friend Pilar requested some Italian dishes so I thought I would start here. It is a twist on 2 great Italian ClassicsShrimp Scampi and Pesto. I figured what could be better than to combine the two.  If you like garlic, shrimp, and basil you will love this. I’ll start with my Pesto recipe first. This dinner is for 4 people or 6 to 8 as an appetizer.

Ingredients

1 lb fresh cleaned basil leaves

1 pint olive oil

½ cup pine nuts

8 cloves garlic

4 tsp salt

2 cups of parmesan

½ cup of romano

6 ounces of butter cut into small pieces and partially frozen

In a food processor grind basil, nuts, garlic, and salt. When ground add oil in a thin stream while running to create an emulsion. Add cheeses and grind in. Add partially frozen butter cube by cube while grinding to make a paste.

Besides being used to dress the scampi, pesto goes great tossed with pasta and some fried pancetta. Spooned over a chicken breast or pork chop or some veal at the end of the cooking process or on a steak sandwich. It is a truly versatile ingredient.

 

Scampi with pesto

32 large shrimp thawed, peeled and de-veined

4 ounces olive oil

1 stick butter

8 cloves minced garlic

3 minced shallots

1 tsp red pepper flakes

2 tbl chopped parsley

2 tbl chopped chervil

Salt and pepper to taste

1 cup of pesto warmed gently over low heat so the butter doesn’t break

Melt butter in saute pan and add oil. When hot add shallots and garlic. When soft add shrimp and salt and pepper to taste. When shrimp are done add fresh herbs and red pepper flakes. Serve on individual plates or in a large dish and drizzle  pesto over the top. The blended taste combination is heavenly. You can serve it with some pasta or rice or over slices of garlic toasts. I love a really good Pinot Grigio to go with it along with a big fresh salad.

Chocolate Chip Cookies

April 19, 2011

Today is my 100th blog post. Thank you all so much for reading and your encouragement. To make this post special I am posting one of the most requested items I make. Chocolate Chip Cookies I have been making this recipe for over 25 years now and everyone seems to always want them. They will be one the featured items in my Cookbook if I can get it published. Only a select few friends and family know it. I love these cookies plain, but have dipped them in chocolate and then drizzled them with white chocolate for special occasions. So here it is, my prized secret is now out. Share it with your kids.

Ingredients

 

2 sticks of Imperial Margarine( I have tried butter, but the cookies get too greasy)

1 cup granulated sugar

½ cup of brown sugar

1 large egg

½ tbl vanilla extract

2 ¼ cups of all purpose flour

1 tsp salt

½ tsp baking soda

1 ½ cups chocolate chips

Sift flour, salt and baking soda together. In a large bowl or a mixer cream margarine and sugars until fluffy. Add egg and vanilla and mix well. Scrape down sides of bowl and add flour gradually. Scrape bowl occasionally while you add flour. When flour is incorporated add chips and mix in gently. Chill dough for 20 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Scoop cookies with a ¾ of an ounce or 1 ounce scoop and place on lined cookie sheets.

Bake for 12 to 15 minutes until lighly browned.

Carnitas

April 17, 2011

Few things taste as good as a warm carnita for lunch or dinner. This great pulled pork taco is a staple at many tacquerias. I have my own twist on them hope you give them a try.

1 - 5lb boneless pork shoulder

2 large onions minced

1   12 ounce can crushed tomatoes

1 small can of chipoltle peppers in adobo sauce

 2 to 3  cups Shredded lettuce

2 bunches chopped green onions

1  1/2 cups each of shredded Monterrey Jack and Sharp Cheddar cheese tossed together

Salt and pepper

1 cup of cider vinegar

1/4  cup good quality chili powder

3 cloves of crushed garlic

1 avocado sliced if desired

sour cream if desired

2 limes cut into small wedges

1 cup of chopped cilantro

Package of 6 inch corn tortilla shells

canola oil

Rub the pork shoulder well with a mixture of salt and pepper and the crushed garlic and let sit overnight in a covered dish. Take the chipoltles in adobo and place in a blender or food processor and blend till smooth.  The next morning place the pork in a large pot with the onions and pour over the can of tomatoes, the chili powder, 1/3 of the chipoltle mix, vinegar and then cover with water. Bring to a boil and then reduce heat and simmer for approx 2 to 3 hours until fork tender.  Remove meat from pan to a cookie sheet and with 2 forks shred like you would pulled or bbq pork and let cool. Pour the liquid from the pot to a saucepan and reduce by half. Taste the sauce. If it is too spicy for you add a small 8 ounce can of tomato sauce, if you want it hotter add a tbl or so of the chipoltle puree.

To make the Carnitas

Heat up 2 to 3 tbl of oil in  saute pan and sear off the shredded pork until crispy. In a small sauce pan warm up the sauce. In another saute pan heat up the shells one at a time in a few drops of oil. You want the shells just crisp at the edge but still a little soft.

Place the meat in a large bowl and all of your other toppings in  bowls and shells on a plate and let your family or guests make up the Carnitas to their own liking at the table.

Serve with sides of Spanish rice, refried or black beans, and some Margaritas or Cold Beer

Enjoy

Chef Tim

Coconut Macaroons

April 17, 2011

With Passover starting this week  Happy Passover to my brother-in-law Mike and all my Jewish friends. The Macaroon is a great little cookie that is perfect for Passover and for any other time of the year. The recipe I am giving you makes both chocolate and regular.   I will be making these tomorrow to send to my brother-in-law. So everyone give it a shot and make someone’s Passover special.

Ingredients

2  14-16 oz. bags of unsweetened coconut

1 small can of sweetened condensed milk

6 egg whites

1/4 tsp cream of tartar or 1/2 tsp lemon juice

1 pinch of salt

1 cup + 2 tbl of sugar

1 tbl of vanilla extract

1/4 cup of unsweetened cocoa powder

3 tbl of water

In a large bowl mix the coconut, vanilla, and sweetened condensed milk together. In a mixing bowl add egg whites, salt and lemon juice or cream of tartar together and beat on high with an electric mixer or in  the bowl of a kitchen aid mixer until the whites get foamy. Slowly add in the sugar while you continue to beat the whites until you have firm stiff peaks. In another bowl mix the 2 tbl of sugar,  cocoa powder and water together to form a paste. Preheat oven to 350 degrees, mix the coconut mix gently with the egg whites until blended. Line 4 cookie sheets with parchment paper or a silpad or grease and flour 4 sheet pans. Using half the mix place tbl size dollops of the batter on the sheet pans.  Take 1 cup of the remaining mix and beat into the cocopowder mix until well mixed and then gently fold that into the remaining macaroon mix. Place in dollops on the remaining pans and bake at 350 until they become light brown. Shut oven off and let cookies sit in oven for 2 hours with door partially open until cookies are dry. Store on a plate covered with wax paper or in a open container, DO NOT PUT IN CLOSED CONTAINER OR THEY WILL GET SOGGY. Will last for about 2 weeks if you can last that long.

Veal Franchese

April 15, 2011

Veal Franchese or Veal in the French style is a very traditional Italian dish that in and of itself  is a misnomer. It is an Italian dish to start with. These types of light fast saute dishes were brought to France by Catherine De Medici and her chefs centuries ago from Florence Italy when the Pope arranged for the her(whose family controlled all of the banking  intrests for the Vatican) to marry the King of France. The arranged marriage let to a powerful French Kingdom under which her son  defeated the English takeover of France. Well enough of  the history lesson. The best part of this dish it that it also works just as well with pork or chicken.

Ingredients

2  to 3 slices of veal  loin pounded out to about an 1/8 of an inch for each serving

2 eggs

1 cup of parmesan  cheese finley grated

juice of 1 lemon

1/2 cup of white wine

2 tbl of butter

olive oil

salt and pepper

Sprinkle the veal slices on both sides with salt and pepper. Heat about 2 to 3 tbl of olive oil in a saute pan. Beat the eggs and add the parmesan cheese to them and mix into a wet paste. Dip the veal in the egg mix and coat both sides. Place directly in hot pan on high heat and brown slices on each side for 2 minutes a side. Remove from pan and place on a plate  in a warm oven to hold. Drain excess oil from pan and deglaze with the wine. Reduce wine by 1/3 and add the lemon juice and then stir in the butter until melted. Shut off heat and return veal to pan to coat with sauce. Serve on a warm plate with sauce drizzled over it. Goes great with some herb roasted potatoes or a nice saffron rice pilaf and a crisp Chablis. Some saute leeks or spinach make a great colorful vegetable side.


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