About Me

My photo
I grew up in Annapolis, the capital of MD, on the Chesapeake Bay and the Severn River where we always had fresh fish and seafood. I love all things food: cooking, eating, trying new recipes and sharing what I make with family and friends. I must say that my most favorite (I have many favorites) food is fish and mostly catfish. So, I'm always seeking catfish recipes frolm all olver. I like my cooking, my daughter, Wendy's, cooking and my son, Dan's dishes, as well. I'm not a food snob; in other words, I also enjoy OPC, (Other People's Cooking) also. I've got loads of interests: cats and dogs, taking photos, Giant pandas, chandeliers and the arts. I am a former teacher, personal chef and recovering lawyer turned information marketer. I love (watching) football, basketball, extreme sports like mountain/rock climbing, snowboarding, skiing and surfing. My own extreme sports are swimming, walking and talking. Not necessarily at the same time.
Showing posts with label food kids love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food kids love. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Speaking of Catfish Family Appetizer

 

I haven't actually talked about catfish for a long while,  so I feel the need to get back to it. Catfish, in my view, was born to be dunked in milk or egg, coated with cornmeal and fried crisp and golden. Although my favorite is the fried catfish, there are so many other tasty ways to eat it.  I have used it for fish tacos and, particularly in this weather, in catfish stew spiced with Caribbean curry powder.  Catfish is so versatile that you can bake it, encrusted in grated potatoes, grill it or broil it. with garlic, herbs and lemon or lime.

 You can add it into your favorite pasta dish or in put some of the sweet little morsels into salads.  Or, for example, you can or use it in little pastries as appetizers for a dinner party.  (See recipe below) Be careful, though, you may end up indulging so well in the little pastries, you may find you have left no room for the main dish.


Chile and Cheese Empanaditas

Catfish and Goat Cheese Appetizers

Ingredients

1 - 15-ounce package folded, refrigerated, unbaked pie crusts (2 crusts)
1 medium onion, chopped
1 garlic clove, minced
3 TBS butter or margarine
1½ pounds U.S. farm-raised catfish fillets, cubed
8 oz fresh goat cheese or soft-style cream cheese
2 TBS chopped fresh basil or 1 tsp dried basil, crushed

Directions
  1. Let pie crusts stand at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes according to package directions.
  2. Unfold pie crusts.
  3. Place on ungreased baking sheet.
  4. With 3 1/4-inch round cutter, cut 8 rounds from each pie crust
  5. In a saucepan, cook onion and garlic in butter or margarine until tender.
  6. Add catfish; cook and stir about 5 minutes or until flakes easily.
  7. Use spoon to break into small pieces.
  8. Add goat cheese or cream cheese and basil.
  9. Cook and stir until cheese melts.
  10. Remove from heat.
  11. Spoon the catfish mixture evenly onto half of each dough round.
  12.  Brush edge of crust rounds with beaten egg.
  13. Fold crust rounds in half; press edges with fork to seal.
  14. Place on ungreased cookie sheet.
  15. Brush tops with egg or milk. Cut small slit in top of each.
  16. Bake in a 375°F oven for 25 to 30 minutes or until pastry is brown.
  17. Serve warm or at room temperature.

This recipe is a take on a dish from the US Catfish Institute Cookbook

Friday, March 23, 2012

Healthy Fish Tacos For Your Family Movie Night

I usually make my fish tacos with fried fish, as in my photos here.  However, recently, I have been aware of the amount of sodium and fat I am eating these days.  So, for a change, I have been testing making my fish tacos by sauteeing the fish instead of frying.  I have also been experimenting with herbs and spices instead of salt since there is so much sodium in so many of the foods we eat.  Surprisingly, they taste just as good because of the seasonings in the guacamole and the salsa.  Plus, I have the pleasure of knowing they are truly healthy and still way yummy!  Even if you decide to fry your fish, you can omit deep frying and salt.
I have used catfish, tilapia, and whiting to make these.  You can use cod, flounder or any other white fish you have available.  I use the prepared standing taco shells, just because I like the idea that you can sit them up side-by-side and they don't fall over so much.
Ingredients

2 Tbs extra virgin olive oil
1 lb catfish, tilapia or cod fillets
*Salt and fresh ground pepper to taste, if necessary
Guacamole
Salsa
**Light sour cream or Homemade Fish taco sauce (See Below)
Shredded reduced-fat cheddar or Colby Jack cheese
Shredded lettuce
8 Stand and stuff taco shells

Preparation

Heat oil in skillet over low-medium heat.  Add the fish.  Add *salt and pepper if desired and cook slowly on each side for about 3-4 minutes or until the fish flakes easily.  I like to add a couple of tablespoons of water if the fish starts sticking to the bottom of the pan and then cover to steam until fish is done. Season with garlic salt. Remove from heat.

Place fish into shells and add toppings.  I usually start with the lettuce, fish, then guacamole on top; salsa, light sour cream or my homemade tartar sauce and cheese

*In my quest for no added salt recipes, I have combined ground savory, basil, dill to season the fish.  It has been a delicious substitute and has made the fish have really succulent.

My Homemade Tartar Sauce

1/2 cup light mayonnaise
1/2 cup low or non-fat yogurt
2 Tbs dill relish
1/2 tsp cumin seeds
1/2 tsp dried dill
1/2 tsp dried oregano or Italian seasoning
1/2 tsp basil
1 teaspoon ground cayenne pepper or to taste

In a medium bowl, mix together yogurt and mayonnaise.  Stir in dill relish, oregano, cumin seeds, dill, and cayenne.  Let stand to blend flavors while preparing tacos

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Family Friendly Holiday Sweet Potato Pie

I love sweet potato pie and have always loved it. It's not a recipe that my mom or anyone in my family ever made.  It's just something that I found out about when visiting my ex-husband's family in North Carolina.   Well, actually, it was my brother in-law's grandmother who made awesome sweet potato  pie.  She was a true southern cook.  It was an amazing adventure to visit that part of the family.  They were the epitome of the black family from the South who had little in the way of financial riches and worked hard to support the family in the best way they could.

Interestingly, it didn't have to be Thanksgiving or Christmas. It could just be an occasion of family or friends visiting for a weekend.  Every stop was pulled out.  It was amazing.  Fried chicken, mashed potatoes, gravy, candied yams, potato salad, collard greens, kale, homemade rolls, sweet potato pie; and this was not a holiday! This was just a regular Sunday dinner! Welcoming anyone who came by.  I was a young bride and new to North Carolina cooking.  But it was there in Raleigh that I fell in love with North Carolina Barbecue and real sweet potato pie.

Here is my take on Sweet Potato Pie.  I'm pretty sure I've added some ingredients like rum extract and coriander that they did not use in the North Carolina . This year, I used white and yellow sweet potatoes for the first time. I got them from a local farmer where I buy my eggs.

This recipe made enough for two hearty pies. Since I don't do pie crusts very well, I got two ready made frozen pie crusts to pour the filling into.  That didn't take away from the taste. I also could not find my hand mixer so I had to mix the filling by hand.  This meant I couldn't mix everything at one time. Had to add the ingredients a few at a time.  It took a little extra time to blend.  Still, the pies turned out well.  And, they were actually better on the second day when the flavors had a chance to meld.




Ingredients

4-4 1/2 cups mashed sweet potatoes (I used about 4 lbs of sweet potatoes)
4 eggs slightly beaten
1/2 cup melted butter (1 stick)
1 cup almond milk 
2 Tbs molasses
6 Tbs all-purpose flour
1/2 cup packed light brown sugar
2 tsp cinnamon
1  1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
1 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp ground cloves
1/2 tsp coriander
1 tsp allspice
2 tsp lemon extract
2 tsp rum extract
2 tsp vanilla extract

Directions

Preheat oven to 375° F

Mix all ingredients together until well-blended with a hand mixer or food processor.  Bake for one hour or until a sharp knife inserted into center of pies comes out clean. Serve plain or with whipped cream.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Fast and Easy Pork Sandwich for a Quick Fall Lunch

When you go to a deli or  a lunch wagon here in my area for a hot sliced or pulled pork sandwich, you can expect to spend no less than $8 for a naked sandwich.  More often than not, however, they will cost $9.00 or more plus tax. Don't get me wrong, they are delicious and worth it.  Well, maybe.  Anyway, I guess it's whatever the market will bear.  And, in this market, it can bear a lot, apparently.



I was thinking: "Why go to a deli when you can make a perfectly delicious sandwich at home worthy of the best meals on wheels food truck fare?"  So, for lunch today I made my sandwich with some thinly sliced Korean BBQ marinated pork I bought from one of my favorite Korean food markets.  I cooked it slowly in a a tablespoon of oil with some sliced yellow and red onions, toasted a large sub roll and added a little non-fat ranch dressing for the extra juicy sloppy factor.  When I had almost finished half of the sandwich, I though to have some avocado with it.  Way yum!


Tuesday, March 1, 2011

World's Best Fried Catfish Nugget Recipe

That's a pretty bold statement, however, beauty and taste are in the eye (mouth) of the beholder.   I am a catfish lover, so, IMHO, this is the word's best catfish recipe!  Having grown up at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay on the Severn River in Annapolis, MD, I suppose it is only natural that I came to love fish.  We had all kinds of fresh fish and seafood available to us: butterfish, rockfish, shad, white and yellow perch, and hardheads (which I was to learn later were actually Atlantic croaker) were a few in abundance. 

Of course, we also had Chesapeake Bay blue crabs and in late spring through the summer, we would enjoy pan-fried soft-shell crabs.  Aside from a short walk to the bottom of my street to go fishing and crabbing with my father and brother, there was a fish vender who came to our street every Saturday and sold fresh fish right from his truck. Then my mom would fry the smaller fish and bake the larger fish and add a sauce.  Then I would be in fish heaven.

I hasten to add that we did not have catfish nuggets; it was the whole catfish with the bone in that my dad would catch, skin, clean and cut in half.   At that time, my mom cooked the world's best fried catfish. 


2 lbs catfish nuggets or fillets cut into strips
1 cup yellow corn meal
2/3 cup crushed Panko (Korean or Japanese bread crumbs)
3 tsps salt
1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper or to taste
Oil

Pour enough oil into a large heavy skillet (cast-iron is my favorite) so it is about 1/4 inch deep.  Heat oil to very hot, but not smoking. 

Rinse catfish nuggets in cold water.  If using fillets, cut them into pieces.  Put cornmeal, Panko, salt, pepper and cayenne into a thick brown paper bag.  Drop nuggets into bag and shake until well coated.   Shake off excess. 

Carefully place catfish pieces in the oil.  Fry in batches in a single layer so you don't crowd them.  Cook until golden brown; about 2 minutes on each side.  Drain on brown paper bag or newspaper.  If preferred, you can cover paper with a paper towel.

Serve with homemade tartar sauce.

Homemade Tartar  Dipping Sauce

1 cup mayonnaise
3 Tsp dill relish
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper or to taste
1/2 tsp cumin seed (optional)
Mix well and dunk away

Friday, February 18, 2011

Fried Catfish Middle Eastern Style

You will know from this blog that fish and catfish, in particular, are featured.  Searching always for new catfish recipes, this one is adapted from a recipe called Lahori Fish.  Lahore is a city in Pakistan.  It is not specifically for catfish, yet this recipe is delicious using my favorite river food.  You may find some new seasonings and ingredients in this recipe you might not have in your pantry, like gram flour (made from chickpeas), chaat masala and carom seeds.  No worries.  You can find them in Indian markets or online.

The fish is marinated in and covered with a thick  batter of gram flour (Besan) and spiced with carom seeds (Ajwain) and chaat masala, another spice mixture..


Ingredients

    * 1 kg, (about 2.2 lbs) catfish nuggets or fillet, cut into medium sized fillets/chunks)
    * bread crumbs
    * oil for frying
 
  * Batter:

    * 1/2 cup gram flour (Besan)
    * 1 tsp ginger garlic paste
    * 1 tsp red Chilli powder
    * 1 tsp crushed red chillies
    * 1 tbsp crushed whole coriander
    * 1/2 tsp cumin seeds
    * 1/2 tsp carom seeds (Ajwain)
    * 2 tbsp white vinegar
    * salt to taste
    * water, as required

Directions

    * Combine all ingredients for the batter with enough water to make a thick paste.
    * Apply this well on the fish.  Marinate for couple of hours so that some marinade is absorbed by the fish.
    * Now lightly coat with bread crumbs and set aside for 15 minutes.
    * Deep fry the fish, in batches, in hot oil until golden brown.
    * Drain and sprinkle fish with lemon juice and Chaat Masala.
    * Serve hot with salad and lemon wedges.
 

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Copycat Sonic Drive-In Fritos Chili Cheese Wraps

Hi All

Got this from the Ron Douglas Recipe Secrets Blog

Your kids are going to love this simple recipe.

1 can mild plain chili
3 cups Fritos original style corn chips
1 cup shredded mild Cheddar cheese
1/2 cup diced onions
4 large flour tortillas

Directions:

Warm the chili. Mix Fritos with chili; place chili mixture in the
middle of one flour tortilla. Sprinkle shredded cheese and diced
onions on top to taste.

Fold one side of the tortilla halfway on top of chili. Fold each
side over each other. The bottom should be tucked in and filling
will be seen from the top of wrapped shell. Microwave for 15 to 20
seconds.

Repeat with each tortilla shell. Serve immediately.

Serves 4

Source: The Secret Recipe Blog

Until Next Time... Be Well!

Angela

Get your own copy of  America's Secret Recipes

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Bacon and Cheese Stuffed Mushrooms

Just wanted to share this recipe I saw online.  Enjoy!

Makes 12 mushrooms – about 4 servings. Simply adjust ingredients in same ratio depending on your crowd.

NOTES

    * All recipes created by Marla unless otherwise noted.
    * Source organic ingredients when available. Shop for ingredients at the Family Fresh Cooking Amazon Store
    * These mushrooms are great straight out of the oven but good at room temperature too.
    * I used two types of cheese in this recipe. 1/2 the mushrooms had shaved Parmesan the other 1/2 had Brie. I encourage you to try whatever you like. (See Variations below.)
    * If you use dried Thyme and Chives you might need a little more.
    * To reheat I put ours in the toaster oven at 350˚F for 8-10 minutes until warm.

INGREDIENTS

    * 12 medium Crimini Mushrooms, rinse and pat dry
    * 3 tablespoons Bacon crumbles, set 1 tablespoon aside for topping
    * 1 ounce varied Cheese, cut into pieces (I like Brie and shaved Parmesan) set 1/2 aside for topping
    * 1 teaspoon fresh Thyme
    * 1 tablespoon chopped Chives, plus some for garnish
    * pinch of Garlic Salt
    * pinch of cracked Black Pepper
    * pinch of Smoked Paprika
    * Cooking Spray

METHOD

   1. Preheat oven to 350˚F with rack in the middle.
   2. Cook bacon according to package directions. Let cool, crumble up a few pieces and set aside.
   3. Gently remove stems from the mushrooms. Chop stems into small pieces.
   4. Spray a small non stick skillet. Over medium heat sauté mushroom stems, chives, thyme with garlic salt, pepper and smoked paprika for a few minutes. Mushrooms should be nice and soft. Remove from heat.
   5. In a medium bowl combine 2 tablespoons bacon crumbles with mushroom mixture. If you are filling mushrooms with two types of cheese then divide mixture in two. I added Parmesan to one bowl & brie to the other. (see note above)
   6. Place mushroom caps snugly onto a baking sheet or baking pan.
   7. With a small spoon gently fill the mushrooms with mixture(s).
   8. Top each stuffed mushroom with the remainder of the cheese and bacon crumbles.
   9. Bake for about 20 minutes until cheese is melted.
  10. Garnish with some extra cheese and chopped chives.


Variations

    * To make these for the Jewish holidays (Hanukkah) – simply omit the pork bacon and use turkey or vegetarian options.
    * Instead of Thyme, fresh Rosemary would be an excellent choice.
    * Cheese choices: Gorgonzola, Blue Cheese, Romano, Cheddar, Mozzarella, Gruyére, etc. The list can go on and on!

Stuffed Mushroom Recipe Links

    * Classic Herbed Stuffed Mushrooms Babble.com
    * Sausage Stuffed Mushrooms Ezra Poundcake
    * Stuffed Mushrooms Easy French Food
    * Stuffed Mushrooms Pham Fatale
    * Stuffed Portabello Mushrooms Polwig
    * Stuffed Mushrooms with Smoked Pancetta Lucullian and Delights

Monday, November 22, 2010

What are Clone or Copycat Restaurant Recipes?

Ever wonder what clone restaurant recipes are and whether they are really as good as the real thing?  As a personal chef I have.  They are supposed to be an exact duplicate or copy of the dishes you order from your favorite restaurant. My conclusion is that some are like the creations they represent and some are not.

Many home cooks replicate clone restaurant recipes in their own kitchens.  They are able to make the food taste like the real thing.  There are secret recipe cookbooks that are written by personal chefs or commercial cooks who have researched and tested various methods to come up with their own versions of dishes from famous eateries.

I, myself wondered about recipe secrets, so I invested in a couple of cookbooks that contain clone restaurant recipes from some of America's most popular eating places.  For the most part, they are simple and easy to make in your own kitchen.  Others are more complicated for new home cooks and take a great deal of time to prepare.

Even for more established cooks and personal chefs, demystifying these copycat recipe secrets can be a challenge.  However, there is great joy in having prepared a menu that includes a clone restaurant recipe that tastes like you would expect when you order it.

There is one e-cookbook that I swear by.  America's Most Wanted Recipes, written by Ron Douglas, has some of the best copycat recipes ever tried.  Check out this VIDEO where he talks about his book and, one of my favorite recipes, Red Lobster Cheddar Bay Biscuits.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Best and Worst Halloween Snacks for Kids

Halloween is just around the corner.  I found this Reader's Digest article on what Halloween snacks are healthy for kids.  Thought I would publish it here since so many parents today are concerned aobout what their children are putting into thier bodies.  There are some great tips here,

By Chandni Jhunjhunwala

Healthy Treats

What may be the most frightening to you at Halloween is not ghosts or goblins but the thought of what all that candy can do to your kids' health and teeth. Here are some ideas for healthy treats, and recommendations for ones to avoid.

"Everything in moderation," says Connie Evers, registered dietitian and author of How to Teach Nutrition to Kids. "I tell parents to cut down on the amount of candy they hand out. In America we tend to do everything in excess and kids will go to a house and get a huge handful."

Think beyond candy: Trick-or-treating coupons from places like Dunkin' Donuts are always a hit with kids and they give parents control over what their kids eat. "I know a dentist who gives out floss or toothbrushes," says Evers. "And there's a new product, Oral Brush-Ups, which middle school kids love."

Even better, throw a party instead of sending your kids trick-or-treating. "You can have a variety of healthy snacks like mini sandwiches, nachos, and pizzas, so it's not all sugar and candy," says Evers.

Put aside your fears about being the not-so-cool parents on the block and try passing out some of these healthier treats:
  • Sugarless gum
  • Corn nuts, peanuts, or trail mix
  • Small individual bags of pretzels or popcorn
  • Packages of sugar-free cocoa
  • Individual bags of roasted pumpkin seeds
  • Pre-packed cheese and crackers

    Worst Treats

    Try to avoid or limit these unhealthy snacks:
  • Sticky treats like gummy candies, jelly beans, raisins and caramels are bad for dental health.

  • Full-sized candy bars. Some chocolate bars contain high amounts of saturated fat. The worst offenders are Mounds (11 grams of saturated fat in a two-ounce bar), Hershey's Milk Chocolate Bar (nine grams in 1.5 ounces) and Almond Joy (eight grams in 1.7 ounces).

  • Chips Ahoy!, Oreos, Hostess HOHOs and other snack cakes, Keebler Club & Cheddar Sandwich Crackers, and Starburst Fruit Chews were all voted the worst vending machine snacks for kids by Center for Science in the Public Interest.

Don't forget to give your kids a nutritious meal before they go trick-or-treating. This will prevent sugar highs and nasty upset tummies!

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Molasses Crisps (Cookies) for Spring

Not all chefs are professionally trained in culinary schools.  Most of us are self-taught or a least, learned at home.  Personal chefs, for example, are not all formally educated in a cooking school.  Most of us just have a passion for food.  We love taking wonderful ingredients and transforming them into a magical performance.  We learned at home from family or just always had a desire.  Some, to our surprise, never had the desire, yet found that we enjoyed creating masterpieces for ourselves and others to eat.

I learned cooking at home as a child even though I never did the cooking until I got married.  I realize that I have always been inspired by the cooking from my childhood in Annapolis.  The tastes and smells of the kitchen come back to me often.

Today, I was thinking of crispy molasses cookies Mom made in the springtime.  These would be the last of the season, because summer was coming and it would be too hot to have the oven on.  The cookies have a deeply satisfying taste reminiscent of home.

Molasses Crisps

3 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
2 Tbs sugar
2 tsp ginger
1 tsp cinnamon
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 cup molasses (I like dark molasses)
1/2 lb butter (2 sticks)
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Sift flour and measure.  Add next 5 ingredients and sift again.

Heat molasses to boiling.  Add butter and stir until melted.  Add dry ingredients and mix well.  Roll dough in a long roll about 3 inches in diameter and refrigerate over night or at least 4 hours.

Cut dough into very thin slices with a sharp knife.  Place on a greased baking sheet and bake until golden brown.  (10-12 minutes)

Makes about 4 1/2 dozen cookies

Hmmm. Yummy!

Do you have a favorite restaurant dessert  you wish you could give your family without having to buy the processed kind?  Maybe it is Thin Mint Girl Scout cookies or Hardee's Peach Cobbler or maybe T.G.I. Friday's Mocha Mud Pie.  Click the image below to order the Secret Restaurant Recipes Cookbooks?

Monday, March 8, 2010

Personal Chef Syle Moving and Making Big Changes!

It is March already.  Time to think of springtime.  And, as is fitting for the season, I am embarking on some big changes in my life.  Moving in with my daugher at the end of the month.  Cleaning out 25 years of papers, books, memories and all sorts of things..  Moving on to a new high in my life and looking forward to a fabulous and new experience.  We are both excited about this.

This has taken its toll on my ability to contribute to my blog recently; getting mired in the details of the move.  I'll be writing more soon, adding some more recipes and other comments.  Wow!  Moving into a house after having been 25 years in a small condo.  Parking right outside the door rather than having to walk long halls to bring my cleaning and groceries in.   That will be neat for a change.

Being able to walk in the streets of the neighborhood and talk to neighbors from their backyards and on their walks and jogs.  That will be fun.  Looking across the street and outside the window at homes and trees and flowers rather than other apartment buildings.  What a great new adventure.  To say nothing of having a really big kitchen in which to cook!  Yea!  Will keep you posted.

By the way; I overindulged in some more fish tacos last night.  I made enough for two or three people and ate them all.  This time I used my daughter's sauce recipe with light sour cream and light mayo rather than yogurt which I used before.  I also experimented with crystallized lemon (True Lemon brand) to give it a tangy taste.  The sauce was really good.  I'll bet adding some avocado to the tacos will add some nice flavor and texture.

Do you have some favorite restaurant dishes you wish you could have without going out?  Maybe it is the Tequila Lime Chicken from Applebee's or the Olive Garden Sangria or T.G.I. Friday's Mocha Mud Pie.  Always wonder what their secret ingredients are? Click the image to order your favorite restaurant recipes.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Variations on a theme. The BLT with Avocado and More

I love BLTs. They are fast and eually good at breakfast or lunck.   I don't always have lettuce, though, and yet I love the taste of bacon, tomato and mayonnaise on a sandwich.  Sometimes I put a fried egg on my BLT.  Other times, it's bacon, tomato and an egg.  There are days when I add a slice of cheese to the BLT or a half an avocado.  I always use turkey bacon.


So here are some variations on the BLT.  All of these are great with lettuce or not.


Bacon, lettuce, tomato
Bacon, half avocado sliced with sliced plum tomatoes
Avocado, tomato, cheddar slices
Bacon, cheddar and tomato
Bacon, egg, and cheddar melted either on the bacon or the egg
Avocado, tomatoes, very, very thin onion slices, almost shaved
Egg, tomato and avocado


I usually use just mayonnaise, real or light.  I might also use a creamy salad dressing, like blue cheese or creamy Caesar or Bacon or Peppercorn Ranch dressing.  All these add variety to your sandwich and offer a memorable taste.  You can toast your bread or not.   And, use a variety of breads or a tool.  An onion roll is a good choice.


America's Secret Recipes cookbooks, Vols. 1 and 2, offer variations on different food themes inspired by popular restaurants in your neighborhood..  Click on the image and find out more.How about Applebee's  Tequila Lime Chicken or Chili's Chocolate Brownie Sunday?

Friday, February 5, 2010

Celebrating Super Smothered Chicken on Day 33

When I think of smothered chicken, I think of nice-sized juicy pieces of  chicken fried until brown; then smothered in homemade, not bottled, gravy and slowly simmered unil tender.  Takes me back to my childhood in Annapolis when my mother made this.  In a dish like this, good technique is a plus; however, love and passion can make the difference between a mediocre product and a memorable masterpiece. 

This is a classic Southern lip-smacking good creation  that I replicated from my mother's home recipe.  I must admit to adding some extra spices that she did not use.  You can omit the sage or the Italian seasoning, if you like.  On different occasions, I have used both, just one or neither.  It is your choice.  Just depends on your own taste buds at the moment.   This dish takes a little care in the preparation, however, you can leave it alone after the initial browning anf let it simmer till chicken and gravy are infused with the seasonings.



Smothered Chicken

1 large frying chicken, about 3 1/2 pounds, cut  into serving pieces
1 large onion, chopped
1 cup flour seasoned with
   1 teaspoon salt
   1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
   1 teaspoon garlic salt
   1/2 teaspoon ground sage or
   1/2 teaspoon dried Italian seasoning
   1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2-3 cups room temperature water

Heat oil to moderately hot in a heavy skillet.  (My mother always used cast iron and I still do).  Put flour and the next 5 ingredients into a paper bag.  Shake well to incorporate spices.  Place chicken in baga and shake until well coated.  Remove excess flour. Be careful about putting chicken into the hot oil so it doesn't splash on you.  Brown the chicken well on both sides, about 5-6 minutes on each side.   Check oil temperature from time to time so chicken does not burn.  Remove to a plate.

Drain off all except 6 tablespoons of oil.  Lower heat and add chopped onions.   Cook, stirring often, for about 5 minutes.   Sprinkle 6 tablespoons flour into the oil and onions and stir constantly over low heat until brown being careful not to burn.   Add  2 cups water very slowly stirring until thick and smooth.

Carefully put chicken back into the gravy and cover skellet.  Reduce heat to low and cook chicken until tender, about 20-25 minutes.    Gravy will thicken more as chicken cooks.  Add more water for less thick gravy.  Serve with steamed Brussels spouts and rice or mashed potatoes.

Serves 4-6 Want to make some great home-style recipes like those from some of America's most popular and well-known restaurants such as Olive Garden's Parmesan Crusted Chicken, T.G.I. Friday's Hot Artichoke and Spinach Dip or Applebee's Southwest Steak Skillet? Click image at left to get more information.

 

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Simple Super Bowl Potato Salad

Since my computer went down a couple of days ago and I promised 30 recipes in 30 days, I am adding another today.

Sometimes I just want simple tastes, like this "Super Bowl" inspired potato salad.  The other foods you serve will probably have lots of seasonings, so this potato salad will not compete with them.  It has only 4 ingredients and is easy to make. I used Idaho potatoes for this recipe, however, I have used red or white potatoes.  I also leave the skins on.  It's up to your preference.


Potato Salad

1 lb potatoes, well-scrubbed
1 teaspoon garlic salt
2 Tbs minced onion
Salt and pepper to taste
1/2 cup mayonnaise

Cut potatoes in cubes and place in saucepan with cold water to cover.  Add 1 teaspoon garlic salt ti water.  Cook on high till water is boiling; about 8 minutes.  Lower heat and simmer until done; about 7 more minutes.    Drain and cool.  Mix potatoes, minced onion, mayonnaise and salt and pepper. 
Duplicate some of your favorite recipes from the most popular and best American restaurants in the country.  Click the image to get volumes 1 and 2 of America's Secret Recipes at a great price.

Fried Catfish Nuggets for the Super Bowl Crowd?

Wow!  Had technical problems with my computer-tied to my phone service for a couple of days  This is the recipe for day 24 which should have been yesterday.

There's no way I could possibly share a 30-day recipe collection without including a favorite food of mine.  CATFISH!  And, in particular; fried catfish nuggets!  Growing up in Annapolis, Maryland, we could fish for catfish in the clean waters of the Severn River at the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay.  There was no pollution.  So even though catfish were called "bottom-feeders," the Bay and the river were so clean, the risk
of contamination was so extremely slight, that it was unheard of.  Now, of course, I get farm-raised catfish raised in certified waters.  I buy whole catfish or fillets or even pieces (nuggets) from my local supermarket.

I can eat it anytime and any day of the week.  Since I could eat half the whole batch below by myself, I would have to cook a lot for a Super Bowl crowd.  Catfish for four people is my limit.  So you might have to consider whether you want to have fried catfish for your Super Bowl crowd, too.  You don't want to have to spend all your time in the kitchen while everyone is watching the game.  You would no doubt have to keep replenishing the platter.

Fried Catfish Nuggets

2 lbs catfish fillets or nuggets
1 cup yellow corn meal
½ cup crushed Panko (Korean or Japanese bread crumbs)
1 tsp salt
½ tsp black pepper
½ tsp cayenne pepper or red pepper flakes
1 tsp dried Italian seasoning
1 tsp dried parsley
Vegetable or Peanut Oil

If you have fillets, cut them into 1 inch pieces or nuggets.  Mix cornmeal, Panko, salt, pepper and dried seasonings in a thick brown paper bag.  Drop nuggets into bag and shake until well coated.  


Heat oil to hot in a large heavy skillet (cast-iron is my favorite).  Fry catfish in batches in a single layer.  Do not crowd.  Cook until golden brown; about 2-3 minutes on each side.  Drain on brown paper bag or newspaper covered with a paper towel.

Serve with homemade dipping sauce.

Homemade Dipping Sauce

1 cup mayonnaise
3 Tsp dill relish
Couple of dashes of hot sauce


If you love cooking and great food, yet are on a budget, learn how to get the secret recipes from YOUR FAVORITE restaurant, too, and easily cook them yourself in your own kitchen!  Click book cover image.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Mom's Bread Pudding-The Perfect Comfort Food


One of the all-time comfort foods is bread pudding.  So many things have changed about food since I grew up.  One thing remains--the memories of the smells coming from the kitchen when I came home from school.  And, a favorite was bread pudding.  Now, my mom would make tapioca pudding and rice pudding.  Neither of which ever gave me the kind of satisfaction I got when I ate her bread pudding with what she called "hard sauce."  Way yummy. The smell of cinnamon and nutmeg.  I could hardly wait to finish dinner so I could get to the dessert.  The recipe for  Day 23 is:

My Mom's Fabulous Bread Pudding.



Ingredients


2-3 cups stale bread
1 quart scalded milk
1/2-3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup melted butter
2 large eggs
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg

1/2 cup raisins

Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (163 C).  Tear bread into small pieces. Pour milk over bread crumbs and raisins; set aside to cool.  Beat eggs.  Add butter sugar, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and vanilla.   Place bread and raisins in a buttered casserole dish.  Pour milk and egg mixture over bread.  Make sure bread is submerged.  Bake for an hour.  Serve warm with hard sauce.



Hard Sauce


1 stick butter (1/2 cup), softened

2 cups confectioner's sugar
1 tsp vanilla
1 Tbs hot water

Cream butter, add sugar, vanilla and water and  beat well until creamy.  Put on bread pudding.  Refrigerate unused sauce.
Get your own copycat recipes from some of America's most famous restaurants. Click image for details.

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Super Bowl Perfection-Mediterranean Style Cheese Puffs



Most recipes for Super Bowl or Playoff parties are pretty standard.  This appetizer from sunny Spain in the Mediterranean is not standard.  It features creamy Manchego cheese which comes from sheep's' milk.  Genuine Manchego cheese comes only from the whole milk of manchega sheep bred and reared in the La Mancha region near Madrid. . If La Mancha sounds familiar, think , Don Quixote of La Mancha.  This cheese was mentioned in the novel.


This recipe, which comes from one of my favorite and most beautiful cookbooks, Mediterranean, also suggests using Gruyere cheese or another well-flavored cheese.  Be aware; these tasty little gems will get eaten up in a jiffy.  Give yourself time to make a few batches.  You'll need them.


Cheese Puffs


1/4 cup butter, cubed
1/4 tsp salt
1 cup water
2 whole eggs, plus one yolk
1/2 tsp dry mustard
1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
1/2 cup finely grated well-flavord cheese, 
         such as Manchego or Gruyère


Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. (About 218 degrees F.)  Bring the butter, salt and water to a boil in a pan.  Sift the flour onto a sheet of  waxed paper, then pour the flour into the boiling liquid and stir it in very quickly.


Beat the mixture with a wooden spoon into a thick paste that leaves the side of the pan clean.  Remove the pan from the heat.


Beat in the eggs and yolk, one at a time, then add the mustard, cayenne pepper and grated cheese.


Place teaspoonfuls of the mixture on a non-stick baking sheet and bake for 10 minutes.  Lower the oven temperature to 350F (176.6C) and cook for another 15 minutes, until well browned. Serve these hot or cold.


Make sure to have lots of olives.  They are a great accompaniment to the cheese puffs.

Get other deliciously impressive appetizer recipes and  bites from the very  popular America's Secret Recipes cookbooks.  Your family and friends will keep coming back for more. Click image at left.


Sunday, January 24, 2010

Minnesota Vikings Land Super Easy Wild Rice Recipes



Minnesota Vikings fans bask in the beautiful land of 10,000 lakes.  It turns out that there are really more than 15,000, lakes, rivers and steams.  Minnesotans boast some of the best and most creative wild rice recipes, due to the quality of wild rice that is grown in the state.  Interestingly, wild rice is not rice at all.  It's a water-grass seed actually grown in Minnesota's cold waters and must be harvested in the traditional Indian way.  Here are just a couple recipes that I like, in particular, because they are delicious and SUPER easy

Microwave Wild Rice Casserole

1 cup uncooked wild rice
**2 cups chicken broth
1 tsp salt
1 Tbs butter
½ cup butter
½ lbs sliced mushrooms
2 Tbs minced onion
2 Tbs minced green pepper
1 garlic clove, minced
¼ cup chopped pecans

Wash and soak wild rice 1 hour in boiling hot water or soak 2-3 hours covered with tap water.  Use a 3 quart covered casserole.  Cook broth, salt and 1 Tbs butter on high for 6-7 minutes.  Then add rice and cook on defrost for 50 minutes.  In 1 quart casserole melt remaining butter.  Add mushrooms, onions, pepper and garlic.  Cook on high 2-3 minutes until tender.  Stir each minute.  Add the pecans and cook on high for 1 minute.  Add to  the rice and cook on defrost 10-15 minutes until liquid is absorbed Let stand, covered, 5 minutes after cooking.

Serves 6-8

**To keep this vegetarian, I use vegetable broth instead of chicken broth

Shrimp and Wild Rice Loaf

1 cup wild rice
1 green pepper, chopped
3 ribs celery, chopped
½ can pimiento, chopped
1 can cream of mushroom soup
1can shrimp, deveined and rinsed in hot water
OR 1 can tuna, drained and rinsed
½ pound American cheese

Prepare rice. Heat mushroom soup and add cheese, stirring until smooth. Sauté celery, onion and green pepper in butter. Combine all ingredients with cooked rice and stir gently. Pat into greased loaf pan. Bake in 375° oven for 45 minutes. Cool for 10-15 minutes. Turn loaf out on platter. Serve with sauce as given below.

Shrimp Sauce

I can shrimp, rinsed and deveined
1 can cream of shrimp soup
1 can cream of mushroom soup

Heat together.
Get your copy of over 200 fabulous restaurant recipe replicas that are delicious and super easy.


Thursday, October 8, 2009

My Version of Buffalo Chicken Wings

Here is one of my favorites for my version of Buffalo chicken wings. You can use a deep fryer if you have one. I don't, so I use a heavy sauce pan or my trusty cast-iron skillet, because it gets nice and hot. A Dutch oven also works. Anything you can put a quantity of oil in. Please note that I also don't use flour to coat the wings, so make sure to pat dry the wings and drop them carefully in the oil.


Ingredients:                                              

Peanut oil for deep frying
12-24 wing pieces (Whole wings cut in half or buy frozen "wingettes")

4 Tbs margarine
1 Tbs vinegar
* 5 Tbs hot sauce (I use Louisiana, Uncle Brutha's or whatever I have. You can use Tabasco also)
Garlic salt and pepper to taste
Blue cheese dressing
Celery sticks

Directions:

Heat oil in skillet to about 375 degrees F. (190.5 degrees C.) Add enough to cover wings-about an inch or two deep. Sprinkle with garlic salt and pepper if you like. Drop thawed chicken wings gently into the hot oil, one batch at time. Do not crowd. Fry until golden brown. About 10-15 minutes depending on wing size. Remove the wings from the oil and drain on a rack or paper towels.

While wings are cooking, melt margarine in a saucepan, add hot sauce and vinegar. Stir and put in a large mixing bowl. Add the Buffalo chicken wings and toss in the sauce to coat each wing. Place in a bowl or platter.
Serve with blue cheese dressing, celery sticks and lot of napkins.

*If the wings are for children, start with a Tbs hot sauce. Serve the kids first, and then add more hot sauce to the bowl.

Find chicken wing recipes from Applebee's, TGI Fridays and Chili's you can cook at home.