Search This Blog

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Herbed Mushroom Stuffed Pastry Cups

Herbed Mushroom Stuffed Pastry Cups


Puff pastry is a staple in my kitchen and I usually have a package or two in the freezer. It's amazing what you can do with puff pastry and everything you use with it just tastes better. For a recent catering order, I made these Herbed Mushroom Stuffed Pastry Cups. These delectable bites are addictive and full of flavor, all in a buttery pastry shell. If you want an elegant appetizer, look no more...

For these Herbed Mushroom Stuffed Pastry Cups, I used some special puff pastry shellsbut you can get the same flavor and similar effect with puff pastry found in your local grocery store. Just cut the puff pastry into squares and form them into the wells of a mini muffin pan. You can even make large pastry cups by forming the puff pastry into the wells of a standard muffin pan. Either way, these pastry cups are elegant and filled with a nice blend of mushrooms and herbs.

Mushroom Stuffed Pastry Cups
filling recipe from Razzle Dazzle Recipes

1 package Pepperidge Farm puff pastry

Herbed Mushroom Filling:
1 tablespoon butter
1 large onion, minced
4 shallots, minced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 pound mushrooms, minced (white, shiitake, cremini, your choice)
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon ground poultry seasoning
1/8 teaspoon thyme flakes
salt and pepper to taste
2 tablespoons flour
1/2 cup sour cream

Cut each package of puff pastry (there's 2 in a package) into 2 inch x 2 inch squares and place 1 square in each well of a mini muffin tin. Push the puff pastry down into the well to form a cup. Bake in a 400 degree preheated oven for 5-7 minutes or until the pastry is lightly browned and puffed. Remove from oven and allow to cool.

Saute together butter, onion, shallot and garlic until the onion is transparent. Add mushrooms and lemon juice, and continue sauteing until mushrooms are tender and all the liquid is absorbed. Add seasonings and flour, and cook and stir for 2 minutes. Add sour cream and cook and stir for 2 minutes or until mixture is very thick. Allow mixture to cool.

Once cooled, fill each puff pastry cup with the mushroom filling and serve. 

Heirloom Tomato Salad


Heirloom Tomato Salad
heirloom tomatoes (as many as your heart desires)
olive oil
salt
fresh basil (optional)
Cut the tomatoes into bite-size chunks (or slice thin for carpaccio). Drizzle a little olive oil over the tomatoes. Sprinkle some salt. Garnish with fresh basil and serve.

Cucumber and Radish Carpaccio Salad

Cucumber and Radish Carpaccio Salad

 
A perfect elegant summer salad !
 
Ingredients:
  • 1/4 cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 2 Tbs. fresh Lemon Juice
  • 1 Tbs. finely chopped fresh Mint
  • 1 Tbs. finely chopped fresh Dill or Fennel
  • 5 Radishes, sliced paper thin
  • 2 Cucumbers, sliced paper thin
  • 1/2 tsp Kosher or Sea Salt
  • 2 Tbs crumbled Feta Cheese
  • fresh cracked Black Pepper
  • 2 garlic clove, minced
 
 
Directions:
Combine olive oil, lemon juice, mint, dill or fennel, and garlic in a medium bowl and whisk together to combine. Set aside.
 
 
Arrange sliced cucumbers and radishes on a large platter, alternating radishes slices with the cucumber slices.
 
 
Sprinkle slices lightly with kosher salt. Drizzle 3 Tbs of dressing over the slices. Sprinkle with crumbled feta, and fresh cracked black pepper.
Serve immediately. If you are not going to serve right away, do not dress slices with vinaigrette yet. Wait until you are about to set then add dressing at last moment.
 

Tomato and Peach Salad with Mint






This salad is like a fun sweetened up, dairy free version of a caprese salad. The mint and balsalmic really compliment the flavors of the tomatoes and peaches.





Tomato and Peach Salad with Mint - from A Couple Cooks
Printable Recipe
Tomatoes
Peaches
Fresh mint
Aged balsamic vinegar
Kosher salt

Wash the tomatoes and peaches. Peel the peaches and cut the tomatoes and peaches into slices. Chiffonade the mint.

Arrange the tomato and peach slices in a pattern on a plate. Sprinkle with mint and kosher salt, and drizzle with balsamic vinegar.

Brussels Sprouts

Brussels Sprouts
I know.  Brussels Sprouts.  I am aware that you may harbor profound brussels sprout-related anxiety and disgust, but please– are they really so bad?  Well, when you boil or steam them, yes.  They really are that bad.  But try your oven.  These come out crispy and salty, and, as long as you aren’t struck by close-minded aversion, you just might enjoy them.

Crispy Brussels Sprouts

Prep

  • trim the ends
  • peel off the gnarly looking leaves from the outside of each sprout
  • slice in half

Season

  • toss in olive oil
  • strew with freshly cracked black pepper
  • sprinkle very liberally with coarse sea salt

Bake

  • spread out on a cookie sheet
  • bake at 400 degrees
  • start checking them at 30 minutes (I like mine charred so I bake them for 40)

Monday, September 19, 2011

Oven Baked Garlic Potato Fries

Oven Baked Garlic Potato Fries


Happy Hump Day!  Its "The Happy Hour" here at The Slow Roasted Italian every Wednesday we will be bringing you fantastic dishes you would find at happy hour.

Today we have oven baked Garlic Wedges (Fries).  These are fabulous, flavorful and crispy.  The perfect fry out of your own oven.  The garlic seemed overwhelming while it was baking, but the flavor was perfect when it was done.  The corn starch helps create a fantastic crust on the fry.  I served these with ranch dip, a perfect accompaniment.  I hope you enjoy.

We enjoyed these so much I made them again tonight for dinner.  Yes, you heard me...  Following a long day with Em, poor baby is sick for the first time, we just wanted to relax with some comforting fast food.  So, instead of wasting the money to go out and get garbage food I made these fries again!! Oh so good!

 Recipe adapted from Purple Foodie 

Garlic Oven Baked Fries
8 garlic cloves, minced
6 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 ½ pounds russet potatoes, cut into wedges
4 tbsp cornstarch/cornflour
1 1/2 tsp coarse sea salt
1 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
½ tsp garlic powder
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper

Preheat oven to 440° F.

Combine the garlic and oil in a large bowl, warming it in the microwave until the garlic is fragrant, about 1 minute.  Transfer 5 tablespoons of the oil (leaving the garlic in the bowl) to the baking dish, coating it well. 


 Add the potatoes to the bowl with the garlic mixture and toss to coat. 


 Wrap tightly in plastic wrap and microwave on high power until the potatoes are translucent around the edges, 3 to 6 minutes, shaking the bowl to redistribute the potatoes halfway through cooking.

Combine the cornstarch, salt, pepper, garlic powder, and cayenne in a small bowl. Sprinkle over the hot potatoes and toss well to coat.


Arrange the potatoes in a single layer on the prepared baking sheet.


Bake, turning once, until deep golden brown and crisp, 30 to 40 minutes.  Serve with your favorite condiment.

MANTY

Манты . 


 

 

Тесто раскатываю и нарезаю на квадраты или ромбики 

 

 

 

 

Dolma

This is a recipe that I have wanted to make and post on here for ages…but every time I have made them, I have either forgotten to photograph them, or not had a working camera.
Anyway, these are my Grama Sanom’s grapeleaves! FINALLY!
So there really isn’t one particular story to go with this dish. There were many stories over many years, that I hold close to my heart, and remember every time I make these. Because, whenever I saw my Grama Sanom, we would 9 times out of 10 make grapeleaves together. So this is a recipe that I remember very well. And, as the years go by without my dear Grama, I find that little pieces of her live on in me. For instance, when I look down at my hands rolling these leaves, I notice that they are indeed so very like my grandmother’s hands. And in 50 years, I can see them curling into little arthritic cups…just like hers. A painful, but perfect measuring device. :)
Some fond memories I have regarding grapeleaves, were things like driving along in the car with my Grama and Jiddu (Jiddu = Grandpa in Arabic), and hearing my Grama shout to my Jiddu to “Pa! Stop the car!”, and we would come to screeching halt at the side of the road, when my Grama would then calmly get out, walk to the side of the road, and start picking grapeleaves off of the vines growing on the side of the road. I would jump out and help her, knowing that my belly would soon be filled with delicious stuffed grapeleaves.
When we would get home, my grama would wash the leaves in cold water removing all the dirt and any stray bugs that may have made their way home with us. After the leaves were rinsed, it was my job to lay all the leaves out so that the veins were facing up, and trim off all the stems while my Grama made the stuffing. (Recipe below). After all the leaves were stacked, vein sides up, and stems cut off, my grama would lay them in a 9×13 baking dish and pour boiling hot water over them until they were covered with it. She would wait until they became their signature dark green color, and were wilted and pliable enough to roll. After they were tender enough, she would drain out all the water and then it was my job to pat them all somewhat dry so they weren’t dripping wet.
Once the leaves were ready, and the meat/rice mixture was ready, it was time to roll! We would sit at the kitchen table for what seemed like hours, and carefully roll out each delicious package. Stacking them up into a big pot. When they were done, she would mix up a bowl of water and tomato paste, stirring it until the paste had fully dissolved. She would then place a plate upside down over the pot of leaves, and pour the tomato mixture over the leaves until the leaves were just covered. She would throw in a few teaspoons of salt, and a little squeeze of lemon…and in around 30 minutes…we would be enjoying our grapeleaves feast.
Let me just say, that I have eaten my fair share of grapeleaves at restaurants over the years, and never have any of them come close to these. Maybe it’s just because the way she made them, was what I became accustomed to, what I grew up eating…but to me, they are even more delicious because they are wrapped up in my memories of her. And so whenever I make them, I look down at my hands…and know she is with me and somewhere up there, smiling down on me for keeping her memory and traditions going. I can’t wait to have kids and grandkids so that I can share this tradition with them.
In the meantime, I am sharing it with you! So please enjoy them!
Grapeleaves
Recipe from Mary Sanom
2 lbs. ground chuck (you can also use ground turkey, but if you do I like to add a little olive oil for some fat)
1 lb. long grain white rice
1 small onion (finely diced)
1 small green pepper (finely diced)
1 clove minced garlic
8 oz tomato sauce
8 oz tomato sauce or paste
Salt/Pepper to taste
Grapeleaves (from the side of the road! OR you can buy them in the jar at the grocery store in the ethnic food aisle, but they aren’t as tender as fresh picked!*)
1 lemon
Instructions:
  • Mix ground chuck, rice, onion, green pepper, garlic and tomato sauce in large bowl. Season to taste with salt and pepper. (I use around a teaspoon, perhaps a little more). I usually just take a little bite of this mixture to make sure it is seasoned correctly, which freaks a lot of people out to eat raw meat, but I’ve been doing it all my life, and never once have I fallen ill from this. ;)
  • Pour in some tomato sauce enough to moisten the meat. You want the meat mixture to be slightly moist, but not so it’s so wet that it’s falling apart
  • Place enough grapeleaves in the bottom of a large pot to cover the bottom of the pot. This will keep the grapeleaves from sticking to the bottom of the pot and burning.
  • Lay out a grapeleaf with the vein side up. Place a small amount of the beef and rice at the bottom 1/3 of the leaf (see photo above), tuck in the sides of the leaves over the meat, and begin to roll up like a cigar
  • Continue rolling your grapeleaves, and laying them in rows on the bottom of the pot, which has been lined with unfilled leaves. When your first layer of grapeleaves has lined the bottom of the pot, you want to start the new layer in the opposite direction, so that the rows criss-cross each other. This will allow the liquid to get to all the leaves easier than it would if they were all going the same direction and packed in tightly together
  • Keep rolling up all your leaves, and stacking the layers, until there are no more leaves/or no more filling/or your pot is full! I never like to fill the pot more than 3/4 with grapeleaves to allow room for the liquid, the plate, and for the liquid to boil and bubble up over the leaves without spilling out of the pot
  • Once you’ve got your leaves all rolled, place a plate upside down over the leaves. This will keep the leaves from floating during cooking, and coming unrolled.
  • In the bowl that your meat mixture was in, scoop out a 8 oz can of tomato paste and mix with enough water to cover your grapeleaves
  • Pour the tomato/water mixture over your leaves until they are just covered.
  • Add a teaspoon or so of salt, and a squeeze of half a lemon into the pot
  • Cover the pot with a lid, and bring the leaves and liquid to a boil, then reduce heat to medium, and let cook for about 30 minutes or until meat is cooked thru and rice and leaves are tender (if you have a lot of leaves, this may take longer – to test, just take out a leave from the top of the pot and taste it)
  • Once your leaves are cooked, remove from heat. Take out the plate, and start removing your grapeleaves with a pair of tongs, arranging them on a pretty serving platter!
  • DIG IN! They will be super tender and moist and full of flavor.
  • I like to reserve the rest of the sauce from the pot, and use a little bit of it to pour over leftover leaves before I reheat them in the microwave
I hope you enjoy my Grama Sanom’s recipe for Syrian grapeleaves!
Click here to see the whole photo set on my flickr!
*If you do buy grapeleaves from the jar, make sure that you rinse them thoroughly and pat them dry. Also, you CAN freeze fresh grapeleaves, but only after they have been wilted with boiling water, just pat them dry and put stacks of them into ziplock bags and throw them in the freezer. These will last you through the winter months, when you can’t pick them. The best time to pick grapeleaves in Michigan is during July, early August, when they are big enough, but haven’t been eaten by all the bugs.

Corn Beef Wrapped with Asparagus



bacon wrapped with asparagus




Recipe: Corn Beef Wrapped with Asparagus 
Makes: 16

Ingredients:
• 1 pkt asparagus (est 90g)
• 1 Lb Corn Beef

Method by cooking:
1. Wash and trim asparagus to half.

2. Boil them in a pot of boiling water for 2mins with 1tsp of oil.

3. Drain them and place asparagus in groups of three if the asparagus spears are really thick, groups of 4 if they are thin.

4. Take a slice of  Beef  and wrap each bundle (slice the  Beef into half if it's too long). (you can use a toothpick to secure the  Beef wrap - but i don't cos its not necessary)

5. Repeat with remaining ingredients.

6. Hit up the pan with 1tsp of oil, meidum fire.

7. Put the  Beef with the ending stripe facing down for about 1min, turn over and fried for another 45sec or till slightly brown and its ready to be serve.

Method by grilling:
* To grill, DO NOT BOIL the asparagus! place bundles on hot grill and cover. Cook 10 to 12 minutes until  Beef is crisp and asparagus bundles are tender.

Method by oven:
* For oven preparation, DO NOT BOIL the asparagus! Preheat oven to 180C, place bundles on slotted broiler pan. Bake 12 minutes. 

Quick Skillet Steak with Onions and Mushrooms

Quick Skillet Steak with Onions and Mushrooms


Meat lovers will LOVE this quick weeknight steak dish!

Mushrooms and onions are the perfect compliment to steak, plus they add bulk without added calories or fat. A great example of using steak as a condiment.

Originally when I made this steak dish, it was intended for my steak sandwich recipe, but since this is also so good over rice, I felt it deserved it's own post. (Steak and cheese sandwich recipe coming tomorrow!) Serve this with a salad and you have a complete meal!

Have all your vegetables sliced and ready before you start cooking, this takes only minutes to make once everything is prepped. Enjoy : )


Quick Skillet Steak with Onions and Mushrooms
Gina's Weight Watcher Recipes
Servings: 4 • Serving Size: 1/4th (about 4 oz) • Old Points: 2 pts • Points+:2 pts  
Calories: 95.4 • Fat: 4.1 g • Protein: 12.5 g • Carb: 3.5 g • Fiber: 1.0 g • Sugar: 1.1 g Sodium: 26.8 mg (without salt)

Ingredients:
  • 1/2 lb thin cut beef round sandwich steaks
  • 1/2 large onion, sliced into rings
  • 1/2 tsp olive oil
  • 8 oz sliced mushrooms
  • 4 seconds cooking spray (I like Smart Balance)
  • garlic powder to taste
  • salt and fresh cracked pepper to taste

Directions:

Slice beef into thin strips. Season with salt, garlic powder and fresh pepper to taste.Heat a large skillet over high heat. When the skillet is very hot, spray with cooking spray and add half of the beef. Cook one minute, then turn steak and cook an additional 30 seconds. Set aside in a large dish.


Spray the skillet again and when it gets hot add the remaining steak, cooking one minute, then turning and cooking 30 seconds more. Add remaining steak to the dish.Return skillet to heat and spray once again with cooking spray; add onions and season with salt and pepper. Cook one minute, then turn and cook onions an additional 30 seconds or until onions are golden.


Lower heat to medium and add 1/2 tsp olive oil to the skillet, add mushrooms, salt and pepper and lightly spray the top of the mushrooms with cooking spray. Cook 1 1/2 minutes, then turn mushrooms and cook another minute and a half. Add to dish with steak and onions and stir to combine. Serve over rice.

Simple Roasted Chicken


Simple Roasted Chicken

Print Friendly
Chicken.
It’s a win-win.
No matter what you do with it, you’re sure to wear giddy pants while eating it.
Grilled, seared, stuffed, shredded, poached, baked; honestly, the world is your oyster. I mean chicken. The chicken is your oyster. I mean, the world is your chicken. Wait, the chicken is your chicken!
. . . Never mind.
Today I’m getting all roasty with this popular bird. I believe roasting a chicken might be my favorite way of cooking it, as it locks in all the succulent juices, while satisfying your mouth with the crunch factor in the skin as well.
PLUS, this version is easy to the max, as you roast the chicken CUT UP. There’s no mess, no fuss, and the cooking time is way less. High-five!
Yep, giddy pants again.
Thanks to the fabulous Amy for the inspiration!
Simple Roasted Chicken:


Look at well the chicken snuggles. Why am I obsessed with the word snuggle?



What it took for 4:
* 1 whole chicken, cut up
* 2 Tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
* 1/4 cup white wine
* 2 sprigs fresh rosemary
* 2 sprigs fresh thyme
* 1 Tbs. coarse salt
* 1 Tbs. freshly ground pepper
* 1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
Preheat oven to 450 degrees.
Coat the bottom of a cast iron skillet with a little oil, along with coating all sides of the chicken. Nestle the chicken pieces in the pan. Pour the wine over the chicken. Top with the fresh rosemary and thyme leaves, and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
Roast for 40 minutes. Change the oven to broil, and broil 5 more minutes.
Bring it out of the oven and spritz with lemon. Let rest for 5 minutes.
Serve with whatever side you wish! Last night was a quick sauteed broccolini.
Maybe another spritz of lemon? Oh, yes.
Simple and elegant. Do this.