Shrimp Sauce for Pasta
Wednesday, December 31, 2003
Fry up two slices of bacon, set them aside to drain. Dump a bunch of mushrooms and garlic in the grease, cook. Dump shrimp in, sautee until pink. (If the shrimp have a lot of water in them and it cooks out, drain the pan.) Crumble bacon and add it back to the pan, add about 1/2 cup white wine, 1/4 cup heavy or whipped cream. Optional: add 1-2 tbs. of capers. Simmer (stirring frequently) until thick. Serve over pasta.
Posted by Mel •
Seafood •
(0)
Trackbacks •
Permalink
Hot Wings
Tuesday, December 30, 2003
(These are really good and you can control the spiciness)
1 c. taco salsa
� c. French dressing
� c. barbeque sauce
1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
� stick butter, melted
1-4 tsp. cayenne powder (to taste)
1 lb. Chicken wings (I�m just assuming 1 lb. here, mom uses a large bag of frozen ones)
Fry the wings in shallow oil for about 10 minutes on each side. Drain well and set aside. Mix together all the sauce ingredients. Dip the wings in the sauce and place in a shallow baking dish. Pour the leftover sauce over the wings. Bake at 425 for 20-25 minutes.
{via Kathy}
Cornbread
(This is one of my favorite things to snack on, and its really easy. It depends on having the right kind of flour and cornmeal)
1 c. self rising flour (I like Martha White or Hudson Cream, but those are hard to find outside of the south)
1 c. self rising cornmeal mix (again, the best kind is hard to find here, but try to use the same as the flour)
1 egg
� c. buttermilk
1 c. milk
Preheat the oven to 450 and melt 1 spoonful of shortening in a 9 inch round pan. Cast iron is best, but use whatever you have. Mix the flour and cornmeal. Stir together the liquids and add to the dry. Stir well and add a bit more milk if it is dry. Add the melted shortening and mix well. Pour the batter into the pan and bake for about 25 minutes, until the top is golden brown. Turn out onto a plate and serve with butter.
{via Kathy}
Posted by Mel •
Bread •
(0)
Trackbacks •
Permalink
Shrimp Vindaloo
(I got this one off some Sri Lankan website, but it is really good. You can probably find most of the spices and such in an Indian grocery)
1 lb. shrimp, peeled and de-veined
2 onions, finely chopped
� c. chopped tomato
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 in. piece of ginger, peeled and chopped
5-6 curry leaves
juice from 1 lime
2 tsp. cayenne powder (or some other hot chili)
� tsp. turmeric
1 tsp. black mustard seeds
� tsp. cumin seeds
salt to taste
Crush the ginger and garlic with the cumin and mustard seeds. Set aside.
Fry the onion and curry leaves in a bit of oil until the onion is golden. Add the tomato, cayenne, and turmeric with about � c. water and cook until the tomatoes are soft. Add the crushed spices and fry about 5 minutes. Add the shrimp and salt and mix well. Add enough water to just barely cover and simmer 10 minutes. Add the lime juice and cook until the sauce is slightly thickened. Serve with rice.
{via Kathy}
Posted by Mel •
Seafood •
(0)
Trackbacks •
Permalink
Portobello Mushrooms with Garlic, Parmesan and Pine Nuts
From Steven Raichlen’s “How to Grill” book.
4 Lg. portobello mushrooms
2 large cloves garlic, cut into slivers
1 oz. Romano, Parmigiano-Reggiano or other firm cheese, cut into slivers
1 sprig fresh rosemary leaves or 2 tsp. dried rosemary
2 tbs. pine nuts
1/2 cup plus 2 tbs. balsamic vinegar
1/2 tsp. coarse salt
1/2 tsp. black pepper
1 1/3 cups extra-virgin olive oil
12 fresh basil leaves, thinly slivered
1. Trim the stems off the portobellos. Using a sharp object, make a series of holes in the portobellos in the gill side of the mushroom caps, 1/2 inch apart. Insert garlic and cheese slivers, rosemary leaves and pine nuts in these holes.
2. Combine 1/2 cup vinegar and the salt and pepper into a nonreactive (glass, I assume) mixing bowl and whisk until the salt is dissolved. Whisk in the oil and basil. Pour some of the mixture in the bottom of a nonreactive baking dish and arrange the portobellos in it, gill side up. Swish the mushrooms around to coat the bottoms with marinade. Spoon the remaining marinade over the portobellos. Let marinate in the fridge, covered, for as little as 30 minutes or as long as 3 hours.
3. Preheat grill to high (this always means medium on my grill).
4. When ready to cook, remove the mushroom caps from the marinade. Strain the marinade if the basil looks wilted. Whisk the remaining 2 tbs. vinegar into the marinade. Arrange the portobellos on the hot grate, gill side down. Grill for 3 minutes, then invert the portobellos and spoon on some of the reserved marinade. Continue grilling until the caps are browned and very tender, 4 to 6
minutes, rotating the caps 45 degrees after 2 minutes to create an attractive cross-hatch of grill marks. Transfer to a platter and serve at once.
The recipe also says you can try different things to insert into the shrooms like prosciutto, chorizo, lemon zest, olives, almonds, etc.
{via Casey}
Rice & Beans Quickie
1 C rice
1 can of red beans
1 can water
Sausage
Chop up some of the link sausage (like Ekrich smoked) Jack it up with some garlic, pepper, onion salt to taste
Bring to a boil, cook for 20 minutes (add sausage after like 10 minutes)
{via Tea}
Posted by Mel •
Meat •
(3)
Trackbacks •
Permalink