Thursday, November 5, 2009

Creamy Chicken Enchiladas

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Here is an easy recipe for a yummy weeknight meal. I wanted to try making enchiladas by making them without the traditional green or red enchilada sauce (which is really good too, but can get a little messy). I have been thinking about doing this for a while, and I finally got around to it!

1 rotisserie chicken
1 cup chopped mushrooms (I used crimini)
8 oz cream cheese
1 packet taco seasoning (or Carne Asada flavoring)
2 Tablespoons dried onions
salt to taste
2 cups shredded monterey jack cheese (or cheddar)
1 pint (2 cups) heavy cream
7 or 8 taco size tortillas (I used low carb ones)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees

Place the meat from the rotisserie chicken on a cutting board and chop it up pretty fine. In a large bowl, add chicken, chopped mushrooms, cream cheese, taco seasoning, and dried onions to the meat and mix until the ingredients are incorporated. Taste and add salt and more onions or taco flavoring if necessary (to suit your taste).

Grease a 9 by 13 baking dish. Place about 2-3 spoonfuls of mix into the center of the tortilla and wrap up tight. Place in baking dish seam side down. Repeat with the remainder of the tortillas. Add Monterey Jack cheese to the top of the tortillas and spread evenly. Drizzle the cream evenly over the top of the cheese. Sprinkle more taco seasoning over the top if desired.

Place foil over the top and bake in the oven for 20 minutes. Remove foil and bake another 15 minutes. The top should be bubbly and toasty looking.

Enjoy!

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Chicken Saltimbocca

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We went to Buca di Beppo the other weekend and had a delicious chicken dish that translates into "jump in your mouth" and I think it literally did. I thought I could probably manage to make something similar at home and when I found a Buca di Beppo recipe on line, I just took it and ran with it. I made a few alterations but it turned out to jump in our mouth just as much as ever. It's actually really quick and easy too.


7 chicken cutlets or 4 chicken breasts
One piece of prosciutto for every chicken piece you have
2 tablespoons sage
Olive oil to coat pan
flour for dusting
1 can artichoke hearts, quartered
capers for garnish
5 ounces white wine
Juice of 2 lemons, and lemon peel from one
4 ounces heavy cream
1 1/2 Tablespoons butter
Salt to taste

Lightly salt chicken breasts. Sprinkle evenly with chopped sage. Place sliced Prosciutto on top the chicken and pound it into the breast until the thickness of the chicken measures 3/8-inch.

Meanwhile, heat olive oil in a saute pan. Lightly flour chicken pressed with prosciutto. Place in heated oil, Prosciutto side down. Brown one side, turn and brown the other side. Drain off excess oil, and deglaze pan with white wine. Add artichokes, fresh lemon juice, lemon peel, cream and butter and cook until sauce is thickened, about 10 minutes.

On a large platter, place chicken breasts topped with reduced sauce and garnish with capers.

Adapted from Buca di Beppo recipe.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

In The Mood For Caldo Verde

Caldo Verde is a Portuguese soup that is TO DIE FOR. It's Portugal in a bowl. The ingredients are so simple and the end result so satisfying.

  • 3-4 medium sized sweet potatoes (the white ones),or 6 to 8 medium sized potatoes, peeled and sliced thin (like potato au gratin style)
  • One big sweet onion (spanish or yellow), minced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3 TB olive oil
  • 1 TB butter
  • 10 ounces chourico, chorizo, or pepperoni if you can't find those, sliced thin (I used pork chourico that wasn't in a casing and it worked great, found at Sprouts)
  • 3 Liters cold Water
  • 1 lb Kale (this is what I used) or Collard Greens, washed, middle vein removed, and julienned (use a basil chiffonade technique)
Put 3 TB olive oil and 1 TB butter in the bottom of a big heavy saucepan and on med-high heat, cook the onions and garlic for about 2-3 minutes until onion becomes translucent being careful not to brown the onion.
Once onion is translucent, add potatoes and saute until they start to get some color, about 3-4 minutes.
Once the potatoes are getting some color, add the water, cover the pot, bring to a boil and cook for about 20-25 minutes.
While the potatoes are cooking, julienne the greens (there will be a lot of it, don't worry, it's supposed to be that way)
and cook the chourico in a skillet until most the fat is cooked out. (If you are using a sausage with casing, remove the casing before you cook it)
Drain fat from sausage and set aside until the potatoes are ready.
Once the potatoes are soft, take a potato masher and mash the potatoes in the pot.
Next, add the sausage and lastly add the greens to the pot. Let cook for another 5 minutes until the greens incorporate into the soup. Taste for salt and pepper and pour the last Tablespoon of Olive Oil over top. serve with bread.


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Here is a link to a website with some good visuals and a little more traditional recipe.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Slightly Sweet White Wine Salmon


This is the first meal I ever cooked for Anthony back in my little NYC apartment in early 2007. He's been hooked ever since. Serve with rice and asparagus.

Ingredients:
1 lb salmon
1/3 cup white wine
2 T butter
1 T honey
3 T brown sugar
juice from 1-2 lemon slices

Preparation:
Preheat oven to 350. Place salmon in rimmed cooking dish. Salt and pepper both sides. Place rest of ingredients in saucepan and bring to a boil. Boil for 3 minutes. Pour sauce over salmon and bake in oven for about 15 minutes, or until just opaque inside. Turn oven to broil, place salmon dish on 2nd to top shelf and broil for 3-5 minutes, until slightly browned. Enjoy!

Note: You can make this without the white wine, it's delicious either way.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Pork Schnitzel with Chantarelle Mushrooms

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I can't take credit for this recipe, but I can take credit for choosing such an amazing recipe to celebrate a special event with my husband. He spent a lot of time in Germany and every time it appears on a menu, he orders schnitzel. I always just have a bite, but I haven't been too ecstatic over schnitzel until now! This dish is mouthwatering, even if you don't have any ties to Germany. Wow, I will make this again and again, but I think I will try and substitute turkey next time for the meat and bacon. It's so easy and impressively delicious.

I doubled Hans Rueffert's recipe found here.

Ingredients

4 (3 ounce) pork cutlets, pounded super thin
Kosher salt and fresh cracked pepper
all purpose flour, for dredging
3 eggs, beaten
breadcrumbs, for dredging
4 tablespoons butter
6 slices smoked bacon, roughly chopped
1 onion diced
2 tablespoons dijon mustard
2 tablespoons capers, drained
butter
1 1/2 cup Chantarelle mushrooms, chopped if large
1/2 cup heavy cream

Directions:
Pat cutlets dry. Season cutlets with salt and pepper, then dredge in flour, then egg, then breadcrumbs. In a large skillet, add butter (clarified if possible) and saute cutlets on both sides until golden brown and crunchy. Drain on paper towels and keep warm in a 200 degree oven.

In a separate skillet over high heat, cook the bacon and the onions until they both start to brown. Add mustard and capers. Add a lump of butter to mix and immediately add chantarelles (I used dry chantarelles, so I turned down the heat and extended the cooking time a little bit until they were soft). As the mushrooms begin to absorb the butter, add just enough cream to cover the bottom of the pan. Simmer sauce to reduce slightly. Add more mustard or capers as needed (I didn't need to add anything.)

To serve, spoon sauce over browned schnitzel and serve with half a lemon. Squeeze over schnitzel right before eating.

Recommended authentic side dish: Cauliflower florets with butter.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Mashed Cauliflower


I've tricked at least a dozen people with this recipe thinking it's potatoes, most of them admitting they don't like cauliflower. This is one of my husband's favorites. If you are carb sensitive like me, then this is the perfect substitute for starchy side dishes like potatoes and pasta. Hey, I never said it was low fat, just low carb okay?!

1 head cauliflower, cut up into small pieces
4-5 Tablespoons butter
2-3 Tablespoons sour cream
1 Tablespoons cream cheese
Kosher Salt and Fresh cracked pepper to taste

Steam or boil cauliflower florets until very soft (when touched with a fork, it falls apart). If boiling, salt the water. Strain if boiled. Remove saucepan from heat and return cauliflower to warm saucepan. Put butter, sour cream, cream cheese, and about 1-2 tsp kosher salt into saucepan with cauliflower and mash with a potato masher until well mixed and smooth (start out with smaller quantities of the ingredients first) Taste puree, make any adjustments needed. I usually end up adding a little more butter, a little more salt and just a tad more sour cream. That's what my tastebuds fancy. It seems to work well for the general population...

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Strawberry and Grapefruit Salad with Vanilla Dressing

These colors are so pretty together and they taste really good too. Strawberries and Grapefruits are both a little tart so this sweet dressing goes well with them. I made this as a side to my Monte Cristos. It was delicious.

1 Grapefruit, cut into slices and seeds and rind cut out
10 ounces (or so, you can eyeball it) strawberries, fresh or thawed

Mix fruit together in large bowl. Then drizzle with Vanilla Dressing (recipe follows).

Vanilla Dressing
adapted from Alton Brown's recipe

1/2 cup plain yogurt
1/4 cup mayo (sounds weird, but it's good)
1/2 tsp lemon juice
2 tsp honey
2 tsp powdered sugar
1 tsp pure vanilla extract
1/4 tsp kosher salt
pinch of fresh cracked pepper

Combine all ingredients. Let rest for one hour in fridge before serving. Depending on what fruit you are using, you might want to adjust the acidity (lemon juice) and the sweetness (honey and powdered sugar) to suit your tastes (the strawberries and grapefruit are both acidic and a little tart so I added less lemon juice and more sweetness).