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08 January 2010

Cajun Comfort Food Chases Away Winter Cold, 3 Recipes



Photo of Jumbolia from McIlhenny Comapny Tobasco sauce

From Denny: At the first sign of chilly temperatures in January, Louisiana people turn to cooking up tummy satisfying comfort food like gumbo, jambalaya and seafood or chicken stews! Comfort food is the new trend in 2010 and it's no wonder as to why: it tastes good and it's easy to make.

With the heavy French influence, Louisiana has long been a place where we preserve our culture and market it as well. One of the oldest institutions in Louisiana is the company that makes the internationally famous Tabasco brand hot pepper sauce, the McIlhenny Company from Avery Island, Louisiana, where the salt mines abound. Recently, they updated some of their old family recipes for the company's history book, “Tabasco: An Illustrated History,” written by Shane Bernard.

Many of these recipes date all the way back to 1895, originally written by Mary Avery McIlhenny Bradford. Instead of the Jambalaya spelling we see Creole Jumbolia that is a New Orleans-styled version. Oddly enough, this older recipe does not include onions, bell pepper and celery - the Holy Trinity - like we are used to in current day recipes. Creole Jumbolia is a recipe originally handwritten in 1875 by Edmund McIlhenny.

For more mouth-watering recipes, the history of the McIlhenny Company and the 141-year-old tradition of making Tabasco sauce, visit Tabasco.


Creole Jumbolia

From: Tabasco

Serves: 6 to 8

Ingredients:

2 tbls. vegetable oil
1 lb. fresh, pure pork sausage, removed from the casing
1 fryer chicken (3-1/2 to 4 lbs.), cut into serving pieces
1 tsp. salt
1-1/4 cups long-grain rice
1-1/2 cups canned diced tomatoes
2 cups beef broth
2 tsps. original Tabasco brand pepper sauce
Garlic-Flavored Oil, if desired (recipe follows)

Directions:

1. Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a large, heavy pot or Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the sausage and cook, stirring to break the meat up, until all pink has disappeared, 5 to 6 minutes. Transfer the sausage to a plate lined with paper towels to drain.

2. Season the chicken pieces with the salt. Add the remaining tablespoon of oil to the pot. Add the chicken and brown evenly on all sides. Remove the pan from the heat and carefully drain off any excess oil that has accumulated in the pot.

3. Add the sausage, rice, tomatoes, broth and Tabasco sauce. (If using the Garlic-Flavored Oil, add here.) Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to medium-low, cover the pot and simmer until the rice is tender and most of the liquid has been absorbed, about 25 minutes.

4. Remove from the heat and let stand, covered, for 10 minutes. Serve warm from the pot.


Crawfish Bisque

From: Tabasco

Serves: 8

Ingredients:

2 gallons water
1/4 cup salt
1/4 cup original Tabasco brand pepper sauce
10 lbs. live crawfish

Stuffing:

1-1/2 lbs. peeled crawfish tails
6 tbls. butter
1 cup finely chopped onions
1/2 cup finely chopped green bell peppers
1/2 cup finely chopped celery
1/4 cup finely chopped green onions
2 tsps. minced garlic
2 tbls. minced parsley
1 tsp. salt
2 tsps. original Tabasco brand pepper sauce, or to taste
1 cup plus 1/2 cup fine dried bread crumbs
1 egg, lightly beaten

Crawfish Bisque:

6 tbls. vegetable oil
6 tbls. all-purpose flour
1 cup chopped onions
1 cup chopped green bell peppers
1 tsp. minced garlic
Reserved crawfish fat
6 cups reserved stock (from boiling the peelings, etc.)
2 tbls. tomato paste
1-1/4 tsps. salt
2 tsps. original Tabasco brand pepper sauce
1 lb. peeled crawfish tails
1/4 cup chopped green onions
2 tbls. chopped fresh parsley

Directions:

1. Combine the water, salt and Tabasco sauce in a boiling pot large enough to accommodate the crawfish. When the water comes to a boil, carefully add the live crawfish. Return to a boil and cook for 3 minutes. Remove from heat, cool and strain. Cool the crawfish to room temperature.

2. Peel the tails (you should end up with 2-1/2 pounds peeled crawfish tails), remove the fat from the heads (put in a separate container), and reserve 50 to 60 of the largest heads. Set aside the peeled crawfish and the crawfish fat.

3. Clean heads by snipping off eyes and mouth section, then clean out the shells, rinsing well in cool water. Drain on paper towels and set aside.

For the stock:

Crush the remaining heads, peelings and claws, and put in a large pot with 3 quarts water. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer 30 minutes. Remove from heat and cool. Strain through fine sieve and reserve 6 cups. Set aside.

For the stuffing:

1. Finely chop the crawfish tails or pulse them two to three times in a food processor and set aside.

2. Heat butter in large sauce-pan over medium heat. Add the onions, bell peppers, celery, green onions, garlic and parsley. Cook, stirring, until vegetables are soft and lightly golden, about 5 to 6 minutes.

3. Add the chopped crawfish tails and cook, stirring, for 3 minutes. Remove from heat. Add the salt and Tabasco sauce. Add 1 cup of the bread crumbs and the egg, and stir to mix. The mixture will be thick. Set aside to cool.

4. Preheat oven to 375 degrees. When crawfish mixture has cooled, stuff each head with a heaping teaspoon (more or less depending on the size of the head) and arrange them in a shallow baking pan. Generously dust the stuffed heads with the remaining 1/2 cup bread crumbs, patting crumbs gently into the stuffing.

5. Bake the heads until the bread crumbs are lightly golden, about 20 minutes. Remove from the oven and set aside.

For the bisque:

1. Combine oil and flour in a large, heavy pot or Dutch oven over medium heat. Stirring constantly, make a roux the color of peanut butter. Add the onions, bell peppers and garlic. Cook, stirring, until vegetables are soft, about 5 minutes.

2. Add the crawfish fat, reserved stock, tomato paste, salt and Tabasco sauce and stir to blend. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer for 1 hour, stirring occasionally.

3. Add the crawfish tails, the stuffed crawfish heads, green onions and parsley. Cook for 8 minutes, stirring very gently so as not to break up the stuffed heads.

4. To serve, mound a cup of steamed or boiled white long-grain rice in a soup bowl, ladle some of the bisque over the rice, and include several heads per bowl.


Farci Crabs

From: Tabasco

Serves: 6

Ingredients:

2 slices day-old white bread, broken into small pieces
1/2 cup milk
1 egg, lightly beaten
3 cups (1 lb.) white crabmeat, picked over for shells and cartilage
1 tbl. finely chopped fresh parsley
1/2 tsp. original Tabasco brand pepper sauce
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tbl. butter
1 tbl. chopped onions
1 tbl. vegetable oil
1/4 cup fine dried breadcrumbs
6 lemon slices, for garnish

Directions:

1. Combine the bread pieces, milk and egg in a large mixing bowl; stir to mix. Add the crabmeat, parsley, Tabasco sauce and salt, and gently stir to mix.

2. Heat the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the onions and cook, stirring, until soft, about 2 minutes. Add the crabmeat mixture and cook, stirring occasionally, until the mixture thickens slightly, 3 to 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and cool for about 5 minutes.

3. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Lightly oil 6 clean crab shells, 6 small ramekins or an 8-inch square casserole. Spoon the mixture into crab shells, ramekins or an 8-inch square casserole. Sprinkle the mixture with the bread crumbs and bake until the crabmeat is bubbly and the bread crumbs are golden, about 20 minutes. Garnish with the lemon slices and serve warm.


*** THANKS for visiting! You are welcome to return again and again to fill up on good food! :)

06 January 2010

4 of 10 Top Quotes of 2009

*** Thought you might enjoy a teaser of Cheeky Quote Day! This is an excerpt from the full post over at The Social Poets:

Political Cats!From Denny: Some of the cheekiest - most irreverent or most odd - quotes were uttered in the year of 2009 in America. There are times when I wonder if there are regions of the country with lead in the water, sounding as bizarre as ancient Rome did right before they destroyed their empire. The ancient Romans poisoned themselves with lead in their wine, unknowingly, that also sterilized them, dropping the population of the ruling aristocracy. Their increasing bizarre behavior is well documented historically and, of course, Hollywood celebrated it with many a movie. After all, villains are great story grist! :)

I knew there was a verbal bridge somewhere in here... more like a teetering wood suspension bridge in the Amazon... 2009 has been a very bizarre year for quotes from politicians in particular and a few celebrities too. Notice that Tiger Woods is noticeably silent. Maybe he's saving his quotes for 2010. Stay tuned...

1. "Do ya think?" he's: Holding Back

"He deserves my silence."

George W. Bush, former President, refusing to criticize President Barack Obama during a speech in March, his first address since leaving office. Yet the Republicans didn't waste any time later in the year, propelling Bush out in front to take the fire for complaining about Obama's job performance and handling of terrorism issues.

Hmmmm... yes, Obama still deserves his silence. The man was a hack in the Presidency so what real advice could he offer? The majority of the time he never watched nor read the news, depending upon filtered information from jealous coveting-the-power aides like Rove.



Photo by Ross D. Franklin/Getty

2. Obama's Persistent Peanut Gallery (OPPG) throwing rotten tomatoes:

"The America I know and love is not one in which my parents or my baby with Down syndrome will have to stand in front of Obama's 'death panel' so his bureaucrats can decide, based on a subjective judgment of their 'level of productivity in society,' whether they are worthy of health care."

Sarah Palin, former Alaska governor, rambling all over the place on her Facebook page, whiner lying about a provision of the proposed health care bill that called for Medicare to reimburse doctors for counseling patients on end-of-life-care issues such as living wills and hospice availability. Somehow, she had reading comprehension problems and started screaming death panels are in the bill when clearly they are not.



3. Perilously Close on the Heels of Republican Retreads

"I'm happy to get good ideas from across the political spectrum, from Democrats and Republicans. What I won't do is return to the failed theories of the last eight years that got us into this fix in the first place, because those theories have been tested, and they have failed. And that's what part of the election in November was all about."

President Obama, during his first official press conference, on 9 Feb 2009. What's annoying is when you follow such a disastrous act like Bush and Cheney who basically broke several world governments, is that you are forced to continue some of the same policies until you can stabilize a region, beginning new policies to repair all the damage.

So it goes in American politics for decades: Republicans like to blow up the world and Democrats come in behind them to clean up their mess. Then the public gets angry it takes too long to clean up the mess and choose Republicans again, thinking the economy will pick up. There is a real disconnect of the American voter with an understanding of just how long it takes to repair a mess and then gin up the economy.



4. The Commies Are Coming! The Commies Are Coming! Stay safe; hide under your school desk when the nukes hit. (Now there's a plan.)

"I don't want this country turning into Russia, turning into a socialized country. My question for you is, What are you going to do to restore this country back to what our founders created according to the Constitution?"

Katy Abram, a Pennsylvania mother, speaking at a health care town hall moderated by Senator Arlen Specter in August in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. If this woman knew what she was talking about, understood economics, international diplomacy and common sense, and actually cared if women got equal pay for the same job, well, she would never have voted Republican in the first place. These guys are the ones who sent our country careening out of control financially for decades starting with President Reagan and his paranoid Star Wars concept.

*** For the full post and quotes 5 - 10: including Michael Jackson, Hillary Clinton, Berlusconi, David Letterman and con man Madoff, visit The Social Poets, go here.

*** THANKS for visiting!

04 January 2010

5 Recipes: Lemon Chicken, Portobello Fries and Sides

From Denny: Chef Ed Brown rustled up a more interesting menu to start off the New Year. OK, so he hooked me with the easy and simple lemon chicken as we love anything lemon at our house. And those Portobello fries look awesome! What can I say? I'm a big fan of brain food - my fav mushroom! :)



Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy




Lemon chicken

From: Chef Ed Brown

Serves: 4

INGREDIENTS

• 2 pounds boneless chicken breasts, cut into thin cutlets (approx. 1/2 inch thick)
• 1/2 cup flour
• 1 teaspoon kosher salt
• 1 teaspoon fresh black pepper, ground
• 1/2 stick butter
• 1/4 cup lemon juice
• 1/4 cup white wine
• 1/2 cup chicken broth, or vegetable broth or water
• 16 each paper-thin lemon slices with the skin
• 1/2 bunch flat-leaf parsley, picked, washed, dried, roughly chopped

DIRECTIONS

• Combine flour, salt and pepper and place in baking dish.

• In a large nonreactive skillet, melt 1/2 the butter over medium fire.

• Dust the chicken cutlets in the seasoned flour, shake off excess.

• Place chicken into the melted butter and reduce flame a little so it cooks slowly with NO color, turn after 2 minutes.

• Add lemon juice and wine, simmer 3 minutes.

• Remove chicken to serving platter, add stock to pan and increase heat to high, when boiling add remaining butter and simmer until reduced to half; cook 3-4 minutes.

• Place lemon slices and parsley over chicken.

• Pour sauce over the chicken.


Roasted carrots

From: Chef Ed Brown

Serves: 4

INGREDIENTS

• 2 bunches medium, fresh carrots with tops, washed, trimmed not peeled
• 1/2 cup good olive oil
• Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

DIRECTIONS

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.

Place carrots on baking sheet, coat with oil and season. Place in oven and roast until tender, approximately 25 minutes.


Smashed potatoes with olive oil and parsley

From: Chef Ed Brown

Serves: 4

INGREDIENTS

• 8 each medium Yukon Gold or red bliss potatoes
• 3 quarts water
• 2 tablespoons kosher salt
• 2 bay leaves
• 3 cloves garlic, peeled
• 1/4 cup best quality extra-virgin olive oil
• 1/2 bunch flat-leaf parsley, picked, washed, dried, roughly chopped
• Fleur de sel or kosher salt, freshly ground black pepper

DIRECTIONS

• Bring potatoes, water, salt, bay leaves and garlic to a boil in a large pot.

• When fork-tender, approximately 18 minutes, drain water, discard garlic and bay leaves, return potatoes to pot.

• Add oil, salt and pepper, then use either a potato masher or a large fork and roughly smash mixture. Add parsley, check seasoning.


Portobello fries with soy dipping sauce

From: Chef Ed Brown

Serves: 4

INGREDIENTS

Portobello fries

• 8 each portobello mushrooms
• 2 cups all-purpose flour
• 2 cups club soda
• 2 large eggs
• 1 teaspoon kosher salt
• 5 cups canola oil
• Sea salt

Soy dipping sauce

• 1/2 teaspoon soy sauce
• 1 1/2 tablespoons ketjap manis sauce
• 1/2 teaspoon Thai fish sauce
• 3 tablespoons mirin
• 1 teaspoon rice wine vinegar
• 1 slice fresh ginger, smashed

DIRECTIONS

Method for portobello fries

Remove the stems and the gills from the bottom of the portobello mushrooms. Cut the mushrooms like steak fries. Lightly dust the mushrooms with 2 tablespoons of flour. Mix the flour, club soda, eggs and kosher salt to form a batter. Dip the portobello fries in the tempura batter. Blanch the fries in the canola oil at 325 degrees F. Drain on a dry towel and let cool.

Heat the oil to 375 degrees. Cook the blanched fries in the hot oil until they are golden brown and crispy. Drain on a dry towel. Season with the sea salt.

Method for soy dipping sauce

Mix the soy sauce, ketjap manis, Thai fish sauce, mirin and rice wine vinegar. Add the ginger. Marinate overnight. Strain through a fine chinois or other small mesh strainer.


Endive, watercress and pomegranate

From: Chef Ed Brown

Serves: 4

INGREDIENTS

• 3 endive, split, cored, cut lengthwise in 1-inch segments
• 1 bunch fresh watercress, washed, dried, remove large stems
• 1 fresh pomegranate, remove seeds only, discard rest
• 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
• 2 teaspoons sherry vinegar
• Kosher salt and fresh black pepper to taste

DIRECTIONS

In a salad bowl, combine all ingredients, season, toss, serve.

*** ALSO: Tummy Warming Desserts for The New Year

*** THANKS for visiting and feel free to use these free graphics for your site or blog - and stay warm this winter!
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