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Share your signature recipes.

BNGL,
Mr. Piggy asked for "Signature" Recipes.
My "John Hancock" calls for something special, but that doesn't necessarily mean
hard to prepare.
Here's some additional ideas/info (I started to edit previous post, but took too long, so was locked out. If any is dup, I apologize.)
---

My Stroganoff mentioned earlier --

This is a decent cut of beef - larger quantities call for Sirloin Tip Roast or Bottom Round Roast, cut up and cooked accordingly. Add enough sliced sauteed onions, baby bellas sauteed w/ butter and worchestire sauce, some Cream Sherry, Sour Cream, Garlic, Black Pepper. Serve over wide egg noodles or rice -- Mmmmm Mmmm good.
---

I've also taken the time to prepare Jambalaya - Rice, Tomatoes, Peppers, Onions, Chicken, Pork, Shrimp, Andouille Sausage, Ham, Garlic for a Cub Scout Campout, believe it or not. Takes some time to do all the cutting and prep, but the "work" itself isn't that hard - just time consuming. Mainly, because, even if you limit your meats to 1 Lb of each, you wind up with a LOT of food! lol But Oh So Good, I bet I'd make Justin Wilson Proud, yesiree, how y'all are?! Cook the rice using either Beef or Chicken stock to make it that much richer. Watch the salt - you don't need a lot, the ham, sausage, maybe the broth will add plenty.
The tomatoes add acid that replaces need, plus the granulated and /or fresh sauteed garlic.

--

Our Ratatouille/Fast Sauce is similarly easy, if time consuming, depending on size of pot you make.
Lots of fresh tomatoes, cut up green/sweet red/yellow/orange peppers, Onions with bite, garlic, basil, black pepper, some olive oil. All cut up and cooked up till thickened. Served over pasta with shredded parmesan/romano cheese. Hard to beat. Meatless, too. We like big chunks instead of tiny diced - meatier, you know what you're eating. It all melts into the sauce eventually, too.

---
Another great Crock pot meal is either doing a variation on the foil wrapped sliced baked potatoes w/ onions, butter on the grill -- do the same thin in a crock pot. A little flour on the bottom, a row of sliced potatoes - washed but not peeled, a row of bermuda onions sliced, some butter pats, a little salt and ground pepper, keep layering.

Want to make it extra special, add a layer of sliced ham and some granulated garlic to the sequencing, plus a little milk - and turn the whole dish into scalloped ham and potatoes to die for.

NOW, in Piggy's case, that might be a bit close to cannibalism, I grant you, so, maybe just the potatoes.

Less expensive w/out the meat, still flavourful.

---

And there you have the outlines of several hot dishes - since this is a luncheon - do you know if there will be enough "heartier fare" to fill the tummies? Plus muffins or cakes for desserts - unless there's a birthday cake to fit that bill.

Speaking of desserts --- another easy but special dessert -- Ice cream pie - customized to your specs.

Graham cracker pie crust.
Fill alternating w/ your choice of ice cream flavours -
e.g. Coffee, French Vanilla, Chocolate Drizzle with chocolate syrup, maybe butterscotch, cover, freeze.

I think I've done my best for Mr. Piggy, and anyone else looking for a group treat. The baked goods really don't take any more time than a box mix.

The heartier fare isn't that difficult to prepare, and the time required to make if a function of HOW MUCH you make.

Budget is a concern. You don't want to bust it, or be inordinately above everyone else in the expense category. If your mentor is someone you truly appreciate, and want to show your thanks to, then spending a little time preparing something special/different is a nice way to do it.
:wave:
 
Yeshua,
Mac 'n Cheese is a good suggestion - and it's easy to make a big batch from scratch, too.

Boil up some macaroni - elbows are cheaper, rotini is funkier, makes it look more home made.

Boil the pasta al dente - a couple minutes shy of full time so it has bite.

Take some velveeta, add some milk, zap to melt, mix with the hot, cooked, drained pasta, voila'.

Add a little grated sharp cheddar for homemade touch, maybe put in a baking dish and bake to get a toasty crust for that effect.

Otherwise, just put in crock pot on low to warm up for serving.

My kids like adding zapped frozen broccoli cuts to theirs - they like "trees" in cheese.
 
I wanted you to have lots to choose from.
Don't let me intimidate you with any of them.
 
Here are snippets I posted in another thread. I looked for the Crock Pot one, but It appears to have disappeared on me.

Beets - ah, my beloved beets - you have to learn to love beets.

Fresh beets, cooked and peeled, so sweet. Harvard Beets as a kid - like candy.

Then, there's our traditional Easter dish -
Pickled eggs and beets --
a dozen hard boiled eggs,
2 15oz cans of whole beets, reserving the juice.
Sliced Bermuda Onions,
whole cloves.

Pour the beet juice in a 3qt sauce pan,
add 1 cup of white vinegar,
and 1cup of white sugar - heat until the sugar is all dissolved.

Pour over the shelled hardboiled eggs and the whole beets, onions, cloves.

Let set for a few days -- the pickling permeates the eggs - when you cut open you have deep purple on the outside, lightening to white, then the sunshine yellow centers - add a little fresh black pepper and enjoy. And the beets are like candy, too.
---

Cauliflower - try steaming, then putting in the oven, sprinkling parmesan cheese and bread crumbs over, bake @ 350F for around 10 minutes - delicious.
---

Butternut Squash/Apple bake - alternate pieces of squash and a good baking apple, possibly some onion, plus some brown sugar, honey, or maple syrup and a little bit o' butter in a baking dish - 350F for about an hour. Sweetens the squash up. Cinnamon and Nutmeg! You can also add walnuts or pecans for added intrique.
 
57312_Pg06_cmyk-07.jpg

okay - so you're trying to kill a horse, rite?
Cuz there's enuff sodium in that box of chemicals to do just that !
 
We seriously need a recipies FORUM !!
Then we can "critique" all the Food Network Chefs and cooks at the same time !! VPL's welcome... Who's on Top (Fun and games section) - yup that will work -- done !!

Remember David Lieberman (left) (with Alton Brown)
 

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Am I the only person who'd like to kick Alton Brown until he's dead?

I swear, he's more annoying than Beaker from The Muppet Show.
I used to think that, but then I saw him on his motorcycle without the lab coat and glasses thing, and actually I decided that he's pretty hot, in his own unique way....
 
Open can of whatever, dumb in bowl, heat in microwave, eat.
 
Am I the only person who'd like to kick Alton Brown until he's dead?

I swear, he's more annoying than Beaker from The Muppet Show.


Oh, I hate that bitch! On his "good eats" show he was always using weird gadgets and a lot of his techniques were too elaborate and not really that great.

But out of the food network chefs, I think I would have to go with Guy Fieri to beat to death.


I loved Beaker, though! And Bunsen. I never cared for Miss Piggy.
 
Gooey Fudge Brownies:

Half a stick of butter
Half of a good quality dark chocolate bar (I use Valrohna 70%; Do not use crap like Hershey's), about 4oz.
2/3 cup of good quality cocoa powder (Do not use crap like Hershey's or Nestle)
1.5 cups sugar
3 large egg whites
1 whole egg
1 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/8 teaspoon salt

Melt butter, chocolate, and cocoa powder in a 2 quart pot on low heat. You don't have to use a double boiler, but make sure you stir continuously and gently when the butter starts melting so it's smooth and doesn't burn.

Add the sugar and stir to coat each individual granule for about 1 minute. The sugar won't disolve and the heat shouldn't melt it. It will form a thick ball. Remove from heat and let it cool, about 5-10 minutes.

In the meantime, sift the flour, baking powder, and salt quickly through a strainer into a bowl to make sure there's no dense lumps of flour.

Also separate the eggs and lightly beat them.

When the chocolate/sugar mixture is still slightly warm, add the eggs to the pot and gently mix. You don't want to work it too much.

Then slowly add the flour mixture 1/3 cup at a time and gently fold in with a spatula, just to moisten the flour. You don't want to stir or fold much more than 4-5 strokes each time you add flour.

Pour into a 9-inch square pan and bake at 325F for 20-30 minutes. Stick a toothpick into the middle to test if the batter is still raw at 20 minutes.
 
You can make a batch of those brownies I posted and make a nice flan with the separated egg yolks.

Flan:
Caramel:
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup water

Custard:
1 cup sugar
2 cups heavy cream
1 cinnamon stick (or 1/8th cinnamon powder)
1 vanilla bean (you can just add vanilla extract if you want)
3 egg yolks
2 whole eggs
1 pinch of salt

Preheat the oven to 325F and put a big roasting pan in there. Boil 1-2 quarts water and pour it into the roasting pan to about half an inch in depth.

Put the cream into a pot with the cinnamon and vanilla bean and bring to a boil an then simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and allow to steep for 20-30 minutes.

In the meantime, put 1 cup sugar into an even layer in an 8-inch skillet or a 1 quart pot. Add the water and allow all the sugar to get wet. Put it on a burner at medium-high heat and wait for the sugar to start to melt, 5-10 minutes. Swirl the pan around to mix, but don't use a spoon. Once it starts turning brown, it can quickly burn to black. You want to be quick and remove the pan from the burner when it gets to a deep amber color and immediately transfer it to a flan mold or an 8-inch cake pan.

Mix 1/2 cup sugar with the eggs and a tiny pinch of salt. Mix it very well until the mixture is thick and pale yellow.

Remove the vanilla bean from the cream and slowly a cup to the sugar/egg mixture while mixing. The cream will probably still be hot, but if you add it nice and slow, the eggs won't cook. Then add the rest of the cream and stirr well.

Pour the mixture through a strainer and a couple times, but clean out the gunk each time.

Pour the mixture into the cake pan and put it into the hot water bath/roasting pan in the oven. Add more water to the roasting pan intil it goes about 3/4 of the way up the side walls of the cake pan. Don'te get any water into the cake pan

Bake for 30 minutes. Carefully remove both the flan and the water bath from the oven and let cool to room temperature while still in the waterbath. Refridgerate overnight so that it sets.

You can do this a couple days ahead. It's always better after a few days in the fridge anyway.
 
We seriously need a recipies FORUM !!
Then we can "critique" all the Food Network Chefs and cooks at the same time !! VPL's welcome... Who's on Top (Fun and games section) - yup that will work -- done !!

Remember David Lieberman (left) (with Alton Brown)

Alton is fun to watch and I miss Dave Lieberman...and not just for his cooking

Black beans are better. :p No canned tomato sauce/paste? :(

aha...well...I'm part Native American on my mom's side.
Sure, you could. I just think it makes a nice sauce all on its own in the slow cooker but I have a friend who adds V8 vegetable juice to his chili.

I add some hot sauce in the bowl before I eat it.
 
Here's my Quiche recipe... I like to do it for brunch and Christmas morning:

1 9" pie crust (I use Pillsbury - bring to room temp before unrolling so it doesn't tear)
1 and 1/2 cups Half and Half
4 eggs
1/8 teaspoon salt
Pepper to taste
2 cups shreadded cheese (I use both cheddar and swiss)
2 tablespoons flour
8 strips crispy bacon
I cup broccoli flourets

Preheat oven to 350...
*Combine Half and Half, eggs, seasonings in a mixing bowl
*Toss cheese with flour and sprinkle into the unbaked pastry shell
*Top with broccoli that has been cooked or microed
*Crumble bacon and add that to the mix
*Pour liquid ingredients in
*Bake at 350 for 40-50 minutes, test for doneness by inserting a knife or toothpick, top should be golden brown
*Let rest 5 minutes or so before serving

Everyone will love it and think you're a master chef!! :-)
 
Black Bean Chili!

Ingredients

* 2 pounds ground beef
* 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil, 1 turn of the pan
* Salt and pepper
* 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce, eyeball it
* 1 medium onion, finely chopped
* 4 to 6 cloves garlic, finely chopped
* 1 red bell pepper, finely chopped
* 1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and chopped
* 3 tablespoons dark chili powder, 2 palm fulls
* 1 tablespoon cumin, 1/2 palm full
* 1 cup beef stock or broth, 1/2 a 14-ounce can or paper container
* 1 (14 1/2 ounce) can diced tomatoes
* 1 (8-ounce) can tomato sauce or tomato puree
* 2 (15-ounce) cans black beans, drained
* 2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro, a handful, optional
* 2 (8 1/2-ounce) packages, corn muffin mix
* 1 cup milk
* 2 eggs, beaten
* 2 tablespoons vegetable or corn oil
* 3 scallions, thinly sliced
* Butter, for greasing griddle pan

Directions

In a large deep skillet or pot, brown ground beef in oil over high heat. Season meat with salt and pepper, then add Worcestershire sauce. Reduce heat to medium high when the meat is browned and crumbled, then add onion, garlic, red peppers, jalapeno. Season veggies and meat with chili powder and cumin. Cook veggies and meat together 5 minutes. Stir in broth and scrape up pan drippings. Stir in diced and pureed tomatoes and black beans. When the mixture comes to a bubble, reduce heat to simmer and stir in cilantro, optional.

Mix together 2 packages of corn muffin mix with 1 cup milk, 2 beaten eggs, 2 tablespoons vegetable oil and sliced scallions. Batter should be thick. Heat a nonstick skillet or griddle pan over moderate heat. Nest a pat of butter into folded paper towel and wipe hot pan surface with it to lightly grease. Pour corn cake batter into the hot griddle pan or skillet in 3 or 4-inch rounds. Cook 2 or 3 minutes on each side, until golden. Transfer to a plate and repeat with remaining batter.

To serve, top bowls of beef and black bean chili with green onion corn cake toppers. Eat the chili and corn toppers as you would a pot pie, grabbing some of the corn cake with each spoonful of chili.
 
My Mentor's birthday is on November 30. For birthdays, everyone in my department (10-15 people) brings a signature dish for a luncheon.

I'm always get assigned with bring napkins, silverware, and cups. My female coworkers assume I can't cook. I want to surprised them by bring something I cooked. ;)

Share your signature recipes. (Desserts, too)

Sutprise them with something completely different and delicious. Bobotie is a very traditional South African dish http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobotie

It is easy an there are many variations, but try the following:

1 kg ground/minced beef
1 slice of bread
25 cl milk
2 table spoons olive oil
3 eggs
1/2 cup golden raisins
1/2 cup flaked almonds
2 teaspoons apricot jam
1 large finely chopped onion
2 teaspoons garlic paste
1/2 lemon juice
salt


Spices:
2 table spoons massala
1 teaspoon turmeric
1 teaspoon nutmeg
2 teaspoons ground cumin
2 teaspoons ground coriander seed
½ teaspoon cloves
1/2 teaspoon pepper



Put the bread in half of the milk, remove it and keep it aside.
Peel and finely chop the onion.
Mix together the meat, the bread, the onion, the raisins, almonds, apricot jam, lemon juice, the olive oil and the spices.
Mix frequently.
Place this mixture in a non sticky pan for about 10 minutes on moderate heat.
Then place it in an oven dish.
Whisk together eggs and the rest of milk. Pour over bobotie.
Bake at 200°C (thermostat 5) for 50 minutes.
Cut it into squares or wedges and serve with rice and chutney.


Serve with long grain rice cooked with turmeric and raisins (yellow rice).
 
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