Thursday, May 31, 2012

Food Summer 2012, Part I

So far I've tried three new recipes; last night it was a chicken and eggplant casserole which I found on the internet.  It was pretty much either a chicken parm or an eggplant parm.  Depending on what side of the meal you were looking at. 


I didn't have mozzarella cheese to top it with so I sliced up some Fontina; I think the substitution worked out well. I served the dish with spaghetti but I didn't realize how much of the sauce the eggplant would absorb.  The unfortunate result was there was not quite enough sauce to coat the noodles as I would have liked.  The dish refrigerates well and the flavors were, understandably, even more melded this morning.  I'd say this one is a keeper.

Tonight I made two new recipes. The first is a creamy oriental salad dressing that I got from the culinary teacher at Farrington.  This one has all the elements I like in a dressing; it's creamy but the vinegar prevents it from being too rich.  There's a touch of shoyu and a touch of sesame.  Yum.  We ate it over a combination of mushrooms, romaine and green lettuce.


The one setback is the dressing is very thick--it's hard to trickle a small amount onto your individual serving; it works better if the whole thing is just tossed together.

The second recipe is from a magazine.  It was a first-place winner in some cooking contest and the winner claims it's a recipe her mother got from Hawaii.  Naturally it contains pineapple.  And coconut.  Basically, it's oven-roasted Cornish hens basted with butter then basted with a mixture of the pineapple juice and steak sauce. With all the basting I did, I would expect the Cornish hens to be spectacular.  It wasn't.  Good but not incredibly outstanding.  


The pineapple coconut stuffing, on the other hand, was very good--crushed pineapple mixed with shredded coconut, melted butter and chopped onions then tossed with bread crumbs and salt and pepper.  I used some of the mixture in the hens before I tied them shut.  The majority went into a baking dish and was heated after the hens came out of the oven.  The top got a bit crusty and the rest was moist and fruity.  I don't normally like sweet stuffings but I did like this one.


Three recipes down.  Many more to go!



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