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Other Topics => Off Topic Discussion => Topic started by: hellbilly on February 02, 2010, 12:56:39 PM

Title: What's cooking?
Post by: hellbilly on February 02, 2010, 12:56:39 PM
Share some of your favorite recipes here  :smile:

Today I made me Pizza dough with dip. Ingredients:

14 ounces Refrigerated Pizza Crust
2 spoons melted butter
Italian seasoning
Dip: Tomato Chili Cocktail sauce
Green salad

I made 10 equally sized pieces from the dough and rolled them into sticks. Placed them on a slightly greased baking pan and brushed the sticks with melted butter (makes them crispy and flaky). Added some Italian seasoning and put them in the oven for about 17 minutes (420F). Viola! Dinner was delicious  :thumbup:
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: SPazzo on February 02, 2010, 04:10:45 PM
That sounds really good hellbilly. :thumbup:

My favourite is a cheese Quesadilla.

Take two soft tortillas and butter each one side on each.  Put some sunflower or canola oil in a pan and heat it.  Place one of the tortillas butter side down in the pan.  Layer well with cheese.  put some cayenne pepper, chili powder, garlic powder, and cumin on the cheese.  Place the other tortilla butter side up onto the cheese.

Once the cheese is melted flip the quesadilla and cook until both sides are golden brown.  Then cut into fourths and eat. :teddyr:
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: hellbilly on February 03, 2010, 12:31:49 AM
I love Quesadillas, haven't made any in ages. I used to add pickled red peppers to mine. I think I got the idea for that from one of Robert Rodriguez' cooking vids.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: RCMerchant on February 03, 2010, 06:57:20 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4GdjmCXjUrg
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Javakoala on February 04, 2010, 06:12:08 PM
For a moderately healthy meal:

one whole wheat pita
refried beans (fat-free mixed with just a little butter makes it tasty and spreadable)
meat of your choice (I like lean ground beef or lean sausage for this)
your choice of veggies (I use onions and jalapenos)
thick salsa of your choice
shredded cheese of your choice
some lime juice

Preheat your oven to 325 or 350, depending on your oven's real temps. You're looking for something between 300 and 340.

Brown the meat and season with chili seasonings or Mexican style seasonings
Soften your onions (cut into good-sized but edible chunks) with the meat
Sprinkle the meat and onions with a little lime juice (ideally, you do this while it is cooking and not at the end)

lightly spray your pita with olive oil or canola spray (or very lightly brush some on)
mix your refried beans with your salsa until it is a slightly thick paste that will slowly ooze off your spoon
spread the beans on the pita like pizza sauce but not too thick

add your meat and onions as you choose but the thicker the layer, the less heat that gets through
Lightly put your veggies on (same theory as the meat)
rather lightly sprinkle the cheese on the top (you want enough to hold the stuff together and that's all)

put it on a pizza pan and bake for about 12 to 18 minutes
cut into quarters and enjoy

Using pitas, if you have a cookie sheet, you can actually cook two at one time, but you should rotate the sheet halfway through and allow up to 20 minutes


Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Leah on February 04, 2010, 10:31:35 PM
mix a waffle with an omelet:
get 4 eggs
milk
flour
broccoli
roast beef
red beans
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: hellbilly on February 06, 2010, 12:40:49 PM
My pizza obsession this week came to full circle today: I made my very own Cheddar Bacon pizza, a re-creation from our local pizza joint. It was delicious. Ingredients:

Ready made thin pizza crust
Tomato Basil sauce
Smoked Bacon
Walnuts
Fresh Sage
Sharp Cheddar
White Cheddar

1. Add a thin layer of the Tomato Basil sauce on the crust. 2. Add lots of shredded Sharp Cheddar. 3. Add 8-9 strips of fried, drained and slightly crumbled smoked bacon. 4. Add one cup chopped and roasted walnuts. 5. Add a good amount of freshly chopped Sage leaves. 6. Add a thin layer of white cheddar. Bake for 20 minutes.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Javakoala on February 17, 2010, 07:23:59 PM
I just had Pepper-Palooza  for dinner. What is that?

3 Anaheim peppers sliced in half and scooped clean
3 jalapeno peppers sliced in half and scooped clean

Then I filled them with different combinations of refried beans, cheese, real bacon bits and leftover bits of cooked ground beef. Baked them at 350 for about 16 minutes (though they could have gone 20, I think).

Wonderful stuff, but even with the membranes and seeds scraped out, I think I'm gonna be awakened by my colon at 2 or 3 in the morning. But, on the upside, I'll have the emptiest bowels in the state. I just hope I can make it to work.

I think I'm gonna die when my pepper rack and pepper corer shows up.

Is it hot as hell in here, or it is just me?
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Leah on February 18, 2010, 08:23:11 PM
Jambalaya Pasta Served COLD! :buggedout: tasty though  :teddyr:
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Sleepyskull on March 02, 2010, 05:19:25 PM
Quote from: Javakoala on February 04, 2010, 06:12:08 PM
For a moderately healthy meal:

one whole wheat pita
refried beans (fat-free mixed with just a little butter makes it tasty and spreadable)
meat of your choice (I like lean ground beef or lean sausage for this)
your choice of veggies (I use onions and jalapenos)
thick salsa of your choice
shredded cheese of your choice
some lime juice

Preheat your oven to 325 or 350, depending on your oven's real temps. You're looking for something between 300 and 340.

Brown the meat and season with chili seasonings or Mexican style seasonings
Soften your onions (cut into good-sized but edible chunks) with the meat
Sprinkle the meat and onions with a little lime juice (ideally, you do this while it is cooking and not at the end)

lightly spray your pita with olive oil or canola spray (or very lightly brush some on)
mix your refried beans with your salsa until it is a slightly thick paste that will slowly ooze off your spoon
spread the beans on the pita like pizza sauce but not too thick

add your meat and onions as you choose but the thicker the layer, the less heat that gets through
Lightly put your veggies on (same theory as the meat)
rather lightly sprinkle the cheese on the top (you want enough to hold the stuff together and that's all)

put it on a pizza pan and bake for about 12 to 18 minutes
cut into quarters and enjoy

Using pitas, if you have a cookie sheet, you can actually cook two at one time, but you should rotate the sheet halfway through and allow up to 20 minutes





I tried this and it was EXCELLENT!!! Great idea! 

I did not have salsa (I ate it all with chips) and I used vegetable oil but it was incredible.

As for veggies I used jalapenos, green bell peppers, and red bell peppers.

Cheese: Mozzarella and Provolone.


I could not find a whole-wheat pita in the grocery store so I used white.

:teddyr:  :thumbup:
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Javakoala on March 02, 2010, 05:27:09 PM
Still, not a bad way to make a quick pizza. And if you are really hungry, two of them aren't all THAT much food. Right?

Okay, I'm a pig.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: claws on April 01, 2010, 09:01:19 AM
To my understanding Ajvar (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajvar) isn't easy to find in the U.S.. It is available at amazon (http://www.amazon.com/Podravka-Mild-Ajvar-690-gram/dp/B000LRH9FQ/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=grocery&qid=1270130365&sr=8-1) though but the price including shipping can be hefty. If you should ever find this delicious stuff at a store or elsewhere, try this recipe I did today. It was heavenly:

Creamy Ajvar Soup
(4 Persons)

13.50 oz Broth (your choice)
10.50 oz Ground Beef
7 oz Ajvar (Mild or Hot)
7 oz heavy cream
5.30 oz soft cheese (Philadelphia)
5.30 oz crumbled or diced Feta
2 Tbs Oil
1 Onion, finely chopped
Tabasco
chives
salt, pepper

Heat oil and cook onions until tender. Add ground beef and cook until crumbly and done. Add salt and pepper for taste. Now add the Ajvar, cream, broth und soft cheese and stir until it boils. Reduce heat and let it simmer for five minutes. Add more salt and pepper for taste, and Tabasco to your liking. Transfer the soup into four bowls and add cubed or crumbled feta and chives snipped with scissors. Bon Appetit.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Jack on April 01, 2010, 12:40:41 PM
Rachel Ray's Thick Cut O Rings and Spicy Dipping Sauce

Ingredients

•Vegetable or canola oil for frying
•2 large sweet Vidalia onions
•2 cans evaporated milk, 5 ounces
•1 cup all purpose flour
•1/2 teaspoon dried mustard
•1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
•1 teaspoon sweet paprika, 1/3 palm full
•Coarse salt

Dipping sauce:

•1 cup reduced fat sour cream, eyeball the amount
•1/4 cup chili sauce, eyeball the amount
•1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
•1/2 teaspoon ground cumin

Directions

Heat 1 inch of vegetable or canola oil in a large frying pan over medium high heat.

Cut onions across into 1-inch rings and separate. Discard the outer layer of skin on your rings. Pour evaporated milk into a small, deep bowl. Mix flour with seasonings in a pie plate or shallow dish. Dip individual rings in milk, then coat in flour. And repeat for a double dip. Fry in a single layer in hot oil until golden brown. Remove to brown paper bag or paper towel lined surface to drain. Salt while hot, to your taste.

For dipping sauce, combine all ingredients in a bowl and stir.

Tip: refrigerate your onions and canned evaporated milk when you unpack from the grocery store. The colder the better for making onion rings!
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Dennis on April 03, 2010, 11:04:42 AM
This is one of our favorite meals, New York steak, twice baked potatoes, and steamed asparagus.
Starting with the simplest item:
Steamed asparagus - rinse the asparagus, then put the spears in a steamer basket, put a 1/2" or so of water in a pot, about 10 minutes before it's time to eat bring the water to a boil, put the asparagus in the pot, cover and steam for 4 to 5 minutes, remove the steamer basket from the pot, drain and serve. The asparagus will be warm, cooked, crisp and very tasty.
New York steak - this should be thick cut, and well marbled, pierce both sides with a fork, apply a dry rub on both sides (I use Grillmasters Montreal Steak Rub) brush both sides lightly with extra virgin olive oil, broil for 3 - 3 1/2 minutes per side for medium rare, longer for medium to well done, a little shorter for rare.
Twice baked potatoes - bake potatoes till they are soft, remove from oven, let them cool off a bit, slice about 1/4 to 1/3 off the top lengthwise, use a spoon to remove the potato from the skin, be careful to save the bootom part of the skin for later use. Put the potato in a mixing bowl, add 2 cloves of minced garlic, grated extra sharp cheddar cheese, pepperjack cheese, 2 chopped green onions, butter and sour cream (basically making thick mashed potatoes), spoon this back into the potato skins, cover with cheddar and pepperjack cheese, broil till the cheese is golden brown.

This makes a great meal for 2 people, me and the wife now that the kids, best described as a pair of stomachs that walk like human beings, have moved out, could start to be expensive, I only make this maybe once or twice a month. 
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Javakoala on April 03, 2010, 05:37:52 PM
I have a passion for pizza like things and have a variation on my previous pizza recipe.

Use Joseph's Flax, Bran, Whole Wheat Pitas. Not advertising for them, but the pitas are quite thin, which enables you to do this:

Take one and cover it with the sauce of choice. I've been using tomato sauce with added seasonings, but hummus or refried beans could be used.

Go light on your choice of toppings. I've used roast beef, ground beef and just plain jalapenos, and various combinations of those.

Lightly cover with the cheese of your choice.

Slide it into a no-stick skillet. I use a 12-inch skillet but 10 will work.

Cover skillet. I bought a skillet with a cover JUST for this type of thing. Yes, I'm weird.

Turn your burner up to half of medium. You want a low persistent heat.

Let it cook for about 10 minutes. You'll know it's pretty much done when the cheese is melted. Cook a little longer if you used cold items on the pizza, other than the cheese.

Slide it onto a cutting board and use either a pizza cutter or a large chef's knife to cut it into quarters.

Enjoy!

It is fast, mostly mess free, tasty as hell and pretty darned healthy, depending on the type of toppings you use. The key here is THIN pitas that are whole grain, with lots of fiber and little carbs. It will take at least two to fill up a fairly hungry person, but one is just enough to blunt the edge of your hunger so you can keep going.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Vik on April 04, 2010, 02:09:00 PM
Just made a delicious pizza if I say so myself  :smile:
Contains:
-Tomato sauce
-Chorizo sausage
-Pepper
-Crushed chilli
-Paprikas
-Pesto
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: claws on April 06, 2010, 09:41:08 AM
Just made me Pizza-Ramen. You'll need:

pepperoni (I used hormel turkey pepperoni sliced, 6 oz)
1 lb ground beef
2 packages (3 oz each) beef-flavor ramen noodle soup mix
1 can (14.5 oz) diced tomatoes with basil, garlic and oregano, undrained
1 can black olives sliced (2.25 oz, drained)
1 cup water
1 cup shredded mozzarella or cheddar (4 oz)

Cook beef and pepperoni over medium heat in skillet for about 10 minutes, until beef is brown. Drain liquids. Stir tomatoes, water, olives and seasoning packets into beef mixture. Heat to boiling. Add noodles broken into small blocks. Cook about 5 minutes, stirring occasionally, until noodles are tender. Add cheese on noodle mixture, turn off heat, cover and let stand about 5 minutes or until cheese is melted. Easily feeds 3-4 people.


Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Vik on April 06, 2010, 11:03:58 AM
I made me some spicy eggs  :thumbup:
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: claws on April 22, 2010, 03:17:38 PM
Crunchy Sourdough Sandwiches (my own creation):

4 slices sourdough bread
4-6 slices Muenster Cheese
2 cups Cheddar French Fried Onions
Mayonnaise
Stackers Kosher Dill Pickle Slices
Butter

Spread Mayonnaise thick (yes!) on two slices of bread. Sprinkle each slice with one cup of Cheddar French Fried Onions. Layer 2-3 slices of Muenster each on Cheddar French Fried Onions (meatlovers may also add very thin sliced ham). Top with remaining two buttered bread slices. Carefully flip and press Sandwiches slightly and cut in half. Fold ("S" shape) four Stackers Kosher Dill Pickle Slices and pierce with toothpick on Sandwich halves. Enjoy.

Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Flick James on April 22, 2010, 03:50:35 PM
Pesto sauce is one of Italy's finest contributions to the culinary world. It can be used not just as a pasta sauce, but as a marinade for cooking meats (try it with pork chops or chicken), as a pizza sauce (instead of or combined with tomato sauce), and, my favorite, on potato gnocchi. If you're not familiar with gnocchi, Italy's version of potato dumplings, then you're missing out. Pesto is simple, and doesn't need to be cooked, just put the ingredients in a blender or food processor, and blammo, fresh pesto. Just spread it on whatever floats your boat or mix it in with freshly cooked starches. Tonight I'm putting it on chicken and mushroom stuffed raviolis.

2 cups fresh basil leaves, packed well
1/2 cup of a good parmesan or romano cheese
1/2 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/3 cup pine nuts or walnuts (pine nuts for that special tang)
3 cloves garlic (or 4-5 if you're a garlic nut like me)
A little salt and pepper
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: claws on September 25, 2010, 01:01:38 AM
Two eggs in a hole (basket, nest).
It takes a little effort to get the bread crispy and the yolks just a tiny bit runny, but I managed.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: dean on September 25, 2010, 09:37:23 AM

Just came back from a gathering at my friend's place where we had some great food.  Two stand outs; home-made dumplings and pork belly.  Yum!

Topped off with home-brewed chilli beer.  Booya!
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: meQal on September 25, 2010, 01:54:10 PM
Going to cook something really simple tonight, pintos and rice with smoked sausage.
Just need a couple of cans of pinto beans, some rice, and a package or two of smoked sausage.
Broil the sausage while heating the beans and cooking the rice. Cut the sausage up in slices or chunks, put the cooked rice in a bowl, toss the sausage on top of the rice, then scoop some pinto beans on top of it and add hot sause as desired. Real simple to make but very good to eat.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: claws on September 26, 2011, 05:34:22 AM
Here's a hearty traditional German dish we always make in fall. It's called Zwiebelkuchen which literally translates into Onion Cake, but there is nothing "cake" about this dish. If anything, it's more like a flat, thin crust pizza/quiche hybrid. You'll need:

Zwiebelkuchen

1/2 yeast cube
5 fl oz milk
1 pinch of sugar
3 cups flour
1 tea spoon salt
2.2 lb onions, sliced
1 cup bacon, diced
3 1/2 cups sour cream
3 eggs
1 tea spoon caraway seeds
pepper
oil

Stir yeast and sugar into lukewarm milk. Add flour and half of the salt, knead dough into ball and place in covered bowl. Let it rest for 45 minutes at a warm place.
Heat oven (392F) and fry cubed bacon in pan until half done. Add onions until done (but not brown). Mix sour cream, eggs, pepper and salt in bowl.
Knead dough and roll out on oiled baking sheet. Add and spread bacon and onions, pour sour cream mixture on top, spread. Sprinkle with caraway seeds. Bake for 35 minutes. Serve while still warm.

Goes great with Federweisser (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federweisser). That is, if you can find any in the states.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: AndyC on September 26, 2011, 08:58:13 AM
Made a nice pot of beef stew on the weekend. Hard to put it in recipe form, since I seldom cook with a recipe, but here goes.

Flour a couple of pounds of lean cubed steak and brown in a large pot with a couple of tablespoons of oil. Add in a large onion (or a couple of smaller ones), finely chopped, and a minced clove of garlic. Continue until the onion is soft. Throw in some salt, pepper, celery seed, sage, rosemary, thyme. Add enough chicken broth to cover, along with a small can of tomato paste. Put in a dash of Worcestershire sauce and soy sauce. Once that gets bubbling, let it simmer on low heat for about an hour. Add about three large diced potatoes and about a cup and a half of diced carrots. Add more broth as needed to cover, and keep simmering and occasionally stirring for about an hour. Taste and add additional seasoning if needed. Add a cup and a half of peas and half a cup of brown rice, then simmer for another hour. Just prior to serving, take a teaspoon or two of corn starch and dissolve in a tiny amount of orange juice, and stir in to thicken and stabilize.
Title: Re: What's cooking?
Post by: Olivia Bauer on September 26, 2011, 03:35:15 PM
I'm making Lasagna for my roomates soon. I also ordered a cookbook in the mail, I can't wait to try it out.