Archive for July, 2009

Alfredo Sauce Recipe – Delicious Recipes for Alfredo Sauce

Sunday, July 26th, 2009

Alfredo sauce is one of my very favorite toppings for pasta. There are many types of boring alfredo sauce, but the recipe included below is a very delicious version of alfredo sauce. I hope you enjoy this alfredo sauce recipe.

Click Here to Download the Life123 Recipe Toolbar and Get Free Access to Thousands of Great Alfredo Sauce Recipes and other Delicious Recipes

Ingredients

1 medium onion, minced

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter

1/2 cup all-purpose flour

1 cup hot milk

1/2 cup grated Parmesan

1 pound penne pasta

1 (8-ounce) package frozen peas, blanched in salt water

Salt and white pepper

Directions

Bring a pot of water to boil for the pasta.

For the sauce, melt butter in a saucepan which will be large enough to accommodate the pound of cooked pasta, and saute onion until it becomes translucent. Mix in the flour to make a roux. Gradually add milk and allow thickening over low heat. Remove from heat and whisk in Parmesan. Immediately cover surface of sauce with a sheet of plastic wrap and set aside briefly.

Boil the pasta until al dente and drain. Add the cooked pasta and the blanched peas to the pan containing the sauce and fold to coat pasta. Season with salt and pepper, as needed.

Alfredo Sauce:

1 pint heavy cream

1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened

1 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano

Freshly cracked black pepper

Chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley, for garnish

To prepare alfredo sauce: Heat heavy cream over low-medium heat in a deep saute pan. Add butter and whisk gently to melt. Sprinkle in cheese and stir to incorporate. Season with freshly cracked black pepper. In a large stockpot, cook pasta in plenty of boiling salted water for 3 minutes. Quickly drain the pasta and add it to the saute pan, gently toss the noodles to coat in the alfredo. Transfer pasta to a warm serving bowl. Top with more grated cheese and chopped parsley. Serve immediately.

Alfredo Sauce Recipes | Alfredo Sauce Recipe

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • TwitThis
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • Pownce
  • MySpace

My Favorite Thai Food

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

I was thinking of providing a comprehensive of “foods found in Thailand” list but decided there are just too many and listing the foods that I love most would be far easier. So… The list below provides a short list of my favorite Thai foods.

Fried Rice – I love Thai style pork fried rice for breakfast. This is basic fried rice with tomatoes, onions with Thai spices like lime and chili thrown in at the end.

 

Thai Omelet – The Thai omelet is simple but delicious dish made of eggs, chili, onions, pork and other things as desire. The chilies make it spicy and Thai. The omelet is served with white rice.

 

Som tum or papaya salad – som tum is a spicy salad consisting mostly of shredded fresh papaya with tomatoes, chilies, garlic, lime juice, and fish sauce. Thais love this dish SPICY, so be careful.

 

Hoi tod – hoi tod is a mixture of egg and mussels (or oysters) pan fried with spices, namely white pepper. This is served over a bed of fresh bean sprouts. This is often made on the street and I like mine cooked crispy.

 

La moo ma ma or Ground pork salad – this is browned ground pork with chilies, fish sauce, tomato sauce with chopped shallots mixed in before served. This is often served with instant noodles. This is another HOT dish so, again, be careful.

 

Wing bean salad – This very similar to the dish above but tends to have more of a tomato base and chopped fresh wing bean are added and lightly cooked at the end. Very tasty. 

 

Glass noodle salad – glass noodles are made of green bean, are very thin, and absorb the flavor of the accompanying foods very nicely.

 

Fried grouper – this a simple deep fried sea fish dish. What makes it on my favorite is the condiment they serve with it. The English name is seafood sauce and it is made with finely chopped green chilies and garlic in fish sauce. It is very spicy and delicious.

 

Common Condiments

Fish sauce – fishy and salty amber colored liquid

Seafood sauce – green, smooth to lumpy, chili and garlic dip

Soy sauce – tangy and salty brown liquid

Red pepper – dried chopped red chili

Vinegar – usually served with fresh chopped chili

Sugar

 

The longer i live in Thailand the longer this list grows. When visiting Thailand I urge you to try as many things as possible, but remember, most western people can not eat the spice level of the Thais, not without practice.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • TwitThis
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • Pownce
  • MySpace

Fried Chili Chicken: Recipes to Die For!

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

When it comes to delicious meals, you can have healthy too! Today more than ever, delicious foods are geared at providing healthy benefits in a scrumptious dish that will be a favorite for years to come. Fried chili chicken is a delicious blend of healthy chicken spiced to perfect without the unnecessary additions of added fat or sugar.

Instead of depending on additives that enhance the flavor of the meal, this is one meal that takes simple ingredients and makes them into one dish easy to fix and enjoyed by everyone. Take a closer look at why this is a favorite in my house!

Fried Chili Chicken

Ingredients:

2 tbsp flour

¼ tsp cayenne

1 tsp chili powder

½ tsp ground cumin

½ tsp dried oregano

½ tsp garlic powder

½ tsp salt

4 chicken breasts, cubed

3 tbsp vegetable oil

1 onion, chopped

2 cups chicken broth

¼ cup chili powder

1 tbsp hot New Mexico chili powder

1 tsp ground cumin

1 tsp dried oregano

20oz can pinto beans, drained

Directions:

In a plastic bag: mix the flour, cayenne, chili powder, cumin, oregano, garlic powder, and salt and toss together. Add the chicken cubes and shake until evenly coated with the spice mixture.

Heat 2 tbsp of oil in a large skillet and cook the chicken, turning as needed until chicken is lightly browned, set aside. Heat the remaining oil in the same skillet and sauté for 5 minutes. Put the chicken & onion mixture in a large saucepan with the chicken broth.

Add all remaining ingredients – except pinto beans – bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 1 hour (add water if needed). Add the beans, taste and adjust seasonings if needed.

Tip: this is a hot temperature chili! Hard crust country bread, thick sliced, lightly sprinkled with oil and toasted or grilled is all you’ll need with this spicy chicken chili.

Dry soup: many Mexican dishes feature bread or tortillas that are soaked in a sauce until the dish resembles more a casserole or a heavy stew than a soup. In Mexico, they refer to these dishes as dry soups.

Canned or fresh peppers: with the ever growing interest in Mexican cuisine across the USA, you will likely find be able to find fresh chilies to meet the needs for your cooking. However, if you must use canned, plan to use about half as much as you would of fresh because the peppers become more packed during the canning process.

When I make this for my family, I try using more goodness by using fresh peppers toasted to perfection. In addition, you will find it is easy to make pinto beans in the Crockpot while at work. This is a great way to insure you are not getting added sodium from canned beans. Also, I can choose the herbs and spices my family loves. You can, of course, find your own!

Fried chili chicken offers an exceptional recipe that is easy to make and tastes absolutely delicious. A favorite in my house, you will find that this can be a favorite in yours too.

Columbian bride

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • TwitThis
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • Pownce
  • MySpace

Hot Dog! Try This Versatile Dinner Dip

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Dinner at our friend Latoola’s house must be very interesting when she gets in creative cooking mode. We really must finagle an invitation one of these days. Meanwhile, we’ll have to settle for trying this latest creative cooking idea she sent us at home.

Start with an 8-pack of your favorite brand of hot dogs; preferably bun length. Chop four of them (using kitchen scissors is the suggested method) into slices approximately a quarter-inch thick. Let them fall into an 8 x 8 glass baking dish, then rearrange so they are evenly spread. Top with a cup of shredded mild cheddar cheese. Add about a half cup of bacon bits, a medium diced fresh tomato, and about a quarter cup of sliced green or black olives (depending on your taste, you can might add both). Next chop the remaining four hotdogs in the same manner and spread them on top of the mixture you’ve already started. This time add another cup of the shredded mild cheddar cheese and another half cup of bacon bits. Put the dish in the microwave oven and cook on high for 5-6 minutes. Make sure cheese is melty, according to Latoola. Let it sit for two minutes, then scoop it out with a serving spoon.

Estimated preparation time is 10-15 minutes. Add cooking time and you have a fun food fest ready in approximately 20 minutes. And, by all means, if you have children around, let them help. Let them spread the ingredients or suggest some of their favorite things to add.

Serve it as a meal all by itself, or use some of these options.

• Dip it onto a bun and make a sandwich; consider pouring on some catsup or another favorite sauce (try a Tortuga rum sauce).

• Dip it on a large cracker.

• Dip it on to a bed of lettuce and create a salad.

• Dip it with large corn chips.

• Dip it with a pretzel.

Expand its possibilities by dipping the uncooked mixture onto a pizza crust and bake as directed for the crust.

For alternatives to this very versatile dinner dip, add some of your other favorite ingredients, such as salsa, peppers, or some Tortuga Gourmet Pepper Jelly.

Not only is this meal enticing as a dinner option, it has a lot of potential as a party dish or a covered dish for your favorite gathering of family and friends. It’s perfect for those who are rushed, on a tight budget, or just plain tired of the same old things everywhere you go during the holidays.

But wait! You don’t have to reserve this nifty creative cooking idea only for the holidays. It will work any night, any time, even for no special occasion.

Latoola reports that she and her husband can eat an entire batch of the Hot dog Dinner Dip as a standalone meal on a hungry night when he has skipped dinner, so gauge how much you might need by that and multiply accordingly. Making two batches certainly wouldn’t double your efforts.

The point is: Have Fun with Food. What a hot dog of an idea!

man boobs

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • TwitThis
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • Pownce
  • MySpace

Susur Lee’s Magical Mystery Tour

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

usur Lee’s Magical Mystery Tour

Wrinkled parachutes cast a rosy glow on circle booths at Shang. Photo: Steven Richter

It says a lot about the souped-up speed of gentrification in New York and even more about Susur Lee that he was willing to close his rocking hit restaurant Susur in Toronto for Shang, a hotel dining room above Orchard Street. It must have seemed quite a lure at the moment of commitment: The Thompson LES hotel with a world class restaurant in Manhattan’s hottest new zip code. Now, with escalating financial wipeouts and even crazed nocturnal nomads pinching dollars, there’s more riding on Lee’s back than just his ponytail.

Every country has its own Chinese food flourish: Chef Lee honors that fusion. Photo: Steven Richter

Yes, he looks like a movie star and talks like a poet, flashing briefly through the dining room with its big round booths and giant crushed fabric parachutes casting a rosy glow. Lee clearly knows it’s his to lose. From the look of the Saturday night crush in the dining room – the preferred age group, vogueish but not slavishly so, masters-of-the-universe-in-waiting, still dancing on the edge – Lee’s already got an audience that could build a buzz. Two longtime veterans of hip, one from Nobu, one from Matsuri at the entrance obviously have the required Rolodex. Tonight’s early responders are not just peripatetic first-nighters but also Saturday daters and even locals, a good-looking stew skewing young that might build the vital word of mouth if they like the food as much as we do.

What is it like? “What are the Beatles like?” you might have asked before hearing the Liverpudlian four. Like no one, would have been the answer. Susur Lee’s magical tour has taken him from Hong Kong, to Toronto, to Singapore with its triangle of influences – Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia – back to Toronto and now he hopes to woo New York with these lyrical inventions. His food is unique, unlike anything I have tasted here, often thrilling, endlessly inventive, whimsical and traditional in the same dish, daring and delicious. His passion for design almost never overwhelms his mastery of texture and layered flavors. He counts on a trusted second from his days in Singapore as he drives the kitchen to his astonishing tune, is his own pastry chef (and also fields room service). Be warned. Come with friends you like. In this first ten days, the kitchen can be slow.

Caramelized wild sablefish with mustard green relish and salmon roe. Photo: Steven Richter

You don’t have to know that the chef wants to honor the Chinese Diaspora. “Wherever Chinese food goes, it changes with each country. I want to honor that tradition.” Call it fusion, I suppose, but look for more at Shang. From time to time, a notion seems totally Chinese.  Crispy taro puffs – four of them lined up without embellishment on a plate – are a dim sum you might encounter in Chinatown, except for that velvety surprise of curried egg salad inside. (Taro is a special weakness of mine that not everyone shares.) A big tangle of chickpea sweet onion fritters on puddles of ginger-mango chutney and minted yogurt – orange on one side, green on the other – links to India and possibly Japanese tempura. Splendid lobster croquettes filled with salty duck egg, lemon balm, shallot and the tang of chili-lime juice is a generation removed from China, reminiscing.

Nineteen ingredients and toasted hazelnuts give Singapore slaw its crunch. Photo: Steven Richter

Lee’s signature Singapore slaw is the perfect opener (one order is more than enough for four, no matter what your

Celestial seafood tofu. Photo: Steve Richter

server says). Toasted hazelnuts and a puckery taste of sour plum dressing add to the crunch and flavor of 19 ingredients. Sashimi of madai with pickled daikon, celery sprouts and lemon purée, plus caramelized wild sablefish, then lobster-shrimp croquettes with Malay black pepper sauce have us raving on our first visit. Dishes arrive two or three at a time with a clean round of rectangular plates for tasting, white with a tiny red rabbit on the rim – the chef’s astrological sign. I’m a fool for turnip cake, including this one, rife with eggplant, Cantonese-preserved black bean and shiitakes. With so many exotic notions, it would be easy to overlook steamed potato dumplings. They sound so ordinary. Don’t be fooled. Carved away with a triangle of their almost-veil-thin crust attached, the dumpling is marvelous and full of surprises. Crisp-skinned young garlic chicken with sweet-and-sour onion marmalade is remarkably juicy.

The young garlic chicken is crackly-skinned, moist within. Photo: Steven Richter

Less thrilling is the Beijing cucumber salad, a too thick-skinned oxtail soup dumpling in chicken-coriander broth, and coin-like slices of octopus with tomatillo and tomatoes. Cardamom-scented carrot and chili-mint chutneys plus glazed bananas can’t save bland Mongolian lamb chops. But the triumphs blur the flubs. And even though we’re all groaning from the excess, our host, a legendary gourmand, can’t stop ordering. I am still able to appreciate the saving grace of orange and lemongrass granité on lemon curd with passion fruit gelée and bitter orange sorbet. I didn’t really need the lemon tart with lemon parfait and raspberry coulis in tea sauce or the coconut crème caramel with Chantilly and black rice pudding at the bottom, but I tasted – loved them both – and survived.

The chef’s dessert range:  granité, warm tong yuan, and lemon tart. Photo: Steven Richter

I can’t wait to share this revelation with Chinese friends and taste more dishes even though it costs $30 one way and takes forever to creep and lurch through traffic from the Upper West Side. It’s my second visit this week. We must repeat the slaw, the potato dumplings, the taro puffs and my favorite dish of all – steamed tofu custard with crab, shrimp, lobster, baby mussels and air-dried scallops in Tanjin bouillon, a superior stock of duck, pork and ham – sheer umami. The black hairy stuff is desert moss (not “dessert” as typoed), a green that grows outside Beijing. Thin slices of pork loin wrapped around green beans with mustard and almonds should provide safe haven for tofuphobes and finicky eaters but I won’t waste my calories again. I love squab and foie gras in wrappers imitating Peking duck but the lotus crepes are leathery by the time they reach our table. Spicy slow braised beef cheek, fatty and luscious, is perfect. Served with soft brown rice and olive preserved vegetables, one portion is enough for four to taste, especially, if like me, you’ll eat too much anyway. And with so many options $12 or less, and everything else (except Kobe beef) $25 or considerly cheaper, you can spend a little or a lot. Include a $3 order of mantou whole-wheat Chinese bread to sop up sauces, and you probably won’t want to stop for a burger on your way home.

187 Orchard Street. 212 260 7900. Closed Sunday. To avoid a steep flight of steps at the Orchard Street entrance, enter through Hotel Thompson LES at 190 Allen Street. Take the elevator to 2.

Copyright Gael Greene 2008 www.insatiable-critic.com

Symptoms of H1N1

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • TwitThis
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • Pownce
  • MySpace