Showing posts with label lemon chicken. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lemon chicken. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

The "I can't cook" No-Plan Summer Party

I have learned that I am not like most people--in many ways, but I mean in terms of cooking! Many people won't or can't cook anymore. Or they don't think it's worth the time and effort. In this convenience culture, that's fine. At least until the weather makes it hard to eat out or it's so tempting to go outside or...when it's time to have people over for dinner.
I am also an anomaly in that it doesn't faze me if people pay a surprise visit. I can crank out a meal more or less from scratch without too much fuss. I stock up on stuff and can whip things up. Here are some tips for feeding more than 10 people with little notice. That leaves an hour to grocery shop if your fridge and pantry are not stocked, a little over an hour in the kitchen, plus one hour to tidy up the place and take a shower!

Cous Cous or Bulgur  Wheat
I try to have these on hand at home, since they can be baked or cooked in less than ten minutes. Really hard to burn or even stick to the pan as long as you stay in the kitchen a few minutes and add enough water (which you can keep adding without wrecking the grains, unlike rice.) For both, just add the 1.5 the amount of boiling water in ratio to the grain--1 cup cous cous needs 1 1/2 cups lightly salted boiling water or stock; bulgur wheat may need a little more liquid. Allow to sit in pan or metal bowl with lid for 5 minutes, then mix and flavor. Best thing? Both of these can be served hot, cold or room temperature.

Add-ins:
Chopped tomatoes and cucumbers, seasoned well with salt and vinegar, then strained (prepare before cooking grains)
Crumbled feta cheese
Lightly cooked and seasoned peas and carrots
Chopped sweet or red onions cooked in salt and butter until soft and clear
Raisins (golden look prettiest) and chopped green olives
Craisins or fresh pomegranate seeds and chopped shelled pistachios

Hamburgers (or meatballs)
A good, quality burger at home is cheaper than a good-quality burger at a restaurant when you count all the servings left over. I figured out a way to make hamburgers using stew beef that comes out tender, cheaper, and of better quality meat than the ground variety. Did you know that 400 different cows can contribute to one package of ground meat? And we wonder why there are so many recalls? Plus, there's only a fraction of the fat of a regular hamburger in this version. As good or better than many restaurants, too. You will need a food processor for this. Well, maybe you don't need one; you can ask the butcher to grind some chuck or eye round for you and chop the turkey bacon at home and incorporate.

3 lbs. fresh stew beef--chuck and eye round work well--cubed (the smaller the pieces, the better)
8 slices turkey bacon
2 slices bread
2/3 cup milk
1 medium onion
Pepper to taste

Get the grill ready, or...
Set oven to broil or 500 degrees. Mash bread and milk together in a small bowl. Set aside. Pulse half of stew meat in food processor with onion. Tear half of the turkey bacon into chunks. Add to processor when stew meat is almost free of chunks. Add in half of bread paste. Add pepper to taste. Pulse until just about uniform (maybe 5 more times.) Shape into burgers or meatballs and repeat.

Make 12 patties or 30-35 meatballs and put on a greased oven-safe pan. Shake a little salt on top, if desired. I also slice another onion and put in the pan for burger toppings. Spray meat and onions with nonstick spray, if desired. Broil for 3 minutes. Turn heat down to 350 and cook 8-10 minutes longer, until juices run clear for a well-done burger. The great thing is that you grind the meat at home and use right away, so there are a lot fewer bacteria on freshly-ground beef than the ground beef from the store. Therefore, the hamburgers or meatballs don't have to be well done at 160 degrees to be safe. (I do medium-well, with a little pink in the middle.)

Variation: Meatball Subs
Add some basil, oregano and thyme or Italian seasoning to the meat mixture. Heat or make marinara sauce. Prepare long rolls (grilling or toasting, if desired.) Add meatballs and sprinkle mozzarella or Parmesan cheese on top. Meatless option needed?

Black Bean Sliders
1 can (15.5 oz)  black beans, drained, then rinsed
1 tablespoon taco seasoning mix or dry Ranch or Italian salad dressing mix
1/2 cup fresh salsa from refrigerator case (or homemade), drained well
1/2 cup bread crumbs or try 1/3 cup milled flax seed
1 egg or Egg Replacer powder + liquid equivalent
12 potato rolls-the kind stuck together or other buns that are about 2-inch squares 
1 avocado, pitted, peeled and sliced
1 lime, cut into wedges plus fresh cilantro, if desired

Heat oven to 350°F. Spray cookie sheet with cooking spray or use paper towel to brush with oil. Empty drained and rinsed beans in a medium bowl, then mash with fork. Add seasoning and salsa. Mix, then add bread crumbs/flax seed and egg. Mix well.

Shape into 12 mini patties, to fit in small buns. Place on cookie sheet. Bake 6-8 minutes, then flip with spatula. Bake 4-6 minutes longer.  Place patties on open buns. Top each with 2 slices avocado, a squeeze of lime juice, cilantro and top with remaining bun half.
 
3.5 pounds Boneless, Skinless Chicken Thighs or Wing sections (6-8 pounds)
If you marinate these as soon as you can, you will be awarded with a flavorful dish to serve for company. These can be seasoned in many ways and grilled (but wings are tricky that way) or baked. Chicken thighs can also make a great, juicy burger or meatballs. 3.5 pounds with a half-onion in each batch as described for meatballs--no need to add milk/bread mixture. Turkey bacon optional; add salt to mixture if not using.
My favorite combinations for baking--can also be used with beef meatballs:
Lemon and garlic-Slice 2 lemons and use 10 sliced cloves garlic and 2 tablespoons olive oil.
Salsa, about one cup (fresh is best), along with a half cup of Goya brand mojo criollo (lemon and orange juice, plus cumin and black pepper and salt)

Green beans (especially if you can get some Trader Joe's Frozen Haricots Verts)
Trader Joe's has the most delectable frozen thin green beans. I prefer them to fresh, steamed green beans in most cases. I actually like to wash, snap and eat fresh, uncooked green beans with homemade garlicky mayonnaise or a really good creamy dressing. They are a great, cheaper alternative to snap peas or snow peas on a veggie tray, too!
But I digress...I sometimes sauté green beans in olive oil and butter with mushrooms. But, my new favorite way is to cook 1.5 cups chicken stock down to 3/4 cup with one-half of a chopped onion and a little bit of red pepper flakes. If you want to add carrots, put some in a cold pot with the stock and pepper. Then add about 10 ounces green beans (almost the whole package), which I cook for about 10 minutes. The stock is still there but is cooked almost all the way down with the onions. I add salt if needed. Do two batches (you will need about 1.5 pounds for 10) or double recipe in a large pot if it's for 10+ people.) If kids are picky about onions, cut onion into big chunks and don't put any on their plate.

Two-Way Punch (Sangria and Alcohol-Free)

2 packages (10 ounces each) frozen strawberries; allow to partially thaw
2 cans (12 ounces each) frozen pineapple concentrate 
2 cans (11 1/2 ounces each) frozen grape or cranberry concentrate, thawed
1.5 Litre Rosé Wine (Red Zinfandel is a nice choice)
3 2-liter-bottles seltzer--raspberry flavor if available
1 lemon, thinly sliced
1 orange, thinly sliced

Get two large beverage serving containers ready, each able to accommodate 1.5 gallons or more.
Place each package of opened strawberries in a gallon-size freezer bag. Squish each package of strawberries until most lumps are gone. Add contents of each into the beverage containers. Add pineapple concentrate to non-alcoholic beverage; add grape or raspberry concentrate to sangria container. Mix each juice-berry slush well, adding orange slices, then wine slowly to one and lemon then one bottle seltzer to the other. Once mixed well, add one bottle seltzer to each and top off with ice. Stir before serving.

Watermelon
Chill as soon as possible. I like buying small ones (a little bigger than cantaloupes). They are usually sweet and chill pretty fast.

Chocolate Fondue (Prepare this later, as dinner food is being cleared off the table)
Feeling empowered? Want something fancy? Make ganache--when kept warm, it is a versatile dessert sauce that firms when cooled. Melt one 12-ounce bag of chocolate (and/or white chocolate, peanut butter, butterscotch) chips in a glass bowl in the microwave 50 percent 2-3 minutes; you have to hang around and check, since they require low heat. It does not need to bubble! The chocolate is ready when 75-80% of the chips are melted and all the chips are glistening. Stir gently and add about 8 ounces room temperature or cool half and half or 8 ounces coconut milk for a vegan version (make sure you use vegan chocolate chips!) Serve with fresh or toasted cake cubes or warmed madeleines, fresh berries, fresh orange sections, pretzel rods and/or meringues.

Or, buy pound cake or another unfrosted cake (must be room temperature, not warm) and use as "frosting" by using a spatula to spread on whole cake. Let cool in fridge until set, about 15 minutes. Serve with fruit, chocolate shavings or chopped nuts.


Bags(s) of ice
For a couple dollars you can get a head start on chilling beverages and even the watermelon without worrying about fridge space. Handy for smoothies and serving drinks, too!



Monday, October 22, 2012

Tastes of Haiti

The Woodside United Methodist Church, part of the Silver Spring Cooperative Parish, went to Haiti through Volunteers in Mission October 6-13. The food--preparing and eating it--became a rewarding high point for me. Learning through our embedded cook Yves-Rose what Americans like: "pancakes", reassuring her that our group would try (and love) Haitian dishes, and preparing ketchup, aioli, salsa and green papaya salad represented in a way our group's goals. Show people we care, work side by side and have fun!

Fried goodness: Some lunches and every dinner seemed to feature delicious fried morsels we never tired of .


Salads and Sides: Besides the recipes below, we usually had vegetables, luscious avocados and often papaya or banana.
Haitian Coleslaw
Macaroni and potato salad
Green papaya salad
Macaroni gratin Every time I had gratin, there was ground meat with a touch of tomato and onion sauce at the bottom of the pasta.


Di Riz Djon Djon "secret ingredient black rice"--it was mushrooms! 

Meats: I saw Yves Rose marinate meats with sour oranges and limes. Four Stars!!
Chicken stew
Beef and potato stew (still looking for this recipe!)
 Fried chicken

Breakfast and Dessert: Breakfast was interesting. We had delicious omelettes, dozens (and dozens) of hard-boiled eggs, oatmeal, spaghetti with onion and meat, and citrus drinks (Orangeade, limeade, and watermelon limeade) that combined fresh-squeezed juice, sugar, cool water and "essence", a almondy-vanilla flavoring that went in lemonade drink mix, fruit cocktail--pretty much anything that had sugar added.

Coffee-first thing on the table every morning
Spruced up fruit cocktail: vanilla essence and watermelon + bananas
Spaghetti for breakfast!
Banana Pancakes 
Bread Pudding
Guava Jelly
Mamba=Creole for peanut butter
Vache Qui Rit=Laughing Cow cheese wedges
Homemade flatbread

Sonia's sauces: Condiments are the spice of life. These are easy with not too many ingredients.
Apple pancake syrup-pretty close, but didn't use raisins...
Homemade salsa
Homemade ketchup  (I usually boil the onion instead of frying and using oil)
Aioli (simplified by using a good mayonnaise instead of making it) 
Recipes from Haitian Church at Marvin Memorial:
http://recipes.wikia.com/wiki/Haitian_Salad -served at fundraising luncheon
 Pineapple chicken with gravy: Yveline Clement’s recipe
 Ingredients:
Chicken (any part to your liking)
Crushed canned pineapple
Frozen vegetable stew
Olive oil
Salt
Garlic
Lemon or lemon juice
Apple cider or white vinegar
Hot pepper (optional)
Tomato paste
Thyme
Parsley
Other spices: to taste (ex. oregano, basil, chicken bouillon cubes etc.)

Directions:
Wash and clean chicken with cold water; then wash with lemon or lemon juice, rinse very well, squeeze excess of liquids out. Place chicken in a bowl; add salt, garlic, other spices to your taste and vinegar. Cover and put it in the refrigerator to marinate; preferably overnight.

Cook:
In a large skillet or pan put some olive oil on low heat; very carefully add tomato paste to oil with 1-2 tsp of water mix well. Drain chicken and save the juice or marinade; add chicken to the skillet, sauté on both side on medium heat for 2-3 minutes, cover, let it simmer on reduce heat for about 5-7 minutes then add the juice or marinade, the vegetable stew, parsley, fresh thyme, hot pepper. Once again mix everything, cover and let it cook for another 15 minutes on medium heat then add crushed pineapple with the juice steered well let it cook for another 10 minutes.  This may be served with white rice or beans and rice.
 
Baked chicken à l'Haïtienne: This spicy baked chicken dish in Créole sauce is a family tradition and a guest favorite at dinner parties. (Leroy)
 Ingredients:
 Large fresh chicken cut into pieces (bone-in / skin-off)
3 lemons
1/2 cup vinegar
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1/2 cup water
Freshly ground garlic, chives or scallions and parsley
Fresh thyme
1/2 hot pepper
3 cloves
1 large onion, sliced
1/4 hot pepper
1 tsp. tomato paste
Salt and pepper to taste

Directions:
Clean and rub chicken with lemons and vinegar. Rinse with boiled water. Marinate overnight in refrigerator in lemon juice, salt, pepper, garlic, onion, chives or scallions, hot pepper, parsley, thyme and cloves.

Sprinkle a large pan with oil and add the marinated chicken. Pour oil over chicken. Cook uncovered for one and a half hours in preheated oven at 375 degrees until golden brown, turning a few times to brown both sides. To make the sauce, scrape the bottom of pan and add 1/2 a cup of water and 1 tsp. tomato paste. Add sliced onion.

Independence Day Pumpkin Soup: Read about the inspiring history behind the soup prepared on New Year's Day!

Sources:
http://www.haitian-recipes.com/recipes/index.php
http://www.everythinghaitian.com/HaitianCuisine/default.aspx
http://recipes.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Haitian_Recipes

Epicurious.com- Check out my inbox with Haitian / Island recipes

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Spring is here, but a lot of good produce is not!


With wildly varying temperatures in the D.C. area and produce tiptoeing in, sometimes it's hard to figure out what to make. These days I make foods that are wintry with spring foods or springy with wintry foods. With the corn-okra-tomato-squash-basil season a little ways ahead, I'm more Bretonne than Provençale.


Risotto with Petite Peas and Cremini Mushrooms
Tastes great with Lemon Chicken

1 onion, chopped
1 tsp. butter
8 oz. cremini mushrooms aka Baby Bella, sliced
12 oz Arborio rice
4+ cups warm stock (add 1 cup at a time)
Juice of 1 lemon or 4 oz. white wine, optional--add with rest of liquid
white pepper (or black if that's all you have)
thyme
nutmeg
1/2 cup frozen petit pois/petite peas--or use regular peas

1/4 cup heavy cream
1/4 cup Parmigiano or Romano cheese, grated
salt to taste at the end

Cook onion in butter in a heavy saucepan. Add mushrooms and cook until liquid goes away. Lightly toss rice in butter/mushrooms for 1 minute. Add stock, one cup at a time, stirring every two minutes. Keep rice between low and medium heat. Add liquid whenever you can still stir rice without it sticking but only a couple spoons' worth of liquid remain. Add herbs and spices to taste, except salt and parsley. This process usually takes just over 20 minutes. Rice should taste done and be soft but not sticky. There should be about 3 teaspoons of thick liquid in the saucepan.

Next, turn off stove. Add peas and parsley, then stir. Add cream and cheese, then stir. Last, add salt to taste. Serve hot.


Quiche -made with spinach, bacon and caramelized onions
Great with cream of asparagus soup, spinach salad and arugula. Trader Joe's frozen pie pastry is really good!


Croissant Bread Pudding, served with Strawberry, Rhubarb and Lemon Compote (and vanilla ice cream!)

Croissant Bread Pudding
9 croissants, cut into 2-inch wedges--used kitchen scissors
1/3 cup sugar
3 eggs (used 3 egg whites)
3 cups 2%, low-fat or skim milk
dash salt
2 teaspoons real vanilla extract or 1 teaspoon imitation

Grease 9x13 glass pan. Add croissant wedges, then toss with sugar. Bake 10 minutes at 375 degrees while assembling other ingredients. In a medium bowl, beat eggs, then add milk, salt and extract. Remove croissants from oven, then slowly pour milk, patting down croissants as they absorb the milk mixture. Bake covered at 375 for 40 minutes.

Strawberry, Rhubarb and Lemon Compote
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
12 strawberries
2 very long or 4 short stalks rhubarb
1 organic lemon

Heat sugar and water in a heavy saucepan (at least 2 quarts). Meanwhile, use a blender or food processor to coarsely liquefy strawberries, rhubarb and lemon. It should have the consistency of chunky ketchup. Scrape fruit mixture into sugar water. Cook on medium high about15 minutes, making sure it doesn't bubble over. Stir every five minutes.

Molten Chocolate Cakes
I made this at work. Quick to make & bake, especially since I put this in 12 cupcake portions instead of 6 cakes. I had lunch while this was in the toaster oven, then had some for dessert. Even enough time to clean all the dishes. Great use of a lunch hour!



Photo: Lisa Hubbard