Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Dancing Cheek to Cheek - Recipe Critique: Thoughts on Turkey Tetrazzini

Today's ear worm, courtesy of Fred Astaire and Irving Berlin:

Heaven, I'm in Heaven
And my heart beats so that I can hardly speak
And I seem to find the happiness I seek
When we're out together dancing cheek to cheek

I think it jumped into my head because I was thinking of critique, and well, it rhymes.  Simple minds, simple pleasures, that's me.

I also thought I had previously provided the link to the recipe for the Pioneer Woman's Turkey Tetrazzini, but I can't find it, so here it is.  Since I did prepare it the post-holiday weekend with some leftover Thanksgiving turkey (thank you, Sir Spatchcock!), strictly according to her recipe (well, almost), I'd like to critique it, with some notes to myself as to what I will change next time. 


Pioneer Woman's Turkey Tetrazzini

1-1/2 pound Thin Spaghetti, Broken In Half
4 Tablespoons Butter
4 cloves Garlic, Minced
1 pound White Mushrooms, Quartered
1/2 teaspoon Salt
1 cup White Wine
1/3 cup Flour
4 cups Turkey (or Chicken) Broth
1 block 8 Ounce Cream Cheese
3 cups Cooked (leftover) Turkey, Shredded Or Diced
1 cup Finely Chopped Black Olives
1-1/2 cup Frozen Green Peas
4 slices Bacon, Fried And Cut Into Bits
1 cup Grated Monterey Jack Cheese
1 cup Grated Parmesan Cheese
 Salt And Pepper, to taste
 Extra Broth For Thinning
1 cup Panko Bread Crumbs

Cook pasta until not quite done - al dente according to package instructions (it will finish cooking in the oven.) Drain, rinse, and set aside. In a large pot, heat butter over medium-high heat. Add garlic and saute for a couple of minutes. Add mushrooms and salt, then sauté for a couple more minutes. Pour in the wine and allow it to cook with the mushrooms for several minutes, or until the liquid reduces by half.  Sprinkle in flour, then stir the mushrooms around for another minute. Pour in the broth and stir, cooking for another few minutes until the roux thickens.

Reduce heat to medium low. Cut cream cheese into pieces and add it to the pot. Stir it to melt (don't be concerned if the cream cheese remains in little bits for awhile; it'll melt eventually!) Add the leftover turkey, the olives, the peas, the bacon, and the cheeses. Stir to combine, adding salt and pepper as needed.

Add the cooked spaghetti and stir it to combine. Splash in more broth as needed; you want the mixture to have a little extra moisture since it will cook off in the oven. If it's a little soupy, that's fine! Add up to 2 more cups of liquid if you think it needs it.

Pour the mixture into a large baking dish and sprinkle the top with Panko crumbs. Bake at 350 degrees F for 20 minutes, or until the casserole is bubbly and the crumbs are golden brown.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Okay - first off, the dish was absolutely delicious as is.  But since I am always critical of anything I cook, my mind is usually 12 steps ahead, planning revisions.  So for next time: 

Ingredients - I used bucatini instead of thin spaghetti, but I would stick with that decision.  Bucatini is a thick spaghetti with a hole in the center, and it is good for hearty dishes like this one.  I also cut back the pasta to 12 ounces.  I would increase the turkey to four cups, and a note to myself is to use just the white meat.  For some reason it worked better in the casserole.

I would also like to try this cutting back slightly on the black olives, and then adding a small can of fire-roasted green chilies, and a very small jar of chopped pimentoes.  Both of these should be drained before adding them.  Most importantly, this dish screams out for sautéed onions, and I will be adding them even if I do nothing else to change the recipe.

No bread crumbs, panko or otherwise.  Possibly French's onion rings, or crushed potato chips, or more cheese.  Or I might keep the bread crumbs, but first toss them with melted butter.

Technique - my sauce just did not come out the way I envisioned, so I thought it best if I reverted to my tried and true cream sauce technique.  I also like more sauce in any dish that includes pasta, so I will adjust amounts accordingly:

12 tablespoons butter (1 1/2 stick)
6 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 large sweet onion, chopped
1 pound white mushrooms, quartered (I might like to substitute crimini here)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 teaspoon granulated garlic
1 cup white wine (I'm leaning towards using 1/2 cup sherry instead)
3/4 cup flour
6 cups turkey (or chicken) stock
A few drops of Worcestershire sauce
A few drops of Tabasco (optional)

In a large pot, heat butter over medium-high heat. Add onion and garlic and saute for a couple of minutes. Add mushrooms, salt, pepper, and granulated garlic then sauté for a couple more minutes.  Sprinkle the flour over the vegetables then stir around for another minute. Pour in half the stock and stir, cooking for another few minutes until the roux thickens.  Gradually add about two-thirds of the remaining stock until the sauce is a little thicker than the final result you want.  Stir in the wine or sherry.  Add as much of the remaining stock as you like to achieve a medium thick sauce.  Add the Worcestershire and Tabasco.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

I'm going to try this the next time I have leftover turkey.  Which will not be for Christmas.  In the meantime, I highly recommend you follow Ree Drummond's recipe just as she wrote it.  If you don't have any turkey, you can poach 4 or 5 chicken breasts, or even better, pick up a rotisserie chicken from the market.  Truly delicious, the epitome of "home-cooked."


Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Christmas with the Doctor

I've pretty much got my Christmas plans in order.  Rob and I are going to spend Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, with the Doctor.  No, we're not sick.  And he's not that kind of Doctor.


He is this kind  of Doctor, all thirteen of him.  A son of Gallifrey.  A madman with a box.

BBC America will be broadcasting the Doctor Who Christmas Special on Christmas Day, but will be showing other episodes featuring other Doctors besides Twelve, starting on Christmas Eve.  In the U.K., Doctor Who Christmas Specials are a tradition, like Queen Elizabeth's Christmas Speech and plum pudding.

I don't plan on any sort of shopping immediately before or after Christmas Day.  I never go into stores the day after Christmas, because I'm not crazy, and besides, it's my birthday.  I do not get dressed for the outdoors.  I am walking no further than my kitchen, and from there, to my spot on the couch.

Of course I am going to cook, but that's not work.   We shall nibble and nap and I plan on some knitting, as well putting in some more time on my recipe collection.  Six ring binders so far, and probably three more to go.  We shall coddle the Yorkies and Anakin, shamelessly and repeatedly.

The menu for all this lazy living is going to be based on the contents of my freezer.  No time to do any major food shopping, as we are going to Amway Arena for a Magic game tonight.  We're playing the Brooklyn Nets, which is cool, because no matter who wins, I'm happy.

Raging River Brussel Sprouts AND Smoke 'em If You Got 'em Chicken

Well I woke up Sunday morning
With no way to hold my head, that didn't hurt
And the beer I had for breakfast wasn't bad,
So I had one more for dessert.
Then I fumbled in my closet through my clothes
And found my cleanest dirty shirt.
Then I washed my face and combed my hair
And stumbled down the stairs to meet the day.

Except for the beer, it sounds like Johnny Cash was singing that about me.  I haven't stumbled down the stairs yet, which means I haven't had my coffee yet.  Which doesn't bode well for man nor beast crossing my path.  Grrrr.



Chelsea - Before

We have so much to do today, the very thought is making me anxious.  Drive here, buy this, cook that, and buzz cut the dogs.  I'm leaning toward waiting until the end of the week when we can work them in between episodes of Doctor Who, but we have a tiny bit of a flea problem, and two bottles of flea shampoo on the counter.  My head hurts just thinking about it.



My weekend cooking list developed a life of it's own, and somehow I find myself at least emotionally committed to preparing that wonderful Mushroom Cappuccino we tasted on the cruise, a batch of potato latkes, and some smoked chicken. 


All I want to do, right here and now, is close this iPad and slide back under the covers.  Besides, Rob and I had some delicious potato latkes at the Wheeler's Hanukkah party, so we should be all latka-ed out for the year, right?  And did I mention my back hurts?


But first, from the Waste Not, Want Not Department:  Raging River Brussel Sprouts - I had about a half pound of bacon hanging out in the fridge, and being Sunday, I decided to offer it for Sunday breakfast.  All I did in lay the bacon out in an aluminum pan and stuck it into a 450 degree oven.  Well, first though, I sprinkled it with some Raging River Five Pepper Blend, from The Salt Table in Savannah, and then with a healthy amount of dark brown sugar.  When it was done to our liking, I removed the bacon to a clean aluminum pan with tongs (don't try to drain this on paper towels), and along with a couple of toasted waffles, my man had a fine Sunday breakfast.


And I had a pan with some marvelous sweet and spicy bacon drippings.  To which I added some leftover fresh Brussel sprouts, halved, a 3.5 oz. package of roasted chestnut kernels, also halved, which I had picked up in my favorite Korean market (I suspect you can find them in any Asian market) and some slivered onions.  I gently mixed the ingredients in the pan so everything was coated with the bacon drippings, sprinkled on a little more of that Raging River, and put the pan in the 450 degree oven for about 15 minutes, or until the sprouts were done but still toothsome.  Season with kosher salt and more Raging River, if desired.  If you have any of the bacon, chop it and top the sprouts.  Serve immediately.

Not going shopping.  Wa-Hoo!


So now going to figure out how to approach the smoked chicken idea.  I have this cute little smoker bag I am dying to try, and some chicken thighs, but I am in a quandary regarding the spice rub.  The spice must flow.  I started researching through my collection of barbecue books, which took a while, but nothing struck my cooking fancy.


Then I went online, looking specifically for spice rubs to be used with smoked chicken.  The top of the list was from Bobby Flay, and the only thing that gave me second thoughts was the name:  Sixteen Spice Smoked Chicken.   Which wouldn't necessarily bother me - I have an excellent spice cabinet - but knowing Bobby Flay's recipes, he was going to be using a bunch of pure chili powders, and the only pure chili I had in the cabinet was chipotle.


No kidding, he's included ancho, pasilla, and chili de arbol, but no freaking chipotle.  I really want to try this recipe!


In the meantime:  we bit the proverbial bullet and shaved all four of the dogs.  We will give Chelsea her bath, but right now, we are totally drained.  What a project!  Almost four hours on our feet.  Needless to say, there was no mushroom cappuccino bubbling on my stovetop, and I am no closer to making potato latkes than I was last night.


What I did manage to do was try out the smoker bag on the chicken.  I seasoned the chicken and left it in the fridge for a couple of hours while Rob and I did our demon barber thing.  During the break between Romeo and Indiana, I washed my hands, preheated the oven, and put the chicken in the smoker bag.  The rest is rather delicious history.


As far as the spice rub is concerned, I deviated a bit from Bobby's recipe based on my family's tastes and the content of my spice cabinet.  I'm sure his original recipe is awesome, but this version has depth of flavor without competing with the smoke.  This one is a keeper.

All those spices ... pretty!

Smoke 'em If You Got 'em Chicken

1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
1/2 tablespoon McCormick's dark chili powder
1/2 tablespoon Badia chili powder
1 tablespoon ground cumin
1 tablespoon ground coriander
2 teaspoons garlic powder
1 teaspoon onion powder
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
1 teaspoon ground fennel seed
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon kosher salt
1 tablespoon coarsely ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
8 chicken thighs, skinless

Preheat the oven to 475 degrees.

Combine all of the ingredients, except for the chicken.  Season the chicken on both sides with about half of the spice blend.  Place the chicken in the smoker bag according to directions, and seal well.  Place the bag on a metal baking sheet, and slide into the oven.  Leave the oven door open slightly, as you would when broiling.  Bake for 15 minutes at this temperature, then lower it to 375 degrees and close the oven door.  Bake for another 40 - 45 minutes.  Remove from the oven and allow the smoker bag to sit, undisturbed, for 15 minutes.  Open the bag by cutting across the top.  The chicken can be served as is, or brush the tops with a favorite barbecue sauce (I used the regular barbecue sauce from Jimmy Bear in St. Cloud) and place under the broiler for a few minutes, just until the sauce shows a few small bubbles.  This is so very good.  Your home will have the rather pleasant scent of hickory smoke, and it will dissipate by the next day.


I was thinking the hickory scent was a nice change from the floral, fruity, and baked goods scents we generally use to deal with the ubiquitous scent of dog and cat.  I may be in a minority here, I realize.

Chelsea - After

Dip it ... Dip it good - Easy Donuts, Part II

I guarantee that these lyrics are going to leave you with a raging case of ear worm.  You don't have to thank me, just enjoy.



When a problem comes along
You must whip it
Before the cream sets out too long
You must whip it 
When something's goin' wrong
You must whip it

It's not too late
To whip it
Whip it good


Robert and I have a fabulous weekend planned.  It has nothing to do with whips or whipped cream, so just wipe that little smile off your face.  Yes, you.  Don't give me those Innocent Eyes.

It does happen to involve Indiana Jones, however.


Really now, whatever are you thinking?


As a matter of fact, our boy Indy is going to have a  lovely flea shampoo and a haircut.  So are his brothers Romeo and Woody, and sister Chelsea.  Even Anakin is going to get a bath.  Fun times!

But that's not all, as we have been invited for a Hanukkah party at Jay and Laura Wheeler's home on Saturday evening.  Since Laura is going to prepare the potato latkes, I wanted to find something else to fry in some miraculous canola oil.  I am going to prepare some corn fritters, but that's another blog post.  I am also going to hopefully repeat my sufganiyot success with a batch of jelly doughnuts, also prepared using canned biscuit dough.

Remember these?

Cream Cheese and Jelly Doughnuts

2 tubes Pillsbury buttermilk biscuits (regular size biscuits, 10 each tube)
Smucker's Squeeze Strawberry Fruit Spread
1 - 16 oz. tub of Pillsbury Cream Cheese Frosting
Nonpareils, for decoration
Miraculous canola oil, for frying (regular canola oil will work as well)


Heat oil to 350 degrees.  I like to use an electric wok for these, but you can use an electric frying pan or your stovetop.  Carefully slip the biscuits into the hot oil; when they are golden brown on one side, turn and brown the other side.  Using a slotted spoon, remove the doughnuts to drain on paper towels.


Put some of the strawberry fruit spread in a piping bag with a metal tip.  (I could not find my metal tips, and had to improvise,  using my trusty Korean chopstick to create an opening and space for the strawberry).  When the doughnuts are cool enough to handle, press the piping tip into the side of each doughnut, and squeeze in some of the fruit.


Remove the cover and foil from the top of the frosting tub.  Microwave for 30 seconds, then stir well.  Pour the frosting into a bowl that is wide enough for easy dipping.  Now, work fast:  dip each doughnut top into the frosting, 3 times.  This will ensure a nice, glossy frosting.  Place onto a flat surface, and immediately sprinkle with some of the nonpareils.  Repeat with the remaining doughnuts, working quickly before the frosting in the bowl begins to solidify.


Let the doughnuts sit for at least a half hour to allow the frosting to dry.  Move them to a platter (in my case, a trusty aluminum pan), and serve to your appreciative guests.


Happy fifth night of Hanukkah!

TRAVELBLOG POST #7 - BRKEXPAT

BRKEXPAT
                                    

You can take Salem out of the country, but
you can't take the country out of Salem

If you are around my age and can remember a time before cigarette ads were banned on television, you now have an annoying ear worm.  You're welcome.  Can you believe that all those physicians were feeling Lucky?  P.S., there's no Surgeon General's Warning on this ad.  It's old, like me.


Today is a Sea Day.  No stops at any ports of call, just rest and relaxation aboard this floating hotel.  Times like this, my mind starts to wander off into strange territory.  Today I wandered into Brooklyn, city of my birth.

751 Daniel Street, North Woodmere

I have been a true-blue suburbanite most of my life.  Besides the eleven years I lived with my grandparents and brother in our high ranch in the Five Towns, I have spent all the years of my married life but one in the 'burbs.  I like the 'burbs.  I like having a backyard with a kumquat tree and splashy hibiscus.  I like having property and a patio and a pool.  I love expansive lawns and green green St. Augustine grass and a peaceful view of water and trees.  I like suburban schools and Boy Scout troops and martial arts schools and synagogues. The 'burbs are the best place to raise a child.

Central Florida has towns and cities and suburbs and country.  Real country, with no visible neighbors and very few paved roads.  Working farms with citrus trees, cattle, or corn as far as the eye can see.  Neat brick ranch homes, large airy barns, and a mailbox barely within driving distance.  Or no farm, but a family who prizes peace and privacy above all else, doesn't mind driving an hour each way to do their food shopping, and are okay with the kids being driven two hours each way to attend their district public schools.  Huge pieces of property peppered with mobile homes in a questionable state of repair.  What they all have in common is a complete absence of a town center, or even a neighborhood.  There are a lot of people who love that isolation, prefer raising their kids away from the bad influences of overcrowding and negative opportunities and are up to the task of quality homeschooling.

915 East 7th Street, Brooklyn (Midwood)

When I was a very young child, living in Brooklyn, "country" had a whole different meaning.  My grandparents had a summer house in the country, and that was probably pretty accurate, as it was located upstate (defined as anything north of the Bronx) in Monroe.  Each home had quite a lot of property around it, and I used to help my Pop mow the lawn.  Never mind my lawn mower was constructed of plastic, I was helping.  We had a patio and a pear tree that we could see from the kitchen window over the sink.  That was before the Dark Times - Joyce and Mike were still together and home in Brooklyn taking care of my little brother - and my relationship with my grandmother was special and precious.  Once I got a little older, all hell broke loose and my brother and I went to live with my grandparents, and the definition of "country" was extended to include anywhere on Long Island, as long as you pretended not to know that Brooklyn and Queens were on Long Island.  "The Island" was just that part of Long Island covered by Nassau and Suffolk Counties.

3521 Kings Highway, Brooklyn (Flatlands)

Okay, I could possibly see Suffolk County being called "the country" - the Long Island Expressway barely crossed the county line back then (although Vanderbilt Motor Parkway had once stretched from Queens to the western shore of Lake Ronkonkoma), and there were a hell of a lot of potato farms all the way out to Riverhead and the Forks - but by the late fifties my Aunt Ceil, Uncle Louie, and cousin Cary had only moved as far as Bellmore, on the south shore of Nassau County, and my grandmother insisted that was country.  Never mind that it was a normal suburban street with sidewalks and neat front lawns and a school bus stop on the corner.  My grandmother often said that Aunt Ceil lived in the country, but it was still better than the house she had wanted to buy out in the anarchist wilds of Islip.  The family was uniformly scandalized by that flight of fancy, and someone managed to talk her out of it.  Probably her bossy sister, my grandmother, who never lived any further out on the Island than the Five Towns, in the most southwestern corner of Nassau County, tucked tightly up against Far Rockaway and Rosedale in neighboring New York City.  Mom (my grandmother) was definitely a city girl, so when Rob and I were buying our first house, in Ronkonkoma, she asked if the garage was attached, and I replied, "of course it is, Mom ... and we even have indoor plumbing." She was not amused.

2177 Cedar Avenue, Ronkonkoma

I realized, at least within the last few years, that I am more like my grandmother than I usually like to admit.  I could never live in the country, or even in the more isolated sections of suburbia.  Of course, there is absolutely no part of Long Island that could be considered country anymore, but I'm not really talking about Long Island.  The country in Florida is entirely real, and at least in my own head, I have given it some thought.  Idle thought - the Keys, the Panhandle, one of the habitable islands in the middle of Lake Toho.  I said the 'burbs are the best place to raise a child, and they are, but I am way past that point in my orbit.  But if I allow myself to go beyond idle thought, what I feel is a frisson of fear.  I need to be able to see my neighbors, even if I don't know their names.

Sadly, no relation.  Nathan was actually the first name of the founder.

I really think it is the Brooklyn in my blood.  I was born in Brooklyn Jewish Hospital, and that pretty much tells you everything you need to know about the essential me (if you really care about that, which you certainly may not.)


Although we moved out of Brooklyn when I was nine years old, I never really left.  For one thing, my Pop owned businesses in Brooklyn; first, Vijax Coal and Oil up in Greenpoint, and then as a partner in Plaza Home Improvement.  As a very young man, he started out driving Mac trucks for Vijax, his father's business, and as he used to tell me, he "knew Brooklyn like the back of his hand."  I loved when he would pass on his knowledge and all his backroad travels. Yes, even Brooklyn has backroads.  While I was living in Howard Beach, in Queens, I was so close to the county line, I could spit into Brooklyn.  I attended Long Island University at their Brooklyn campus, right across from Junior's Restaurant, on two different occasions - graduate school and paralegal school.

The old Brooklyn Paramount is now part of the Long Island University - Brooklyn Campus

While I was working at Robert Hall Clothes on Metropolitan Avenue in the Maspeth/Middle Village area, I would go out of my way to find creative backroads home, which almost always landed me somewhere in Brooklyn.  (Fellow New York City peeps - ever take the Interboro (Jackie Robinson Parkway)?  On purpose? It was like driving through the City of the Dead, which made it so interesting.)  When I was dependent on mass transit, and especially while I was attending LIU, I would purposely take convoluted routes so I could experience new lines and stations in Brooklyn.  I loved that borough like nobody's business.

Where I fell in love ... with lobster.  I was five years old.

So, over 15 years ago, when I first needed to pick an online handle for the old Orlando Sentinel message board, the name that immediately popped up in my mind was "brkexpat" - Brooklyn Ex-Patriate.  Never mind that I had been living in various Long Island communities since 1962, my connection to Brooklyn is that powerful, as well as eternal, because just last year I found  a bunch of my father's family, my Osher relatives, and a number of them still live in Brooklyn. 

I'm essentially a city girl, and it's best that I realized it and accepted it before I bought a home out in the boonies.  Because ...

You can take the girl out of Brooklyn, but ...

Monday, December 22, 2014

Chick-a-Boom-Boom-Boom Chicken

I opened the third door and there she was
And she whispered so sexy, hello-ooh
I tried to do the same
And impress her with my style
But why I said this
I'll never know

Chick-a-boom-chick-a-boom
(Mmmmm-aaaah)
Don't ya jes' love it
Chick-a-boom-chick-a-boom
(Mmmmm-aaaah)
Don't you jes' love it
Chick-a-boom-chick-a-boom
(Mmmmm-aaaah)
Don't ya jes' love it
Chick-a-boom-chick-a-boom-boom-boom


Good grief, that pose is soooo me!  Hand on my hip, the severe look on my face, the attitude in my body language.  Incipient lawyer, indeed.  Maybe a med mal case as that's my client, the future doctor Elliot Morris.

I am starting a new series of blog posts tentatively called Six Degrees of Separation and Consanguinity, dealing with the lost and found status of family members.  It is a topic that has been on my mind and in my heart for a number of years.  I'll probably start publishing the posts once the Travelblog series is completed.  From paradise to family dysfunction - don't tell me I never take you folks to interesting places!

When I was planning to make the stir-fry earlier this week, I picked up both pork and chicken breasts to use as the protein.  Having changed my mind in the time it took us to drive from Publix to our house, I figured that when the time came, I'd know exactly what to do with those two lovely chicken breasts.  Well, the time came and this is what I did.  This is delicious, just slightly spicy, and the right balance of chicken to sauce.  My boys don't seem to care if I serve any side dishes with the entrees, but I was thinking these ingredients might pair well with couscous.

Best of all, this is a dish that works well for a mid-week dinner.  And if the kids don't like the very slight bite from the hot giardiniera,  I'm guessing the recipe would work well with the milder version.



Chick-a-Boom-Boom-Boom Chicken

Ingredients:
2 tablespoons bacon fat
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 large sweet onion, sliced
About 1 pound of boneless and skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite-size pieces
2 tablespoons Wondra flour
1 cup white wine
1 - 16 oz. bottle of hot giardiniera, drained (I use Mezzetta brand California Hot Mix)
1/4 cup whole, pitted Kalamata olives, drained and cut in half lengthwise
1 - 14.5 oz. can fire-roasted diced tomatoes, undrained
4 tablespoons half-and-half

Seasoning:
Kosher salt
Ground black pepper
Granulated garlic
Whole dried oregano
Emeril's Essence

Heat the bacon fat and the butter in a large frying pan over high heat.  Add the sliced onion and season well with the salt, pepper, garlic, oregano, and Essence.   Cook the onion, stirring fairly frequently, until it starts to brown.

Place the chicken in a ziploc bag.  Add the flour.  Shake the bag so that all of the chicken is lightly dusted with flour.  Add the chicken, with any remaining flour in the bag, into the pan with the onions.

Brown the chicken on all sides. Add the white wine and bring to a boil.  Cover the pan and reduce the heat to low.  Cook the chicken for about 20 minutes, stirring once or twice.  Remove the cover and stir in the tomatoes.  Raise the heat to medium, and cook just until the sauce begins to thicken.




Add the giardiniera and the olives and cook for another 10 minutes, adding a bit of white wine if necessary to keep it from drying out.  Lower the heat all the way down and begin adding the half-and-half one tablespoon at a time. Stir well after each addition.  Once you add the dairy, do not allow the sauce to bubble.

Happy Hanukkah!


Sunday, December 21, 2014

Fry, Fry My Darling - Corn Fritters


Die die die my darling
Don't utter a single word

Die die die my darling
Just shut your pretty eyes

I'll be seeing you again
I'll be seeing you in hell


Sheesh, what awful lyrics!  Forget that, and instead concentrate on these wonderful corn fritters.


This is still Hanukkah week, and I am frying some tasty tidbits in more of that miracle canola oil.  These will be coming with us when we head over to the Wheelers for some Hanukkah Hoopla (that's the invitation, folks).



I found this recipe about 35 years ago, in a Hadassah cookbook I'd purchased from a neighbor who lived across the hall from me in Howard Beach.  Her studio apartment was even smaller than mine, which was pretty amazing.  So are the fritters.

2 eggs
1/2 cup milk
2 cups Bisquick
black pepper, to taste
2 teaspoons sugar
2 - 11 oz. cans Green Giant corn niblets, well-drained


In a small mixing bowl, beat the eggs with a fork.  Add the milk, set aside.  In a large mixing bowl, mix the Bisquick with the pepper and sugar.  Stir in the egg-milk mixture.


Add the corn niblets.  Use a wooden spoon for the mixing, and don't worry if it looks like the batter is insufficient to coat the corn.  It works, trust me.  Set the fritter batter aside to rest up to 20 minutes.


In a wok, heat 2 inches of oil to 350 degrees.  Stir the batter again, and then using a small scooper that has been coated with cooking spray, gently drop the fritter batter into the hot oil, about 8 to 10 fritters at a time.  Turn them occasionally and fry until the fritters are golden brown and the interior batter is cooked all the way through.  With a slotted spoon, remove the fritters to drain on paper towels.  Repeat with the remaining batter.  This makes approximately 3 dozen fritters.



The best way to eat these is with maple syrup.  Break  one open and drizzle a few drops of maple syrup over each half, then eat and enjoy.  And you will enjoy.


These are great served as an appetizer or as a side dish.  Let's face it, they are great, no matter what.

TRAVELBLOG POST #6 - AT SEA: RIDDLE ME THIS


When we are at home, we live in a 90 year old house with solid wood floors that slope precipitously, a very updated 2014 kitchen, and a tin roof. I loved that house the minute I stepped into it, 15 or so years ago, when we were looking to buy property for professional offices, and I love it even more now that we have converted most of it into a residence.  It is quaint and it is quirky, and I suppose those two words describe me as well, so the house and I are well suited to each other.

See how the floor tilts?

The bedrooms are on the top floor, in what used to be an enormous attic. That conversion was done long before we bought the house, including ruining the original wooden floors beyond repair, so we had to ceramic-tile the entire second floor. The ginormous master bedroom, with it's low sloping ceiling reminds me of a deep, cozy cave.  It's a wonderful place to sleep.  There is plenty of room for a king-sized bed, and we were all set to replace our 40-year old queen, but had to abandon that idea when we realized rather quickly that those 1925 doorways would never accommodate a king-sized mattress's passage.
You can see that nothing is even; certainly not the floor.

The tin roof is relatively new.  In 2004, when Florida was hit with the deadly hurricane trifecta of Charlie, Frances, and Jeanne, our Kissimmee house took some serious damage.  Not as bad as our neighbor, who had a tree pierce the first story roof of his building, but bad enough.  I remember walking into what was then my office on the first floor of our building, looking up and remarking to Rob's secretary Maria, "I don't remember having a skylight over there."


Everything was a mess.  Hundred year old trees all along the surrounding streets had been uprooted.  Above-ground electrical wires were down, along with the poles that had supported them.  An old house located in back of the courthouse was completely leveled, while others were so severely damaged as to be uninhabitable.  Downtown Kissimmee was trashed, which turned out to be a good thing in the long run, but certainly didn't seem so at the time.  FEMA-blue tarps overtook the majority of roofs in our neighborhood.


In time, our insurance company paid for the roof to be replaced, and the neighborhood returned to a mostly pre-hurricane normal, except for my neighbor, an antisocial personality in full bloom, who had been hoping he would be permitted to tear down his damaged property so he could sell that land without an ugly, badly-maintained cinderblock wart there to detract from the true value of the location.  I wish he had been successful as well, but that's water under the bridge, or through the roof, so to speak.
That is my office building behind the sign.  Two historical 
hotels previously sat on that site.

But this is about my tin roof.  This morning, while sitting in bed in our stateroom, enjoying the gentle rocking of the ship (yes, of course I am wearing my wristbands), I could hear the patter of raindrops above me. Very soothing, as it reminded me of that same sound around and above me from our tin roof at home.  Until I remembered that our stateroom is on Deck 5 of a 14 deck cruise ship.  So riddle me this - where were the raindrops coming from?  And why did they stop at the same time it stopped raining outside?


When we completed the move to Kissimmee earlier this year, my world closed in on itself.  On a daily, workday basis, I travel a lot less and enjoy it more.  I live close to my office - I could walk to work if I wanted to - and even closer to the courthouses.  I can walk to Lake Toho, with it's beautiful lakefront park, and stop at Susan's Courtside Cafe on my way back for a nice lunch and an even nicer cup of coffee.

Or I could walk from home in the other direction and pick up pizza from Al's (a Kissimmee institution) or chips from the 7-11 where I also gas up my car, once a month or so.  I don't have a backyard - I have a cobblestone parking lot, much better.  The lawn care dude doesn't need to use a mower on our teeny bit of grassy knoll, because ten minutes with a weed whacker works just fine.  It's a short ride to the Race-Trac for frozen yogurt and do-it-yourself toppings, and my very favorite chip mix from Utz. The Starbucks is nearby, as is a Walmart grocery, and every fast food restaurant known to man.  While I don't eat a great deal of fast food anymore, there is nothing like Long John Silver's to alleviate a deep-fried food craving.


Nearby on Broadway Avenue is an eclectic selection of restaurants and nightspots.  In my office complex right off Broadway is Savion's Place. Awesome food, even Emeril agrees. And then there is Nadia's with her wonderful Mediterranean food, including really good falafel and salad with big hunks of feta, and Broadway Pizza with calzones the size of your head. The Kissimmee Police Department is one minute away, the fire department is two.

Part of the City Centre complex.  Three Sister's Speakeasy
and Savion's Place.  

For the most part, the location is incredible.  Except for the motorcycle gangs, nightly arising from the extreme south end of Clyde Street, and the absence of decent sushi.  I have no idea where the motorcycles come from, but their harmless, noisy parade reminds me of that early scene from the Rocky Horror Show, just before Brad and Janet's tire blew out, forcing them to walk back toward the light coming from the Frankenstein house.  Our dogs are quite diligent about chasing them away.  The motorcyclists, not Brad and Janet.  Yappie dogs, gotta love them.

The back of my office building.  I know, I still can't believe it.

For sushi, we still head back to Hunter's Creek to Mikado, but the distance makes it less likely we're eating sushi.  Same reason my fake nails keep breaking off.

I love this.  The lake, of course, is Lake Tohopekaliga.  Big Toho.

This ship has sushi.  Not the fake-but-fun sushi rolls that used to be served on the  Carnival Ecstasy, along with that Japanese mayonnaise I'm so crazy about, but real Mikado-quality sushi with gorgeous fresh fish (how they managed that on the sixth day of a cruise I haven't figured out, unless we picked up something besides souvenirs in Curaçao.)


We know this because we decided to have lunch there today.  The place is called Bonsai Sushi, and it is right across from the Fahrenheit 555 steakhouse.  Today is a sea day, and very much a food-focussed day, with another English Tea at 3:00 PM and a cruise elegant dinner.  Sushi for lunch fit in with the general theme.  There is an upcharge, but it is relatively minor and oh-so-worth it.  Their menu is a lot more limited than Mikado, which has a menu that needs a Table of Contents.


See what I mean?  No cognitive overload here.  I can definitely handle this. So we ordered the "Ship for 2", and I discovered something I had suspected for a long time. Miso soup sucks.  Rob and Cory order it all the time, but it has never appealed to me.  Anytime I've seen Morimoto use miso paste on Iron Chef, dozens of times, it always looks like something that only Andrew Zimmern should be eating. But, since it came with the lunch, I decided to try it.  One discrete, delicate sniff, and very small, tentative sip.  Oh, feh, or as Nero Wolfe would say, Pfui.  Oh, and double feh - I found tofu in the soup.  I don't necessarily dislike tofu, but the problem is that tofu is only worth eating when it is paired with other flavorful elements of the dish.  Tofu is a flavor-cipher that ends up tasting like the other ingredients in the recipe (unless you are crazy enough to try Korean stinky tofu, another Andrew Zimmern favorite.  Come to think of it, I don't think even he likes it.)  Unfortunately, this tofu had no choice but to taste exactly like the less-than-palatable-to-me miso soup, so let me just put that whole thing on the "No Need to Try Again Shelf" along with blue cheese and truffles.


Robert enjoyed the miso soup tremendously, so I don't want you to think my lack of enthusiasm had anything to do with the quality of food at Bonsai.  Everything was delicious.  Lunch came with a side salad which was just what I was craving, and the California roll (which was all I was able to eat) was full of real crabmeat and buttery avocado.  So very yummy, even without my Japanese mayonnaise.

We already have plans to return for lunch on the next sea day.  Which is not tomorrow - tomorrow we dock at Grand Turk, and I booked a tour of Historical Homes and Museums.

Edamame, yes.  Miso, no.

Tonight though, was our second cruise elegant evening, so I put on eyeliner and high heels and we had a lovely dinner, after watching a terrific live show.  Let me remind you, disco is not dead, and these performers proved it.  For dinner I ordered escargot and the chateaubriand.  Not bad at all, but I would have liked more béarnaise sauce.  I did not order the Baked Alaska for dessert because I never do and neither should you.  When it is Baked Alaska night on a Carnival ship, order the warm melting chocolate cake for dessert.  You will thank me.