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Progressive Dinner For Jan 23 |
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HistoricFoodie
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Joined: 21 February 2012 Location: Kentucky Status: Offline Points: 4945 |
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Topic: Progressive Dinner For Jan 23Posted: 17 January 2014 at 06:48 |
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We're reaching the end of the road with this dinner, so let's make it a gangbusters meal.
Here are the assignments for this final shot: Appetizer: Dan (fill-in for Anne) First course: Ron Soup: Mark Salad: Dan Seafood: Ahron Main: Hila Dessert: Brook Hopefully, Ahron and Hila will get their entries posted quickly, so we can all post balanced dishes against them. |
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gonefishin
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Joined: 20 September 2012 Status: Offline Points: 1778 |
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Posted: 20 January 2014 at 09:13 |
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Cheese & Potato Croquette
Boil potatoes in salted water until tender, 20 minutes. Rice potatoes then blend in butter, cream, pancetta, 1/4 cup cheese and use salt and pepper to taste. In a bowl, whisk two eggs and blend into potato mixture. Let mixture cool. Form into 10-12 3-4 oz ovals. Divide remaining cheese into same number of portions and stuff in the middle of the potato mixture shaped balls, to form croquettes. Mix remaining 3 eggs in a bowl. In separate bowls add flour and bread crumbs. Bread each croquette by rolling in flour, dipping in egg, then rolling in bread crumbs. Deep fry in 350f oil until golden brown |
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Enjoy The Food!
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HistoricFoodie
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Joined: 21 February 2012 Location: Kentucky Status: Offline Points: 4945 |
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Posted: 20 January 2014 at 16:16 |
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When I was much younger than I am, tapioca was a very common dessert. Like so many ingredients of that time, however, it became associated with deprivation, and fell out of favor. Now, I’m glad to say, it’s coming back into vogue.
Tapioca is produced from the cassava plant, and has been used, literally, for centuries to make sweet desserts and creamy puddings. It has a light, delicate flavor, that supports, rather than masks, other flavors such as fruits, vanilla, cardamom, and so on. For this week’s dessert, we’ll have: Tapioca Pudding with Raspberry Chocolate Sauce ½ cup tapioca pearls ¼ tsp salt 2 eggs, separated 2 ½ cups milk ½ cup sugar 1 tsp vanilla Soak the tapioca in 2 cups room temperature water overnight. Drain. In a double boiler, heat the milk until just no longer cold. Add salt and tapioca. Continue heating until small bubbles appear at sides of pan. Cover, turn heat to very low, and cook for one hour, making sure the milk does not boil. Beat the egg yolks and sugar together until light yellow. Temper the yolks by adding a little of the hot mixture and blending thoroughly Then add the egg mixture to the hot milk mixture, stirring constantly. Place the double boiler over medium heat and cook until tapioca mixture is very thick, ten to 15 minutes. Meanwhile, beat the egg whites until stiff. Slowly fold the egg whites into the hot tapioca mixture. Stir in vanilla. Chill several hours or overnight Raspberry Chocolate Sauce 1 10-oz pkg frozen raspberries ½ cup sugar ½ cup orange juice Splash Chocolate-Mint liquor 2 tbls semi-sweet chocolate chips 1 tbls cornstarch Simmer all ingredients except liquor until slightly thickened and chips are melted. Add the liquor and remove from heat. For service: Spoon portions of tapioca pudding into dessert bowls. Top with raspberry sauce. |
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gonefishin
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Joined: 20 September 2012 Status: Offline Points: 1778 |
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Posted: 20 January 2014 at 16:23 |
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wonderful dessert, I'll give it a whirl sometime!
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gonefishin
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Joined: 20 September 2012 Status: Offline Points: 1778 |
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Posted: 21 January 2014 at 08:01 |
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Here's a lovely salad that is simple and back to basics. While It's written with Iberico Jamon in mind, of course substitute any type of prosciutto you enjoy.
Iberico Jamon with Salad
Toss cleaned greens together, with chervil, parsley and chives. Whisk olive oil and balsamic together in separate bowl, season with salt and pepper. Pour over salad mixture and lightly toss. Make a mound of the salad mixture in the middle of the plate, then place Iberico slices around the salad. Grind some peppercorns to top and serve. |
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africanmeat
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Joined: 20 January 2012 Location: south africa Status: Offline Points: 910 |
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Posted: 22 January 2014 at 10:19 |
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For the seafood i will do
Takoyaki (octopus balls ) |
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Ahron
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gonefishin
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Joined: 20 September 2012 Status: Offline Points: 1778 |
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Posted: 23 January 2014 at 17:56 |
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Nice course Ahron! They look delicious!
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TasunkaWitko
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Joined: 25 January 2010 Location: Chinook, MT Status: Offline Points: 9389 |
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Posted: 24 January 2014 at 01:13 |
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For our first course, I've decided to stick with our spheroid theme and present falafel. I made this for the first time last weekend, and took photos; once my pictorial is complete, I will link back to here, of course. The recipe is rather special to me, because it comes from a very good friend whom I have not yet met, Ahron (africanmeat). Ahron generously shared his sister's recipe with me, and graciously encouraged me to share it with the forum. His sister used to have a food truck that sold falafel, so it's the real deal! ![]()
To go with the falafel, here is an excellent recipe for a lemon-and-garlic tahina sauce, from my Middle-Eastern volume of Time/Life's Foods of the World series:
The sauce is referred to by its Arabic name, taratoor, in the book; not to be confused with tarator, which is a Middle-Easter and Balkan cold soup made from a yoghurt base. The following links elaborate on this: Taratoor: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/580398/tahini Tarator: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarator It turned out very well, just as advertised, and made a wonderful condiment or Ahron's falafel. Enjoy!
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MarkR
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Joined: 03 February 2011 Location: St. Pete FL Status: Offline Points: 625 |
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Posted: 24 January 2014 at 14:21 |
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I was trying to wait on the main but here goes. This could be a soup and/or a main.
Seafood Gumbo in a bread bowl with crispy corn cactus! ![]() |
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Mark R
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