What can you expect in the Food Thread on PF?

In summary, a food lover and connoisseur named PF shared their favourite recipes, their kind of cuisine, and favourite dishes. They also shared their experiences dining out and cooking at home. Lastly, they mentioned a food thread that is popular on the website, as well as a recipe that they like.
  • #71
Moonbear said:
Hey, now hush up about those substitutes! I was looking forward to an excuse to get crabcakes in D.C.! :grumpy:
Well, visiting Cyrus is a good enough excuse. :biggrin:
 
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  • #72
I fancy myself an amateur chef. :cool:

Here are some recipes that I came up with. My friends and family all think they're great.

Ultimate Chicken and Dumplings
You will need the following ingredients for 4 servings.

Chicken
3 chicken breasts, cut into 2 inch pieces
2 bay leaves
2 tbsp chicken base (I used "Better than Bouillon" by Superior Touch)
salt, pepper, garlic powder to taste
1/2 cup white wine

Veggies
2 ribs celery, chopped
2 carrots, chopped
1 large onion, chopped
3 cups chicken broth

Dumplings
1 cup flour
2 cups Bisquick
salt, pepper, thyme, basil, and nutmeg to taste
ice water

Bechamel Sauce
1/4 cup unsalted butter
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
2 cups heavy cream
1 small onion studded with 6 cloves
2 small bay leaves
salt, pepper, thyme, basil, and nutmeg to taste

Chicken and Veggies
In a large stock pot combine the chopped vegetables and the chicken broth over medium heat. Season chicken breasts with salt, pepper, and garlic powder and brown in a hot frying pan. Remove the chicken from the pan, and remove the pan from heat (or just shut off the burner) and deglaze the pan with the white wine, scraping up all the browned bits with a spatula. Transfer the wine and pan residue to the stock pot with the vegetables, along with the chicken base and bay leaves. Once the vegetables are fork tender add the chicken and chicken base. Keep pot over medium heat until chicken is cooked through and broth has reduced. At this time you should also get another large pot of water and bring it to a boil. This will be for the dumplings.

Bechamel Sauce
I used the recipe found at http://www.dianaskitchen.com/page/sauce/bechamel.htm, with the following alterations.

* Instead of milk, I used heavy cream.
* I used 6 cloves and 2 bay leaves for extra flavor.
* I added basil, again for extra flavor.

It helped matters to use the cloves to tack the bay leaves to the onion for easy retrieval and removal. I then chopped up the onion and put in in the stock pot with the other veggies. Waste not, want not, and all that.

Once the bechamel sauce is done, add it to the stockpot with the veggies and chicken, stirring to fold it all together. The bechamel sauce is very thick, and the chicken broth and wine are supposed to thin it out to be less of a paste and more of a sauce. If you want to remove the bay leaves from the final product then it would help to do it before adding the bechamel sauce, while the cooking liquid is still clear yellow.

Dumplings
In a mixing bowl combine the flour, Bisquick and herbs with a whisk. Add ice water gradually and stir constantly until the mixture forms a dough. Note that the both the flour and the Bisquick are needed. When I used only flour the dumplings were too dense. When I used the Bisquick they broke up in the boiling water. The 1:2 ratio made fluffy yet sturdy dumplings.

Tear off small pieces of dough (about 1 inch) and add them to the boiling water. Let the dumplings cook about 5 minutes in the boiling water, then transfer to the stockpot with the chicken and the vegetables and stir so that dumplings are distributed throughout the pot. Once the chicken is cooked, the vegetables are tender, and the dumplings are added, let the pot simmer for about 10 minutes so that the flavors can come together.
 
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  • #73
Seafood Pesto Risotto

This is my favorite dish, hands down.

Risotto
2 cups arborio rice (risotto)
3 cups chicken broth
2 cup white wine
6 scallions, finely chopped
extra virgin olive oil

Seafood and Stuff
1 pound shrimp, peeled, deveined, and chopped
1 8oz lobster tail, chopped
1/2 cup frozen peas
1/2 cup porcini mushrooms, finely chopped
salt and pepper as desired

Pesto
1 cup fresh basil leaves
1/2 cup fresh parsley
4 cloves of garlic
6 oz of pine nuts
1/4 cup grated parmesan cheese
extra virgin olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

To make the pesto combine all of the dry ingredients (everything but the oil) in a food processor. Drizzle in the oil and pulse until a thick paste forms. The objective is to get the pesto to be the same consistency as the risotto.

Bring the chicken broth to a simmer in a large saucepan.

In a seperate, well-oiled saucepan over medium heat add the rice and the scallions. Be sure to coat the rice with oil as you saute the scallions. Add 2 ladles of broth and stir continually, repeating as the broth is absorbed and the starch is released. Add wine regularly during this process. Continue until the broth and wine are used up, about 20 minutes.

In an oiled frying pan or wok over medium-high heat add the mushrooms and peas. Cook for about 15 minutes, then add the seafood. Continue cooking until the the meat is cooked.

When everything is finished cooking transfer the seafood-veggie mixture and the pesto to the risotto and combine thoroughly. Serve topped with grated parmesan cheese.
 
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  • #74
Tom Mattson said:
I fancy myself an amateur chef. :cool:

Here are some recipes that I came up with. My friends and family all think they're great.

Ultimate Chicken and Dumplings
Mmmmm, I love chicken and dumplings, I need to try your version. :approve:
 
  • #75
There's a bit of a story behind that recipe. I was looking for a great chicken and dumplings recipe, and I thought "Who's would be better than Paula Deen's?" She's the country lady on the Food Network. Anyway I printed out her recipe, and it wasn't all that great. The dumplings were like little lead belly bombs. And for the sauce she used a canned cream of celery soup. Yuck! Since then I've learned that anything you can do with CampbellsTM cream-of-puke soups, you can do a million times better with a bechamel sauce made from scratch.
 
  • #76
Minestra

Nothing beats this on a cold night.

2 large heads escarole (spinach or chard suisse will do nicely also)
1/4 cup chicken broth (vegetable broth is fine too)
1 large can of cannellini beans
1/4 lb of prosciutto and/or pepperoni
6 scallions (1 small chopped onion is an OK substitute)
4 cloves of garlic, minced
extra virgin olive oil
grated parmesan cheese
salt and pepper

In a well-oiled stockpot saute the onion and garlic cloves over medium heat. Add all of the chicken broth and batches of the escarole leaves. Add greens as they cook down. When all the greens are wilted add the meat and beans. Toss thoroughly and allow the latter ingredients to become heated through and the broth to reduce, about 10 minutes. Salt and pepper as desired. Serve topped with grated parmesan cheese and buttered bread. Add red pepper flakes for some heat, and a touch of white wine doesn't hurt either.
 
  • #77
Shrimp Scampi

2 lbs large shrimp, peeled
extra virgin olive oil
1 stick of butter
1 garlic bulb (not clove, bulb--this ain't for wimps!), minced
chopped parsley
chopped basil
red pepper flakes
grape tomatoes
spaghetti (any pasta works)
2 lemons
white wine
parmigiano reggiano

Coat the bottom of a large frying pan with extra virgin olive oil. Add the shrimp, 1 stick of butter, white wine, and the juice of 1 lemon to the hot oil. Once the shrimp are pink on both sides, add the herbs, red pepper, garlic, tomatoes. Salt and pepper as desired. Serve over your favorite pasta and top with parmigiano reggiano cheese. Garnish with parsley and lemon wedge. Setting the excess pan liquid in a bowl makes a nice dipping sauce, and avoids having a little puddle below the pasta. Try substituting your favorite risotto dish instead of pasta for a little variation.
 
  • #78
Roasted Garlic Marinated Beef Tenderloin

2 beef tenderloins
4 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 head of garlic
4 sprigs of oregano
4 sprigs of rosemary
1/2 cup red wine (I like chianti)
4 tbsp of Worcestershire sauce
1/2 tsp of tobasco sauce
salt
ground black pepper
red pepper flakes

Cut the top off the head of garlic and place in a baking dish. Generously salt and pepper the garlic and drizzle on the olive oil. Roast the garlic in a 350 degree oven until the cloves are brown and pliable, about 1 hour. Once the garlic has cooled, peel the cloves and transfer them to a food processor along with the seasoned olive oil from the baking dish. Add the oregano, rosemary, and red pepper flakes to the processor and pulse until a paste forms. Spread the paste onto the tenderloins.

In a metal bowl combine the wine, Worcestershire, and tobasco and mix thoroughly. Add the tenderloins, cover, and refrigerate overnight. If the steaks aren't submerged then turn them over at the midpoint of the marinating process.

In a hot frying pan, sear off the steaks on both sides to seal in the juices. Rub the steaks with the garlic paste and then salt and pepper to taste. Place steaks on a hot grill and cook until desired level of doneness is reached.
 
  • #79
Favorite Food Network Dishes:

http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/show_ei/episode/0,1976,FOOD_9958_27709,00.html , by Giada De Laurentiis
I regularly make the stuffing and the mushrooms.

http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,,FOOD_9936_24963,00.html , by Michael Chiarello
I cut the butter to about 1/3 of what he uses and add a cup of grated parmesan.

I'll post more later. I've got lots more favorites by Giada, Michael, Mario, Paula, Ina,...

Just stay away from the "quickie" pseudo-chefs like Sandra Lee, Robin Miller, and Rachael Ray. They're the culinary equivalent of crackpots. :grumpy:
 
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  • #80
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a cordon bleu chef in the making .
Tom Mattson, those recipes positively make my mouth water, especially the chicken and dumplings . Sadly I don't cook ( I plan to start someday :P) and some of the ingredients are beyond me .

Ok Moonbear, I won't say a word about substitutes till you get back from DC after having your crabcakes . I love crab and I love cakes, but what are crabcakes anyway ?

PS: Tom, do you have those recipes stored on your PC or something , as I gather from the posting times ?
 
  • #81
arunbg said:
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a cordon bleu chef in the making .
Tom Mattson, those recipes positively make my mouth water, especially the chicken and dumplings .

He He Thanks! :cool:

Sadly I don't cook ( I plan to start someday :P) and some of the ingredients are beyond me .

Make that someday soon! Cooking is both fun and rewarding. It makes you a much better party host too. I would recommend starting by watching Michael Chiarello ("Easy Entertaining") and Giada De Laurentiis ("Everyday Italian"). Their dishes are really delicious, and really easy.

Ok Moonbear, I won't say a word about substitutes till you get back from DC after having your crabcakes . I love crab and I love cakes, but what are crabcakes anyway ?

Check out the following thread, 2nd post down.

http://p212.ezboard.com/ffoodnetworkfansfrm9.showMessage?topicID=8.topic

PS: Tom, do you have those recipes stored on your PC or something , as I gather from the posting times ?

No, I post on cooking message boards. I just copied and pasted.

http://theantiboard.proboards47.com/index.cgi (You have to be registered to view.)
Food Network Fans
 
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  • #82
Thomas you've excelled yourself there. The Roasted Garlic Marinated Beef Tenderloin sounds divine, I will report back when I've eaten the lot.
 
  • #83
How could I have forgotten dessert?

Baked Apples with Maple Syrup
Rome baking apples
maple syrup (The good stuff. If you use Mrs. Butterworth's and I find out about it, you will have a stalker on your hands. :biggrin: )
brown sugar
cinnamon

Core apples, taking care not to punch a hole through the bottom. Fill cavity with maple syrup. Blend equal parts brown sugar and cinnamon and cap off the hole in the apple with the cinnamon and sugar mixture. Bake apples 30 min (or until tender) in a preheated 400 degree oven. Serve with ice cream.

It's simple to make, but it's delicious and my guests are always impressed with it. I serve them in a bowl with 3 small scoops of ice cream around the edges. When you first break that apple open the hot maple syrup runs out and melts the ice cream, and it's sooooooo good. Vanilla bean ice cream is strongly recommended.

Enjoy!
 
  • #84
Great recipes, Tom!

I'm surprised the single ladies around here aren't hitting on you yet. :biggrin:
 
  • #85
I'm sure they will once the smell wafts down the hall. :cool:

Back in November--for the very first time--I made the entire Thanksgiving dinner. The results are at the following thread.

http://p212.ezboard.com/ffoodnetworkfansfrm43.showMessage?topicID=45.topic

My lasagne is much better than that one now. I used to make it with 2 thick cheese layers, but now I do 1 layer of cheese and 1 layer of sauce with well-seasoned ground beef. I've never written the recipe down though, I just kind of throw stuff in a pot and continually taste it with a chunk of bread. :biggrin: I've also added a 4th cheese to the mix: scamorza. On the next cool day I'll make a lasagne and report the amount of each ingredient. o:)
 
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  • #86
Yummy...those recipes sound delicious! But, bisquick is not allowed anywhere near my kitchen, so I'll be avoiding that chicken and dumpling recipe everyone else seems enamored with. I've just never liked bisquick anything.

I especially like the sound of that couscous recipe.

I make a very simple shrimp scampi for myself (and for those less adventurous than Tom in the kitchen). I just heat up some olive oil with LOTS of garlic (use a garlic press to release all the juices and toss in 4 or 5 cloves of garlic) in an 8" frying pan on medium-high heat (this is a single serving meal), toss in the shrimp (6 to 10, depending on your appetite, shells removed), add a little salt and pepper, cook about 30 seconds to a minute on each side (until the shrimp is nice and pink), then pour in some white wine, just enough to cover the shrimp. Let the wine boil in the pan and finish cooking the shrimp through (just a few minutes), then serve over rice (I start the rice before I start thawing and shelling the shrimp...I just use frozen shrimp and thaw it in a bowl of warm water...so it's ready about the same time as the shrimp scampi is ready).

Nowhere near as fancy as Tom's, but when you need a quick meal after a long day of work, it's easy and tasty.
 
  • #87
Astronuc said:
I'm surprised the single ladies around here aren't hitting on you yet. :biggrin:
So whatever happened to the "Win a Date with Tom Mattson contest?" I don't remember any winners being announced, and I'm sure I was the only entry in the contest (I banned everyone else who tried :biggrin:).
 
  • #88
Moonbear said:
Yummy...those recipes sound delicious! But, bisquick is not allowed anywhere near my kitchen, so I'll be avoiding that chicken and dumpling recipe everyone else seems enamored with. I've just never liked bisquick anything.

No need to avoid it, you can substitute baking powder. Anything that will lighten up the dumplings will do just fine. I just chose Bisquick, but it's not essential. The real beauty of that recipe is in the bechamel sauce, which is soooo much better than cream-of-whatever soup. I hope you will try it, because it is very good.

I especially like the sound of that couscous recipe.

Err...I didn't see any couscous recipe. :confused:

I make a very simple shrimp scampi for myself (and for those less adventurous than Tom in the kitchen). I just heat up some olive oil with LOTS of garlic (use a garlic press to release all the juices and toss in 4 or 5 cloves of garlic) in an 8" frying pan on medium-high heat (this is a single serving meal), toss in the shrimp (6 to 10, depending on your appetite, shells removed), add a little salt and pepper, cook about 30 seconds to a minute on each side (until the shrimp is nice and pink), then pour in some white wine, just enough to cover the shrimp. Let the wine boil in the pan and finish cooking the shrimp through (just a few minutes), then serve over rice (I start the rice before I start thawing and shelling the shrimp...I just use frozen shrimp and thaw it in a bowl of warm water...so it's ready about the same time as the shrimp scampi is ready).

Nowhere near as fancy as Tom's, but when you need a quick meal after a long day of work, it's easy and tasty.

That does sound easy and tasty! I'll try it. :approve:
 
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  • #89
My fav - Butter Chicken :!) :!) :tongue: (Be careful about the cals though :devil: )
( http://food.sify.com/recipe.php?id=13262166&ctid=76&cid=13293281 )

Ingredients

Chicken - 1kg (whole)
Butter for batter - 120 gms (approx.)
Butter for basting - 125 gms (approx.)

Tandoori Masala:
Red Hot Chilli Powder - 5 gms
Kashmiri Chilli Powder - 10 gms
Green Chillies - 20 gms
Ginger - 10 gms
Garlic - 10 gms
(Grind all the spices)


Method

1. Mix ground masala with butter.
2. Make cuts or slits on the fleshy parts (breast and legs) of the chicken, and rub in the mixture thoroughly.
3. Leave it to marinade for 10-12 hours.
4. Bake till chicken is three-fourths cooked, basting frequently with butter.
5. Then remove it and fry in butter. Return again to the tandoor for 3-4 minutes.
6. Keep basting till done.
 
  • #90
Tom Mattson said:
Err...I didn't see any couscous recipe. :confused:
Sorry, it was the risotto recipe. I must have had couscous on the brain! :rolleyes:
 
  • #91
I have had butter chicken once and it tastes great !
But the basting and putting aside for half a day, that put me off .

Okay, I thought why not run a theme for recipes to be submitted .
The themes will be changed regularly.

The first theme is : TEA TIME SNACKS

The recipes have to be original or at least tried, and the preparation time has to be inside the 1 hour mark. Let's see what you come up with .
 
  • #92
Moonbear said:
Sorry, it was the risotto recipe. I must have had couscous on the brain! :rolleyes:

A-ha. You certainly don't want to use couscous in that risotto recipe. You will end up with a fine-smelling, inedible pile of mush! :yuck:
 
  • #93
Well, I don't usually have tea snacks, but I'm craving this right now.

Cucumbers in sour cream

1 cup sour cream
Juice from one lemon
1 peeled cucumber, thinly sliced
salt and pepper to taste

In a medium bowl, combine sour cream, lemon juice and sliced cucumber until well blended. Add salt & pepper to taste.
 
  • #94
Mmmm! I can't wait until our pickling cucumbers start coming in. I like the little slightly-tart cucumbers, and I don't peel them. Just slice them into a small bowl with some cider vinegar, salt and pepper.
 
  • #95
Here's my recipe to share:

Get some really nice, lean, top quality Canadian NY Sirloin Steaks, throw some steak spices on them, grind them into the raw meat a bit, and then throw them on the bbq.

Add some beer and some friends and enjoy.
 
  • #96
turbo-1 said:
Mmmm! I can't wait until our pickling cucumbers start coming in. I like the little slightly-tart cucumbers, and I don't peel them. Just slice them into a small bowl with some cider vinegar, salt and pepper.
Mmmmm, I like them that way also.

Rocketboy, what time should we be over? :tongue2:
 
  • #97
I'm cooking chicken enchiladas, and I don't remember what time I put them in the oven. :cry:
 
  • #98
turbo-1 said:
Mmmm! I can't wait until our pickling cucumbers start coming in. I like the little slightly-tart cucumbers, and I don't peel them. Just slice them into a small bowl with some cider vinegar, salt and pepper.
Slight variation on a theme here...I take cucumbers and a small onion, slice them up, put them in oil and vinegar (about 1/3 vinegar and 2/3 oil...just like you use for making salad dressing), add salt, pepper, garlic powder (not garlic salt), and let it marinate together for about an hour (or as long as you can stand to wait to eat the cucumbers, whichever comes first :biggrin:). It's a simple, tasty summer snack. My grandmother used to make it all the time when I was a kid. :smile: You can keep reusing the dressing a few days and just add fresh cucumber. It's also a big hit at family bbq's.
 
  • #99
Evo said:
I'm cooking chicken enchiladas, and I don't remember what time I put them in the oven. :cry:
When you smell them burning, turn the oven off. :biggrin: Oh, wait, that's Pengwuino's recipe. :tongue:
 
  • #100
Moonbear said:
Slight variation on a theme here...I take cucumbers and a small onion, slice them up, put them in oil and vinegar (about 1/3 vinegar and 2/3 oil...just like you use for making salad dressing), add salt, pepper, garlic powder (not garlic salt), and let it marinate together for about an hour (or as long as you can stand to wait to eat the cucumbers, whichever comes first :biggrin:). It's a simple, tasty summer snack. My grandmother used to make it all the time when I was a kid. :smile: You can keep reusing the dressing a few days and just add fresh cucumber. It's also a big hit at family bbq's.
Mmmmm, that sounds yummy. That reminds me of the mozarella, basil, and tomato with olive oil and vinegar.

Moonbear said:
When you smell them burning, turn the oven off. Oh, wait, that's Pengwuino's recipe.
Or when the smoke alarm goes off. :tongue:
 
  • #101
I bought 1.5 lbs of snow crab from the groecy store today...

Step 1: Boil water
Step 2: Throw the legs in the water for 10 mins
Step 3: Take them out of the water

Its as easy as 1-2-3.
 
  • #102
Evo said:
Mmmmm, that sounds yummy. That reminds me of the mozarella, basil, and tomato with olive oil and vinegar.
That's yummy too. :approve: I had that the other day too...just happened to spot some fresh mozarella when grocery shopping, and had a nice ripe tomato and fresh basil (usually I can't quite coordinate things so I end up with all three at the same time). Yummmmmmmmmmm.

Or when the smoke alarm goes off. :tongue:
No, that's how you know pizza is done. :rofl:
 
  • #103
cyrusabdollahi said:
I bought 1.5 lbs of snow crab from the groecy store today...

Step 1: Boil water
Step 2: Throw the legs in the water for 10 mins
Step 3: Take them out of the water

Its as easy as 1-2-3.
No crab boil spice? No salt?
 
  • #104
cyrusabdollahi said:
I bought 1.5 lbs of snow crab from the groecy store today...

Step 1: Boil water
Step 2: Throw the legs in the water for 10 mins
Step 3: Take them out of the water

Its as easy as 1-2-3.
You forgot to melt the butter! :eek:
 
  • #105
Evo said:
No crab boil spice? No salt?

Nope, Just boiled in water, that's it.

I like to eat them just like that :biggrin:

I want to taste the crab, not the spices.
 

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