What Are Quick Hot Appetizer Ideas for an Office Potluck?

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The discussion centers around quick and easy appetizer ideas for an upcoming office potluck, with a focus on recipes that can be prepared and cooked in about 15 minutes. Suggestions include frozen mini pastry puffs, pigs in a blanket, and creative uses of Poptarts as appetizers. Recipes like Parmesan Garlic Potatoes and Spam Tater-Tot Velveeta De-lites are highlighted for their simplicity and appeal. Other ideas include bacon-wrapped scallops, stuffed jalapenos, and various cheese dips, emphasizing the use of common ingredients like cream cheese and deli meats. The conversation also touches on variations of classic recipes, such as bruschetta and pickle wraps, and the importance of quick preparation due to limited oven access at the potluck. Overall, the thread is a resource for anyone looking for fast, crowd-pleasing appetizers that require minimal cooking time.
  • #51
Monique said:
I like turbo-1's interpretation of a 'hot' appetizer :smile:
If you clean out the placenta and seeds really well, they are not all that hot, and the cheeses moderate that even further. They are really good, and are a favorite appetizer at cook-outs. They disappear very quickly - almost as fast as my spicy marinated grilled jumbo shrimp.
 
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  • #52
Vanadium 50 said:
I doubt one could possibly improve on the flavor and texture. The little plastic toothpicks would be there solely to increase the nutritional content.
Vanadium, you should get the funniest member award. :-p
 
  • #53
turbo-1 said:
I often make this on my gas grill set on "high" with the cover closed, and just peek in from time to time. I don't time stuff, usually, but 10-15 minutes is probably about right. I have made them in the oven, and IIR, I used a setting of 450 deg.

You can use other cheeses, for sure. I made them one time with extra-sharp Vermont cheddar instead of Monterey Jack, we we had run out of that. Generally, there is a bag of pre-shredded Monterey Jack in the fridge, though, for nachos, etc.

Great! Thanks much :)
 
  • #54
turbo-1 said:
If you clean out the placenta and seeds really well, they are not all that hot, and the cheeses moderate that even further. They are really good, and are a favorite appetizer at cook-outs. They disappear very quickly - almost as fast as my spicy marinated grilled jumbo shrimp.
I often buy the cheese-filled peppers that are preserved in oil, very tasty indeed. I would want to try your recipe, but the only good peppers I can get my hands on are Madame Jeanettes.. they may be a bit too spicy, even without the placenta and seeds.
 
  • #55
Sometimes I take some crackers, spread them on a plate, put a slice of pepperoni on each one, a small piece of cheese, one of those small disk shaped pickels and a little mustard on top. Those are good.
 
  • #56
Monique said:
I often buy the cheese-filled peppers that are preserved in oil, very tasty indeed. I would want to try your recipe, but the only good peppers I can get my hands on are Madame Jeanettes.. they may be a bit too spicy, even without the placenta and seeds.
I use a great brand of mild jalapenos, they're pickled, but I stuff them all of the time. I don't know if you can find these online. The also come stuffed with shrimp or tuna, but those I can only get in southern Texas. See picture of the "MILD" jalapenos, I know turbo will not approve. :-p

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  • #57
Monique said:
I often buy the cheese-filled peppers that are preserved in oil, very tasty indeed. I would want to try your recipe, but the only good peppers I can get my hands on are Madame Jeanettes.. they may be a bit too spicy, even without the placenta and seeds.
When I'm cooking for a crowd that has heat-intolerant people (my father has lost his taste for real hot peppers, though he used to love them) I make up some of the cheese-and-bacon stuffed chilies with jalapenos (Mmmm!) and some with Hungarian wax chilies. The Hungarian wax chilies are larger and milder than jalapenos. I don't know what they are called in your part of the world, but perhaps you could find those. I love them in stir-fries. They come in a range of colors, so the stir fry looks as good as it tastes.

Dumb me, Monique! I just looked around a bit and found out that Hungarian wax chilies are paprika. You might be able to find them fresh... Good luck.
 
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  • #58
Evo, I have always wanted to try grits... the way it looks just turns me off though hahaha.

Jalapeno peppers stuffed with cheese is extremely good ... I think it requires more effort to make than bruschetta however.
 
  • #59
Evo said:
I use a great brand of mild jalapenos, they're pickled, but I stuff them all of the time.
I can get these hot peppers, which are delicious straight out of the can, the best thing is the brine that infiltrated the pepper and comes out when you eat them. I think they'll be too difficult to fill, because they are too long and irregular shaped.
000314764_002_118774_200.jpg



These are my favorite, why go through the trouble when someone has already done it for you? :smile:
000446140_002_140846_200.jpg
 
  • #60
Sorry! said:
Evo, I have always wanted to try grits... the way it looks just turns me off though hahaha.
Grits are wonderful, nothing like them.

Your bruschetta recipe is awesome, I love bruschetta.

Jalapeno peppers stuffed with cheese is extremely good ... I think it requires more effort to make than bruschetta however.
Nah, it's incredibly easy. Bruschetta is much more involved, more ingredients, more complex flavors. Stuffed jalapenos is about as easy as you can get.
 
  • #61
Vanadium 50 said:
Spam Tater-Tot Velveeta De-lites

5. Arrange the slices of fried Spam on another cookie sheet. On each, place a Tater Tot and then a Velveeta slice, securing the arrangement with a decorative toothpick. Bake at 300 for 10 minutes, or until the Velveeta has melted over the Tater Tots and onto the fried Spam, the cookie sheet, and the oven floor.

What if the oven is run by a microprocessor that has a spam filter?
 
  • #62
Evo said:
Grits are wonderful, nothing like them.

Your bruschetta recipe is awesome, I love bruschetta.

Nah, it's incredibly easy. Bruschetta is much more involved, more ingredients, more complex flavors. Stuffed jalapenos is about as easy as you can get.

Lol thanks, and you're probably right, I've never made stuffed jalapenos myself so I wouldn't really know.
 
  • #63
I got all the stuff to make "practice bruschetta" tomorrow. I almost bought some heirloom tomatoes just for the fun colors.
 
  • #64
Practising with food is the best part.
 
  • #65
GeorginaS said:
Practising with food is the best part.
That's the beauty of having a vegetable garden. You get to practice a lot without paying top prices for the produce.

If you know that you're going to get tagged for some pot-luck in the future, it's a snap to prepare something in advance. Due to the very cold wet summer last year, I didn't get to can my usual batches of pickles because I didn't have enough cucumbers ripening at once. I got some of the big, over-ripe cucumbers from my neighbors, though, and saved them in the 'fridge until I could make a small batch of dill pickles. (halve them, scoop out the seedy cores, then slice them into spears) At the end of the season, I got a few more and made a batch of refrigerator pickles. Make up your brine, like usual, and pack the vegetables in the brine, jar it and refrigerate it. The pickles end up nice and crispy, with a flavor that processed canned pickles, can't get. I made the refrigerator dills with cayenne and jalapeno peppers and lots of fresh garlic. One of my neighbors' granddaughters is hooked on them. She won't eat the chilies, but she'll snag a whole clove of garlic if given the chance, even if it's a bit "hot".
 

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