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Recipes that include vinegar (apple cider)

A Sauerkraut Replacement?

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Not to toot my own horn, but it may be possible that I’ve created a replacement for the several hundred year old classic brat topping sauerkraut. Actually, other than the use of cabbage, it’s quite different: sweeter and mustardy. We’ve made other yummy cabbage dishes before, but this is different from those too. I really enjoy it and it will go great on your favorite brat, hot dog, smoked bacon, (or both combined) pork chops, or even regular ole Italian sausage.

Mustardy Cabbage

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Quail Egg and Bacon Salad with Creamy Curry Dressing

Friday, December 5, 2008

I saw these quail eggs at the Chinese supermarket and they were so cute, I couldn’t resist. You can treat them similarly to chicken eggs. Just adjust cooking time because they’re much smaller. To hard-boil the quail eggs (without getting the green tinge), dunk them in boiling water for 3 minutes, rinse with cold water, then peel.

quail eggs

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Thanksgiving 2008 Series: Cranberry Cabbage Slaw

Monday, November 17, 2008

Some people love Cole Slaw and some people hate it. I used to hate it as a kid because the ones I had tried were overly dressed and soggy, like cabbage sitting in mayo soup. I didn’t have a good one till some time during college but now I’m a fan, well sometimes. If your family like slaws, this one has a Thanksgiving touch to them, dried cranberries. It’s easy to make. You can (well, have to) make ahead, and it’s an easy dish to pack and bring to someone else’s home. Enjoy!

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Conch Fritters

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Back in college, I went to the Bahamas with my girlfriends for spring break. Everywhere you go, they serve conch fritters. As much as I loved them in the beginning, I couldn’t look at another conch fritter by the 3rd day. You don’t see conch fritters much in NY (I probably never have), so I was ready for conch fritters again. I looked up several recipes but I didn’t have the standard ingredients so we improved a bit and ended up with non-traditional but very good conch fritters. How bad can any deep fried batter be, right?

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Unsquashing Squash Soup

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Squash Soup Ingredients

If the weather is not enough to let you know it’s Fall, the farmer’s market will. Every other stand has a beautiful selection of fall veggies, including many types of squash. After laughing about how some pumpkins were bigger than Ice (our dog); I picked up a butternut and a delicata. My goal was to make a glowing orange, fall soup that could shine above the rest, something to really get people excited about squash soup.

Jessica and I LOVE the finished product. It is perfect, seriously. The spice and fall flavors combine perfectly, this soup will make you feel warmed for the cool weather. While eating it, Jessica said she could imagine herself sitting in a log cabin, by a fire, drinking this soup.

Unsquashed Squash Soup
~ approximately 10 cups

Ingredients

  • ~8 cups roughly cubed Butternut Squash (1 good size squash)
  • ~2 cups roughly cubed Delicata Squash, (1 squash)
  • 2 tablespoon Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 1 teaspoon Kosher Salt
  • Fresh Cracked Black Pepper
  • 6 ounces Bacon (3 thick-cut slices), cut in 1″ wide pieces
  • 1.5 cups roughly chopped Yellow Onion (2 small onions)
  • 1 cup roughly chopped Carrot (2 large carrots)
  • 1 cup roughly chopped Parsnip (1 parsnip)
  • 2 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
  • 1/4 teaspoon Red Pepper Flakes
  • 1/4 teaspoon Turmeric Powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon Cayenne Pepper Powder
  • 1/4 cup Apple Cider Vinegar
  • 1/8 teaspoon Allspice Powder
  • 8 cups Chicken Broth or Bouillon equivalent (room temp.)
  • 1 tablespoon Buckwheat Honey (or any dark honey)
  • 3 Roasted Pasilla Peppers, roughly chopped (seeded) (use Poblano if Pasilla not available)
  • 1/2 Lemon
  • 1″ of Ginger, peeled & roughly chopped
  • 2″ Cinnamon Stick
  • 1 teaspoon Black Peppercorns
  • 2 large Bay Leaves
  • Parsnip Leaves, rinsed and most of stems removed.

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Pequin Pepper Sauce

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Wandering through the farmer’s market yesterday, Jessica and I were discussing whether or not grapes were in the berry family. The answer is yes. If you didn’t already know Jessica loves berries. Then, as if the universe was calling to us a moment later we found ourselves in front of a beautiful stand of chili peppers (one of MY favorite types of berries). They had a huge selection of Pennsylvania-grown chilis, including some Pequins — yum. We bought five and home we went for me to start cooking.

Pequin Peppers

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Red Cabbage Relish-ish

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

I bought a package of Sweet Apple Chicken Sausage from Trader Joe’s. They were giving it out on my last visit and I guess I was sold. (That doesn’t happen to me often. ) After lugging the groceries back to our apartment, I found Lon sitting at his computer. Apparently their office had an Internet outage so he was home. Yay! It’s always more fun to make lunch for two.

I wanted to make a cabbage relish to go with the sausages but I didn’t want it to be so potent that you couldn’t eat more than just a smear on the sausage. It was going to act as the vegetable portion in our meal too so, here it is, a Red Cabbage Relish-ish. It was exactly what I had hoped for and we each ate a big pile of it.

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