Category Archives: Cooking

Building Confidence In the Kitchen

Kitchen Counter Cooking School | Kathleen FlinnHave you ever wanted to be able to cook without thinking about it? Do you have trouble piecing together a meal from the contents of your refrigerator? Do you feel that you don’t understand the basics of cooking or even some rudimentary skills like chopping, dicing or julienning? Well, that’s how I always felt about cooking – I was great at following a recipe (to the letter), but could not improvise anything. I also did not know much about basic kitchen skills.

Then I read “Kitchen Counter Cooking School” by Kathleen Flinn. This book is not a how-to book but rather a chronicle of how a professionally trained chef (Flinn is a graduate of Paris’ Le Cordon Bleu) took nine culinary novices and transformed them into perfectly serviceable cooks. Flinn’s journey is prompted by a random encounter with a woman loading processed food into her supermarket cart. After talking to the woman, Flinn finds out that the woman buys the processed food because they are “easy” and “always come out right.” It was this lack of knowledge and confidence that sparked Flinn to create a series of classes which would take ordinary folks and teach them to become more than proficient in the kitchen.

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Breakfast Bake with Eggs

Breakfast is such a boring meal to have people over for. What do you make? A big bowl of scrambled eggs? Maybe a nice banana bread and a bowl of diced fruit. If you’re feeling really creative maybe you’ll make pancakes. The problem with all these options is the time it takes in the kitchen. You’re spending all your time in the kitchen prepping and cooking while people are milling around, drinking Bloody Mary’s or Mamosas and generally enjoying each other.

I have your solution. Enter the Breakfast Bake with Eggs.

This little ditty is great because most of the work is done the night before. You can prep most of the components the night before and shove it in the fridge with only the need to heat it up the next morning. But, unlike other breakfast casserole type meals, this one has pizzaz! The addition of fried eggs on top of the souffle gives you a sophisticated look that will put your guests in awe and make you look like the culinary royalty that you aim to be.

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Grilled Elk Sausage How-To

The folks over at Ballistic BBQ have a great new YouTube video up where they show you how to grill some Elk Sausage.  I don’t know about you, but I haven’t seen much Elk Sausage around me.  The techniques shown, however, are quite interesting and I’m sure can be used for many different types of sausage.

Enjoy!

[tube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4BNpFX7mmVA[/tube]

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Geeking Over Guacamole

'Guacamole with Smoked Tofu' photo (c) 2010, Janet Hudson - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/Taste buds are a funny, funny thing.  When I was young – and when I say young, I really mean up until probably three years ago – I wouldn’t eat anything that didn’t fit into the meat, potato, grain or pasta categories.  Vegetables, for the most part, were a big no-no for me and fruits were even more non-existent in my diet.  Then, out of the blue, I started trying all kinds of different foods.  Maybe it was my trip to Japan (about seven years ago) that opened my thought process or the fact that a man can eat only so many steak and potato dinners (Author’s Note: The maximum quantity of steak and potato dinners a man can in a lifetime eat is still TBD.  Research is ongoing…).  Regardless of the reason, I started exploring lots of different foods and found that I enjoyed most of them.

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Spice Up Those Supermarket Hamburgers

'frozen hamburger patties' photo (c) 2006, stu_spivack - license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/We are all busy.  It’s a fact.  Most of us do not have time to make our meals from scratch.  In an ideal world, we would all shop only from the outside aisles of the supermarket and buy only the ingredients that we need to craft our meals from the basic building blocks on up.  However, in a realistic world, that just does not happen.  Work, kids, family and personal responsibilities all get in the way.  That means that we need to sometimes make do with what’s already put together for us.

Outdoor cooking is happening all over the country during this time of year.  Hamburgers make up a big part of that activity.  We’ve previously discussed how to make some great hamburgers on this site.  That article talks about how to put together a small set of ingredients to make a tasty hamburger.  But what do you do when time prohibits you from making hamburgers from a large pile of ground beef?  How about sprucing up your store bought hamburger patties?

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How To Make Chicken Francese

I have yet to find anything that does not taste better when drenched in a good red gravy. But, even an Italian guy like me has to vary his taste every once in a while. Chicken Francese, despite the French name, is an entirely Italian dish. Most of the research out there points to this dish originating in the States during the 1950s. French-style cooking had become popular due to influx of returning WWII soldiers. The Italian restauranteurs of the time took advantage of this popularity by replacing their traditional red gravy dishes with a lighter fair of white wine and lemon sauce. Whatever its origin, this dish is a great alternative to your usual chicken parmigiana.

Ingredients

  • 2tbsp Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 5tbsp Unsalted Butter
  • 1.5lbs Chicken Cutlets
  • 4 Eggs
  • 1 Lemon (or lemon juice)
  • 1/2c Dry White Wine
  • 2tbsp capers
  • 3tbsp Parsley, chopped
  • Salt & Pepper (to taste)
  • All-Purpose Flour (for dredging)
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2011 Should Mean Good Eats!

2011 Food & Wine Cookbook

Look at this little ditty that showed up at my door yesterday.  Food & Wine Magazine has traditionally offered this cookbook at the beginning of the year to subscribers of the magizine.  It then goes on sale later in the year.  This year, we received an offer to purchase this book for a very low fee – basically the cost of shipping and handling – just for being  American Express card holders.

As I mentioned, the cookbook is currently only available to Food & Wine Magazine subscribers and, apparently, American Express card holders right now.  You can, however, buy the 2010 Food & Wine Cookbook on Amazon.com.  I have not had the chance to review the 2010 version but, if it is anything like the 2011 version, it’s well worth the pick-up.  The recipes in the 2011 version look absolutely amazing with everything from starters to main courses (entire sections on beef, chicken, seafood, shellfish, etc) to drinks and desserts being covered.  We are both excited to experiment with some of the recipes and will absolutely be sharing any and all of our trials with you all here.

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