Tag: roll
Enchiladas: Believe In The Cocoa Powder
Teleolurian Kordyne
1 month ago in Poultry
So tart-on wanted me to make her enchiladas, out of Mexicans, for eating. Not having any idea how to make them, I read four or five recipes online for common ingredients (this is how I research all recipes), then promptly forgot everything I read and just started cooking.
I started with some canola oil and about four cloves of garlic, minced. To this I added about two tablespoons of ground chiles (dried red, ancho, and california pods), paprika, chili powder (a lot), cumin, and onion powder. After this started to smell like enchiladas, I browned two chicken thighs on both sides, then poured in two cups of chicken broth and put on the cover for about fifteen minutes (on medium high).
After the chicken was cooked, I shredded it with a fork while the chicken broth reduced on high. Then I pulled the tortillas out of the oven (what? Where did the tortillas come from? I forgot to mention, I put some in the oven at 170 so they wouldn't break when I tried to roll them) and rolled them around the chicken before I put them in a square glass baking dish.
By the time I filled the dish and set the oven for 350 degrees, the chicken broth was reduced to the point where I could start making a sauce. I added two cans of tomato sauce, some garlic powder, some more chili powder, some dried parsley, about two tablespoons of cocoa powder (heck yes), and a little pepper. The chicken broth was salty enough so that I didn't need to add any salt.
After the sauce all came together, I poured it into the baking dish, covered the top with cheddar, and put it into the oven for half an hour. This is awesome. Eat enchiladas. Every day, until you die.
Sloyki Mushroom Pastries: Dough Is No Joke
Teleolurian Kordyne
9 months ago in Appetizers, Russian Night

The Queen of Tarts is always acting all high and mighty, baking bread and cookies and I think probably even people every night. She'll casually pull out some flour and other stuff, get a bowl or something, and in twenty minutes she'll be yanking a tray of golden brown tastiness out of the oven. Her demeanor seems to say, what, bread? Oh look, here it is. Easiest thing in the world.
So, for Russian night, I decided to make a mushroom pastry. I'd show her. I'd whip up a huge plate of tasty mushroom foods and then I'd be the one who shrugs modestly. Oh yeah, those pastries? Totally easy.
I started the night before with:
- 3 cups flour
- 1 cup sour cream
- 2 sticks of butter
The recipe I was following told me to cut the whole thing together with a wide knife. Not knowing what the heck it was talking about, I got a butter knife and cut the mixture together while watching Bob the Builder. By the end of it, my shoulders were totally and completely sore.
The next day, I sauteed:
- 1 lb minced mushrooms
- 1 minced large onion
I added some pepper and tarragon during the cooking process, then set it aside to cool down while I pulled out the dough.
Of course, the dough didn't look right. It kept falling apart. It was impossible to roll. So I got out the pastry knife (yeah, I didn't know we had one the night before) and cut in an additional half stick of softened butter. The dough formed a nifty ball immediately. Victory for me.
I started rolling the dough out, but it was pretty sticky, and it kept tearing in places. In fact, it took me an hour to roll out, but I learned one vital fact you'll need if you ever work with dough: flour is your friend. If your dough even begins to give you lip, cover it (and your rolling surface) with flour. You cannot have enough flour on hand. It's mathematically impossible.
Once I had the dough rolled out to about a quarter inch, I cut it into squares. I mixed a cup of grated parmesan into the mushroom mixture, put teaspoonfuls of it into the squares, and folded them diagonally. After all the little triangley things were made, they were brushed with egg yolk, sprinkled with caraway seeds, and put into a 350-degree oven for twenty minutes.
Were they good? Yeah. They were good. They were pretty darn good. But I couldn't shrug and be all modest, because my shoulders might have fallen off.
New England Clam Chowder
The Queen of Tarts
11 months ago in America The Edible: Northeast
I love New England Clam Chowder. So when Tele and Savory decided on Northeastern America for EU Night I had to make it. I know that it goes against my MO of making desserts for EU night and everything else, but this was a must.
In making clam chowder you have a very important decision to make...canned or fresh clams. I read both types of recipes. I was a little scared of the whole shucking of clams, but that wasn't going to stop me from using fresh clams. The idea of canned clams in kind of creepy too. Alton Brown suggests using both clams, fresh in the soup itself and then topping the bowl with a few fresh clams. I don't like the idea of a shelled clam sitting upon my bowl of soup though. So that was definitely not the solution. Ohh, what to do? The decision was made for me when the meat counter guy at Smith's explained that he didn't stock fresh clams regularly, but only by special order. Alright, so there we go. Canned clams it is (even though I still found canned clams to be a strange thing).
Now to find the ultimate recipe. I started out my research in cookbooks around the house, but they just didn't have what I was looking for. I then moved to the internet and finally decided on Michael Chu's Clam Chowder New England Style on Cooking for Engineers. I love how this guy thinks. The recipes have so much wonderful detail. I have decided that it is the engineering part of my brain that leads me into doing my crazy photo journal recipes on EU. But, anyway, I digress.
Now that I was armed with the recipe and ingredients it was just time to wait for EU Night to roll around.
In true EU Night fashion I did not perform a test run of any kind on this recipe. It was either going to be good or bad, but we would all find out together. I am happy to report that it came out very good. There is an amazing amount of clams in this wonderfully creamy soup. I will say that you must not skimp on the salt. The salt is certainly a key ingredient in balancing the flavors.
The one thing that I will add to the recipe next time I make it is a rib or two of celery. I didn't think I would miss the celery that Progresso's Rich and Hearty New England Clam Chowder has in it, but I really did.
Philly Cheesesteak Sandwiches
Savory Masochist
11 months ago in Meat, America The Edible: Northeast
Here we go! For this EU night, I decided on making Cheesesteaks. Alas, they weren't traditional, in the fact that they weren't made with Cheez Whiz (Seriously. Apparently, a hot dog vendor in Philidelphia invented cheesesteaks when he got bored with his regular faire). This is the recipe. alas. it is not exact. Why? Well because its up to you the amount of ingredients you want on the thing. Not me.
Also, note that the cut of beef required (suggested) for these is a mysterious cut known to few as "Eye of Round" Roast. In my earlier, uncertain years, I worked at a Smiths Food and Drug in the Meat department. I know quite a bit of beef from my Father and Grandfather as well, but I had never heard of this cut. I dont know why. Ask your butcher, or use a Rib-Eye steak or comparable marbled cut of beef. You can't tell the difference. Except in price, maybe, the Eye of Round is very cheap, $11 for 2.5 lbs or so. (Note: 2.5 lbs is enough to make 10 sandwiches, and thats just meat and cheese.)
2lb. Eye of Round roast,
or comparable portion of
meat to stick in sandwiches.
8-10 Dutch style sandwich rolls (very flaky crust).
16-20 Slices of provolone cheese
? Frenched onions, chopped bell peppers, mushrooms
sweet cherry peppers, anything you want on there.
1 Spray bottle or mustard bottle filled with
clean water.
1 Bottle of Steak/Grill seasoning (optional)
Start by putting the roast, or other meat in the freezer for an hour or two. You want it frozen, but still pliable. Rock hard would be bad, and hard to cut. While its freezing, cut the vegetables, watch TV, do something.
Frozen enough? ok, get a serrated blade, yes, the type you cut bread with. What you're looking for here is to shave very thin slices of beef off of the roast. Since the beef is frozen, it should be easier to cut without tearing. After you've sliced all of the beef very thin, set it aside in a bowl. I would suggest you get a two burner cast iron griddle for this, they're good for pancakes, eggs, pretty much anything, but great for this. Lay it across one front burner and one back burner, and turn the heat on the front burner to high, and the back burner to low.
Throw a cup or so of your veggies on the front part of the griddle, and saute until desired done-ness. While this is cooking, preheat the oven to 175 degrees. If the vegetables begin to stick to the griddle, hit them with a squirt of water from the mustard bottle, it will prevent them from sticking. Once they're cooked to your liking, move them to the back of the griddle. Throw a cup of the sliced beef on there, and cook to desired doneness and again, hit with a squirt of water if it starts to stick. Once this is cooked to your liking, combine the cooked vegetables and the beef together and cook for a minute or two, blasting with water when you need to. With the spatula, form the mixture into an oval shape, and then put two slices of provolone on the oval, almost covering the meat but try to keep it off of the grill. Hit the top of the cheese with two or three squirts of water, and the steam from this will melt the cheese very very quickly.
Get one of your sandwich rolls, and cut lengthwise along one side, in the typical hot dog bun fashion. Lay the bun open side down onto the meat, and then slide the spatula underneath the entire mass. In one motion, flip the whole mess over, and you should have a Philly Cheesesteak! Yay!
I know it seems like quite a bit of work, but they are mighty tasty.
Kobe Sushi Bar: I Really Don't Know
The Queen of Tarts
12 months ago in Restaurant Reviews
I would love to tell you all what I ate at Kobe, but I really have no idea. Now you may be thinking of course you have no idea it has been almost a month since you ate there. Well, that really has nothing to do with it. I didn't remember what I ate when I left there either.
Here is the problem. Once the fish is cut and put on to a piece of rolled up rice, it all looks the same to me; except for Tai which looks extremely different from the tuna.
So all I know is that I ate a lot of raw fish. Included in that line up was at least 4 pieces of Tai (Red Snapper), some Toro (Fatty Tuna), probably some Maguro (Tuna) and Albacore (White Fish), and one order of Hotategai (Scallops wrapped in Nori). I also had some Philadelphia and Cucumber Rolls and an order of Tomago (Egg Nigiri).
As you can see I ate a lot. I could have sat there longer and eaten more, but that would get mighty expensive.
After we left Kobe we went to the Orange Pearl Yogurt Store where I got a Strawberry Mango Smoothie. That helped to finish filling me up.
I have to say that Kobe is where I first fell in love with Tai. I had liked sushi before the Tai, but I did not yet have a love for it. Then I decided to order Tai. It came out looking different from the other fish. It is white with a slight red color to one side of it. And a slice of lemon tops it. Tai has a sweetness to it that is remarkable. If you aren't sure about sushi or have not yet fallen in love with it I must suggest trying Tai. It may convert you for life (I'm talking to you too Mrs. Savory!).
Kobe I love you and your Tai! I'll be back soon.
Kobe: I Ate It, Sorry.
Savory Masochist
a very long time ago in Restaurant Reviews
Well, as Tele has previously posted, the other night we went to Kobe. I think its a fine little sushi bar, and I must say that while I was there I fell in love with Red Snapper. That's some awesome fish, I tell you what.
The problem, however, is as much as I love sushi, I can almost never eat enough of it. I can eat .. well.. quite a bit more than I logically should be able to eat, and I fear that it's my voracious appetite that will condemn me to a) not eat enough at a sushi bar, b) eat so much at a sushi bar that the itamae and I have to battle in hand to hand combat because they have nothing left in the restaurant to eat, or c) I've eaten so much sushi that the Pacific ocean is declared devoid of life. A good example, is what I had to eat today. I had the following to eat:
- 4 cups of coffee
- 1 cup of tea
- 5 bottles of water (16 oz)
- 4 sandwiches
- 1 cup cheese popcorn
- 2 truffles
- 1 pear
- 1 stuffed pork chop
- 1 baked potato
- 1 bowl of cinnamon apples
- 1 bowl of coffee icecream
At the sushi place, if I recall correctly, I had:
- 5 pc cucumber roll
- 5 pc philadelphia roll
- 4 hamachi (yellow tail)
- 2 red snapper
- 2 crab roll
- 3 cups green tea
- 1 16oz sake
and we went out for frozen yogurt afterwards, in which I had a 16oz plain with pomegranate seeds.
I think I have a tapeworm. He and I understand each other.
Save Your Family And Friends!
The Queen of Tarts
a very long time ago in Desserts
Please save your family from store bought refrigerated sugar cookie dough. These cookies turn hard as a rock within minutes of making them and they have no real flavor at all. Treat your family to some wonderful homemade sugar cookies and frosting. They will thank you for it.
The recipe I am going to share with you has been in my family for over 20 years. My aunt Kathy received the recipe from a co-worker. Kathy then gave the recipe to my mom. It has since become a tradition that each year at Easter and Christmas my mom makes 6 double batches of cookies. We spend many hours baking and frosting, but it is always a lot of fun and wouldn't be the same without them.
I had never made these cookies on my own, but this past week that all changed. LittleRoq had a Christmas party to go to and I volunteered to make the sugar cookies (so as to save the children from the horrible store bought ones!). LittleRoq joined in on the cutting out of the shapes. And then he frosted the cookies reserved for our house while I frosted the ones for the party. It was really neat to make a recipe with my son that I have been making at my mom's side for many years.
Over the years we have learned a few things about making sugar cookies.
- First: Make way more cookies than you think you will need because no one can get enough of these.
- Second: If you are going to ship them, use small shapes rather than large ones because the small ones are more likely to survive the trip intact.
- Third: Do not roll the dough into large balls and then refrigerate. This creates a lot of hard work for you later on. The best thing to do is separate the dough and flatten it into a few small slabs, wrap in plastic wrap and then refrigerate. This makes rolling the dough out much easier.
- Fourth: Use powdered sugar rather than flour to dust your rolling surface so as to not add too much flour taste to the cookies.
For many cookie pointers read the transcript of the Good Eats episode The Cookie Clause. Alton Brown has many great tips on cookie making in that episode. It is where I learned about the slabs of dough. Can you believe we never thought of that?
And FINALLY the recipe:
Kathleen's (Mary's) Sugar Cookies
1 1/2 c sifted powder sugar
1 c butter softened
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp almond extract
2 1/2 c flour, sifted
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cream of tartar
Cream the sugar and butter. Mix in the egg, vanilla, and almond extract. Blend dry ingredients, stir into butter mixture. Refrigerate at least 3 hours.
Heat oven to 375 degrees.
Roll out dough a little at a time (if it gets too warm it gets sticky) to about 1/4 inch thick. Use cookie cutters to cut out.
Bake on un-greased baking sheets for 8 minutes or until lightly golden. Cool on wire racks. Frost with butter cream frosting.
Butter Cream Frosting
1 lb Powder Sugar (4 cups)
1/4 c milk
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/3 c butter softened
Food coloring
In a bowl combine sugar, milk, vanilla and butter. If a little thick add milk a few drops at a time until thin enough to frost with. Divide into bowls and mix in the food coloring.
Frost the cookies. Allow frosting to harden on the cookies then store in air-tight containers. (Place a piece of bread in with the cookies to keep them soft. When the piece becomes hard and dried out replace it with a fresh piece.)
An Early Thanksgiving
The Queen of Tarts
a very long time ago in Events
My mother's family has Thanksgiving the Saturday before the actual holiday so as to free everyone up for other obligations. This year was no exception. We opted to go potluck style this time around. I was in charge of whole cranberry sauce, cranberry salad and rolls.
For the rolls I made:
It seems like a lot of work, but it wasn't. Both cranberry dishes are make-ahead, so no pressure there. I made the Farm House White Rolls the day before. The dough for the Buttery Rolls was put in the fridge the afternoon before so they could be shaped, risen and baked the morning of. And I made the Cornbread the night before. So there you have it. Five different dishes all made in a day and a half with low stress!
Thanksgiving #5 Rolls
The Queen of Tarts
a very long time ago in Breads And Pasta
You must have rolls at Thanksgiving. Now you could get some Brown & Serve Rolls from your local market, but wouldn't they taste so much better if they were homemade? from scratch? Sure they would. What is that you say..."I have no time to make rolls. I have all these other dishes to make". Take a deep breath. Calm down. And follow my lead.
The solution is a yeast dough that you make the night before and put into the fridge. Yes, you heard right. The mixing of the dough is done the day before.
So are you with me now? You can do this. There is lots of time between now and Thanksgiving. Mix up a batch and give dinner an extra special touch this week. You deserve some fresh baked dinner rolls.
I am presenting two buttery roll options for you two choose from. Each dough can be made a day ahead. One can just be plopped into muffin tins and baked, the other needs a little shaping and then rise time.
Spoon Rolls
Southern Spoon Rolls are super easy to make. I always make them with salted butter (never margarine). The recipe link calls for self rising flour, but you need not go and purchase it. For each cup of self rising flour needed use: 1 cup of all purpose flour, 1 tsp baking powder and 1 /2 tsp salt. You can make this dough the day you are going to use it if you wish or you can make it ahead of time as the dough will last for up to one week in the fridge.
Buttery Rolls
- 1 package (1/4 ounce) active dry yeast
- 1 cup warm water (110 to 115 degrees)
- 1 cup butter, melted
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 3 eggs
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 4-4 1/2 cups all purpose flour
In a small bowl dissolve the yeast in warm water. In a mixing bowl, combine the butter and sugar. Add in the eggs, salt and yeast mixture. Stir in enough flour until the dough leaves the sides of the bowl and is soft (do not knead). Cover and refrigerate overnight.
Punch the dough down. Turn onto a floured surface and divide in half (follow shaping procedure for each half or refrigerate the 2nd half for later use).
For CloverLeaf Rolls (This is easy to do and they look so nice. This is my favorite shape for this recipe.):
Roll into a long rope about 1 1/2 inches thick. Fold into thirds and cut, leaving you w/three equal length ropes. Divide each rope into 12 equal size pieces (36 total pieces). Roll each piece into a ball. Drop 3 balls into each cup of a greased muffin tin.
For Crescent Rolls: Roll into a 12 inch circle. Cut into 12 wedges. Roll up the wedges from the wide and and place with the pointed end down on a greased baking sheet. Curve the ends to form crescents.
Cover and let rise in a warm place for about 1 1/2 hours or until doubled. Bake at 350 degrees for 20 minutes or until golden brown.
Note: I have found that this recipe is best when used within 3 days of making the dough. On the forth day it is just not as flavorful. (example:If you make the dough on Monday, finish it up on Wednesday.)
A Few Great Sites
The Queen of Tarts
a very long time ago in Knowhow
With my latest bread obsession I have been to many sites gathering information to better understand this skill of bread making. I have found that reading the directions is great, but understanding them is even better. I am trying to narrow down what the different stages of dough stickiness/firmness really mean. Also, how does a quick rise yeast affect the recipe? I feel like I have just entered into a whole new art form.
You would think that 3 years of pretzel shop experience would give me some insight into this process, but unfortunately it hasn't. When you work in that type of environment you just put a big package into a huge mixer turn the timer on and walk away. Then throw the dough into a bowl for a rise time, roll 'em out, and bake. We did not hand knead anything or adjust flour amounts per the air's humidity. The pretzels were what they were and always came out excellent. I guess maybe that tells me that bread recipes are more forgiving than some make them out to be.
So far all of the breads I have tried have come out well. There have been no major disasters as of yet. I did have one loaf come out a little doughy in the center, but if I would have just left it in the oven for 5 minutes more it would have been fine. I hope to have some bread making tips for you all some time in the future, but for right now we will just refer to a few great sites out there.
Baking Success by Red Star Yeast-There are some great basic tips on this site. Especially useful it how to tell if you have kneaded your dough long enough.
How to Bake Bread at Fabulous Foods-Super information about yeast and so much more can be found here.
Farmgirl Fare's Ten Tips for Better Bread-She has some wonderful tips on how to get great bread. I have to go out and get a wooden bread bowl now!
Step-by-Step Instructions from Fleischmann's Yeast-Great tips on the proper way to knead dough.
I am sure as time goes on I will find many more great sites, but for now these are a good start. I hope you have some fun making bread from scratch at home too!