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Growing On Me

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It had to grow on me.

A number of years ago I worked with a crew that would occasionally end the day with a visit to a local bar with an order of an appetizer and some quantity of barley and hops based beverages. On a frequent basis, the appetizer that would get ordered would be spinach-artichoke dip. Give me wings, potato skins, nachos or even stuffed peppers, but spinach-artichoke dip was at the bottom of my list.

As is my downfall, once something is sitting in front of me, I start to munch. Over the years after repeated exposure to the dip I first came to tolerate the dip and late enjoy it. My tastes had changed.

Wanting a quick, hot appetizer the other day, I decided to make it myself.

Photo Dec 31, 6 58 20 PM

This was so easy to make and was warm and creamy.

Photo Dec 31, 8 08 43 AM

The first challenge was frozen artichoke hearts. I hadn’t seen them before and it took me three trips up and down the frozen vegetable aisle to see the single faced box of them.

Photo Dec 31, 6 58 07 PM

Very tasty and great with baked pita chips.

Hot Spinach and Artichoke Dip

Prep Time: 10 m | Cook Time: 15 m | Makes: 2 batch (Scaled) | Difficulty: Easy

Ingredients:

  • 2 cup thawed, chopped frozen spinach
  • 11 cups thawed, chopped frozen artichoke hearts
  • 12 ounces cream cheese
  • 1/2 cup sour cream
  • 1/2 cup mayonnaise
  • 2/3 cup grated Parmesan
  • 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic powder

Directions:

Boil spinach and artichokes in 1 cup of water until tender and drain. Discard liquid. Heat cream cheese in microwave for 1 minute or until hot and soft. Stir in rest of ingredients and serve hot.

Source: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/hot-spinach-and-artichoke-dip-recipe/index.html

 

The second week in April is National Egg Salad Week. In honor of this food holiday check out the following recipe from The Rantings of an Amateur Chef.

L.O.V.E Wrap Sandwich

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Call Me Abuela

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Many of the dishes I made during the week are not very involved. It may be 30 minutes of active cooking and prep work and total time of an hour. It is on the weekends that I get to make those dishes that are more involved and take the proper time to develop. As a result, I find that I am spending most of my Sunday in the kitchen. I think of all the old Italian grandmothers who spent many hours every day in the kitchen and think I am starting to morph into one of them.

This time there was a distinct Mexican theme, so call me Abuela….

Photo Dec 09, 5 24 46 PM

This was the first time I made tamales. They were pretty darn good.

Photo Dec 09, 1 40 55 PM

I found the corn husks in the “ethnic” aisle of the grocery store. I didn’t have California chile pods, so at first (and in the picture) I was going to use some Arbol chilies. Ultimately I had some sweet and hot red-hot peppers that I used.

Photo Dec 09, 1 45 00 PM

I sliced the pork loin in half to fit into the dutch oven.

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After two hours cooking, shredding and mixing with the pepper sauce.

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I halved the recipe that you see below. It says it makes enough for 16 tamales (8 for half) but those must be tiny. Mine made a solid 4.

Photo Dec 09, 4 29 46 PM

This part was much easier than I thought.

Photo Dec 09, 4 29 57 PM

Put the pork inside.

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Roll, fold, roll.

Photo Dec 09, 4 32 45 PM

Each tamale has two husks. I did not have a steamer, so I built one. I used my big metal roasting pan that I use for Thanksgiving turkeys, a small rack (to elevate off the bottom), a grill rack and some foil for the top. I put water in the bottom and put it on the stove over medium-low heat.

Photo Dec 09, 4 34 17 PM

Poke a few holes in the foil to let excess steam escape. I had to add water several times.

Photo Dec 09, 5 24 41 PM

These were pretty good. The Ranting Wife said she normally doesn’t like tamales, but liked these.

Real Homemade Tamales

Prep Time: 35 m | Cook Time: 3 h 35 m | Makes: 16 tamales

Ingredients:

Tamale Filling:

  • 1 1/4 pounds pork loin
  • 1 large onion, halved
  • 1 clove garlic
  • 4 dried California chile pods
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt

Tamale Dough:

  • 2 cups masa harina
  • 1 (10.5 ounce) can beef broth
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 2/3 cup lard
  • 1 (8 ounce) package dried corn husks
  • 1 cup sour cream

Directions:

Place pork into a Dutch oven with onion and garlic, and add water to cover. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and simmer until the meat is cooked through, about 2 hours.

Use rubber gloves to remove stems and seeds from the chile pods. Place chiles in a saucepan with 2 cups of water. Simmer, uncovered, for 20 minutes, then remove from heat to cool. Transfer the chiles and water to a blender and blend until smooth. Strain the mixture, stir in salt, and set aside. Shred the cooked meat and mix in one cup of the chile sauce.

Soak the corn husks in a bowl of warm water. In a large bowl, beat the lard with a tablespoon of the broth until fluffy. Combine the masa harina, baking powder and salt; stir into the lard mixture, adding more broth as necessary to form a spongy dough.

Spread the dough out over the corn husks to 1/4 to 1/2 inch thickness. Place one tablespoon of the meat filling into the center. Fold the sides of the husks in toward the center and place in a steamer. Steam for 1 hour.

Remove tamales from husks and drizzle remaining chile sauce over. Top with sour cream. For a creamy sauce, mix sour cream into the chile sauce.

PREP 35 mins

COOK 3 hrs

READY IN 3 hrs 35 mins

Nutritional Info:

Calories 236 kcal 12% Carbohydrates 12.6 g 4% Cholesterol 37 mg 12% Fat 16.6 g 26% Fiber 2.1 g 8% Protein 9.1 g 18% Sodium 401 mg 16%

Source: http://allrecipes.com/recipe/real-homemade-tamales/

Easter Recipes

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Getting ready for Easter? Take a look at some of the recipes below for your Easter Dinner. In reviewing I realized that I had not yet made a baked ham, so you won’t see one down there. I’ll rectify that this year.

Appetizer

Photo May 06, 5 14 24 PM

Caprese Salad Crostini

Bread

Photo Sep 03, 5 37 42 PMPerfect Dinner Rolls

Salad

Photo Sep 03, 5 37 12 PMSpinach Salad with Warm Bacon Dressing

Main Dish

Photo May 23, 5 57 32 PMBaked Salmon with Orange Ginger Sauce

Photo Nov 11, 5 04 25 PMBeef Wellington

Photo Dec 04, 5 28 26 PMPineapple Glazed Pork Loin,

IMG_1799Roasted Leg of Lamb

Photo Nov 25, 5 38 17 PMTuscan Style Pork Roast

Sides

Photo Sep 08, 5 53 49 PMApple Sweet Potato Bake

butternut-macncheeseButternut Mac and Cheese

Photo Nov 20, 5 25 31 PMParmesan Crusted Baby Carrots

Photo Nov 28, 5 35 46 PMSpinach Gratin

Photo Mar 11, 11 58 21 AMVegetable Frittata

Dessert

IMG_2050Glazed Lemon Cake

IMG_3483Gooey Butter Tarts

Diced! – Jenna – Italian Quesadilla with White Wine Peach Sauce

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Today we have an entrant for the first course of the Diced! competition. Contestants were instructed to create or find a recipe for an appetizer, soup or salad containing the following ingredients: Peach Preserves (or jam or jelly), Pita Bread, Regular carrots (baby ones would be acceptable) and Prosciutto. They were instructed to make their dish and create a blog post about it, including pictures. You can help determine who advances to the next round. On Friday, after the last post, I will post a poll where you can vote for up to four of the contestants to move on. Vote for the post you like the best. You can vote because of the inventiveness, the yummyness, the use of ingredients, the quality of the writing and pictures or for any other reason. The poll will be active for one week only. Check back and vote. In the event of a tie, the Ranting Chef will choose who advances. More information about Diced! can be found here.

Today’s contestant, Jenna has three blogs including The Burgeoning Gourmet. With all that blogging, I’m glad that she has time to compete here in Diced! Check out her blogs and the post below…

Italian Quesadilla with White Wine Peach Sauce

Pic 6

I’m aware this doesn’t sound that appetizing but it turned out surprisingly good!  When I got the list of ingredients, something Italian popped into my head.  Along with what I wanted to do with the peach preserves.  Especially since I am in no way a fan of anything peach flavored.  Oh, fresh peaches are great, but anything with a peach flavor always seems to pale in comparison.  I’m the same way with anything strawberry flavored.  But I digress.

Mandatory Ingredients:

Pic 1

3 tbsp. Peach Preserves

¼ lb. Prosciutto, sliced thinly

1 Pita bread

5-6 Baby Carrots

Additional ingredients used:

1 tbsp. Butter

¾ cup White Wine

Several leaves of fresh basil

½ cup shredded Mozzarella and Romano cheeses (combined)

Olive oil

Preheat oven to 350.  In a saucepan, combine peach preserves, white wine, and butter.  Whisk/stir until butter is completely melted and let simmer for 15 minutes or so.  Keep an eye on it and whisk/stir as needed.

Pic 2

Using a dry white wine will help keep the sweetness down to a minimum.

Pic 3

In the meantime, grate carrots (I used a food processor) and dice up basil.  Cut pita pockets in half and then separate.  They tend to want to anyway, and this makes putting it all together much easier.

Using a baking sheet, spray with Pam or similar.  Place the halves of the pita pockets on the sheet.

Pic 4

Brush a little of the olive oil on the bread.  Layer on one half of the pita bread with prosciutto, shredded carrot, cheese, and fresh basil.

Pic 5

Pop in the oven for 5 minutes.

When done, cut in half and pour sauce over top.

Pic 6 (2)

My Man loved this and is ready for me to make it again.  J

Jenna

Remember – check back after the last post to vote on who advances in the Diced! competition.

Diced! – Ajax – Seared Jumbo Scallops Glazed with Peach and Carrot Sauce

2 Comments

Today we have an entrant for the first course of the Diced! competition. Contestants were instructed to create or find a recipe for an appetizer, soup or salad containing the following ingredients: Peach Preserves (or jam or jelly), Pita Bread, Regular carrots (baby ones would be acceptable) and Prosciutto. They were instructed to make their dish and create a blog post about it, including pictures. You can help determine who advances to the next round. On Friday, after the last post, I will post a poll where you can vote for up to four of the contestants to move on. Vote for the post you like the best. You can vote because of the inventiveness, the yummyness, the use of ingredients, the quality of the writing and pictures or for any other reason. The poll will be active for one week only. Check back and vote. In the event of a tie, the Ranting Chef will choose who advances. More information about Diced! can be found here.

Today’s contestant, AJAX is a former F-16 pilot and blogger over at Like A Fighter Pilot. His posts, as demonstrated below, contain entries for mind, boy and spirit. Check out his blog and his Diced! entry below… 

Buck a Bullet?

Photo 1 - Top Hat F-16 Strafing

Top Hat F-16 Strafing (Photo by Brian Lockett)

Mind – Here’s to the Ranting Chef for putting on the Diced Cooking Competition! After reading Pat’s blog, I knew I wanted in because fighter pilots love to compete. LIKEAFIGHTERPILOT.com focuses on Mind, Body, and Spirit through attempts at humor, fitness, tasty yet expedient food, and good thoughts—sometimes with success, sometimes not so much. LIKEAFIGHTERPILOT.com attempts to describe how to think, train, eat, play and pray like a fighter pilot, or at least laugh along in the process. Since the Ranting Chef threw down the gauntlet, a quick story about a favorite fighter pilot competition is in order. For the starving foodies, skip to the recipe of the day.

As I put my ideas for the cooking competition together, I felt like I was strapping into my jet, and as the plans formulated, my adrenaline flowed. Who would have guessed cooking and flying could evoke some of the same emotions? Believe it or not, flying fighters and cooking require similar traits—creativity, adaptability, and perseverance.

Competition can spark new friendships, develop teamwork, build esprit de corps, and improve overall performance; great reasons to compete no matter the endeavor. Bombing and gunnery competitions, tracked closely by all fighter squadrons, usually spark the most interest. When flying fighters everyone wants to be the Top Gun, but when it comes to cooking and blogging, we want to be The Ranting Chef!

Pilots spend a copious amount of time studying flight parameters, tracking aircraft performance, evaluating previous missions, and working on techniques to improve scores. We also experiment to see what works best and adjust on the fly during the competition to adapt to current conditions. Each bomb we drop is scored by the range control officer and is called out over the radio. Four aircraft circle the target from high above, each taking turns hoping to hear the call “Shack 1!” meaning the bomb hit the target directly. The pressure mounts as the other aircraft roll in and the scores are called out. Low angle strafe marks the last event of the mission and the winner usually walks away with the prize, but until the tapes are reviewed, the outcome is uncertain.

Photo 2 - Bomb On Target

Bomb On Target (Photo by Brian Lockett)

Once the mission is over, the four-ship debriefs and evaluates individual performance looking for any violations of the rules, or deviations in airspeed, altitude, and other specific parameters. Offenses on a pass cause the score to be thrown out and a loss of points for the errant pilot. Points and reputations are not the only thing on the line; pilots usually make the “standard bet”—a quarter for each strafing pass and bomb dropped, equating to $3.50 per pilot. On rare occasions brazen wingmen chime in and try to raise the stakes to a “Buck a Bullet!” meaning $100 for most training missions.  For high stakes competitions the gun limiter is removed making 5 seconds of trigger time available… or 500 bullets/bucks! One thing about competitions, know your competitors.   I have zero intel, so I’ll stick with quarters until the culinary chefs-d’oeuvres of Maggie, Mikaela, Ellie and Jenna are posted.

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Body – Strength Day

Photo 3 - LtCol Bruiser Bryant

LtCol Frank “Bruiser” Bryant

“The Bruiser”  – In memory of Lieutenant Colonel Frank “Bruiser” Bryant Jr.

3x Progressive Ladders

A progressive ladder is 1 rep per rung, then 2 reps per rung, then 3 reps per rung. Each ladder is a set rungs of the exercises below with weights prescribed.  Scale as required for ability and strength.

Bench Press, 225lbs, 205lbs, 185lbs

Dead Lift 355lbs, 335lbs, 315lbs

Front Squat 185lbs, 165lbs, 135lbs

Overhead Squat 135lbs, 105lbs, 95lbs

Standing Military Press 135lbs, 105lbs, 95lbs

Squat 355 lbs, 335 lbs, 315lbs

Weighted Pull Ups 40lbs, 20lbs, Body Weight

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Recipe of the Day

Seared Jumbo Scallops Glazed with Peach and Carrot Sauce

By AJAX, inspired by Lisa and Janice

Photos by AJAX 

Photo 4 - Glazed Seared Scallops

When Pat sent out the required ingredients list for the Diced Competition my mind started to churn on the possibilities.  Should I go for the salad?  Spring greens, carrots, peach vinaigrette topped with prosciutto, shaved Parmigiano-Reggiano and pita croutons…sounded easy enough.  Hmmm, maybe a split pea and carrot soup filled with peach fried prosciutto and pita on the side for dipping? Then my mind went to the appetizer category. Maybe I would try a pita wrap sliced into rounds filled with peach glazed lamb, prosciutto, goat cheese, peppers, and carrots?  All of them sounded wonderful.  Each was from scratch and formulated in my head. Remember the creativity thing? I didn’t want to cook from some recipe I had found.  This might be risky …what if the recipe was a total flop? “Don’t be lame.” I thought, “Attack!”  “Go for it!” I felt like the new wingman chiming in with “A Buck a Bullet!” Surely my competition is filled with steely-eyed veteran chefs and bloggers, but I have learned with risk will come reward if properly prepared.

As I discussed the possibilities with my wife Lisa, I decided to go for the appetizer.  I initially settled on the Pita wrap, but then my friend Janice suggested scallops as the protein portion of the appetizer.  “Perfect!” I thought, now I just need to execute the mission.

Serves 4-6, prep time ~20 minutes

Ingredients

1 medium carrot

1/3 cup of 100% carrot juice

1/2 cup of brown sugar

2 Tablespoons of Tamari sauce

1/3 cup of peach preserves

1/2 cup of dry cooking sherry

2 tablespoons of canola oil

1/2 pound of fresh jumbo dry scallops

3 ounces of thin sliced prosciutto

4 ounces of goat cheese

1 peach in small 1/2” wedges

1 red pepper from jar grilled, peeled, seeded and cored (better if fresh but I went for time savings).

2 rounds of 6” pita bread

Instructions

1. Assemble all the ingredients. Pre-heat the oven broiler to high with a shelf on the top and middle.  Place a pizza stone on the middle rack for toasting the pita.

Photo 5 - The Ingredients

2. Peel and slice the carrot into 1/4-inch thick rounds.  Place into a blender or food processor with the carrot juice and puree.

This is where I ran into my first hiccup. I guess I figured since the button said liquefy I could make carrot juice out of carrots. All it did was make little tiny chunks, so I added 100% carrot juice to give the blades slurry with better results.

Photo 6 - The Carrot Puree

3. Heat a skillet on high heat with the canola oil until just prior to smoking. Sear the scallops until brown on each side, about 2-3 minutes. Set aside to rest for 5 minutes.

Photo 7 - Searing the Scallops

4. Combine in a medium bowl 2 tablespoons of the carrot puree, peach preserves, brown sugar, and tamari sauce.

5. Dump extra oil out of the hot skillet. Pour in the cooking sherry; reduce and scrape any seared scallop off the bottom.  When the sherry has reduced to about a quarter, pour in the bowl of carrot, peach preserves, brown sugar, and tamari.  Continue to reduce until sauce thickens and turns darker, about 4-5 minutes on medium-high heat, stir frequently. Set aside.

Photo 8 - The Glaze

6. Cut the scallops into approximately one half by three quarter inch cubes. Depending on the size of the scallop this is probably about sixths. Place the pieces on a plate and brush them with the peach carrot glaze. Tear pieces of the prosciutto into roughly 2”x2” squares and wrap each scallop. Place each prosciutto-scallop wrap, seam down, on a 1”x1” piece of the red pepper in a small baking pan and then brush generously with glaze.

This is the second area where I went wrong.  I initially had larger pieces of scallops and had a good chuckle as Lisa tried to muck down a “bite” size piece of the final product. Several iterations revealed the best size.

7. Separate the pita pockets horizontally in to two round halves, like a mini-single layer pizza crust.

Adapting on the fly and learning was key for this step.  We tried the pita toasted several ways, whole, quartered, etc., but found that the best taste was with a pita that was broiled crispy like a cracker as a single layer sheet.

8. Place the prosciutto wrapped scallops on the top rack and the pita on the pizza stone.  Keep an eye on them both so as not to burn either.  Broil the scallops until the prosciutto starts to brown crystallizing the glaze as the pita toasts light brown. The scallops should be done first in about 2-3 minutes with the pita done shortly after.

9. Remove the scallops and pitas from the oven. Cut the pita into sixths. Smear a thin layer of goat cheese on the pita then stack with the peaches and prosciutto-scallops held together with a toothpick. Variations included peppers, peaches, or pears.

Final assembly took several iterations and experiments to see what we liked best. At first we just used warmed pita, red peppers and the prosciutto wrapped scallop but the pita was too gooey and didn’t add to the appetizer. Here we adapted on the fly and decided to toast the pita until crispy like a cracker then spread a layer of goat cheese on before adding the prosciutto-scallop. Bingo! This was the taste I was looking for.  Here I tried several iterations with and without the pepper, then tried the sliced peaches as a replacement to the pepper. What we finally liked best was the toasted crunchy pita, goat cheese, sliced peach and glazed prosciutto scallop.

As a final note, although I didn’t have the time to try this, I believe the absolute best combo would include caramelized baked peaches.

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Spirit – 1 Corinthians 9:24-25 “Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever.”

AJAX

Remember – check back after the last post to vote on who advances in the Diced! competition.

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