Thursday, August 31, 2006

Saganaki Chicken



One of my most proudin'est creations is something I call Saganaki Chicken. I love saganaki, the flaming cheese that you get at Greek restaurants, where they squirt the lemon juice on it, spread on the brandy, light it and say, "opa!" It isn't the show I enjoy so much. I think it is just the crusty, fried feta cheese. In fact, shut up and give me my flaming cheese already.

I pound chicken cutlets flat between sheets of plastic wrap, dip them in beaten egg, and then roll them in shredded parmesan and feta crumbles instead of breadcrumb. It will work with just the parmesan, too, only it will be less melty -- more like a parmesan crouton on the outside. You fry them in just enough oil to cover the bottom of the pan.

This doesn't work as well in a dry pan, and it is pretty messy. You also have to be careful not to peek, and try to flip the chicken before it has formed a nice crust on one side. I've put marinara over the top of this like chicken parmesan, but I really think it tastes better all by itself. I put the chicken pieces on a cookie rack as I cook them, with a paper towel underneath, because the little suckers want to stick to the paper towel while they are very hot. They are crunchy, cheesy and salty. I garnish with basil or parsely, and squeeze lemon over them.



"Opaaa!" Eh, shmeesh.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Goat Cheese Portobello Salad



Wish I had a better pic... this is one from the olden days, when I was still using my trusty camera from junior high. No, Jen, it is not a Disk Camera. But it is the one I got right after that, so if you're sly you can figure about what year that was.

This salad is one I ripped off from the cafe that was downstairs in the office building I worked at in Skokie. It was really the only decent thing they had, but I could eat it just about every day... so that was ai'ight. I chop portobello mushrooms and red bell pepper, and cover them with my own vinaigrette (balsamic, olive oil, Italian seasoning and a little sugar). I keep that mix (peppers, mushrooms, vinaigrette) in the fridge, or bring it along that way so that I can mix it with the lettuce right before I eat it. Then I crumble in goat cheese, and top it with fried chow mein noodles. Oh, and scallions are good, too.

Might be my favorite salad. Until the next salad.

Thursday, August 24, 2006

Shrimp Caesar Salad



Okay, I have a confession to make... I had never actually purchased uncooked shrimp before. I always got cooked, or cooked and frozen. But in the interest of upping the quality of my cuisine, I knew I had to stop being so lazy. Sometimes at least. Especially since the fresh takes about two minutes to cook. I still plan on getting frozen sometimes -- but maybe I'll be frozen uncooked shrimp. Do they make those? I cleaned these under water, and left the tails on.

Anyway, I used Alton Brown's "No Guilt Caesar" dressing recipe... It got such rave reviews on FoodTV.com that I just had to give it a shot. It's made with tofu, and no raw eggs. I thought it was really good!! It made so much, that two days later I served it at a little dinner party, and everyone seemed to dig it. My pregnant friend, Lindsay could indulge and not worry about the eggy-weggs. I used firm tofu, cuz that's what I had -- and I added a little milk to thin it to the consistency I wanted. I also added anchovies (which pregnant women can have, as long as they are the tinned kind). Anyway, Alton claims that anchovies have no place in real caesar dressing, but I can't imagine it without. Call me trashy.

I marinated the shrimp briefly in lemon juice, olive oil, salt, and Nonno's seasoning. Chris' grandfather makes this with fresh herbs (sage, rosemary, garlic and red pepper flakes) and a mezza luna, and then freezes it for us. I grilled them on my handy-dandy grill pan.

I covered the salad with parmesan cheese, and added more fresh lemon juice. It was fantastic!

Tuesday, August 22, 2006

Kira's Brownies



As promised, I made Kira's brownies the very next day after she posted about them in a comment (see Kira's blog on my blogroll: "Shovel-It-In.") She stated that she uses the "one bowl" brownie recipe on the back of the Baker's unsweetened chocolate box. She said she also adds extra chocolate morsels and macadamia nuts. I did the same, except I added half a bag of chocolate and peanut butter morsels that I had. And next time I will crush up the nuts a bit smaller, instead of just throwing them in the way I did. I was in a big hurry to get these things in my mouwf.

Well, the resulting recipe will go next to my cornbread as an Untouchable for all time. I don't think I'll ever make another brownie. The morsels melted all through the mix, and the top is crispy and the inside, when heated for ten seconds each time in the micro, is a fresh and chocolate-lava gooey as the day it was born. Wait, I hate the word "gooey." And yet that it what it is. God is it gooey, and dare I say the forbidden word? Moist?

Thank you Kira. You've changed my life yet again!

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Chili Mac



About once a month for oh, my whole life, my dad would get a craving for Steak 'n Shake chili mac. We'd have to rush out and get it. I've often said that I think he was under the misgiving that there was a little fetus growing in his little potbelly, and he would get the cravings that would correspond to that condition.

I could never figure out why the chili mac I made at home never tasted like the mac at Steak 'n Shake. I even bought the chili that they sell there out of a can, and it still didn't taste right. Later I realized that there was chili sauce under the chili. Now I put the pasta sauce in the bowl, a healthy glug of chili sauce out of the bottle, and warm chili. Then the cheese, onions, and sometimes some sour cream. Shown in the picture above is my buddy Cameron's fantastic Howitzer Death Fart Chili that he was kind enough to send home with us. Well, that's what I call it. The effects last up to five days (that's tested fact, and not a joke), but lordy. Worth every green swamp cloud that the stuff emanates. Just make sure you look ahead on your calendar to what you have going on during the weekend.

Friday, August 18, 2006

Club Sandwiches Inna House



Speaking of the perfect club sandwich, how good are those on a hot day? Chris and I went out and bought all the fixin's, including turkey bacon (btw, nothing compares to Trader Joe's turkey bacon. It's all thick cut and farm-y). We also got taffy apple salad from Jewel, which tasted just like taffy apples. Yum.

They were so good, we made them again the next day!

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Cilantro Lime Chicken and Corn Salsa



This was a super easy dinner I made by marinating a package of chicken breasts in a Ziploc gallon bag overnight. I just put the chicken in with a liberal amount of olive oil, plenty of salt, pepper, the juice of three limes, and chopped cilantro and a little mexican seasoning. I smooshed them around in there until the oil and juice were mixed, then I grilled them up the next day.

The corn is from Market Day. I nuked it, then salted it and added some salsa and chopped raw red pepper. I added more lime juice and served it close to room temperature.

I love those dinners you can be half-dead to make. Friggin' sweet!

Tuesday, August 15, 2006

Buffalo Grove Restaurant & Ice Cream Parlor

Chris and I stopped by the Buffalo Grove Restaurant and Ice Cream Parlor on a hot day when I didn't feel like grocery shopping OR cooking. The service was pretty lousy, and by that I mean incredibly slow, yet disarmingly apologetic. The other bad news is that the matza ball soup was very mediocre:



They might have called it Mush with Boullion Cube, though I don't know if it would have sold so well. Chris' omelette was all right, but didn't look spectacular:



If we ever return, however, it will be because my club sandwich was an absolute perfect "10": a light coat of heavy restaurant-quality mayo, lettuce, tomato, well-done bacon, wheat toast, and real carved turkey. It was a thing of beauty:



Overall, I would recommend the sandwich. They also had a very wide array of creative ice cream sundaes and treats, which we did not sample. I would go back to try those.

I was also pleased to see that the silverware was magnetized, which I haven't witnessed since Denny's Restaurant in 1991, when our friend Chris C. made an elaborate working sculpture that clicked together in a domino effect:





Between the sandwich, the ice cream we didn't try, and the magnetic forks? Worth the money, no question.

Wednesday, August 9, 2006

Oatmeal Scotchies



I'm not really into baking. If you've read my "User Info" page, you know this is because I find that I have to be too precise. However, my need for cookies with chips in them forces me to put my baker's hat on, because I haven't had any from the store yet that really compare with even the crappiest batch of homemade, warm cookies. Plus, you get a ton of them for a lot less money. My friend Brooke has inspired me to double the chips in just about all my cookie recipes. Chris often asks me why I don't just eat the chips, because isn't it really those that I'm interested in? Or, why not just melt them down, and mainline them into a vein, he asks? I tell him that the chocolate cools too fast and clogs up the needle, stupid. Sheeshh.

I changed up my chocolate chip habit recently and made this batch of "scotchies." (I'm not sure how the Scotts came to be synonymous with both a buttery flavor and a breed of little black dogs, but I guess those are both pretty good things to have your name attached to. Not so for the poor Gypsies... I still hear people say they got "gypped" fairly often.) Anyway, do I digress? I won't bother copying the recipe, because it's just the one on the back of the butterscotch chips bag. For this batch, I ran about a cup low on oats, and substituted the rest with more flour -- and they still came out fine. A little cakier, but they definitely scratched the itch.

Shown is about single serving, plus one glass of milk. Because I'm watching my figure.

Tuesday, August 8, 2006

Chicken Nachos



Hoo dogie. If you're in the mood for sin, do I got somethin' fo' dat azz.

I have an all-purpose mexican chicken recipe. It isn't really a recipe, so much as a collection of a few ingredients, dumped into a slow cooker:

four or five chicken breasts, fresh or still frozen
about a half-jar (1-2 cups) of your favorite salsa
4-6 oz. of jelly (low sugar will work fine, no sugar will not work) of just about any flavor: grape or peach or...
one taco seasoning packet, or house mexican seasoning plus salt

I cook this on high for about 4 hours, or up to six if the chicken is frozen solid. When it is cooked, shred it right in the pot with two forks. You can use this for chicken tacos, enchiladas, or these: the badass chicken nachos. Just scatter the chicken over tortilla chips, smother with cheese sauce or shredded cheese of your choice, and place under the broiler until the cheese is melted. Wolf 'em down with guacamole and sour cream, plus your favorite beer... and hate yourself so much in the morning that you're unable to pick up the phone and call yourself ever again. Just pray that you don't run into yourself in public.

Sunday, August 6, 2006

Pierogi and the Fixin's



My godparents are Polish, and I have fond memories of there always being a side-dish of fried pierogi (filled dumplings) at their house. Pierogi also lent me its name for a short time in college, when in a game of "if you were food, what food do the rest of us think you would be?" my seven roommates decided that I was pierogi. Their reasoning was, "At first when you see it, you're like, 'This looks a little weird. I'm not sure about this,' and then later you try it and say, 'No, this is good stuff. This is stuff I like." Sort of a dubious honor, but there you have it -- for about a year, I was "Yogi" for short.

When I moved to Chicago with my bro, we lived on Chicago Avenue in the Ukrainian Village. Being short on funds and time, I often crossed the street to the small Ukrainian grocery for my dinner. Pierogi were inexpensive, and warm and comforting in the winter. And did I mention easy to make? Now they sell them in just about any grocery store. We get ours at Jewel. They have blueberry, sauerkraut, potato and cheese, and beef. These in the pic are "sweet cheese," and we liked them a lot. One day I may make these from scratch... Nah. Who am I kidding? The ones you buy fresh in Chicago (or Wisconsin) are delicious, and great to have on hand for a quick dinner. Why mess with a great resource for a fast nosh?

I just sautee some onion in a couple tablespoons of oil, and then I add the pierogi. I put the lid on, because the ones we buy are frozen. After a couple minutes, I turn them to the other side when browned. When the flip side is done, I add a drained can of sweet (Bavarian) sauerkraut and warm it through. I just gotta have mine with both applesauce AND sour cream!

Friday, August 4, 2006

World's Greatest Cornbread



In this season of BBQ's and chili cook-offs, it is the finishing touch to have the best cornbread recipe ever. I wrote this down on yellow legal paper some years ago, and I now don't remember where I got it from. TV? A friend? Foodtv.com? I dunno. The mysterious origins are lost in the mists of time. But I'll never make another kind. Once you've had the best? You can poo-poo the rest.

1 box of Jiffy corn muffin mix
8 oz. of whole canned kernel corn, drained
8 oz. of creamed corn
8 oz. of sour cream
2 eggs
1/2 cup (1 stick) of melted butter

Mix all of the ingredients well, and pour into a greased 9 x 9 inch pan (the batch shown in the picture has been doubled for one of my friend Cam's fabulous chili nights). Bake at 350 degrees for 30-40 minutes.

That's it! This bread is crazy moist (and trust me, I hate the word "moist" but there's no other way to describe) and never has that gritty-kitty-litter texture. It sure ain't health food, baby... But like I said: the old ways are now dead to us. You try this recipe, and see if you can go back!

Thursday, August 3, 2006

Chicken Kebabs



I have two versions of these kebabs: the full-on version, as shown above -- which usually comes about because I have onions and peppers on hand -- and the lazier version. I do the lazier version when I don't feel like pushing the meat onto kebabs. I like to have hummus and brown rice with both versions, as shown below.

I start by either cubing (for kebabs), or cutting the chicken into strips (which I place right onto the grill). I put the chicken into a gallon Ziploc bag (can't live without those things). I add a liberal dusting of mediterranean seasoning, enough olive oil to well-coat, and the juice of a couple of lemons or limes. Close the bag and sort of massage your meat (insert obvious joke here) until the ingredients are all combined. I marinate them for a couple hours to overnight (no longer, because the citrus will actually cook the chicken a little.)

Grill or roast the chicken, and serve in on brown rice, or dip in your favorite hummus!

Mediterranean Seasoning

Lemme break you off another remix... This combo is what I call mediterranean seasoning. Again, doesn't matter how much you use -- just combine in the following proportions in a bowl, whisk, and pour into a shaker. Then it's there when you want to use it for a quick dusting on grilled meat, or for a marinade:

1 part coriander
1 part cinammon
1 part cumin
1 part Italian seasoning or oregano
1 part dried mint
1/4 part garlic powder
1/2 part onion powder

This mix has a complex, aromatic sort of taste. It smells so good on the grill! Goes well with either lime juice or lemon juice, and olive oil for an in-bag marinade.

Wednesday, August 2, 2006

Taco Salad



I have strong opinions when it comes to making tacos. But more on that later. For now, since it is 106 degrees in Chicago (and that ain't no joke), I'm posting our cooling taco salad.

I got this idea from my mother-in-law's taco salad. Don't laugh -- I know taco salads are as common now as burgers and fries. But hers was a cute idea she had gotten from someone else: ground beef with taco seasoning, shredded cheddar, crumbled Doritos, scallions (which she had left out because of certain onion-loathing family members), iceberg lettuce and Western dressing. It is also because of this that we now put Western dressing on our tacos, but like I said, more on that later.

I changed things a bit to up the nutrition, lower the fat, and suit our veggie-lovin' tastes. Which is good, because I eat half the bowl by myself. The list below is the permutation we had last night:

Brown 1 lb. turkey meat with onions, drain, add plenty of house taco seasoning, salt, and about 3/4 cup salsa (add lastly). Use about half the meat mixture., and keep the rest for leftovers.
one or two handfuls crumbled light tortilla chips
about 1 cup shredded cheddar
defrosted baby corn (about a cup): Market Day frozen veggies are the bomb
chopped scallions
Romaine, mixed greens, or red lettuce (~ 2 cups)
diced avocado, salt and toss in a little lemon concentrate first
Just 2 Good! light Western dressing

That's about it... I have used ranch dressing once, but you just gotta try the Western. Nothing like it. Oh, and sometimes I add drained black beans, too.

I have the same problem with this salad as I have with tacos: I will eat until I am ready to bust. At least it's chocked-full of vitamins and fiber and stuff.