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Showing posts with label Food Friday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Friday. Show all posts

Friday, December 10, 2010

Tanya

McCormick & Schmick is offering one order of bar food FREE


Since teaming up in the early 1970s, Bill McCormick and Doug Schmick have established more than 80 restaurants throughout the country. The two men, very different yet surprisingly compatible, have established themselves as passionate entrepreneurs with one collective vision, to run the nation's premier family of seafood restaurants. The combination of an open imagination and a respect for tradition are what makes McCormick & Schmick's the classic and successful business that it is today. For more information about our history, click here.

Each McCormick & Schmick's restaurant is uniquely designed to create an inviting, original and relaxed atmosphere, where guests can enjoy the highest quality dining experience. Our restaurants are situated in a broad array of locations – from downtown urban cores to suburban retail-driven centers. For more information on the design and development of our restaurants, click here.

Each McCormick & Schmick's Seafood Restaurant’s menu is printed twice daily, featuring the signature “Fresh List” highlighting an impressive number of fresh seafood varieties, in addition to aged steaks, poultry, entrée salads and pasta. McCormick & Schmick's commitment to local freshness is apparent in the seasonally inspired dishes and regionally inspired preparations offered. To learn more about our food, click here.

Since our very first restaurant opened, McCormick & Schmick’s has focused on a true spirit of hospitality, where every guest is treated like family. The McCormick & Schmick’s “people-focus” extends to our employees as well, whom we treat with the utmost respect and for whom we provide growth opportunities at many levels. McCormick & Schmick’s Seafood Restaurants also believe in giving back to the communities in which we are a part by supporting local programs and organizations. For more information about our culture, click here.
McCormick & Schmick is offering one order of bar food FREE for anyone that checks-in on Foursquare during Happy Hour!

What is Foursquare?
Foursquare on your phone gives you & your friends new ways of exploring your city. Earn points & unlock badges for discovering new things.
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Friday, December 3, 2010

Tanya

10 Great Recipes to Get You in the Christmas Spirit

In recent years, Christmas has gotten so commercialized that we’ve forgotten what it is all about—food! Who doesn’t have memories of warm Christmas hams, homemade Christmas candies, pies, warm cider, or other Christmas treats? Making and eating tasty treats and good food is one of the things that makes Christmas so special and gets us in the Christmas spirit.

So, if you are looking for some traditional Christmas recipes—or for something a new and adventurous—check out the list below for links to amazing treats what will make you think you’re hearing jingle bells already.

1)      Mint Chocolate Christmas Cupcakes: A little chocolate, a little mint, and almost no holiday stress.
2)      Christmas Ginger Cookies: Ginger cookies are a staple of season; try these tasty treats to get in the spirit.
3)      Apricot Glazed Ham: Time to update your Christmas ham recipe! Try this new one with a savory and sweet apricot glaze, Christmas dinner will never be the same again.
4)      Christmas Plum Pudding: Have you ever tried this traditional English Christmas treat? Now’s the chance to find out why it’s been an English Christmas staple for so long.
5)      French Canadian Christmas Pork Pie: If you are looking to sample other countries’ Christmas traditions, serve a little French Canadian Pork Pie at your next Christmas dinner.
6)      Chocolate Peanut Butter Tartlets: In reality you could eat these all year round, but then what would you have to look forward to at Christmas?
7)      Christmas Tree Shaped Green tea Cookies: These little cone shaped treats are rolled in sparkling sugar, stand on a chocolate chip trunk, and are topped with a small candy star. If making these doesn’t get you in the mood for Christmas, then bah-humbug to you!
8)      Fantastic Traditional Christmas Cut-out Sugar Cookies: What is Christmas without biting into a good old-fashioned sugar cookie shaped like a sleigh or a reindeer? Try this delicious twist on a traditional cookie guaranteed to make you feel like a kid again.
9)      Russian Friendship Tea: There’s nothing like a little hot cocoa or cider on a cold winter’s night, but if you are looking for something a little different this Christmas try this fruit-based tea infused with cinnamon and cloves.
10)  Chocolate Fruitcake:  I know all the fruitcake jokes in the world, but you’ve never had fruitcake like this. Chocolatly, fudgy goodness that will make you think twice about ever telling a fruitcake joke again.


Gunter Jameson writes about several topics including travel, minimalism and online classes.
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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Tanya

Snowy Day Vegetable Beef Stew

So this past weekend we got our first snow which is a couple months early for us! So to warm us up I found a great beef stew recipes and made some big changes making it AMAZING!!!

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds beef stew meat, cut into 1 inch cubes
  • 1 packet of dry Italitan Dressing Mix
  • 3 tablespoons of olive oil
  • 3 cups water
  • 2 teaspoons beef bouillon granules
  • 1 (14.5 ounce) can diced tomatoes, undrained
  • 1 packet of brown gravy mix
  • 1 garlic clove, minced
  • 2 bay leaf
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1/2 teaspoon pepper
  • 6 small potatoes, quartered
  • 6 medium carrots, cut into 1 inch pieces
  • Any of veggies you would like int it! I used canned peas and green beans and frozen corn
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 3 tablespoons corn starch
  • 3 tablespoons cold water

Directions

  1. In a Dutch oven, brown meat in salad dressing mix and oil over medium heat. Add the next 10 ingredients; bring to a boil. Reduce heat; cover and simmer for 1-1/2 hours or until meat is tender. Add the potatoes, carrots, other veggies and onion. Cover and simmer for 45 minutes or until vegetables are tender. Combine cornstarch and cold water until smooth; stir into stew. Bring to a boil; cook and stir for 2 minutes or until thickened. Discard bay leaf before serving.
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Friday, November 5, 2010

Tanya

Flor Free Eating - Giveaway

Most people who want to eat healthy and control their weight already know that sugar is a no-no. Many also know that processed flour is not nutritious. But what they don't know, and are surprised to learn, is that to the human body, most flours - especially refined flour - are digested in almost the same way as sugar, carrying with it the same health risks. The Complete Idiot's Guide® to Flour-Free Eating provides everyone looking to improve his or her quality of life with the tools to get started in achieving flour freedom.

The Complete Idiot's Guide® to Flour-Free Eating has all the information readers need to achieve a healthier way of life.  It explains to readers what they can eat and what they should avoid, what alternate grains can be substituted for white flour, and recipes to make your family's favorite meals flour-free.

Tanya Peila and Wilks PR are giving away a copy of The Complete Idiot's Guide® to Flour-Free Eating!
Ways to enter to win:
1. Comment below why you would like to win!
2. Subscribe to my blog!
3.
Follow Me on Twitter
4. "Like" Tanya Peila on Facebook.
5. Tweet about this giveaway.
6. Blog about this giveaway.

Leave a comment for EACH entry method please.

Winner will be chosen November 15, 2010. PLEASE make sure you leave an email address where I can get a hold of you! US entries only.
 
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Friday, October 29, 2010

Tanya

Infrared Charcol - Food Friday

For many years I cooked every weekend on a charcoal kettle.  The charcoal kettle design has been around for decades and has been copied by every barbeque grill manufacturer.   The kettle has been a useful barbeque design because of its ability to control temperatures with vents placed above and below the cooking surface, which also places the vents above and below the burning charcoal.  The placement of the vents and the embers made the kettle capable of very low temperatures, very high temperatures and everything in between.   For a while the charcoal kettle seemed ubiquitous, indicative of suburban family life and I enjoyed starting the process of barbecuing dinner by starting the fire while lunch was digesting.   I loved my charcoal grill and still remember it happily but I found a better way.

Typically a charcoal barbeque kettle has a rounded bottom and two grates inside.  The bottom grid is for the charcoal to sit above the floor allowing air flow under the burning charcoal.  The top grid is the cooking grates for food placement above the burning charcoal.  Vents are closed and opened to varying degrees under the charcoal where the airflow is built into the bottom of the firebox.  The top vents are built into the barbecue hood.  Wide-open vents allow full airflow and greater temperatures and as the vents are closed the temperatures drop and eventually go out when vents allow no airflow. 

What I loved about my charcoal BBQ was this control over the heat.  Traditionally to use the charcoal BBQ the charcoal is left to burn until it burns down to embers with a light coat of gray ash.  Once the charcoal has burned to a glowing red lightly covered with ash the heat radiates strongly off the coals and the amount of heat is controlled with the vents.

What most people love about charcoal is the flavor.  Gas barbecues slowly heat the air trapped inside the BBQ hood and the hot air surrounds the food.  This convection causes the food to cook but it also heats only to about four hundred degrees because of the ability of air to transfer heat.  The materials inside the gas barbeque are not usually enough to radiate an additional heat unless briquettes or lava rocks are used.  When hot air surrounds food inside a gas barbeque at a maximum of four hundred to four hundred fifty degrees the food cooks slow and drips moisture, losing flavor.  In contrast, charcoal is burning wood and the smoky wood flavor is what most people love about charcoal barbecuing.

The charcoal barbeque is not using air to conduct heat although the oxygen is necessary for the flames to continue smoldering.  By the time the charcoal briquettes are smoldering and lightly coated with ash the heat is radiating off the briquettes directly heating the food above it.  This is important because charcoal barbecues can radiate a lot more heat than a typical gas barbeque.  Restaurant quality searing is considered over eight hundred degrees because at temperatures over eight hundred degrees the outside layer of food is seared.  Searing the food on a grill means the food seals so no more flavor is able to escape as dripping.  The natural moisture in the food stays where it belongs as flavor.

A charcoal barbeque grill is capable of barbecuing at very low temperatures for longer times and it is capable of searing steaks fast and hot and there is only one gas grill in existence that can duplicate this versatility.  Thirty years ago a company called Thermal Engineering Corporation (TEC) invented the infrared burner.  The name “infrared” refers to the invisible light of the light spectrum where these heat waves are found.  The important thing is that an infrared gas grill can duplicate the effect of radiant heat ranging from three hundred degrees to over thirteen hundred degrees just below the grilling surface.  The radiant heat is direct providing a seared surface on food is seconds rather than the convectional heat transferred in air.  Infrared gas grills have all the features that cause us to sacrifice flavor for convenience when we buy a gas barbeque but the infrared burner is over one thousand degrees within a minute of pushing the grills’ ignition.

Grilling with an infrared gas grill requires no recipe; no combination of sauces, rubs, spices or marinades is necessary.  An infrared grill produces the effect of a charcoal grill an hour after the coals are initially lit.  Within seconds the pressurized burners are radiating over one thousand degrees searing steaks from the outside and locking in natural moisture and flavor without the ability to cause absorption of carcinogens or carbons that are possible with some brands of charcoal.  An infrared gas grill is all that is good about charcoal and all that is convenient abut a gas barbeque.

Obviously the infrared gas grill is useful when grilling steaks and other red meats because of the high temperature and fast grilling times.  Infrared burners are amazing for grilling fish also.  Wild swordfish steak with a light blackened seasoning rub and lemon juice on an infrared grill is ready to eat in about five minutes.  On a traditional barbeque this would take more than thirty minutes and would produce a much drier dish.  

My family and I find the infrared grill indispensable at home for two reasons.  First, the incredible heat allows cooking times to diminish.  We grill skewers of chicken, frits and vegetables in minutes.  Steaks, hamburgers and fish grill quickly at the cooking surface and hot dogs for the kids can grill from the warming rack about eight inches above the grilling surface.  In addition to speed and flavor the size is convenient.  For two years we used a small portable version of the infrared gas grill manufactured for tailgating and camping.  This small grill was more than enough for a family of four.  Now that we have a twenty-seven inch infrared grill built into an outdoor kitchen we use only half the grilling area except when we have birthday parties and company.

Infrared grilling has simplified home life.  Cooking time is less and sitting with my family eating has grown.  With a maximum temperature of fourteen hundred degrees there is no need to schedule time to clean the grill; it is like a self-cleaning oven.  Recipes have become simpler and flavor has grown although ingredients have diminished.  The infrared gas grill burner is the most technologically advanced form of cooking on the planet and we had to save money for awhile to place one in our home but it has improved our life and our time together which is what we expect from technology anyway.  The fact that we cook together outdoor more often than indoors is an added benefit.

 Submitted by Jason at http://www.grill-repair.com/
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Friday, October 15, 2010

Tanya

Hearty Dinner Entrees

Experience the cuisine of The Legendary Napa Valley – right at home. With delicious recipes developed by several of The Napa Valley’s exceptional chefs, home cooks and their families can now enjoy the fine cuisine of this renowned culinary capital any night of the week, cuisine which places an American spin on notable international entrees.

Cakebreak Cellars in Rutherford offers home cooks an outdoor grill recipe for Thai Beef Brochettes that will excite the senses with an explosion of exotic flavors. The following night, put a fresh spin on a great classic with the Culinary Institute of America at Greystone’s Fresh Pasta with Summer Herbs. And then treat the family to Celadon’s Mongolian Short Ribs. You can travel the world with Napa Valley-born recipes.

For more information on The Napa Valley and its culinary traditions, please visit http://www.legendarynapavalley.com.



Thai Beef Brochettes – Cakebread Cellars

Serves 6

2 lbs. skirt steak, ½ inch dice
4 cloves garlic, minced
2 T. oyster sauce
4 tsp. soy sauce

½ pineapple, trimmed and sliced crosswise into rounds
2 T. olive oil
2 red peppers, ½ inch dice
1 red onion, ½ inch dice
12 (9 inch) bamboo skewers, soaked overnight or metal skewers
2 T. grapeseed oil
salt and pepper

3 T. lime juice
4 tsp. fish sauce
1 T. sugar
1 Serrano chili, seeds removed and minced
2 T. fresh basil, chopped


Place the skirt steak in a shallow casserole dish.  Add the garlic, oyster and soy sauces.  Mix well.  Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate 2-3 hours or overnight.

Heat the grill to high.  Place a medium size non-reactive sauté pan over a medium-high heat. Add 2 tablespoons olive oil, and then add pineapple slices to the pan.  Cook for 2-3 minutes per side until they begin to caramelize.  Remove from pan and let cool.  Cut into ½ inch dice.  Thread alternating pieces of the steak, red pepper and pineapple on each skewer.  Place on a plate.  Lightly brush the brochettes with the grapeseed oil.  Season with salt and pepper. 

Meanwhile, in a small bowl combine the lime juice, fish sauce, sugar and the minced Serrano chili.  Mix well to dissolve the sugar.  Place beef skewers over medium-hot fire for 2 minutes on each side.  Baste  with  the lime juice mixture.  Remove from heat and garnish with the sliced basil.

Enjoy with a glass of Cakebread Cellars Merlot.




Cuban Pulled Pork on Plaintain Chips – Cakebread Cellars

2 ½ lbs. pork butt
3 T. olive oil
3 cloves garlic, mashed
½ habenero chili, seeded and chopped
1 C. peeled, seeded plum tomatoes, chopped
1 tsp. dried oregano
1 tsp. cumin, ground
½ C. orange juice
2 T. lime juice
1 bay leaf
salt and pepper

6 plantains
vegetable oil
salt

¼ C. cilantro, chopped

Cut pork into 2-inch pieces. Trim off any large pieces of fat and discard. Season with salt and pepper. Heat a large, wide-bottom skillet over high heat, add the olive oil and sear the pork on all sides in two or three batches. Remove from the pan, pour off all but two tablespoons of oil. Turn the heat to medium and add the garlic and habenero chili. Sautè for a minute to soften without browning the garlic. Add the tomato, oregano, cumin, orange juice, lime juice and bay leaf. Cook for 5 minutes to break down the tomato. Add the pork to the pan, cover and turn to low heat. Cook at a low simmer for one and half hours until pork is tender. Continue cooking for another half hour, partially covered, to allow the braising liquid to reduce and thicken. Remove from the heat and shred the pork with the two forks. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. Reserve.

To make the plantain chips, peel and cut the plantain into ¾ inch pieces. Heat a wide-bottom skillet with vegetable oil to a depth of a ½ inch. When oil is hot, add plantain pieces, partially cook on the first side for a couple minutes until very lightly golden brown, turn and continue cooking on the other side to soften slightly. Remove from the oil to a paper towel lined plate. Allow to cool. Place a piece of plantain between two sheets of plastic wrap. Pound with a mallet or the flat side of meat tenderizer to flatten. Repeat with the remaining pieces of plantain. Turn the skillet with the oil to high, and working in batches, fry the plantains on both sides until crisp. Season lightly with salt.

To serve, place a spoonful of the pork mixture on each chip and garnish with the chopped cilantro. Serve immediately while still warm.

Enjoy with a glass of Cakebread Cellars Carneros Pinot Noir.




CELADON’S MONGOLIAN BRAISED SHORT RIBS - Chef de Cuisine Marcos Uribe of Celadon, Napa
Serves 6
Preheat oven to 350 degrees
Ingredients:
Six 3-inch cut beef short ribs
1 unpeeled orange, cut in to 1” pieces
1 oz. ginger, cut into 1” pieces
1 carrot, cut into 1” pieces
1 medium onion, cut into 1” pieces
1 tablespoon Sambal chili paste
1 kaffir lime leaf
1 bunch scallions, finely sliced on the diagonal
1 small can Hoisin sauce, about 12 oz.
2 cups chicken stock
4 tablespoons olive oil

1. Heat olive oil to medium high in an ovenproof roasting pan. Add short ribs and brown on all sides until golden brown. Set ribs to the side.
2. Add orange, ginger, carrot and onion to the roasting pan. Cook, stirring occasionally, until onion is soft.
3. Add sambal chili paste, kaffir lime leaf, hoisin sauce and chicken stock. Bring to a simmer and add short ribs. Place covered roasting pan in 350 degree oven for about 1 1/2 hours or until short ribs are very tender. Remove short ribs from pan and keep warm. Strain braising liquid and discard solids. In a shallow bowl or plate, mound steamed Basmati rice, place one short rib on top, add braising liquid and sprinkle with sliced scallions.


Fresh Pasta with Summer Herbs, Fresh Ricotta, and Roasted Tomato Coulis – Culinary Institute Of America, Chef-instructor Lars Kronmark

Tossing the linguine with the fresh herbs releases their fragrance while keeping the herbs brightly colored and flavored. If you can’t find a fresh cow’s or sheep’s milk ricotta, find the best quality you can and you may need to finish it with a bit more olive oil and sea salt. Chef-instructor Lars Kronmark, who was part of Greystone’s start-up faculty in 1995, came up with this recipe as part of a chef demonstration program at our nearby farmers market. Chef Kronmark recommends chardonnay in the glass to reflect the chardonnay used in the recipe. The coulis can be made in advance and re-heated as needed.

Makes 6 generous first-course servings

Roasted Tomato Coulis
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
3 pounds ripe, preferably heirloom, tomatoes, cut in half and most of liquid and seeds squeezed out
2 cloves garlic, peeled
2 shallots, peeled
2 celery stalks, cut in large chunks
1/2 cup vegetable or chicken stock
1 teaspoon kosher salt, or as needed
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper, or as needed

Pasta and Herbs
3 tablespoons fruity, good quality extra-virgin olive oil
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 cup chardonnay
1 pound fresh linguine
1/4 cup finely minced chives
1/4 cup finely chopped basil
1/4 cup finely chopped Italian parsley
2 tablespoons finely chopped tarragon
2 tablespoons finely chopped dill
8 ounces fresh ricotta
1 1/2 teaspoons coarse sea salt, or as needed

1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
2. For the tomato coulis: Toss 2 tablespoons of the oil, tomatoes, garlic, shallots, and celery together and place on a baking sheet with sides. Roast the mixture in the oven, shaking the pan occasionally to prevent sticking, until tomatoes are beginning to caramelize, about 20 minutes.
3. Purée the roasted vegetables and their liquid in a blender, adding the stock as needed to achieve a smooth, loose, pesto-like consistency.
4. Add the rest of the oil, salt, and pepper and blend for a few more seconds to combine thoroughly. Strain the coulis through a fine-mesh sieve and keep warm.
5. For the pasta: In a large sauté pan, warm 2 tablespoons of the oil over medium heat. Add the garlic, cover, and sweat until garlic is softened, about 1 minute. Increase the heat to medium-high and add the wine. Reduce the wine by half, about 4 to 5 minutes. Remove from the heat and reserve.
 6. Bring a pot of well-salted water to boil over high heat and cook the fresh linguini according to the package directions (usually just a couple of minutes).
7. Drain the pasta and place in the sauté pan with the wine. Heat over medium heat, tossing to coat the pasta, until well combined and heated through. Add the herbs and toss to coat the pasta with the herbs. Pour about 1/2 to 3/4 cup of tomato coulis on each of 6 warmed dishes, and divide the pasta between the dishes.
8. With two soup spoons, scoop out about 1 1/2 tablespoons of ricotta and pass between spoons, forming into an oval shape. Spoon small dollops of ricotta on top of the pasta.
9. Drizzle each mound of ricotta with 1/2 teaspoon of the remaining olive oil and sprinkle with about 1/4 teaspoon coarse sea salt. Encourage your guests to mix the pasta with the coulis and ricotta.

Chef’s Notes:
Coulis - A coulis is a thick purée, usually made of vegetables, but possibly of fruit. By roasting the vegetables, the acidity of the tomatoes is reduced and sweetness is increased, while the flavors in general become more concentrated.
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