From a mom who became an unlikely cook: A chronicle about what happens when I plan to cook something good just once a week. Our dog gives her "Paw Rating" based upon whether she tripped me by staying in the kitchen while I cooked.
My Chronicle
Attainable goals are the ones for me. Encouraged by our dog Spot and family eaters, I purpose to cook once a week and make it new and delicious. If I cook more often, I get more weeks off later on.
Showing posts with label garlic bread. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garlic bread. Show all posts
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Stuffed Garlic Bread
Saw a version of this reposted by someone on Face Book last week. Shared this recipe only to myself so I could try it without announcing my every thought on social media and thus caused five days of posts that no one else saw. :)
Turns out it was worth it. This bread is yum-licious! We served it tonight along with a new recipe for Hamburger Soup. I will do this again when it's colder and we make spaghetti or lasagna for sure...or more Hamburger Soup!
INGREDIENTS:
1 loaf of rosemary bread (from Target bakery) unsliced
1 stick unsalted butter, melted
5 TBSP minced onions (I used white and Videla - use less if you don't like the zippy taste)
8 tsp or more grated garlic cloves (we love garlic)
1 1/2 TBSP Dijon mustard
1/3 cup chopped fresh Italian parsley
12+ oz freshly shredded Parmesan and mixed Italian cheese
HOW TO:
1. Mix all the ingredients except the bread and cheeses in a small bowl to form a paste.
2. Cut the bread into cubes using "X" slices without cutting all the way through. I cut diagonal lines one way, then rotated the bread and cut more the other way.
3. Paste the buttery-garlic mixture into each slice and crevice, baste the top of the loaf.
4. Do the same with the cheeses (other cheeses will also work)
5. Wrap the loaf tightly in foil and bake for 20 minutes at 350. Unwrap and cook another 10 minutes or until cheese melts.
Don't you think the parsley and garlic make this healthy?!! Spot gives this 1 paw because I only dropped a few shreds of parmesan on the floor by accident. She didn't notice me mincing the onion. Zippy!
Thursday, February 16, 2012
Lov'n Valentines Din-Din
It took a few days to recover from the flu, but we did it, we finally celebrated!
Our annual dinner is verrrry time-consuming but well worth it. I forgot that my recipe meant what I said tonight, so we did not eat til 10 p.m. Seriously, plan that your day is just about this meal and start after lunch. This menu is so good that we now cross Caesar Salad and French Onion Soup off our restaurant options. Bet you will, too.
Menu
The Best French Onion Soup
Caesar Salad
Bread of Garlic
Serves 6-8 depending on soup bowl size
Prep Time: 5 minutes the day ahead of time, and 5 hours the day of
CAESAR SALAD INGREDIENTS:
1 baguette, cubed and broiled til light brown (drizzle with Olive Oil first)
5 cloves of garlic, diced + ¼ cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil: place in Mason jar with lid and refrigerate at least 24 hours ahead of time
2 large heads (or 3 small) Romaine
½ tsp dry mustard
1 ½ tsp Kosher salt
Grated black pepper to taste
Place 3 TBSP red wine vinegar and 6 TBSP Extra Virgin Olive Oil in another Mason jar with lid and chill while preparing meal
1 egg
¼ to ½ cup shredded Parmesan cheese
FRENCH ONION SOUP INGREDIENTS:
10 large onions – 5 red and 5 white – sliced thin and separated into rings
1 cup unsalted butter
2 – 3 TBSP Wondra
2 ½ cans chicken broth
2 ½ cans beef broth
½ cup white wine
1 tsp pepper
6-8 slices of your choice of gourmet bread, sliced to fit oven-proof bowl
12 slices mozzarella cheese
Grated hard Parmesan cheese (almost entire block)
Grated Gruyere cheese (entire block)
BREAD OF GARLIC INGREDIENTS:
Loaf of choice, sliced (this works with Tuscan, Rosemary, 3 cheese & more)
1 stick unsalted butter
1 – 1 ½ cups shredded Parmesan
5 cloves minced garlic
DAY AHEAD:
Prepare garlic and olive oil for Caesar Salad, refrigerate.
DAY OF (Begin 5 hours before you want to serve, I’m not kidding):
Dice baguette and broil til lightly browned, set aside.
Prepare Garlic Bread: melt butter, mince garlic, mix with Parm. Spread each slice with mixture, wrap loaf in foil and bake at 350 for 1 hour (or longer).
Peal and slice the onions, place on a platter or bowl(s).
When almost done slicing onions, melt 2 sticks of butter on medium in large skillet. Add onions to skillet in about 4 batches, keeping onions in skillet, just rotate more cooked ones to the top. This will take the most amount of time – about 2 hours. Sauté til onions are clear, but don’t burn.
While onions are doing their thing, prepare romaine: wash and rip into bite-size pieces, chill. (I also like to chill my salad bowl)
Place 3 TBSP red wine vinegar and 6 TBSP extra virgin olive oil in covered Mason jar and chill til serving time.
When onions are clear, add Wondra and stir in both broths, wine and pepper. Bring to boil, then simmer 15 minutes.
While soup is simmering, prepare part of the salad: Place croutons on bottom of salad bowl, pour over them 2 TBSP of the overnight garlic/olive oil mixture and toss. On top of this, place romaine and toss with the salt and dry mustard and pepper.
Set oven-proof soup bowls on a jelly-roll type tray (rimmed). Place a piece of bread on the bottom of each bowl and sprinkle with shredded Gruyere and purchased shredded Parmesan. Ladle soup over bread. Top with fresh shaved/shredded Parm and 2 mozzarella slices per bowl. Remove your bread and keep it in the foil. Place soup tray under broiler and heat until cheese melts, remove immediately. Watch it carefully.
While soup is broiling, finish salad. Cook egg in gently simmering water for 90 seconds. Pour about 80% of the red wine vinegar/extra virgin oil over the romaine and toss with Parmesan. Crack the egg over the salad and toss once again.
Feast!
Spot gave no paws. At first she was excited to hear the chopping, but promptly left the room when she smelled onions. Besides that, cooking cut into her nap time...
Our annual dinner is verrrry time-consuming but well worth it. I forgot that my recipe meant what I said tonight, so we did not eat til 10 p.m. Seriously, plan that your day is just about this meal and start after lunch. This menu is so good that we now cross Caesar Salad and French Onion Soup off our restaurant options. Bet you will, too.
Menu
The Best French Onion Soup
Caesar Salad
Bread of Garlic
Serves 6-8 depending on soup bowl size
Prep Time: 5 minutes the day ahead of time, and 5 hours the day of
CAESAR SALAD INGREDIENTS:
1 baguette, cubed and broiled til light brown (drizzle with Olive Oil first)
5 cloves of garlic, diced + ¼ cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil: place in Mason jar with lid and refrigerate at least 24 hours ahead of time
2 large heads (or 3 small) Romaine
½ tsp dry mustard
1 ½ tsp Kosher salt
Grated black pepper to taste
Place 3 TBSP red wine vinegar and 6 TBSP Extra Virgin Olive Oil in another Mason jar with lid and chill while preparing meal
1 egg
¼ to ½ cup shredded Parmesan cheese
FRENCH ONION SOUP INGREDIENTS:
10 large onions – 5 red and 5 white – sliced thin and separated into rings
1 cup unsalted butter
2 – 3 TBSP Wondra
2 ½ cans chicken broth
2 ½ cans beef broth
½ cup white wine
1 tsp pepper
6-8 slices of your choice of gourmet bread, sliced to fit oven-proof bowl
12 slices mozzarella cheese
Grated hard Parmesan cheese (almost entire block)
Grated Gruyere cheese (entire block)
BREAD OF GARLIC INGREDIENTS:
Loaf of choice, sliced (this works with Tuscan, Rosemary, 3 cheese & more)
1 stick unsalted butter
1 – 1 ½ cups shredded Parmesan
5 cloves minced garlic
DAY AHEAD:
Prepare garlic and olive oil for Caesar Salad, refrigerate.
DAY OF (Begin 5 hours before you want to serve, I’m not kidding):
Dice baguette and broil til lightly browned, set aside.
Prepare Garlic Bread: melt butter, mince garlic, mix with Parm. Spread each slice with mixture, wrap loaf in foil and bake at 350 for 1 hour (or longer).
Peal and slice the onions, place on a platter or bowl(s).
When almost done slicing onions, melt 2 sticks of butter on medium in large skillet. Add onions to skillet in about 4 batches, keeping onions in skillet, just rotate more cooked ones to the top. This will take the most amount of time – about 2 hours. Sauté til onions are clear, but don’t burn.
While onions are doing their thing, prepare romaine: wash and rip into bite-size pieces, chill. (I also like to chill my salad bowl)
Place 3 TBSP red wine vinegar and 6 TBSP extra virgin olive oil in covered Mason jar and chill til serving time.
When onions are clear, add Wondra and stir in both broths, wine and pepper. Bring to boil, then simmer 15 minutes.
While soup is simmering, prepare part of the salad: Place croutons on bottom of salad bowl, pour over them 2 TBSP of the overnight garlic/olive oil mixture and toss. On top of this, place romaine and toss with the salt and dry mustard and pepper.
Set oven-proof soup bowls on a jelly-roll type tray (rimmed). Place a piece of bread on the bottom of each bowl and sprinkle with shredded Gruyere and purchased shredded Parmesan. Ladle soup over bread. Top with fresh shaved/shredded Parm and 2 mozzarella slices per bowl. Remove your bread and keep it in the foil. Place soup tray under broiler and heat until cheese melts, remove immediately. Watch it carefully.
While soup is broiling, finish salad. Cook egg in gently simmering water for 90 seconds. Pour about 80% of the red wine vinegar/extra virgin oil over the romaine and toss with Parmesan. Crack the egg over the salad and toss once again.
Feast!
Spot gave no paws. At first she was excited to hear the chopping, but promptly left the room when she smelled onions. Besides that, cooking cut into her nap time...
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