We interrupt this regularly scheduled program. I miss you all and the ability to read and participate in your blogs.
I’m having GOOGLE technical difficulties! I will be back and running as soon as I can!
1/2 cup shredded coconut
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup oatmeal (regular or quick)
3 Tbsp milk
2 Tbsp butter, melted
In a microwave safe bowl, heat the water to boiling in the microwave. Add the oatmeal and let sit. In a mixing bowl, cream the butter and sugars. Beat in the egg and vanilla. Add the moistened oatmeal. In a separate bowl, combine the remaining dry ingredients and add to the mixing bowl. Beat until smooth. Pour batter into a greased 9 X 9 pan and bake 350 degrees for 50-60 minutes or until a toothpick comes out clean.
For the topping, combine all the ingredients in a small bowl, mixing well. Spread evenly over the hot cake Broil about 4 inches from the heat 1-2 minutes or until the topping is bubbly. (I just sat down on the floor in front of the window and watched so it didn’t burn and it didn’t take very long before the entire top was a mass of bubbles).
Cool the cake in the pan.
Anyone paying attention? Way back on December 28th, I made an innocent comment that I just don’t prefer Brussels Sprouts. I didn’t attack, I didn’t toss a bowl of them across the room, I just said I didn’t prefer them… Go ahead and click HERE to read that old post. Be sure to check the comments to see how polite I was in my revulsion.
Well, cooks I respect assured me that if I were to try their recipes, I would love the little suckers. One or two, I considered, but the recipes just would not stop, and to be honest, after reading the first half dozen, I was finished with the idea of blindly trying some one’s recipe. If you all would have made the dish, delivered to my house, I would have tried every one. But the idea that I was going to cook up a bunch of recipes was just out of the question.
Oh, BTW, hi again, Dave here from MY YEAR ON THE GRILL. The resident cook in training, famous for three puffed pastry postings in a row. 3 puffed pastry and now Brussels Sprouts… Not sure if this is what the ladies had in mind when they offered a griller a weekly posting, but it’s too late now, I have the password to get into the site. Bwahahahaha!
OK, I sort of made a commitment to give the little buggers at least a try. So I bought a couple dozen fresh ones. I was pretty sure I was not about to like the frozen ones, so fresh or nothing was my attitude. I started my research. remember, I don’t know nothin‘ ’bout nothin‘, so I usually spend an hour or so doing research about a dish.
I discovered something very interesting… Brussels Sprouts have an unfriendly cellular compound that when cooked, releases a combination of mustard oil and sulfur… thus the rotten egg smell that my mother was famous for. The longer you cook them, the stinkier they get. Also, the nastier they taste. If you cook them as quickly as possible in as little water as possible, the nutrients remain, without releasing the nasties that sprouts are famous for.
If ANY recipe calls for sprouts to be cooked longer than 10 minutes, you are releasing those nasties, and I just don’t want anything to do with your recipe. You may like it, and that’s fine. It’s America and you get to like what you like. Please respect my desire to NOT like em… But I did try… here’s what I did to check the theory…
Yeap, I ate em. First, I made a simple roux of equal parts butter and flour. I cooked the roux (stirring constantly) until I got that nice nutty aroma. I popped in a few sprouts and started cooking. After about 5 minutes, they were still crispy, just starting to turn color. I ate one. Not great, but certainly not what I remembered from my mother’s kitchen. I cooked for another 5 minutes, and they were getting a little bit mushy, but not too bad. I ate another. It did have a little bit more nasty taste that I remembered, but again, not too bad. I took out all but one of the buggers. that one, I cooked for 10 more minutes… This time, I had very unpleasant flash backs to my sainted mothers nasty smelling kitchen. Sure enough, the research panned out. Longer you cook them, nastier they taste. Now, the bottom two photos in the collage is what I did with the ones that I just cooked for 10 minutes. I added a bit of flavored balsamic vinegar, and some sea salt. Honestly… Not too bad. I would eat these again. It will never be my favorite, but actually, they were …OK. And OK is a big improvement.
Alright, I now have a basic understanding of what I don’t like about sprouts, which is that funk from over cooking. But I am still really not a fan of the taste even when “properly” (to my tastes) cooked. So, time to come up with a recipe that hides the taste. I saw lots of you experienced cooks and your recipes sounded fair. But they seemed to cook the sprouts too long, and non of them were shouting to me…
Here’s what us knuckle dragging hairy Neanderthals do when placed in a situation of wanting to improve the taste of a food items… Wrap it in meat (more than one kind if possible), add some spices and grill em!
I coated ’em with the hot roux (which by this time, it was really dark and aromatic). I only rolled them around for less than 2 minutes, just to get them coated in the moisture. then, I wrapped em in a thin layer of sausage. Just the standard Jimmy Dean stuff, nothing flavored. I then wrapped em in bacon and sprinkled some BBQ seasoning over the whole thing.
You could bake them or fry them on the stove top, but I chose to grill em. It only took about 15 minutes, turning to get all sides cooked. this does contradict my “no sprout should be cooked longer than 10 minutes” rule, but I was assuming it took at least half the time to get the heat to where the sprout was through the layer of meat.
And the verdict… These were actually good… Very good! Still crispy on the inside and tender on the outside. The added pork fat that actually did the cooking seasoned and flavored the sprouts. Because the balls were so small, in every bite of sprout, there was some sausage, some bacon and some BBQ seasoning. I would make these again, and I would eat them again. TA TA TA TAAAAA – I like Brussels Sprouts!
But, finding a recipe that I liked was not good enough. When you get down to it, it is a vegetable wrapped in fat, wrapped in more fat and then seasoned well… What’s not to like! Let’s see if I can make something without meat that I would like…
Back to my research, I found something else interesting. Brussels Sprouts are a member of the cabbage family. I assumed that just from looking at em. But they have all the properties of cabbage, among which… they can be eaten raw. They do taste a little more bitter than “regular” cabbage, but they can be used in any cabbage recipe. Just should add a little more softener to the recipe. What is the iconic cabbage recipe… Cole Slaw.
OK, I used a mandolin to cut the sprouts. Yes, one at a time, and it was time consuming. BUT, it also gave me a unique look. The sprouts shredded around the edges like “normal” cabbage, but the center stayed intact, so I got a nickle sized disc from each slice on the Mandolin. I added a couple tablespoons of Miracle Whip Light, a tablespoon of flavored vinegar, a tablespoon of heavy cream and some garlic seasoning. I also added some shredded carrots. And finally added a generous amount of Cajun spice to taste.
This tasted just a bit more bitter than a “normal” cole slaw, but in NO way would you suspect that these were Brussels Sprouts (unless you associated the discs as sprouts… unlikely). I suspect that if you add a bit more heavy cream to soften the bitterness, there would be no real difference.
I LIKED THIS AS WELL!
So, in the spirit of I CAN COOK THAT… I have come up with two recipes for Brussels Sprouts that even a died in the wool, unshakable sprout hater would like (if they approached with an open mind).
I plated these with some leftover Julia Child Boeuf Bourguignon… But that’s a tale for my “REAL” site.
As always, if you like my writing style, come take a look at my “REAL” site, MY YEAR ON THE GRILL, which you can see by clicking HERE. Julia would want you to…
Today I’m sharing a chocolate cream recipe from my Joy of Desserts blog archives.
If you didn’t already do so, be sure to enter the giveaway at Joy of Desserts for a chance to win Corked. It’s a soon-to-be-released memoir about a father, a daughter and a wine trip to end all wine trips. There will be 5 winners.
Creme Au Chocolat
In a double boiler, pour 1/4 cup of the milk and chocolate and stir until melted. Gradually add remaining milk, then sugar, stirring constantly. Let cool.
Preheat oven to 350F.
In a bowl, beat the whole egg and yolks. Beat eggs into the chocolate mixture.
Pour mixture into oven-proof custard cups or small molds and set them in a pan filled halfway with warm water. Bake until set or about 30 minutes.
Kristen from What Did you Bake? at OUR KrAzY kitchen offered up a January challenge mystery ingredient this month of Oatmeal. The timing couldn’t have been better for me with Lillian having chose the wonderful Chocolate Oatmeal Almost-Candy Bars. In my new version I added blueberries, changed it to dark versus light brown sugar, change it to honey roasted versus salted peanuts and used peanut butter instead of butter in the chocolate layer. Next time I am going to try cashews.
My version of Dorie’s recipe:
CHOCOLATE OATMEAL PEANUT BUTTER BLUEBERRY BARS
2 sticks unsalted butter, softened
1 1/4 cup flour
1 teaspoon baking flour
1 teaspoon salt + pinch salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
2 cups packed dark brown sugar
2 JUMBO eggs
3 cups old fashion oats
1 1/2 + 3/4 teaspoon vanilla
2/3 + 1/2 cup honey roasted peanuts
1 /2 cup golden raisins
1/2 cup raisins
1 cup dried blueberries
1 can sweetened condensed milk
2 tablespoons peanut butter
12 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
I’m also offering these recipes for the oatmeal theme:
Ingredients:
2 onions sliced
1/2 pound button mushrooms
1 cup vegetable soup (organic)
1 tablespoon maple syrup
2 teaspoons onion powder
1 teaspoon garlic powder
salt
black pepper
You could use onion soup mix in place of the spices.
10 fingerling potatoes, added after beef is taken out of crockpot
Method:
After sprinkling seasoning all over the meat, sear it, in a separate pan, on the stove.
Place in crockpot.
Add mushrooms and onions.
Add the vegetable soup mixed with maple syrup, pouring it over the meat.
Cook on low for 8 hours. It stayed overnight and I am not sure but it was between six to eight hours.
Turn it up to high for another hour.
Turn into a roasting dish. Add fingerling potatoes, as many as you need for your table. I figure two to three potatoes per person. Do not peel. Dave, Tamy and Martha are cheering now.
In liquid from crock pot, place potatoes around roast.
Place in oven at 350 degrees and cook fo 40 minutes.
| DATE |
BREAKFAST |
LUNCH |
DINNER |
|
| MON | 1/18 |
high fiber CEREAL |
veggie sticks & yogurt |
Hungarian Goulash |
| TUE | 1/19 |
poached eggs & toast |
deviled eggs & celery sticks |
Tomato Spaghetti Cups |
| WED | 1/20 |
fruit & yogurt |
cheese & apple slices |
Chicken Marsala |
| THU | 1/21 |
scrambled eggs & onions |
banana & jello |
Roasted Red Pepper Krab Salad |
| FRI | 1/22 |
oatmeal & fruit |
soup & sandwich |
|
| SAT | 1/23 |
Shirred Eggs | leftovers |
Tuna Salad |
| SUN | 1/24 |
German Pancake | Chicken Posole | Grilled Onion Tomato Bacon Cheese |
| DATE |
BREAKFAST |
LUNCH |
DINNER |
|
| MON | 1/18 |
high fiber CEREAL |
veggie sticks & yogurt |
Hungarian Goulash |
| TUE | 1/19 |
poached eggs & toast |
deviled eggs & celery sticks |
Tomato Spaghetti Cups |
| WED | 1/20 |
fruit & yogurt |
cheese & apple slices |
Chicken Marsala |
| THU | 1/21 |
scrambled eggs & onions |
banana & jello |
Roasted Red Pepper Krab Salad |
| FRI | 1/22 |
oatmeal & fruit |
soup & sandwich |
|
| SAT | 1/23 |
Shirred Eggs | leftovers |
Tuna Salad |
| SUN | 1/24 |
German Pancake | Chicken Posole | Grilled Onion Tomato Bacon Cheese |
The small, white navy bean, also called pea bean or haricot, is particularly popular in Britain and the US, featured in such dishes as baked beans and even pies, as well as in various soups such as the famous Senate Bean Soup.
Navy bean varieties include:
* Great Northern beans
* Rainy River
* Robust
* Michelite
* Sanilac
Other white beans include Cannellini, a quite popular variety in Central and Southern Italy which is related to the kidney bean and like the kidney bean has higher levels of the toxin lectin (Phytohaemagglutinin).
PRIME RIB ARTICHOKE BEAN SOUP
2 cups prime rib pieces or any other meat of your choice
8 cups stock – I used the stock from last week’s ham bone
1 1/2 cups Au Jus – left over fro the prime rib, but any stock would do
1 pound Great Northern beans – next time I’ll use Navy beans
3 cloves garlic
1 bunch green onions, sliced
3 large carrots, sliced
3 stalks celery, sliced
1 cup marinated artichoke hearts, chopped
Handful parsley, chopped
When Kristen chose “Oatmeal” as our Mystery Ingredient for this month I just groaned. I have never liked oatmeal or anything with oatmeal – until now!
I know how good oatmeal is for us and since I am on my health and fitness mission I decided to create something that was nice and healthy – and even if I didn’t really like it I would eat it for the health benefits. Well, boy did I surprise myself! I love them, hubby loves them and the boys love them!
Spray 9×13 pan with Pam, mix all ingredients well and pour into pan, press flat and bake at 350 for 20 minutes or until lightly browned around edges. Flip upside down on parchment paper, let cool for 5 minutes, cut. That’s it, ready to eat!
For anyone who is a calorie counter, I calculated the recipe above to be about 140 calories per bar. Not bad at all for a quick, healthy breakfast or snack on the go!
I’ve made several batches this month. For one batch I omitted the butter, honey and chocolate chips – and added 2 scoops of protein powder (all for the health and fitness mission). They came out just as good in my opinion!
The next batch I made for the boys omitting the raisins and craisins and added a little extra on the chocolate chips -The main ingredients are the oats and condensed milk, everything else can be mixed, matched or substituted to your liking.
All versions taste more like a dessert than something healthy!
Thanks so much for choosing oatmeal for our Mystery Ingredient Kristen! You’ve turned my whole family into oatmeal lovers!
Don’t forget to link up your oatmeal recipes on Kristen’s post on Friday, January 29th right here at Our Krazy Kitchen!
Link up your Simple Saturday recipes here today! 🙂