HOT WING SALAD aka VOODOO CHICKEN SALAD

Do you facebook?  I have to admit I did until this.  But, I digress, I played a few of the games while sitting on hold or watching TV late at night.  One of the things that came to mind on CAFEWORLD was, “are these real recipes?”  I did find a recipe for VOODOO CHICKEN SALAD, but it was nothing like I expected so I am making my own!


HOT WING SALAD aka VOODOO CHICKEN SALAD
Romaine Lettuce, torn and washed
1 large Heirloom tomato, diced
1 small red onion, sliced thin
4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, cut into bite sized pieces 

2 cups Flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
hidden valley ranch dressing mix (DRY) OR Good Seasons Italian dressing mix (DRY)

1 teaspoon lime juice
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1/2 cup crumbled Bleu Cheese
  • I prepare the chicken breasts the same as you would HOT WINGS
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees
  • Wash and dry the chicken pieces.
  • Mix together the flour and seasonings in a plastic ziploc bag. Using a ziploc bag makes it easy to throw away the whole mess after dredging all the chicken pieces and it helps you coat every possible spot of the chicken pieces.
  • Add chicken a few pieces at a time and coat them well. Set chicken pieces aside.
  • While you’re doing this, have the butter melting in the pan. Start with 4 tablespoons and add as necessary, but make sure you don’t run out dry.
  • Once all the chicken has been dredged start frying. After you have the pan full pepper the pieces again. Don’t turn the chicken until you can see blood. You only need to turn the chicken one time. Brown evenly and then set aside on paper towels until all pieces have been fried.
  • As the last batch is frying melt 4 tablespoons of butter in a flat bowl. To that add 1/2 cup of Frank’s hot sauce.  Whisk them together well.
  • Spray a cookie sheet with PURE.
  • Dip each piece of chicken into the hot sauce mixture and put on cookie sheet.
  • After you’re all done and if you have hot sauce & butter mixture left, pour a little over the top of each wing.
  • Bake for 30 minutes.
  • Toss the torn lettuce, onion and tomatoes with the lemon and lime juice.
  • Add cooled chicken pieces and bleu cheese crumbles.
  • Pour on the desired amount of dressing and toss well.
  • Enjoy!

WEEKLY MENU

Menu Plan Monday hosted by Laura at I’m an Organizing Junkie

DATE BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER
MONDAY 10/4 CEREAL SANDWICHES ORIENTAL CHICKEN
TUESDAY 10/5 TOAST LEFTOVERS LEMON CHICKEN PASTA
WEDNESDAY 10/6 YOGURT OUT SPICY HONEY BRUSHED CHICKEN THIGHS
THURSDAY 10/7 FRUIT LEFTOVERS BANG BANG SHRIMP
FRIDAY 10/8 OATMEAL C.O.R.N. POLLO IN POTACCHIO
SATURDAY 10/9 EGGCHILADAS leftovers SPAGHETTI with CABBAGE & SMOKED SAUSAGE
SUNDAY 10/10 BREAKFAST PIZZA out CHILI DOG CASSEROLE

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PORK CHOPS with RED PEPPER SAUCE

Hi Tamy here just filling for Simple Saturday.

Roasted Red Pepper Sauce
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/2 medium Vidalia onion, finely diced
3-4 cloves garlic, minced
1 1/2 cups roasted red peppers
1/2 cup fresh basil
1/4 cup white wine
1 tablespoon butter
1 tablespoon  flour
 3/4 cup whole milk
1 cup Gruyere cheese
grated Parmesan cheese and basil for topping
salt and pepper to taste
  • In a medium sauce pan, heat olive oil over medium heat.  Add onions and garlic and cook until onions are translucent and garlic is fragrant, 5-7 minutes.  Add in red peppers and basil, continuing to cook until peppers are heated through.  Stir in white wine and continue to cook for one more minute.  Remove from heat and let cool for a few minutes.  Carefully pour into a food processor.  Turn on food processor and let run until pepper mix is creamy and only has small lumps.  Set aside.
  • Rinse out the medium sauce pan and add in the butter over medium heat.  Once butter has melted, whisk in flour and continue to cook for 1-2 minutes.  Whisk in milk, stir constantly, and continue to cook until the sauce begins to thicken.  Remove from heat and stir in cheese, continually stirring until cheese has melted.  Stir in pepper mixture and return to stove stop.  Over medium low heat, return sauce to a warm temperature to serve.
  • To serve, pour over your choice of pasta and top with the Parmesan cheese and more fresh basil.
Tonight I sliced a few potatoes into a pan.  Salt and peppered them well, Tossed a few pieces of white American cheese over the potatoes.  Topped them with browned some pork chops.  Poured the sauce over top and baked at 350 degrees for an hour.  The guys all but licked their plates!

    ONION PANADE aka DINNER BREAD PUDDING

    I found this awesome recipe for Onion Panade over at Stone Soup.   She called it the ultimate comfort food or a savory bread pudding so I needed to try that. She flavored with golden brown onions and the fragrance of thyme. Rustic bread provides the perfect contrast of textures.  I changed it up a bit.  You’ll find my changes in red.

    I had couple of pieces of Havarti cheese left so tore them into pieces and added them the last few minutes of baking.

    1 large Vidalia onion 

    1 red onion, sliced into rings

    1 large bunch green onions, sliced thin

    2 cloves garlic, minced
    1/2 bunch fresh thyme leaves, chopped
    1/2 medium loaf rustic bread (1/2lb), torn in to chunks I used sourdough buns that I had in the freezer for future croutons
    5 ounces cheese, grated or crumbled
    3 cups vegetable or chicken stock
    2 cups chopped rotisserie chicken pieces
    • Preheat oven to 400 degrees 
    • Cut onion in half lengthwise. Peel, then slice into half moons about 1/4inch thick. 
    • Heat 4 – 5 tablespoons olive oil in a large frying pan. 
    • Cook onion stirring occasionally until soft and golden brown. 
    • Stir in the thyme. 
    • In a medium heatproof dish layer about a third of the onions. Sprinkle over some of the bread and cheese. Repeat until all the ingredients have been used. You want to be able to see a little of each on the top. 
    • Bring stock to a simmer.
    • Pour over the onion dish. 
    • Season. 
    • Cover and bake for 30 minutes. 
    • Remove cover and bake for another 20 – 30 minutes or until the top is golden and crunchy and the stock has been absorbed by the bread.

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    Fire Day Friday: Southwest Twice Baked Potatoes

    These guys may be a re-post from when I first started my food blog but they are one of my favorite side dishes for grilled steaks. Plus they can be made up ahead of time and then finished on the grill indirect while the steaks rest.

    Southwest Twice-Baked New Potatoes
    Adapted from Southern Living March 2006

    2 pounds medium-size new potatoes
    1 tablespoon canola oil
    1 tablespoon kosher salt
    1/2 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
    2 tablespoon sour cream
    1 tablespoon melted butter
    2 tablespoon heavy cream
    1/2 teaspoon pepper
    1/2 teaspoon Salt
    1/2 teaspoon paprika
    1/2 poblano, anaheim, or jalapeno peppers

    Cut a thin slice from the bottom of each potato to make it flat so the potatoes will be stable. Rub them with oil and then rub with the 1 Tbsp of salt.

    Bake them at 350f just until soft to touch, about 45 minutes. Remove and let cool for about 10 minutes.

    While the potatoes are cooking, char the pepper over a hot flame until blistered. Place in a ziptop bag for 5 minutes, then peel, seed, and dice it. Use half or more of it for these recipe.

    Cut a thin slice from the top of each cooked potato. Use a melon baller or a very small spoon to carefully scoop out most of the insides of each potato to make a little bowl. Keep all of the pulp in a mixing bowl.

    Add shredded Cheddar cheese and next 6 ingredients to potato pulp in bowl and mash with a potato masher or just a fork. Mix in the diced pepper.

    Stuff some of this mixture into each potato shell.

    Bake potatoes at 350° for another 10 – 20 minutes until the tops start to turn golden.

    Garnish with your choice of more sour cream, paprika, cheese, cilantro or just about anything.

    HOT BEEF DIP

    Just in time for football season!!



    HOT BEEF DIP
    1 1/2 pounds ground beef
    1/2 cup chopped red onion
    8 ounce can tomato sauce
    1/4 cup Country Bob’s All Purpose Sauce

    8 ounce package cream cheese
    1 cup grated Monterey jack cheese
    2 teaspoons minced garlic, jar
    1 tablespoon parsley
    2 teaspoons sugar
    1 teaspoon salt
    1/2 teaspoon white pepper
    1 teaspoon Frank’s red pepper sauce

    • Brown Hamburger.
    • Add onion and garlic.
    • Drain off fat.
    • Add all other ingredients.
    • Stir until well blended.
    • Transfer to slow cooker ad keep warm.
    • Serve with tortilla chips.

    Marinara Sauce – This Time it IS Your Italian Grandmother’s Red Gravy




    This is one of those “application” posts.  So many things you can do once you master this simple sauce…

    I like to use phrases like, “Not your Grandmothers’s…” (Like my“Not your Grandmother’s Herbes de Provence”).  Often, with availability of ingredients, new fangled cooking appliances or even building on years of other cooks experimenting, updated recipes really are better.  But also often, all you are really doing is dressing up a classic that doesn’t really need to be dressed up.

    And marinara sauce is one of those things that really doesn’t need much of a dressing up.  Tomatoes are still available fresh, but only for a little while longer.  Cheap; $2.50 a pound is the going rate for sorted, top quality, and as little as a dollar for a bag if you are willing to take fluctuating sizes, a few bruises and variations in color.  For this recipe, grab the dollar a bag ones.  In fact, grab 5 or 6 bags.  Make a big batch, freeze in bags of 1 cup size each bag and you will be very glad you did.  February is just around the corner.  I don’t think my wife will take me to the tropics this year.  But with a few bags of these in the freezer, next winter, I can take my wife to the Mediterranean.  Well, at least her taste buds.

    Need I add that this bounty all came from my Farmer’s Market.  If you missed it, I did a photo review of the Kansas City River Market.  Click HERE to see one of the best in the country.  Again… Farmer’s markets are terrific.. even this late in the season.


    And you don’t need much to make this thick rich sauce.  All “real food”, nothing zingy.  But deep rich flavors will add all the zing you need.


    1 TBS Extra Virgin Olive Oil
    4 clove Garlic, smashed and minced
    3 pounds ripe Tomatoes (a $1 bag), skins removed
    1 tsp sugar
    and a few leaves of Basil
    2 TBS “Not your Grandmother’s Herbes de Provence”   
    or, use the herbs you like, thyme, rosemary, lavender, whatever you please.  My  “Not your Grandmother’s Herbes de Provence” herb mixture works great, and since I always have a little bag of it handy, easy and fast, and is a ready made batch of the herbs I like.


    Removing the skins is an easy thing to do.  Get a pot of water boiling, and have a bowl with ice water handy.  Cut an X into the top (not the vine end, the other end)just enough to break the skin.  Plunge them into the boiling water for only 15 seconds.  You want the outside to cook just a shade, but not so hot that the inside starts to cook.  Remove and plunge into the ice bath.  The skin peals easily now.


    Smashing and mincing garlic is just as easy.  Take a wide chef’s knife, put a garlic clove between the flat of the knife and a cutting board and smash away with the flat of your hand.  Then just mince away.  Easy and fast!


    And now, once all the prep work is done, it is finally time to cook.  In a big cast iron skillet, heat the olive oil.  Add the minced garlic and sauté for just a few minutes. 


    While that is working, rough cut the tomatoes into quarters.  Be careful and don’t cut your hand, but best to quarter the tomatoes over the skillet. Every bit of juice you lose on the cutting board is just a bit less flavor.  Also, while you are cutting, remove any hard parts.  the stem end, and if the center is not ripe and red, pull it out.


    Add a little sugar, add the “Not your Grandmother’s Herbes de Provence” spices (or your own favorites) and stew away at a gentle simmer.  At a simmer, it takes about 45 minutes for the tomatoes to break down properly.  BUT, the longer you allow them to simmer, the sweeter the sauce will be.  I was doing other things around the house, and let mine cook for an hour and a half.  If you have less time, you can cook at a higher heat.  But keep an eye on them and stir often so they do not scorch.


    And here it is after the hour and a half… All bubbly, sweet and filled with flavors.  I moved this in a couple of batches into a food processor and pulsed for just a few times to break it up.  At the last minute, add some fresh minced Basil leaf.  If you want a thin sauce, pulse a lot.  If you want a thicker sauce, no real need to pulse at all.  Me, i like the smooth even look, texture and taste of a thick but not chunky sauce.


    Like This…





    Can you stand a little history???  As originally printed in theWISEGEEK.COM site…

    Marinara sauce originated with sailors in Naples in the 16th century, after the Spaniards introduced the tomato to their neighboring countries. The word marinara is derived from marinaro, which is Italian for “of the sea.” Because of this, many people mistakenly believe marinara sauce includes some type of fish or seafood. However, marinara sauce loosely translates as “the sauce of the sailors,” because it was a meatless sauce extensively used on sailing ships before modern refrigeration techniques were invented. The lack of meat and the sheer simplicity of making tasty marinara sauce were particularly appealing to the cooks on board sailing ships, because the high acid content of the tomatoes and the absence of any type of meat fat resulted in a sauce which would not easily spoil.

    Even though marinara sauce has a reputation for being easy to make at home, there are currently several hundred different types of marinara offered on the market. Perhaps the increased popularity of marinara sauce is due to recent research which revealed that cooked tomatoes are rich with lycopene, an antioxidant which may help reduce the risk of certain types of cancer.

    Written by A. B. Kelsey

     So, simple, fast, easy to make and much richer than the jars you get in the stores.  And CHEAPER!  Save a dollar here and 50 cents there, and you have the budget to buy those little extras (like Kalamata Olives that add so much extra flavor to a simple tuna casserole (well, not so simple actually)).  But, that’s a post for another day.


    And the go great with some pasta and meatballs… And that’s today’s subject of my post on my own site… Take a look





    Dave here from MY YEAR ON THE GRILL. It really is just this easy!  

     … I CAN COOK THAT! 

    And so can you!

    CRAB PUFFS for TAILGATING TIME

    Last week Martha posted her puffs recipe with her shrimp filling and it made me think of my crab salad and it was a good thought!  The crab salad was an awesome filling!

    PUFFS recipe from Martha at Seaside Simplicity
    1/2 cup water
    1/4 cup butter or margarine
    1/2 cup all purpose flour
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    2 eggs
    • Heat oven to 425 degrees. 
    • In a medium saucepan heat water and butter until boiling. 
    • Lightly spoon flour into measuring cup and level off. 
    • Stir in flour and salt. 
    • Cook over medium heat until mixture leaves sides of pan in a smooth compact ball, about 2 minutes, stirring vigorously. 
    • Remove from heat. 
    • Add eggs one at the time, beating vigorously until smooth and glossy. Do not under-beat! Drop by teaspoons full onto parchment paper lined cookie sheets. 
    • Bake for about 15 minutes or until golden brown and crisp.
    • Once puffs are cooled completely split and stuff with crab salad when ready to serve.
    This recipe makes about 20 puffs.
    CRAB SALAD
    8 ounces Louis Kemp Crab, finely chopped
    1 stalk celery, finely chopped
    1/3 cup minced red onion
    salt and pepper
    mayo (about 1/4 cup)
    • Mix crab, celery, onion, salt and pepper together until well blended using enough mayonnaise for desired consistency.
    • Place a large scoop of crab salad in each puff.

    Shredded Chicken Sandwiches with Dr. Pepper BBQ Sauce

    I love to make my own BBQ sauce.  You can make it sweet, tangy, spicy, whatever. Most importantly, you KNOW what’s in there.
    I’ve made several different kinds of barbecue sauces.  All sorts of ways.

    This one is a bit different.

    It’s made with Dr. Pepper.
    Pop isn’t healthy. I know this.  This is why I stopped drinking it. Yup. Cold turkey. Stopped.  I don’t let my kids drink it either, unless they are at a party or something. 
    Dr. Pepper USED to be one of my favorites.

    But when I saw this recipe, it looked so intriguing, I just HAD to try it.  So forgive me, but I used Dr. Pepper in this. Get over it and try it, it’s really good.  It was quite sweet but that’s okay.  Go easier on the honey if you want.    
    You don’ taste Dr. Pepper.  If I didn’t tell you that there was Dr. Pepper in this, you wouldn’t know. Seriously.  That’s what I thought was so intriguing about it!

    I’ve seen a recipe with barbecue sauce made with rootbeer too!  Shhh. Don’t tell the Dr. Pepper.
    We ate this meal on Arnold Select Sandwich Thins for dinner.  We also had some delicious roasted cauliflower. The next couple of days, I ate it on tortillas like a wrap. Very tasty!
    Dr. Pepper Barbecue Sauce Recipe
    Adapted from Simply Recipes
    1 cups minced onion
    1 tbsp. oil
    3 cups Dr. Pepper (I used diet)
    2 cans diced tomatoes
    1 cup orange juice
    1 cup honey
    1/2 cup apple cider vinegar
    1 tsp. cayenne pepper
    Salt to taste

    Heat the oil in pan. Add onions and saute for 5 – 6 minutes.  Add the remaining ingredients and stir well.  Simmer for 30 minutes.

    Pour the sauce carefully into a blender and puree until smooth.  It’s best to work in batches and don’t fill the blender more than 1/3 full. 

    Put the sauce into pan and simmer, uncovered for 1 – 2 hours.  Stirring occasionally. Yield 4 1/2 cups.

    Pulled Chicken Sandwiches
    Boneless chicken breasts (I had 2 – 20 oz. packages)

    Cook chicken until done and shred.  Add BBQ sauce and mix together. I used 2 1/2 cups of this BBQ sauce and I froze the other 2 cups of sauce.
     
    2 Chicken Sandwiches + Roasted Cauliflower  = Very Tasty Meal!


    Check out Debbi Does Dinner Healthy for more (mostly) healthy recipes!

    SWEET & SOUR GLAZED PORK CHOPS

    We normally grill these outside, but it was really windy the day I planned these so I decided to try them on the stove and was pleasantly surprised.  The taste was similar but unique without the smoke flavor.
    SWEET & SOUR PORK CHOPS
    4 thick boneless pork chops
    2 tablespoons olive oil
    sea salt and white pepper
    1/3 cup balsamic vinegar
    2 tablespoons honey
    3 + 2 tablespoons butter
    fresh rosemary
    • Drizzle one tablespoon of olive oil on a plate.
    • Salt and pepper pork chops and lay in olive oil seasoned side down.
    • Salt and pepper tops and drizzle with remaining olive oil.
    • Let sit for 30 minutes.
    • In a small saucepan combine vinegar and honey, blending well. Cook until reduced to about 1/4 cup.  Add butter and rosemary. Set aside.
    • Melt remaining butter in sizzling skillet.
    • Add pork chops and brown on both sides.
    • Brush on glaze and cook through.
    • Enjoy.