Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Recipes (alt.food.recipes) An alternative recipe newsgroup. For the posting and sharing of recipes. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to alt.food.recipes
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The following is an excerpt from the book Fix-it and Enjoy-it! Cookbook
by Phyllis Pellman Good Published by Good Books; April 2006;$15.95US; 1-56148-526-8 Copyright © 2006 Phyllis Pellman Good Tuscan-Style Pork Ribs with Balsamic Glaze J.B. Miller, Indianapolis, IN Makes 6-8 servings Prep Time: 30 minutes Standing (or Chilling) Time: 2-8 hours Baking Time: 2 hours, 15 minutes 2 Tbsp. olive oil 2 Tbsp. chopped fresh rosemary leaves, or 1 tsp. dried rosemary 1½ Tbsp. kosher salt 1½ Tbsp fennel seeds, or 1½ tsp. ground fennel 2 tsp. pepper 2 tsp. fresh chopped sage, or 1 tsp. dried sage 2 tsp. fresh chopped thyme, or ½ tsp. dried thyme 2 tsp. paprika 1 tsp. crushed red pepper, optional, depending on how much heat you like 1 tsp. ground coriander ½ tsp. ground allspice 6 lbs. pork ribs 3 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar 1. In a small bowl, combine olive oil, rosemary, salt, fennel seeds, pepper, sage, thyme, paprika, red pepper, coriander, and allspice. 2. Rub spice paste all over ribs and let stand at room temperature for 2 hours, or refrigerate overnight. 3. Preheat oven to 325°. 4. Arrange ribs on a large, rimmed baking sheet or roasting pan, meaty side up. 5. Roast ribs uncovered for 2 hours or until tender. 6. Preheat broiler. Brush meaty side of ribs with balsamic vinegar and broil 6 inches from heat until browned, about 2 minutes. 7. Let stand for 5 minutes, then cut between ribs, or serve in slabs. Tip: You can use this glaze on pork chops, lamb chops, and cuts of chicken. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Curried Chicken Pitas Sharon Eshleman, Ephrata, PA Makes 4 servings Prep Time: 15 minutes ½ cup light mayonnaise or salad dressing 1 Tbsp. honey 1 Tbsp. pickle relish ¾-1 tsp. curry powder, according to your taste preference 2 cups cubed cooked chicken 1 cup halved grapes or chopped apples ½ cup chopped pecans 4 pita breads, halved 8 lettuce leaves 1. In a bowl, combine salad dressing, honey, pickle relish, and curry powder. 2. Stir in chicken, grapes, and pecans. 3. Line pita halves with lettuce. Spoon ½ cup chicken mixture into each pita. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Black Bean and Butternut Burritos Janelle Myers-Benner, Harrisonburg, VA Makes 8 burritos Prep Time: 45 minutes Baking Time: 15-20 minutes 1 Tbsp. oil 1 small or medium-sized onion, chopped 3-4 cups butternut squash, cut into ½" cubes ½ tsp. cumin ¼ tsp. cinnamon ½ tsp. salt 2 cups cooked, or a 15-oz. can, black beans, drained 8 tortillas 1½ cups grated cheese sour cream cilantro, if you wish salsa 1. In a large skillet or saucepan, heat oil. Sauté onions until tender. 2. Add butternut. Cover and cook over medium heat until tender. 3. Add cumin, cinnamon, and salt. Add beans. Cover, and heat through. 4. Put ? of mixture in each tortilla, top with 3 Tbsp. cheese, and roll up. Place seam-side down in a greased 9 x 13 baking pan. 5. Bake uncovered in 350º oven for about 15-20 minutes, until heated through. 6. Serve with sour cream and salsa, and cilantro if you wish. Tips: Tortillas freeze well with the mixture inside so I often make a double or triple batch. You can also freeze just the filling. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Grilled Peach Melba Stacy Schmucker Stoltzfus, Enola, PA Makes 4 servings Prep Time: 10 minutes Grilling Time: 5-10 minutes 4 large, unpeeled peaches or nectarines 2 tsp. sugar 2 cups red raspberries, fresh or frozen sugar, optional vanilla ice cream 1. Halve and pit peaches or nectarines. 2. Press fresh or thawed raspberries through sieve. Save juice and discard seeds. Sweeten to taste with sugar, if needed. 3. Grill unpeeled peaches cut-side down for approximately 2 minutes. Turn peaches over. With cut-side up, fill each cavity with ½ tsp. sugar, and continue grilling until grill marks appear on skins. 4. Serve immediately with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and drizzle with the raspberry sauce. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yam fries Kathy Keener Shantz, Lancaster, PA Makes 6 servings Prep Time: 10 minutes Baking Time: 20 minutes 2 Tbsp. olive oil 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. pepper 1 tsp. curry ½ tsp. hot sauce 4 medium-sized yams, sliced like French fries 1. In a large mixing bowl, combine oil, salt, pepper, curry, and hot sauce. 2. Stir in sliced yams. 3. When thoroughly coated, spread on lightly greased baking sheet. 4. Bake at 375° for 20 minutes, or until tender. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Linguine Salad with Peanut Sauce Gretchen H. Maust, Keezletown, VA Makes 6 servings Prep Time: 15 minutes Cooking Time: 15 minutes 8-oz. box dry linguine ½-1 cup chopped scallions 1 diced cucumber ¼ cup peanut butter ? cup cider or rice vinegar ¼ cup soy sauce ¼ cup warm water ? cup sesame oil 2 cloves minced garlic ½ tsp. 5-spice powder hot sauce to taste dark green lettuce leaves toasted sesame seeds and tomato wedges for garnish 1. Cook linguine as directed on box, but undercook slightly. Drain. Rinse with cool water. 2. In a large bowl, combine linguini, scallions, and cucumber. 3. In a separate bowl, whisk together peanut butter, vinegar, soy sauce, water, oil, garlic, 5-spice powder, and hot sauce. 4. Arrange lettuce on platter. Spoon linguine mixture into the middle. Drizzle dressing over top. Garnish with sesame seeds and tomato wedges. Variations: 1. For a heartier dish, add cubed cooked chicken or turkey. 2. Serve hot, replacing the cucumbers with cooked zucchini. Tip: I like to triple the peanut sauce and keep it in the refrigerator to use as a salad dressing or dipping sauce for grilled chicken. Reprinted from Fix-it and Enjoy-it! Cookbook. Copyright by Good Books ( www.goodbks.com ). Used by permission. All rights reserved. Phyllis Pellman Good is a New York Times bestselling author whose books have sold more than 8.5 million copies. Good has authored the national #1 bestselling cookbook Fix-It and Forget-It Cookbook: Feasting with Your Slow Cooker (with Dawn J. Ranck), which appeared on The New York Times bestseller list, as well as the bestseller lists of USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and Book Sense. And she is the author of Fix-It and Forget-It Lightly: Healthy, Low-Fat Recipes for Your Slow Cooker, which has also appeared on The New York Times bestseller list. In addition, Good authored Fix-It and Forget-It Recipes for Entertaining: Slow Cooker Favorites for All the Year Round (with Ranck) and Fix-It and Forget-It Diabetic Cookbook (with the American Diabetes Association), also in the series. Good's other cookbooks include Favorite Recipes with Herbs, The Best of Amish Cooking, and The Central Market Cookbook. Phyllis Pellman Good is Senior Editor at Good Books. (Good Books has published hundreds of other titles by more than 125 different authors.) She received her B.A. and M.A. in English from New York University. She and her husband, Merle, live in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. They are the parents of two young-adult daughters. For a complete listing of books by Phyllis Pellman Good, as well as excerpts and reviews, visit www.GoodBks.com. |
Posted to alt.food.recipes
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Does anyone have 1/2 the ingredients in their cupboard to make this dish.
Tucson-Style Pork Ribs with Balsamic Glaze. I'll tell you how to fix any pork dish. Salt, pepper, olive oil. Add whatever other ingredients you have on hand, bake, broil, grill, crock pot etc. and enjoy. Good cooking ain't this ****in complicated. A substitute for rosemary is the deciduous bark of any tree whose needles don't turn brown and fall off on the winter. Rosemary is like eating a pine tree, only less poisonous. If you don't believe me, head on out to your yard and gnaw on any tree whoose needles don't fall off in the winter. Rosemary is a spice which tastes like a poison and in moderate amounts is not poisonous. It's one of those potatoes, tomatoes, nightshade, killers much like fugu is today. Taste like shit, but the thrill is there. Like eggplant it has no caloric or nutritional value whatsoever. Your better off on your knees in the front yard munching down on the grasses alongside your goats. "Jane Smith" > wrote in message ... > The following is an excerpt from the book Fix-it and Enjoy-it! Cookbook > by Phyllis Pellman Good > Published by Good Books; April 2006;$15.95US; 1-56148-526-8 > Copyright © 2006 Phyllis Pellman Good > > > Tuscan-Style Pork Ribs with Balsamic Glaze > > J.B. Miller, Indianapolis, IN > > Makes 6-8 servings > > Prep Time: 30 minutes > Standing (or Chilling) Time: 2-8 hours > Baking Time: 2 hours, 15 minutes > > 2 Tbsp. olive oil > 2 Tbsp. chopped fresh rosemary leaves, or 1 tsp. dried rosemary > 1½ Tbsp. kosher salt > 1½ Tbsp fennel seeds, or 1½ tsp. ground fennel > 2 tsp. pepper > 2 tsp. fresh chopped sage, or 1 tsp. dried sage > 2 tsp. fresh chopped thyme, or ½ tsp. dried thyme > 2 tsp. paprika > 1 tsp. crushed red pepper, optional, depending on how much heat you like > 1 tsp. ground coriander > ½ tsp. ground allspice > 6 lbs. pork ribs > 3 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar > > 1. In a small bowl, combine olive oil, rosemary, salt, fennel seeds, pepper, > sage, thyme, paprika, red pepper, coriander, and allspice. > 2. Rub spice paste all over ribs and let stand at room temperature for 2 > hours, or refrigerate overnight. > 3. Preheat oven to 325°. > 4. Arrange ribs on a large, rimmed baking sheet or roasting pan, meaty side > up. > 5. Roast ribs uncovered for 2 hours or until tender. > 6. Preheat broiler. Brush meaty side of ribs with balsamic vinegar and broil > 6 inches from heat until browned, about 2 minutes. > 7. Let stand for 5 minutes, then cut between ribs, or serve in slabs. > > Tip: You can use this glaze on pork chops, lamb chops, and cuts of chicken. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ > > Curried Chicken Pitas > > Sharon Eshleman, Ephrata, PA > > Makes 4 servings > > Prep Time: 15 minutes > > ½ cup light mayonnaise or salad dressing > 1 Tbsp. honey > 1 Tbsp. pickle relish > ¾-1 tsp. curry powder, according to your taste preference > 2 cups cubed cooked chicken > 1 cup halved grapes or chopped apples > ½ cup chopped pecans > 4 pita breads, halved > 8 lettuce leaves > > 1. In a bowl, combine salad dressing, honey, pickle relish, and curry > powder. > 2. Stir in chicken, grapes, and pecans. > 3. Line pita halves with lettuce. Spoon ½ cup chicken mixture into each > pita. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ > > Black Bean and Butternut Burritos > > Janelle Myers-Benner, Harrisonburg, VA > > Makes 8 burritos > > Prep Time: 45 minutes > Baking Time: 15-20 minutes > > 1 Tbsp. oil > 1 small or medium-sized onion, chopped > 3-4 cups butternut squash, cut into ½" cubes > ½ tsp. cumin > ¼ tsp. cinnamon > ½ tsp. salt > 2 cups cooked, or a 15-oz. can, black beans, drained > 8 tortillas > 1½ cups grated cheese > sour cream > cilantro, if you wish > salsa > > 1. In a large skillet or saucepan, heat oil. Sauté onions until tender. > 2. Add butternut. Cover and cook over medium heat until tender. > 3. Add cumin, cinnamon, and salt. Add beans. Cover, and heat through. > 4. Put ? of mixture in each tortilla, top with 3 Tbsp. cheese, and roll up. > Place seam-side down in a greased 9 x 13 baking pan. > 5. Bake uncovered in 350º oven for about 15-20 minutes, until heated > through. > 6. Serve with sour cream and salsa, and cilantro if you wish. > > Tips: Tortillas freeze well with the mixture inside so I often make a double > or triple batch. You can also freeze just the filling. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ > > Grilled Peach Melba > > Stacy Schmucker Stoltzfus, Enola, PA > > Makes 4 servings > > Prep Time: 10 minutes > Grilling Time: 5-10 minutes > > 4 large, unpeeled peaches or nectarines > 2 tsp. sugar > 2 cups red raspberries, fresh or frozen > sugar, optional > vanilla ice cream > > 1. Halve and pit peaches or nectarines. > 2. Press fresh or thawed raspberries through sieve. Save juice and discard > seeds. Sweeten to taste with sugar, if needed. > 3. Grill unpeeled peaches cut-side down for approximately 2 minutes. Turn > peaches over. With cut-side up, fill each cavity with ½ tsp. sugar, and > continue grilling until grill marks appear on skins. > 4. Serve immediately with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and drizzle with the > raspberry sauce. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ > > Yam fries > > Kathy Keener Shantz, Lancaster, PA > > Makes 6 servings > > Prep Time: 10 minutes > Baking Time: 20 minutes > > 2 Tbsp. olive oil > 1 tsp. salt > 1 tsp. pepper > 1 tsp. curry > ½ tsp. hot sauce > 4 medium-sized yams, sliced like French fries > > 1. In a large mixing bowl, combine oil, salt, pepper, curry, and hot sauce. > 2. Stir in sliced yams. > 3. When thoroughly coated, spread on lightly greased baking sheet. > 4. Bake at 375° for 20 minutes, or until tender. > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------ > > Linguine Salad with Peanut Sauce > > Gretchen H. Maust, Keezletown, VA > > Makes 6 servings > > Prep Time: 15 minutes > Cooking Time: 15 minutes > > 8-oz. box dry linguine > ½-1 cup chopped scallions > 1 diced cucumber > ¼ cup peanut butter > ? cup cider or rice vinegar > ¼ cup soy sauce > ¼ cup warm water > ? cup sesame oil > 2 cloves minced garlic > ½ tsp. 5-spice powder > hot sauce to taste > dark green lettuce leaves > toasted sesame seeds and tomato wedges for garnish > > 1. Cook linguine as directed on box, but undercook slightly. Drain. Rinse > with cool water. > 2. In a large bowl, combine linguini, scallions, and cucumber. > 3. In a separate bowl, whisk together peanut butter, vinegar, soy sauce, > water, oil, garlic, 5-spice powder, and hot sauce. > 4. Arrange lettuce on platter. Spoon linguine mixture into the middle. > Drizzle dressing over top. Garnish with sesame seeds and tomato wedges. > > Variations: > 1. For a heartier dish, add cubed cooked chicken or turkey. > 2. Serve hot, replacing the cucumbers with cooked zucchini. > > Tip: I like to triple the peanut sauce and keep it in the refrigerator to > use as a salad dressing or dipping sauce for grilled chicken. > > Reprinted from Fix-it and Enjoy-it! Cookbook. Copyright by Good Books ( > www.goodbks.com ). Used by permission. All rights reserved. > > Phyllis Pellman Good is a New York Times bestselling author whose books have > sold more than 8.5 million copies. > > Good has authored the national #1 bestselling cookbook Fix-It and Forget-It > Cookbook: Feasting with Your Slow Cooker (with Dawn J. Ranck), which > appeared on The New York Times bestseller list, as well as the bestseller > lists of USA Today, Publishers Weekly, and Book Sense. And she is the author > of Fix-It and Forget-It Lightly: Healthy, Low-Fat Recipes for Your Slow > Cooker, which has also appeared on The New York Times bestseller list. In > addition, Good authored Fix-It and Forget-It Recipes for Entertaining: Slow > Cooker Favorites for All the Year Round (with Ranck) and Fix-It and > Forget-It Diabetic Cookbook (with the American Diabetes Association), also > in the series. > > Good's other cookbooks include Favorite Recipes with Herbs, The Best of > Amish Cooking, and The Central Market Cookbook. > > Phyllis Pellman Good is Senior Editor at Good Books. (Good Books has > published hundreds of other titles by more than 125 different authors.) She > received her B.A. and M.A. in English from New York University. She and her > husband, Merle, live in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. They are the parents of two > young-adult daughters. > > For a complete listing of books by Phyllis Pellman Good, as well as excerpts > and reviews, visit www.GoodBks.com. > > > > |
Posted to alt.food.recipes
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 17:24:15 GMT, "Muddle"
> wrote: >Does anyone have 1/2 the ingredients in their cupboard to make this dish. >Tucson-Style Pork Ribs with Balsamic Glaze. I have ALL the ingredients. >I'll tell you how to fix any pork dish. >Salt, pepper, olive oil. Add whatever other ingredients you have on hand, >bake, broil, grill, crock pot etc. and enjoy. That's good too. I'd add some thyme and garlic because I love them and they go well with just about any meat. >Good cooking ain't this ****in complicated. Fix a box of macaroni and cheese or throw a frozen pizza into the oven - served with salad. Some people call it a meal. |
Posted to alt.food.recipes
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 17:24:15 GMT, "Muddle"
> wrote: >A substitute for rosemary is the deciduous bark of any tree whose needles >don't turn brown and fall off on the winter. Rosemary is like eating a pine >tree, only less poisonous. If you don't believe me, head on out to your >yard and gnaw on any tree whoose needles don't fall off in the winter. >Rosemary is a spice which tastes like a poison and in moderate amounts is >not poisonous. Obviously, you've never come near fresh rosemary. Whatta heathen. Crawl back under your bridge. |
Posted to alt.food.recipes
|
|||
|
|||
![]() <sf> wrote in message ... > On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 17:24:15 GMT, "Muddle" > > wrote: > > >Does anyone have 1/2 the ingredients in their cupboard to make this dish. > >Tucson-Style Pork Ribs with Balsamic Glaze. > > I have ALL the ingredients. > > >I'll tell you how to fix any pork dish. > >Salt, pepper, olive oil. Add whatever other ingredients you have on hand, > >bake, broil, grill, crock pot etc. and enjoy. > > That's good too. I'd add some thyme and garlic because I love them > and they go well with just about any meat. > > >Good cooking ain't this ****in complicated. > > Fix a box of macaroni and cheese or throw a frozen pizza into the oven > - served with salad. Some people call it a meal. I make my mac and cheese using a béchamel sauce and good cheddar, baked in the oven till crispy delicious. |
Posted to alt.food.recipes
|
|||
|
|||
![]() <sf> wrote in message ... > On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 17:24:15 GMT, "Muddle" > > wrote: > > >A substitute for rosemary is the deciduous bark of any tree whose needles > >don't turn brown and fall off on the winter. Rosemary is like eating a pine > >tree, only less poisonous. If you don't believe me, head on out to your > >yard and gnaw on any tree whoose needles don't fall off in the winter. > >Rosemary is a spice which tastes like a poison and in moderate amounts is > >not poisonous. > > Obviously, you've never come near fresh rosemary. Whatta heathen. > Crawl back under your bridge. Fresh rosemary taste exactly like pine pitch and yes I am a heathen, although I don't live under a bridge. I'd rather skewer a lightly seasoned, prosciutto wrapped, pepper stuffed shrimp for the grill with metal than a sprig from some nasty pine tree. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Enjoy The Finest Recipes And Cooking | General Cooking | |||
I enjoy the recipes beng posted here | General Cooking | |||
Soup Recipes To Enjoy This Winter | General Cooking | |||
Old cookbook recipes | Historic | |||
A few more Recipes for all to enjoy | General Cooking |