Grilled Corn on the Cob

First I’d like to start by giving a virtual hug to one of my favorite bloggy friends Maureen. She’s like a mother, a friend and a mentor all in one, and she lost someone special to her this week, so I want her to know I’m thinking about her.

One of my favorite things to do in the summer is grill. I don’t care what I grill, brats, steaks, sausage, chicken, asparagus, egg-plant, zucchini, or corn on the cob, but one of my all-time, favoritists things to grill is corn on the cob.

My method is probably out of the ordinary, and if you already grill your corn on the cob this way, then kudos to you, because this undoubtedly makes the corn taste better than the traditional method.

Of what method do I speak, you may ask?

The method of grilling the corn with the husk on. Yes, I said, HUSK ON.

Here’s what you do.

1. You’ll want to soak your corn with the husks on- like you bought it straight from the market- in some water for a minimum of 45 minutes. The longer the better, I think- though I don’t usually let mine go over about 2 hours. You can use your kitchen sink or a bucket. Whatever you have that’s clean and handy.

2. Then you’ll want to peel off the top very green husk. There’s usually just one or two that you’ll discard, but keep at least one, you’ll need it later.

3. Continue to pull down the husk until it looks like this:

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4. Now is the fun part. Let’s make sure we have a LOT of room temperature butter on hand. I used Smart Balance with Olive Oil in it, but any unsalted butter would do.

Do NOT be scared to slather it on the entire ear of corn.

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5. Once you’re done buttering an ear, you’ll add your favorite season salt. I love Tony Chachere’s cajun salt, but any would probably work. Be liberal with the salt.

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6. Then you’ll gently fold the husk back up the ear.

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Tear a piece about 1/2 inch wide from one of the pieces of husk you kept earlier and tie a knot at the top of the freshly re-husked ear of corn.

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Repeat until all your ears of corn are done. It took me about 45 minutes to do 8 ears. So plan accordingly.

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7. Place them on the grill at about 350-400 degrees- or Medium High Heat, turning every 12-15 minutes for about 35 to 40 minutes:

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Yummy, right?

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Are we hungry yet?

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The finished product:

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To serve you can do one of two things:

Pull all the husk off, and of course add more butter:

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Or leave the husk on, add more butter and then some garlic chives. Or you could add garlic chives even if you wanted to pull the husk completely off- but the husk gives you a built in sort of handle!

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Plus, I think it looks prettier. But that’s just me!

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I hope you get to enjoy corn on the cob just once like this this summer!

What’s your favorite thing to grill in the summer?

XO

TSDC

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Roasted Elk Stuffed Poblano Peppers

I gave you the teaser for this post here and am just now getting around to sharing the other photos and instructions. I’m getting hungry just thinking about them actually!

We’ll roast our peppers first. I chose poblano peppers for this dish- you could use green or red bell peppers too, but they wouldn’t be as yummy. Poblanos are a very mild pepper; they have an amazing flavor and thick walls which makes them an ideal stuffing pepper. When poblanos have been dried, they become an ancho chili- which is one of my favorite chilis/spices to use.  I’ve also been known to make reduction sauces from them. It is the sweetest of all dried chilis and is commonly used in tamales.

Now back to our poblanos, don’t they look yummy?

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To roast them you use your tongs and hold them over the open flame of your gas stove. If you don’t have a gas stove you can put them in the oven for 10-15 minutes at 350 and accomplish the same thing. We want them to look all charred when we’re done with them. As you finish roasting each pepper, place them in a plastic bag until they’re cool enough to handle. This is called sweating. When cool, you’ll remove the skin. I realize that removing the skin is messy.  So plan on getting your hands dirty.

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For the stuffing, we need to start with a diced onion and a couple tablespoons of olive oil. I always use yellow onions in my recipes unless specified otherwise. I will occasionally use white, but I find the texture to be softer and I don’t enjoy the flavor as much. But if you have white onions on hand, by all means, they’ll be fine.

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We wanna saute them quickly on a higher heat, because we want them brown around the edges. That makes them sweeter, and we’re about to juxtapose that sweet next to some hot. And I love sweet next to hot!

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Once those get done we’ll throw in our ground elk. You could easily substitute ground beef, ground pork, or ground turkey. Be sure to turn the heat down.

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Then thrown in about a cup of sliced, roasted red bell peppers. You could roast those by hand too, or you could just buy them in the store, which is what I usually do. I’m a cheater. You could actually have used fresh red bell pepper; you’d have just put them in when you cooked the onion. And that would have been just lovely! But y’all that are regular readers to this blog know that it’s not very often I have super fresh stuff in my icebox. And you don’t have to shop at Wal-mart for you groceries. I gotta tell you their produce is more often than not, not really that great. Is it spring yet? Time to plant a garden yet?

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Toss ‘em into your now, browned meat.

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Mix ‘em in and then since throw in some ancho chili, some cumin, a dash of red pepper and some salt.

And then, you’ll want to throw in 4 ounces of cream cheese. And since I’m such an awesome blogger, I failed to take photos of that portion for you. I know, how dare I forget, right? You can turn the heat off too.

Let’s get these pretty peppers ready to stuff!

First we’re gonna want to cut a slit at the top of the pepper:

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Then cut one vertical to the first one:

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And then pull out the seeds:

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Now your pretty pepper is ready to stuff.

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Add some grated Cheddar and Monterrey Jack cheese (note- I cheated and used the pre-grated kind; grating it fresh would be even better!)

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Place the four stuffed peppers into a casserole dish because we’re putting them in the oven at 350 to melt this cheese.

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They’re ready to go into the oven.

While they get all happy and the cheese gets gooey, we’ll whip up the sauce. I made a sour cream sauce- it’s easy. Butter, flour, chicken broth and sour cream.  And of course you gotta throw in some Cumin.

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I think the peppers are happy now.

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Oh. My. You. Look. Yummy.

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I also made rice to serve with these. Typically, I don’t like Spanish or Mexican rice, but the Pioneer Woman shared her recipe with us, and I thought it sounded good. My usual gripe with Mexican rice is that it’s very dry and bland. But this one, was not! I think next time I make it I’ll throw in some corn and maybe black beans too! You should try it!

Here’s the finished product.

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Be sure to garnish with cilantro. Fresh would be best, but if you don’t have fresh, dried will do in a pinch.

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Here’s what you need to make the peppers:

Preheat oven to 350.

4 Whole Roasted Poblano peppers
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 med yellow onion (diced)
1/2 cup of roasted or fresh red bell pepper
1 lb ground elk, beef, pork, turkey
1 tablespoon ancho chili powder (or more to taste)
2 teaspoons cilantro (more if you like that tangy, lime-y flavor)
1 teaspoon of paprika
1 teaspoon of cayenne pepper
1 1/2 cups of grated cheese

Sauce-

2-3 tablespoons butter
2-3 tablespoons flour
2 cups chicken broth
1 cup sour cream

Melt butter. Add flour. Stir until mixture thickens- it’s going to be roux-like in consistency. Add the chicken broth stirring constantly until the mixture thickens. Stir in the sour cream.

I hope you enjoy these as much as we did!

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Decadent, Simple Butter Cookies

Butter cookies are by far one of my favorite holiday treats. Several years ago, I found a recipe in Bon Appetit magazine and fell in love with the short-bread type cookie. All. Over. Again.

And then, I lost the recipe. That’s what happens when you get divorced. You lose stuff. But that’s for another time.

I had tried a couple other recipes since then. But none quite fit the bill. Then the other night as I was Twittering, a thought occurred to me- ask someone if they have it. So I did. And you know what I got, a big zilch. Oh I got a recipe for butter cookies and it is definitely one I’ll make; but it wasn’t the recipe I so desired. And then it happened. I decided I could try to figure it out on my own. After all, how hard can it be- butter, confectioners sugar, flour and an extract. It wasn’t rocket science.

My first attempt tasted great as cookie dough, but failed miserably when it came to baking it. I didn’t have enough flour in it. So I added more, and before I knew it, I had a lovely, soft in the middle, rich, buttery and yummy cookie.

And because I love you all, I’m sharing. Here goes…

Obviously we’ll need butter:

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For best results please use it at room temperature. I used salted, but if you want to use unsalted it wouldn’t mess up the cookies. I honestly don’t know why there is even salted butter in my house. I usually have unsalted. My bad.

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You’re gonna wanna beat that butter until it’s creamy and super soft.

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Just looking at it makes me gain weight. But it’s the holidays. Who cares, right?

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Then, because you love yourself, and the people you’re making cookies for, you’re going to want to add some confectioner’s sugar and some almond extract. If you hate almond extract, and I’m not sure why you would, you could add vanilla. It wouldn’t be as good, but then I’m not eating the cookies you’re baking so add whatever you want!

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Mix it in:

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Until it looks like this:

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Then add some flour. I don’t keep special flours around- I use unbleached. But you can use whatever kind you’d like.

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Get that good and mixed in, and then add more almond extract and more flour.

Mix until it becomes “dough-like”. Typically butter cookies are chilled, rolled and cut into shapes. But I don’t bother with that.

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I take tablespoons full of mixture and roll them into balls like such:

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Place them on your cookie sheet or baking stone (I use a baking stone- less clean-up that way- and you can tell my stone has been well-used).

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Bake them at 350 degrees for about 10 minutes or until they just start to get golden around the edges:
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I don’t wait to let mine cool on the baking stone before placing them elsewhere, because the stone holds heat well, it has a tendency to keep baking the cookie after it’s left the oven. So put it on a cookie sheet or wax paper to cool, and be sure to eat at least one straight out of the oven. Because we all know that warm cookies are the best.

Here’s the recipe:

2 sticks (1 cup) salted, room-temperature butter
1 1/4 c confectioner’s sugar
1/2 Tbs almond extract
2 1/3 c flour

Whip butter until soft, blend in confectioner’s sugar and teaspoon of extract. Add 1 cup of flour, mix well. Then add remaining flour and extract. If you desire to chill them and roll them out, let them chill for about an hour in the ice box, or if it’s minus -20 outside, 10 minutes on the porch will do it! Otherwise, spoon the mixture into your hands and roll into golf-ball sized rounds, and bake for 10 minutes in a 350 degree oven. This yields about 20 cookies. You could double the recipe or just make a second batch. They’re so simple. It takes more time to clean up than it does to actually make the cookies!

Yields about 2 dozen.

If you do not have salted butter in your kitchen- simply add in about 1/4 tsp of salt. And like I said above you don’t have to chill the dough, but after this season (2010 Christmas) the chilled dough makes the cookies better for some reason).

Merry Christmas, and you’re welcome.

TSDC

PS. I hope to, at some point this week, share my recipe for stuffed, roasted, poblano peppers. I’m hungry just thinking about them!

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Ranch Roasted Potatoes

I know that lots of you have probably had roasted potatoes. But since we eat lots of steak and potatoes around here, I’m always looking for new ways to spice them up. And since I’m 65 miles from the nearest WalMarts well, I have to sometimes be creative- if I’m out of the things I typically use.

I’m going to show you the basis of the dish, and then you can take it and run with it.  I do things differently when I have different ingredients on hand, but the idea of the dish is the same.

Here’s what we’ll need to get started:

About 5 medium sized, Red potatoes (note, I had red and gold, as that is what my future sister-in-law shared out of her garden, but I believe red potatoes to be better for roasting. It’s the texture folks.)

5 TBS Olive Oil

Fresh Ground Salt

Fresh Ground Pepper

Onions (minced or fresh)- yellow onions are really the right thing to do. I promise.

Garlic (minced or fresh)

Hidden Valley Ranch Seasoning

Bacon (optional)

Trust me,though,  you’ll want to add bacon. Bacon makes all things taste yummier. (Please note- I was out of both bacon and fresh onion for purposes of this lesson. I apologize. I need to get to the store!)

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Begin by taking that tasty, freshly washed potato and cutting in half, length-wise.

And then cut into half again.

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Now place all those sliced potatoes into a bowl and add your olive oil, along with about 4 tablespoons of Ranch Dressing Mix.

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Give it a good stir and make sure to coat the potatoes with the olive oil seasoning mixture really well.

Then, since we don’t have any fresh onion, we’ll substitute in some dried minced onion.

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This kind is my favorite. If you don’t know where to buy Tastefully Simple products, please let me know and I’ll put you in touch with my fabulousOpera Singer Supplier!

Sprinkle in about 4-6 tablespoons. Don’t be shy. Do it! If we’d used real onion, I’d have had you put in about 2/3 of a cup.   But we’re improvising today!

Look how lovely it is:

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Now throw in some garlic powder or minced garlic, or fresh. Whatever you have on hand. Fresh is best. But I don’t have any so I used some minced garlic that came out of the icebox. Two teaspoons should do it.  Add your freshly ground salt- more than you think you’ll need and some fresh ground pepper. If we had bacon, this would be the time we’d add 3 diced slices, of the salty goodness and then you could sprinkle in less salt.

Let’s put the mixture in a 9×13 casserole dish. You’re gonna wanna roast this goodness for about 25 minutes in a 425 degree oven.

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About half-way through the roasting you’re gonna wanna stir this around.

When it’s done, it should look something like this:

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Can you say yum? We like to serve it with fresh grated cheddar or Monterrey Jack cheese, sour cream, and chives on top. But you could serve it however you wanted. And there’s nothing wrong with serving it just like that. Because it’s all kinds of good on its own.  So next time you’re bored with plain old potatoes, try roasting some. I promise you’ll be glad you did!

Have fun in the kitchen-

Happy Howl-a-ween!

Howling

With Halloween just a day away, why should only the kids get to have fun? The girls at True Femme, are pretty certain that we in the blogosphere should have some fun too, so they’re having a Trick or Tweet Party! Follow either of the links to get all the information and join in the fun! And for one lucky person who stops over here and leaves a comment, I’ll treat you to my great onion ring recipe that has not been published/or shared on this blog before! You can find us on twitter with #trickortweet! And tweet me if you want @thesdcowgirl! Be sure to visit tomorrow when I announce the winner!

Happy Halloween!

Carnitas Enchiladas

It should be glaringly obvious to y’all by now that I am stuck indoors. Partly because I don’t want to be out in the *cold* and partly because it’s been raining, muddy and otherwise nasty outside, and I don’t desire to ride my horses when it’s like that. Sunday, when we gave fall shots, was the nicest day we’ve had nearly all month. To hear the native South Dakotans tell it, we’ll have an Indian Summer, but I’m not holding my breath. I wasn’t ready for the cold. I still have some outdoor projects to finish. At least we have sunny skies today.

So here’s what happens when I’m stuck in the house with fresh jalapeño peppers, some pork tenderloin and a craving for Mexican food. I cook. And I blog of course too. And I do laundry and clean. But those latter two aren’t nearly as fun as cooking or blogging.

I made an attempt to be like the Pioneer Woman, and photograph various stages of the cooking- but have y’all got any idea how hard it is to photograph food? And it’s more difficult when you don’t have the gorgeous kitchen that she has!

I didn’t take photos of every single stage of cooking, but you’ll get the general idea. I didn’t borrow this recipe from anyone, I developed it on my own. On the fly yesterday as I thought about what I wanted, flavor wise, from this dish.

Here’s what you’ll need for the enchiladas:

6 roasted jalapeño peppers, seeded and sliced (roasted pepper instructions to follow)

1 can of rotel tomatoes and green chilis

1 cup of diced onion

1 tablespoon each of garlic salt, fresh crushed black peppercorns, and cumin

1 lb of sliced pork tenderloin (think sliced like a pork chop)

1 1/2 cups of cheese- I used 1 cup of pepper jack and 1/2 cup of mild cheddar

6 10in flour tortillas. Corn would be better but I didn’t have any yesterday.

2 tablespoons olive oil

1/4 cup of tequila

4 oz cream cheese

In a heavy skillet over medium high heat (I would be lost without my Lodge Cast Iron skillet) pour two tablespoons of olive oil. Add your pork tenderloin. You want to sear it quickly, to lock in the juice and tenderness. While one side is cooking sprinkle the meat with the cumin, garlic salt and fresh crushed peppers. Turn the meat after about 1 minute and repeat the seasoning process. Add the onion. You want to let the onion get brown and yummy and cook quickly as you don’t want them to fall to pieces. Dead onion is never good. Remove the pork from the skillet and julienne them. They will still be pink in the center. If they’re not, you overcooked them. Continue to watch your onion and stir as necessary. When your pan is good and hot and your onions are getting brown, add your 1/4 cup of tequila to de-glaze the pan. The smell of this is just glorious. Let that cook for a couple to three minutes as you’ll want the alcohol to burn off. Then add your pork back to the pan. Throw in your can of rotel tomatoes and cover this bad boy for about 8-10 minutes. And you’ll probably want to turn the heat down so that the juices of all this goodness just simmer together and get happy in there. Then add your roasted jalapeño peppers. Oh, and pre-heat your oven to 375.

It should look a little something like this:

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You can even see the steam coming off the pan in this photo. I rock. Now add your 4 oz of cream cheese to the pan. Remove all of this from the pan. Now you’re ready to assemble your enchiladas. Put 1/6 of the mixture per tortilla, and add 1/6 of the cheese. I mean, how else should I explain it? Obviously we’re only making six enchiladas! (If you need a tortilla wrapping tutorial you’re in the wrong place. You don’t have to close the ends if you’re making enchiladas). Just wrap them up tight, place them in an un-greased 9×13 glass pan. Or any other pan of a similar size. But make sure it’s deep enough that you can pour in the sauce we’re about to make. How yummy does that look? It gets better. I promise.

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When all six of your enchiladas are made, place them in the oven for about 9 minutes. while they cook, we’ll whip up the sauce.

What you’ll need:
1/4 cup tequila
1/4 cup cream
12 oz (1 and 1/2 cups) of sour cream
1/2 to 1 tablespoon cumin
1 tablespoon garlic salt
1 to 1 1/2 cup chicken broth
2 oz cream cheese
4 oz grated cheese (monterry jack, cheddar, asiago, etc).
In your same heavy pan you used to make your enchiladas, and you don’t have to wash it folks-just use it- you get extra flavor that way. Add your tequila over high heat and let it cook for a couple to three minutes to cook the off the alcohol. Add your cream. Add the sour cream. Stir until it’s smooth. Add the cumin, and the sugar, and the cream cheese. Now add as much or as little broth as you desire to get the taste just right. You want the sauce to be sweet- not overly salty.

Take your lovely enchiladas out of the oven and pour 2/3 of the sauce over them.

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Then add the cheese. If you desire to make it look super pretty, you can chop up some fresh parsley and cilantro to place on top too. I don’t have fresh, so I use the dried kind. Place it back in the oven until the cheese on top is all melty and wonderful. I think melty isn’t a word. But I don’t really care.

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To serve it, place some sauce on the bottom of a plate, and place the enchilada on top. And then, prepare to be overwhelmed. It’s so good. Really. It is. Things I would do differently next time, and believe me, there will be a next time. I would add some butter to the sauce. That’s it. I would serve it with black bean soup too- but I am out of black beans. I haven’t been to the grocery store in a month. I can’t believe I actually still have food in my kitchen, but that’s what you get when you live 65 miles from Wal-mart. You become a food planner.

I hope you enjoyed this little foray into how my blonde cowgirl brain operates in the kitchen!

Ps. To roast a pepper you hold it over an open flame- such as your gas stove, or put it in a 350 degree oven until the skin is charred an blistered. Put the pepper in a plastic bag for about 5 minutes and let it sweat. Then you peel it. And it’s now a roasted pepper that you can use in so many ways!

A Shrimpy Spin

Jen who is the keeper of Sprite and all things worthy of being spun, came up with the topic of recipes for this week’s Spin Cycle. It made me hungry just thinking about it. I love to cook. I mean I really love it. I have decided that that is one of the ways I love people. Through food. If you follow me on Facebook, my status around supper-time will tell you pretty much what we are eating each night- Tequilla-lime marinated steak flautas; pork tenderloin in a sour cream and coconut rum sauce, or if Zach is cooking. Which he does. Quite well, I should add.

And unlike, Maureen, I will give my cooking secrets to the world; though when it comes to my onion rings, no one does them better than moi. My sister in law has tried, but to no avail. The batter is sort of a feel thing; as are the spices, since I’m not known for measuring a darn thing. But I digress. I don’t intend to share with you my onion ring recipe, even though they stay in pretty high demand.

No. I’m gonna share with you my signature dish, loved the world over. Literally.

Peppered Shrimp Alfredo. It’s light enough for summer, but hearty enough to warm you up on a cold winter’s night.

Here’s what you’ll need:

8 ounces penne pasta (or any other kind- penne is just my favorite).
1/4 cup butter
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 red bell pepper, diced (you can substitute roasted if you don’t have fresh on hand)
1/2 pound portobello mushrooms, diced (you can used canned if you don’t have fresh, but it’s NOT the same)
1 pound medium shrimp, peeled and de-veined
1 (16 ounce) jar Alfredo sauce
1/2 cup grated Romano cheese
1/2 cup cream
1 teaspoon cayenne pepper, or more to taste
Salt and pepper to taste
1/4 cup chopped parsley

And here is how you put the above together:

DIRECTIONS

1. Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Add pasta and cook for 8 to 10 minutes or until al dente; drain.

2.Meanwhile, melt butter together with the olive oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Stir in onion, and cook until softened and translucent, about 2-3 minutes. Stir in garlic, red pepper, and mushroom; cook over medium-high heat until soft, about 2 minutes more.

3. Stir in the shrimp, and cook until firm and pink, then pour in Alfredo sauce, Romano cheese, and cream; bring to a simmer stirring constantly until thickened, about 5 minutes. Season with cayenne, salt, and pepper to taste. Stir drained pasta into the sauce, and serve sprinkled with chopped parsley.

I should add- this is also really good if you have left-over steak to use- though you can’t use steak that was cooked past medium rare, as it will dry out. I have also used the same recipe for chicken- and it gets asked for. All. The. Time. Fresh shrimp is hard to come by in these parts and when you do find it, it costs an arm. And part of a leg.

I typically serve mine with garlic bread or garlic biscuits (like the kind they serve at Red Lobster), and roasted asparagus. Ah yes! I’m hungry just thinking about it.

Please note- this dish has somewhere around 980 calories per serving. Definitely NOT for the faint of heart. You could cut back on them some if you cut out the cream and used milk instead. But I don’t recommend it. It just wouldn’t be the same.
If you decide to brave the calories, please let me know.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’m starved.

Peppered Shrimp Alfredo


Sunday night, Zach requested My Famous Shrimp Alfredo. We eat more pasta than we probably should, but I figure it’s because, well, it’s yummy. The recipe is actually published, and world famous as it’s been tried by folks as far away as Norway. You can get the recipe here. I cheat in this recipe and use jarred alfredo- though when I’m not in a hurry I am known to make it from *scratch. When I was in Texas I used to purchase my garlic butter at the local grocer, but alas, there is no grocer here who makes it, so I’ve resorted to making my own. That recipe hasn’t been submitted for scrutiny yet, so I thought I’d share it with you good folks, first. That is, of course, assuming you’re interested in making your own garlic butter.

Here’s what you’ll need:

1 loaf of french bread (I use half for the first meal, and the other portion for the leftovers)
1 stick of butter (I used Smart Balance)- but as long as it’s unsalted you should be good.
2 teaspoons of finely chopped fresh garlic
2 teaspooons of garlic salt (or more if you desire extra garlic!)
3-4 teaspoons of parsley- fresh would be best, but dried works (I don’t have fresh right now)
1 teaspoon oregano (again fresh is best, but out of the spice jar works fine too).
1 tablespoon freshly grated parmesan cheese, plus extra for sprinkling on the bread

Make sure that your butter is soft- room temperature, and begin to stir it in a small/medium sized bowl.
Add your fresh chopped garlic, mixing well. Then add the garlic salt, parsley and oregano.
Mix well. You can taste it at this point to make sure it’s to your liking. Really you can’t go wrong here.
Once those are well mixed, add your parmesan cheese.
Spread onto julianned slices of french bread and bake in a 425 degree oven for 5-8 minutes depending upon how crunchy/soft you like your bread to be. With a minute to go or so, sprinkle some more fresh parmesan on the bread and enjoy! I’m telling you- it’s so yummy.

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Green Chili Chicken Enchiladas

I’m sort of a Mexican Food junkie. Just ask Zach! The other night as I was making them my facebook status announced that to the world, and my Cousin’s wife, Abby asked me for the recipe. So since I typed it out I figure I might as well share in case someone else is interested in trying them. I’m constantly changing it as I have/don’t have ingredients, but this is it in a nutshell. Feel free to do with it what you want.

Filling:
about 1/2 to 1/4 cup of onion (depending on how much onion you like- I like, a LOT!)
2 tablespoons butter
7oz can of green chilies, drained and divided in half; you’ll need some for the sauce
1  10oz can of original Rotel
4 oz of cream cheese, softened
2 cups chopped cooked chicken (I usually use the kind out of a can!)
1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon cumin
8-12 oz of cheddar or Monterrey jack cheese
(12) 7in corn or flour tortillas

Sauce:

3 Tbs butter
3 Tbs flour
1 c chicken broth (low sodium is best)
about 1-1/2 cups of cream or half/half
1 1/2 c of sour cream
cumin and paprika to taste
remaining green chilis
jalapeno pepper for garnish (optional)
cheese for garnish (optional)

1. In a skillet melt the butter and cook the onion over medium heat until the onion is tender. Remove onions from the skillet.

2. In the same skillet add the chicken, green chilis, and rotel, stir until well combined then add the softened cream cheese. When combined add the cumin and onions back to the mixture. Combine. Remove from heat. Spoon about 3 tablespoons of the chicken mixture onto each tortilla near an edge. Sprinkle cheese on top; roll up. Place filled tortillas, seam side down in a greased, 3 quart rectangular baking dish.

3. In a separate medium saucepan melt the butter and add the flour, stirring with a whisk constantly to make a creamy yellow, roux.  Add chicken broth and continue stirring until the mixture is smooth.  Next, add the cream and the sour cream, cumin and the remaining green chilies. Stir until smooth. Pour the sauce mixture evenly over the tortillas in the baking dish. Cover with foil and bake for about 35 minutes in a 350 degree oven. If desired, sprinkle with more cheese and diced jalapeno pepper. Bake another five minutes, uncovered, or until cheese melts.

This supposedly makes 6 servings but I find I can’t hardly eat but one, so it’s really about 9 I think. I usually serve this with cilantro and onion black beans. I’m not a big Mexican Rice fan, so I don’t serve that normally. The best part about this recipe is that it freezes really well. So I’m known to only cook half of the tortillas, and freeze the remaining mixture and pull it out when I want them. I’ll make sauce fresh and that way you have EXTRA saucy enchiladas!

The Food in Vegas


I completely understand Pioneer Woman’s (Ree) frustration with her husband, aka, Marlboro Man (MM) when it comes to eating. They ranch for a living, just like Zach (and I guess you could say I do- though I really just ride horses and know not too much about cows- but I digress). So getting the MM to eat something besides meat and potatoes is a constant chore for Ree.

Zach is really good about eating what you serve him. He will eat anything I cook, and tries all the crazy things I throw at him. Like grilled egg-plant, fried okra, fried pickles. But he’d prefer to just have steak, and potatoes, and toast. Or just steak and toast. Or just steak. MM is not much different.

But for me, a wannabe/amateur foodie, who will admit, I read the Bon Appetit before the “Barrel Horse News”; before “The Barrel Racing Report”; before “In Style”, Vegas is full of world class chefs and their restaurants. There’s Emeril. Wolfgang. Flay. And that’s just three. Last night we got in to eat at Mesa Grill, Bobby Flay’s restaurant here. I’ve already made the Coffee-Ancho Rubbed Filet Minon that they serve there, and Zach was just not impressed with that idea (I’ve not made it since I’ve been in SD). He says a good steak doesn’t need all that other “Stuff”. And when you’re eating home-grown beef, that qualifies as *good*. So he ordered black bean and smoked chicken quesadillas and I ordered ancho rubbed chicken. It was to die for. The quesadillas were to die for- but according to my cowboy, they were too busy. There was more than 3 flavors in them. It was too much.

I really bad wanna go eat at a Wolfgang Puck restaurant and I could tonight, on our way to see Rodney Carrington (at the MGM right now!) and Zach would go, but I’d like him to enjoy that amazing food as much as me. What is a girl to do?

On another note, I saw the fountains at Bellagio last night. It was emotional. Maybe I’m a sap, but I loved them. I cried.

And for the cowgirl Divas, the photo to the right is one of my pairs of ML Leddys boots. I work in both my pairs.