Sunday, February 20, 2011

Happy Birthday to my sister (in-law)........

Today is the birthday of a sweet lady. I don't know anyone else that is like her....she's the best.

So, IF I had her here for supper tonight, this is what I would serve. I tried these a couple of months ago and they were yummy.

(These are recipes from DOWNEAST Magazine. Downeast got these recipes from local restaurants.)

Ready? Here we go.....recipes and all.

First, we'll have Spicy Creole Haddock and Corn Cakes

Old Port Sea Grill, Portland Maine

Spicy Creole Haddock and Corn Cakes with Roasted Garlic and Tomato Remoulade

Ingredients:
1 ear of corn, shucked
5 tbsp olive oil
1/4 C large red onion, finely diced
1/4 C red peppers, finely dice
1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and finely diced
3/4 lb fresh haddock, cut into 1" cubes
2 bay leaves
1 Tbsp salt
1 Tbsp white black peppercorns  (HUH?) (Oxymoron?)
1 Tbsp Old Bay seasoning
2 lemons, halfed
1 egg
1/2 C mayonnaise
1 tbsp Cajun seasoning
2 C Panko (japanese bread crumbs)

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. (I CANNOT figure out how to type the 'degree' symbol, evah!!!)

Cut the corn off the cob, toss in 1 tbsp olive oil and roast in a small pan in the preheated oven for  30 minutes until nicely browned. (YES, I DID THIS, ALTHO I THINK IT'S STUPID)
Let the corn cool. Set aside.

Saute onion, pepper, and jalapeno in a pan with 2 tbsp of the olive oil over medium heat until tender but not browned, about 10 minutes. Set aside and let cool. (I used less jalapeno, due to the fact that Mr. Downeastdoingstuff can't hack anything spicier than water.)

In a stock pot, combine the bay leaves, salt, peppercorns, Old Bay, and lemons and fill pot 3/4 full of water. Bring the mixture to a boil. Put the diced haddock pieces into a metal stainer and lower strainer into the boiling liquid. Cook for about 5 minutes. Set haddock aside to let cool.
Combine the corn, onions, peppers, jalapeno, and haddock with one egg, mayonnaise, and Cajun seasoning in a large bowl. Add 1/2 C of the panko crumbs to the mixture and combine. If mixture does not hold when pressed together, mix in more panko crumbs 2 tbsp at a time until mixture can hold. (ha....mixture never holds....well, barely....very stressful ordeal) To dredge the cakes, place the remaining panko crumbs in a large bowl. Tightly pack a 1/4 C measure with the haddock mixture and roll into a ball in your hands. press down to form a round cake about 3/4 inch tick Dredge in panko crumbs on all sides.

Heat 2 tbsp of olive oil in a heavy, large skillet over medium-high heatl Add haddock cakes and saute until golden brown, about 4 minutes per side, careful not to overcrowd the pan (you will have to do them in batches). Transfer to plates. (Put the pieces back together like a puzzle so no one will be the wiser that these cakes broke apart when turning over.) Drizzle  remoulade sauce over and serve.

Remoulade sauce? Remoulade sauce?  What's that?????

Glad you asked.....

Roasted Garlic and Tomato Remoulade

4 Roma tomatoes
8 garlic cloves
2 tbsp olive oil
3/4 C mayo
1/4 C capers
1 C parsley leaves
juice of 1/2 lemon
salt and pepper to taste

Preheat oven the 450 degrees. Halve the tomatoes and using a spoon or melon balller, remove seeds and discard. Peel and halve the garlic cloves, put on inside each tomato half, and drizzle with the olive oil. Roast for 30 minutes or until the tomatoes and garlic are slightly charred. Add the remaining ingredients to a food processor or blender along with the tomatoes and garlic mixture. Pulse until everything is incorporated. Finish with salt and pepper to taste.

Makes about 1 1/2 C. Can be made a day ahead and refrigerated. 

Delish.

NEXT ....



Cabernet Pouched Pears Stuffed with Cranberry Blue Cheese

Mache Bistro, Bar Harbor

Pears...
2 Bosc Pears
1/2 C Cabernet Sauvignon
1/4 C balsamic vinegar
2 tbsp brown sugar
1/2 tsp salt
1 tbsp honey
3 C baby arugula
2 tbsp olive oil

Blue cheese filling.....
1/4 C chopped pecans plus 1 tbsp for garnish
1/4 C dried cranberries plus 1 tbsp for garnish
3 ounces cream cheese (room temperature)
1 tbsp mayo
1 tbsp olive oil
2 ounces blue cheese-plus 1 ounce for garnish

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 

Halve pears and place in a baking dish flesh side down together with wine, vinegar, brown sugar, salt and honey. Cover with foil, and bake for 1 hour. Allow pears to cool in liquid. Scoop out and discard pear cores and seeds to create a space for the filling. Reserve cooking liquid.
(this turns the pears into such a red color it's a bit alarming!)

While pears cook, in a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, blend cream cheese, mayo, olive oil, 2 ounces blue cheese, 1/4 C pecans, and 1/4 C dried cranberries until well incorporated.

Divide filling into four parts and fill each pear half. Toss arugula (Can't stand the taste of arugula, so I used s spring mix of greens) with olive oil and divide among four plates. Place stuffed pear on top of arugula  and garnish with reserved pecans, cranberries, and blue cheese. Drizzle reserved cooking liquid over pear and greens.

And finally........

Roasted Pepper Shrimp Saute

Joshua's Restaurant, Wells

3 tablespoons olive oil
1 pound shrimp (21-25 count), peeled and de-veined (If deveining isn't the most disagreeable job there is, then I don't know what is, short of murdering and preparing your own meat/seafood from scratch...)
1 1/2 C chopped tomato, in 1 " dice
1 large roasted red pepper, thinly sliced
1/2 roasted jalapeno pepper, thinnly sliced (Less....remember Mr. Downeastdoingstuff's wimpy-ness)
2 tbsp  chopped garlic
1 C dry white wine
4 tbsp unsalted butter
2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
salt to taste

Preheat 12" saute pan. Put oil in pan, and when it is almost smoking, add shrimp, tomato, peppers, and garlic. Let cook for about 1 minute, then toss thoroughly  just once to create a caramelized flavor. After 1 more minute, when the shrimp should be about half cooked, add the wine and salt to taste. Reduce the wine by half, cooking off the alcohol, then add the butter and parsley to finish. Serve immediately. We garnish this with a few pieces of grilled baguette, perfect for soaking up the sauce.

That's it, my sweet sis. Hope you enjoy it.

Add D's Mud Pie and some alcoholic beverages and it will be a birthday to remember.

Love Ya!!!!! 

8 comments:

JoAnn ( Scene Through My Eyes) said...

Wow - what a nice dinner you would make. I'm with Mr. DownEastDS - nothing spicier than water please LOL

PC/Windows: hold ALT and type 0176 - this is how to make the degree sign - if you really want to know - now copy that and put it in a safe place where you'll never ever find it again LOL

Or if you have a MAC
hold SHIFT and OPTION, then type 8

Or so I'm told - but I've not kept those in a safe place and have to keep hunting them up. I have a friend that uses * for degrees and we all seem to catch on. :-)

Unknown said...

My favorite of those recipes would be the haddock! Sounds delicious!

annie'smom said...

Happy birthday to J.!! How about whipping up this dinner the next time that she's in town???? I'll bring the mud pie!!

brattcat said...

My birthday's in August, E, any chance you'll be cooking?

Sharon Creech said...

My favorite part are your comments in red.
Made me laff and laff.

Lili said...

That sure was a tasty virtual dinner. Thanks for the recipes too! ~Lili

Birdman said...

I agree with Sharon. The red even made me chuckle, a bit. BTW the meal was marvelous!

LBJ said...

Ahhh, You are the BEST! Oh my, delicious, may I have seconds? You are so sweet to think of me. I'll have another apple-tini too. ;-)