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Category Archives: Recipes
Ribeye + Roasted Tomatoes + Potatoes + Cauli Mash
Seared Ribeye
- 2 Boneless Ribeye
- Tommy’s Coffee Rub
- Olive oil
About an hour before you want to cook your steaks, take them out of the fridge and season them. I used a coffee rub on mine, and just simple garlic salt + pepper on Crawford’s. In a heavy bottomed pan that has been on the stove heating for about 3-4 minutes, add in olive oil to coat the pan. When it starts to shimmer, add your steaks. They should sizzle. Sizzle means a good crust, and nothing’s worse that a rubbery, soggy steak. After 2.5 minutes, flip and cook for an additional 3-4 minutes. Remove the steaks and cover them for at least 10 minutes. Slice and enjoy.
Purple Cauliflower Mash
- 1 head purple cauliflower, chopped
- 4 oz goat cheese
- 1 tbs light butter
- Salt/pepper
Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add the cauliflower and cook for about 10 minutes. Drain and add to vitamix with the rest of the ingredients and puree. It’s a weird color, but tasty.
Parmesan and Rosemary Potatoes
My brain hurts and it’s Sunday. Just follow a recipe similar to this, but add rosemary : http://imperrfections.wordpress.com/2010/05/07/parmesan-roasted-potatoes/
Slow Roasted Tomatoes
- Package of cherry tomatoes
- Olive oil
Cut tomatoes in half and put on a baking pan. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle a little s&p. Bake in a 225 degree oven for 3 hours. YES, three hours. These are like crack, and are worth the wait.
Goat Cheese Stuffed Chicken + Corn Salad + Faux Fried Okra
Stuffed Chicken rollups
- 2 chicken breasts (or 4 chicken cutlets)
- Goat cheese
- 1 jalapeño
- ½ shallot, minced
- 2 cloves of garlic, minced
- Salt and pepper
- Olive oil
- Long toothpicks or skewers
Pound out your chicken breasts to about ¼ – ½ inches. Cut each in half so that you have 4 pieces. In a food processor combine the goat cheese, jalapeno, shallot and garlic until it is blended together. Spread on the chicken and roll them up and stick the toothpick in and put on a baking sheet. Bake in a 425 degree oven for about 25-35 minutes.
Sautéed Sweet Corn salad
- 3 ears of fresh corn on the cob
- 2 tbs butter
- 2 tbs cotija cheese
- Handful of fresh bell peppers, chopped (I had an orange one on hand)
- 3 leaves of fresh basil
Cut the corn off the cobs. Melt the butter in a sauté pan. I added some garlic and shallots, but you don’t have to. Add in the corn and sauté for about 8-12 minutes, I like mine a little brown. Add in the bell peppers and cook until soft (3 minutes appx). Turn the heat off and mix in the cotija cheese and chopped basil.
Faux fried okra
- As much okra as you want
- Cornmeal
- Spices
- 1 egg
- ½ cup buttermilk
Cut the okra up in pieces the size you want. Whisk your egg together with the buttermilk. Soak in buttermilk mixture for about 5 minutes. While it’s soaking, add some spices to your cornmeal. I used a little bit of garlic salt, some cayenne pepper and paprika. Totally up to you. Toss the soaked okra in the cornmeal and place on a baking sheet. Bake in a 425 oven for about 15 minutes, flip and cook another 15. Check them at this point and make sure they are crispy. If they aren’t, don’t be a bozo and take them out—let them cook longer. I served my okra with a mixture of equal parts ketchup to sriracha. Also—my cornmeal was stale and this okra actually tasted like sh*t, but I know it will be good next time. Enjoy, and let me know if you have any questions!
Bomb.com Mac ‘n’ Cheese
Make this today. Regret it tomorrow. Who cares? So, when we were growing up, we didn’t have mashed potatoes and gravy with our turkey at Thanksgiving, we had mac n cheese. Up until about 10 years ago, my grandmommy would make it for all special occasions, and it was always the best. Well, 3 weeks ago, she passed away, and after her memorial we all talked about special grandmommy moments, and of course, being chubby mcfatso, my memory was of mac n cheese. When we were kids we boycotted it one year because someone told us there was mustard in it. Mustard is gross, and we were thinking ballpark mustard style mustard, so most of us passed on the mac. Now I realize that mustard was in fact her secret ingredient—but it was dried mustard powder, and it rocks. I now regret skipping out on the mac n cheese that year, and pretty sure I made up for what I missed after I made this recipe.
- 1 box cavatappi—these are grown up squiggles and are, in general, a badass noddle
- 1 quart milk
- 6 tbs butter
- 1/2 cup AP Flour
- 3 Cups grated gruyere cheese (a lot of times this is marketed as fondue cheese)
- 3 cups other cheese—I used 1.5 of white cheddar and 1.5 sharp 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 1 tsp. Ground mustard
- ½ Cup shredded Colby jack cheese (for topping)
- Dash of shredded parmesan.(For topping)
Cook your pasta according to the box instructions, subtracting one minute. Drain the pasta, but don’t rinse it. While you’re cooking the squiggles, heat your milk in a small sauce pan but just get it hot enough to melt things, do not boil it. If you boil it, you lose, and the cheese will taste gross. In another pan (a larger one) melt 6 tablespoons of butter. This is what makes mac n cheese so ungodly delicious—making a roux. Once the butter has melted, add the flour slowly, whisking with one hand while you pour the flour with the other. Cook over low heat for 2 minutes, stirring the whole time. While you’re whisking, add the hot milk with a ladle, a little at a time and cook for about 2-3 minutes, until you have a sort of thick white sauce (gross). Turn the heat off and add all your cheese (except the toppings) and the mustard powder and some salt and pepper to taste . Once it’s all melty and gooey, add in the noodles and mix. Pour into a glass baking dish (greased with PAM), and sprinkle the last two cheeses on top. Put in a 350 degree oven til it’s all crunchy and delicious looking.
This takes a bit of time, but making the cheese sauce like this is totally worth it. Don’t be so lazy—consider the standing and whisking time part of your workout.