Monthly Archives: August 2011

Fresh Ideas for Unusual Fruit Salads

Here are a couple of different style salads to brighten any holiday picnic or bbq you might have planned this coming weekend.

Unusual Fruits Salad

  • 1 cup ripe golden apple
  • 1 cup cantaloupe/ honey dew melon

    Paw-Paw

  • 1 cup grapefruits segments, cubed
  • 1 cup small cucumber, cubed
  • 1 cup ripe paw-paw, cubed
  • 1 cup guavas, cubed
  • 1 cup ripe mangoes, cubed
  • 1 cup firm ripe carambolas, sliced

    Carambolas

  • ¼ cup sliced onion
  • ¼ cup white wine
  • ¼ cup honey
  • Lettuce leaves

Mix together fruits and vegetables,  tossing well. Mix white wine and honey in a small bowl. Stir well and pour over vegetable and fruits. Toss and chill.  Make a doily on a large platter with lettuce leaves, add chilled salad to the platter and serve.

Caribbean Orange-Mango Coleslaw

  • 8 cups shredded green cabbage
  • 2 large mangoes, peeled, pitted and diced
  • ½ medium red bell pepper, thinly sliced
  • ½ medium yellow bell pepper, thinly sliced
  • 6 green onions, thinly sliced
  • cilantro leaves for garnish

Combine cabbage, mangoes, bell peppers, and green onions  in large bowl; stir gently to mix.

Add Orange-Mango Dressing; toss gently to coat.  Garnish with cilantro.  Chill and serve, or store in refrigerator up to 1 day.

Orange-Mango Dressing

  • ½ mango, peeled, pitted and cubed
  • 6 ounces plain nonfat yogurt
  • ¼ cup frozen orange juice concentrate
  • 3 tablespoons lime juice
  • ½ to 1 jalapeño pepper,* stemmed, seeded and minced
  • 1 teaspoon finely minced fresh ginger

Place mango in food processor; process until smooth. Add remaining ingredients; process until smooth.

Mmm…pretty sammich

This is maybe the prettiest sandwich I’ve ever put together.  Sourdough garlic bread, ham, salami, pepper jack, colby, and mozzarella cheeses, sauteed tomatoes (I’ll be so missing these guys when they are gone!), and drizzled with herbed olive oil. Basil in lieu of lettuce.

Awesome Sauce [repost]

I’ve made some tomato sauces this summer that qualify for the label.  I’m pretty sure I’ve mentioned this one before, and teased the recipe.  It is pretty straightforward to make.  Juice a bunch of tomatoes and start them boiling on the stove top.  Now start adding stuff:  The one I’m making today has a head of garlic in it, roughly minced.  I brought in some fresh herbs from the patio garden, a good wad of basil, several sprigs of rosemary, and the same for thyme.  We started some oregano but it died out early and we make do with store bought dried.  There are two grated carrots in there, and a minced onion.  A few ribs of celery diced finely.  Salt and fresh ground back pepper, a few tablespoons of olive oil.  I bet I’m forgetting something, but this will get you very close.

All that’s left to do is simmer the sauce down until it is thick enough to suit you.  Today I started with about six quarts of juice.  I’m not there yet, but I expect to jar one quart, or less.  This stuff makes great pizza sauce.  On pasta it is, well, awesome.

[Edit:]   Made three pints.

Mmm…Mrs J wanted an awesome pie

 

 

Red Pepper Salsa-updated with eggs

When I was asked yesterday what I was going to do with the red pepper salsa, this dish was the first thing I thought of.

I am well pleased with this outcome.  The salsa (relish?) tastes great, with just a hint of heat from the cayenne peppers.  I don’t think I would change a thing.

Mmm…awesome pie

Pizza! pie, that is.  We found some fresh mozzarella in little cherry sized balls, called ciliegine.  They are perfect for a fast pie made on one of my frozen fun crusts.  Also on the pie:  My awesome sauce, fresh basil, and sauteed grape and cherry tomatoes with a sprinkling of aged Parmesan.

Apple Butter Anyone? Updated.

This is how I spent my weekend.  How’d you spend yours?  Do anything fun?

(Updated.  See finally tally at end of post)

Adventures in Apple Butter

It all started with a tree:

A tree filled with crab apples.  And a desire to see them not go to waste.  It took me 20 minutes to pick a 5 gallon bucket full.  I grabbed a few green apples from a neighboring tree to top it off.

Then it was home to wash them.  And wash them and wash them.

I washed 4 sinks full and washed them each three times, culling the bad ones each time.  A couple of things about crab apples:

  1. Bad ones float right to the top.
  2. Black spots always go all the way through the apple – took me about 10 to figure this out – so you can’t cut out the bad stuff.
  3. They seem to suffer from blossom rot, if the stems pulled out they had blossom rot and were rotten throughout.
  4. Unlike the green apples next to them, I saw no evidence of worms or bugs in any apple.  Whew!

Once I figured this out, culling them was pretty quick.  But the thing you need to know is that no matter how much you cull a few bad ones are going to slip through.  Just the nature of their size.  So if that is going to make you queasy, cooking with crab apples probably isn’t for you.

I used three tools for the apple butter and without them I don’t think I would have gone to the trouble.  I cooked them (basically steamed them) in my pressure cooker, I pureed them in my Vita-Mix and I cooked the apple butter down in my slow-cooker.  I can’t imagine the amount of work it would have taken without these.

Next step was to pressure cook them.  Whole: peels, seeds, stems and all.   I added about 1 cup of water and the steamer tray to my pressure cooker and then I cooked them for 25 minutes.  Which is probably a bit long, but that made sure they were good and mushy before the blending stage.

After cooling each batch a bit, I ran them through the Vita-Mix – peels, stems, seeds and all.  Keep in mind the seeds are minuscule  and the stems are smaller than grape stems and cooked tender.  To puree this in a hand puree’er would be to lose much of  the texture and flavors of the whole crab apples. You’d also lose a good portion of your tiny apples.

After running it through the Vita-Mix, I added about 1/2 cup sugar and 1 tbsp of pumpkin spice (cinnamon, ginger, cloves and nutmeg) for each 6 cups of puree.

This is the smooth mixture from the blender, before cooking down in slow-cooker

Then the mixture was added to the slow-cooker, filled to about 2 inches from the top.  Set the slow-cooker on low and use a wooden spoon to prop the lid open to let the steam escape. Because what you want is for the mixture to cook down by half and caramelize.    This takes 8-12 hours.  After the first batch, when the sides browned a little too much, I stirred the next batches every hour or so to keep it from burning.  After it cooked down and was the consistency I was looking for, I did it all over again.

As you can see, there is still a lot to do.  I am cooking the next batch of apples as I put this blog post together.  I only jarred two pints – these are not canned and will need to be refrigerated – one to use here and one to take to work tomorrow.  The rest I plan to can tomorrow night when all the butter is cooked.  I’m planning on both pints and 1/2 pints, most of which I will give away.  I still don’t have a good idea how much this is going to make, but I’ll wager 6 additional pints and 6  half pints.  I’ll update you when it’s all done.  Oh, and by the way, it tastes amazing.  And all weekend long my house smelled like fall.

UPDATED:  Final tally was 12 pints and 12 half pints.  I canned all but 3 pints and 4 half pints which were given away immediately to friends and neighbors with instructions to keep refrigerated.  I never expected it to make so much.

Red Pepper Salsa

Saturday I made another batch of the salsa verde with the tomatillos and various green peppers I bought at this week’s farmer’s market.  I had in the back of my mind making the same sort of salsa from red peppers.  Red salsas are common but they are all red from tomatoes, at least it seems that way.  I bought enough red bells and marconis yesterday to at least give my idea a trial run.  I picked up a handful of fresh, bright red cayennes that I thought might work in it.  Didn’t decide to go with the hot ones until today when all the others were cut up and ready for the pot.

I followed the same general plan as for the green salsa I linked to above and ended up with just a tad more than two pints.  I pressure canned those, and the surplus went into the fridge.  Almost afraid to taste it, but I will.  Any day now, I promise.

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Mmm…bacon cheddar jalapeno cornbread

This is pretty simple and easy to get right.  It is great tasting and versatile, you can eat this by itself but you will want to slather some butter on it.  And as long as you are doing cornbread you can’t go wrong with ham and beans.

Recipes?  Moi?  lol…OK

First thing, fry 3 or 4 strips of bacon in your cast iron skillet.  Don’t fry them all the way crisp, just get the grease out of ‘em and place them on a paper towel.  You will need the grease so pour it out into something to let it cool down a bit.  Go ahead and turn your oven to 400.  Put the skillet in there with the bacon grease still in it (less the 1/4 cup).

This part is straight off the corn meal container from Quaker:

1-1/4 cups AP flour

3/4 cup yellow corn meal

1/4 cup sugar (optional!  We use Splenda)

2 t baking powder

1/2 t salt

1 cup of milk

2 egg whites or 1 whole egg (I use the whole egg)

1/4 cup oil (bacon grease! bacon grease!!)

And now for the extras- 1 cup shredded cheddar, half a small red onion, and a couple of minced jalapenos (one red, one green).

Mix everything together and scrape into the hot skillet (still filmed with bacon grease), smooth it out some, and put those pieces of bacon on the top.  The batter should be sizzling when you put it back into the hot oven.  Give it a look after 20 minutes.

Don’t forget breakfast!

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