Showing posts with label Friday Night Food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friday Night Food. Show all posts

Saturday, November 7, 2015

Clam Chowder Cook Off or TASTE off ( for Weekend Cooking)



I am going to link up with Weekend Cooking at Beth Fish Reads!  YOU can too!
Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend.



I've talked about our Friday nights before ( click here to see all the Friday night fun!)
From Nov. 8th 2009:  Speaking of friends, our Friday Nights, if we are not busy, are spent with our friends, the Miltons.  So, actually, the Handyman and I are busy every Friday night.  It started years ago, and has become a tradition.  If neither the Miltons or us have other plans we get together for supper.   Robbie and I like to try different recipes --our husbands like meat and potatoes--we are trying to broaden their lives with good food.
From Oct. 20th, 2014: Robbie and her husband John are our Friday Night Friends.  The ones we have dinner with every Friday night, IF neither of us is doing anything else.
We've been doing it for years and years.
17 to be exact.
It is so comfortable and normal I can wear my slippers over there if I want to.
And sometimes I do.

It's the same today!
So, when I wanted to try out different kinds of Clam Chowders, I knew it would have to be done on a Friday night.
I needed good honest tasters.



After reading Heather's post about clam chowder I thought--hmmmm, I'm going to try this.  We really haven't given Manhattan Clam Chowder a chance.  And I'm sure the Handyman didn't even know that a Rhode Island clam chowder existed.
I feel that soup is the easiest thing in the world to make.  You just chop and add--all into one big pot.  But when you are making 3 different soups it gets a bit more complicated. Still, once it was done, there was nothing left to do last minute and that's always nice-- you can have a glass of wine and visit.
I served appetizers and drinks and let my Friday Night guests get settled in and then I presented them with this:
Rhode Island Clam Chowder.


Robbie took one bite and said---you don't have to bring out any other soup. This is delicious!
And it was!  It was clear and a brothy (you didn't know I was an expert soup describer, did you?  BROTHY! It's a new trendy descriptive word meaning that you can really taste the clams--and they are SO GOOD. )
I used Heather's recipe from "All Roads Lead to the Kitchen"
To steal from Heather, because she says it best:  It seems to be the version that tastes (dare I say) the purest. It's broth is clear, and tastes like ocean air...salty...clammy. It has some underlying heat from a healthy dose of black pepper, as well.

All I know is that is to die for!



Next, I brought out the Manhattan version--in a tomato broth.   Most people here in the Western part of the United States steer clear of this one.
I have no idea why after tasting this one!  (again Heather's)
It has my mouth watering even now!
It was spicy and tasty and YUMMY!
My tasters liked it too.  They were now having trouble making a 'favorite' decision.
This Manhattan Clam Chowder is laden with clams and chunks of potato nestled in a tomato-based broth with a hint of underlying heat, and a bit of smokiness lent by the addition of bacon.


I used mild Rotel tomatoes and added a small can of tomato sauce to Heather's recipe.
This one is one of my favorites!


Last but never least is New England Clam Chowder.
The old standard.
I used my friend Barbara Brown's recipe ( I've adopted it as my own, but she might be reading this, so I can't steal it outright)
This is very good. Creamy and velvety and traditional tasting.
It's the best!!  For New England style.



What would your favorite be?


A few pics of my tasters before you get the results.
My sweet daughter-in-law, helped me make the Bourbon Bread Pudding for dessert.
and the Handyman and John are ALWAYS playing cribbage.
And my son and Robbie are 'not-so' patiently waiting to have soup.
Thanks to them for putting up with me and my weird food night ideas.
Scroll down to see the soup they chose as their favorite.





These soups were all great---could easily stand alone and win any contest against like soups--YES, they are THAT good!
But I asked my people to pick their most favorite kind of clam chowder...
and they chose.......


New England Clam Chowder!
They are lovers of traditional and what is familiar to them, but it was a great choice.  It's a really good soup!
Hooray Barb!!
**********************************

Heavenly Clam Chowder (that's the name Barb gave me)
(and this is how she wrote the recipe for me)

Cut 5 slices bacon into 1-inch pieces and cook in the soup kettle till limp.....about 5 minutes.
Add 1 large chopped onion and 1 cup chopped celery and cook until onion is limp...about 10 minutes.
Add 3-4 potatoes, cut into 1/2-inch chunks, 1/4 cup parsley, 1/2 tsp salt, 1/4 tsp pepper and 1 quart chicken broth.
Cover and and cook until potatoes are tender...about 30 minutes.
Stir in 2 10oz cans of minced clams with liquid.
Stir in 1 quart of milk and cook until soup is hot, but not boiling.
Blend 5-6 tablespoons of cornstarch with 1/4 cup water until smooth and add to the soup.
Continue cooking until soup boils and thickens.
Taste and add more salt if necessary.
***************
Things I did differently
I used only 1/2 onion
I used half and half instead of milk
I used "new" potatoes and left the skin on
I used 3 cans of minced clams with juice
I used more than a quart of chicken broth/stock
**********************
These two soups tied for 2nd place and you can find the originals at
All Roads Lead to The Kitchen
(Heather once had  a Tortilla Soup finding challenge that lasted a year---we tried to find the best! I might have to have a taste test challenge for that soup next!)
Heather did say she adapted soups from this article: The Clam Chowder wars by Sam Sifton.
They are SO GOOD!
Manhattan Clam Chowder
I used mild Rotel tomatoes and added a small can of tomato sauce to Heather's recipe.
Ingredients (serves 6)
  • 1 pound small clams, scrubbed (about 24-26)
  • 1 (10 ounce) can of whole baby clams
  • 4 ounces bacon
  • 1 medium onion, cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 2 stalks celery, cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 1 large carrot, cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 fresh bay leaf
  • 6 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 1/2 teaspoon crushed red chile flakes, or to taste
  • 12 ounces Yukon gold potatoes (about 2 medium), cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 6 cups clam broth, stock or juice (or seafood stock, water, or a combo) (See Notes)
  • 1 (14 ounce) can petite diced tomatoes
  • 1/4 cup chopped parsley
  • 1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper
Instructions
Place the clams in a large pot and cover with 1 quart of water. Set pot over medium-heat heat and bring to a boil, then cover, and reduce to a simmer. Cook until all the clams have opened, about 12 minutes; discard any clams that don't open. Set a strainer over a bowl and line it with cheesecloth or a damp coffee filter; pour the cooking liquid through the strainer. Remove the clams from their shells.
Drain the canned clams, adding the juice to the reserved clam broth from above. Combine the clams; run your knife through half of the clams a few times, just to roughly chop some. Set combined clams and broth aside (this will count towards your 6 cups).
Cut the bacon crosswise ito 1/4-inch strips. Put in a heavy pot or Dutch oven over low heat, stirring occasionally, and cook until done, 12-14 minutes. Scoop out the bacon and transfer it to a paper towel-lined plate; reserve. You should have about 2 tablespoons of bacon grease left in the pot; if you don't, add a bit of oil or fat to make that amount.
Set the pot back on the stove over medium heat and add onions, celery, and carrots. Cook until beginning to soften, 7-8 minutes. Add garlic, bay leaf, thyme, and crushed red chile flakes; cook 1 minute longer. Add potatoes, clam broth (or other recommended liquid), and tomatoes with their juices. Bring back to a boil, then reduce to a simmer for 20 minutes, or until potatoes are tender.
Stir in the reserved clams and bacon, plus the parsley and white pepper. Cook gently for another 3-5 minutes without letting it come to a boil (to keep clams from getting tough). Remove from heat then taste and adjust seasoning (don't add any salt until you've tasted, it may not need it because of the bacon, tomatoes and broth). Remove bay leaf and thyme stems before serving.
I like to garnish mine with a couple of clean clam shells (that can picked out easily), but that's all for looks.
notes:If you don't want to use this reserved clam broth, or if you don't have enough, you could make up the difference (or substitute) with bottled clam juice, seafood stock, or water.
If you don't have access to fresh clams, you can substitute them with 4 to 6 ounces of canned clams (whole or chopped). Save the juices, and sub as much clam juice, stock, or water as you need to get the amount of broth you need for the recipe.
*****
Rhode Island Clam Chowder
Ingredients (serves 6-8)
  • 12 to 16 ounces canned clams, chopped or whole (see note)
  • 4 ounces bacon
  • 2 small yellow onions, cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 2 large ribs celery, cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 1/2 cup white wine (nothing fruity, choose dry)
  • 16 ounces red potatoes, cut into 1/4-inch dice
  • 1 quart clam juice, broth (or fish or seafood stock)
  • few sprigs thyme
  • 1 bay leaf
  • freshly ground black pepper, to taste
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
Instructions
Drain the canned clams, pouring the liquid from them into a 4-cup glass measuring cup. Add enough clam stock or juice (or alternative) to yield 4 cups (1 quart); set aside. At this point, if you want to chop any of the clams, do that and then reserve them.
Cut the bacon crosswise ito 1/4-inch strips. Put in a heavy pot or Dutch oven over medium heat, stirring occasionally, and cook until done, 5-7 minutes. Scoop out the bacon and transfer it to a paper towel-lined plate; reserve. You should have about 1-1/2 tablespoons of bacon grease left in the pot; if you don't, add a bit of oil or fat to make that amount (or pour off any extra).
Set the pot back over medium heat and add the onion and celery. Cook, stirring occasionally for 5 minutes, or until soft and turning translucent. Pour in the wine and let it bubble up for 1 minute.
Add the potatoes, clam broth, thyme, and bay leaf. Bring back to a boil, then reduce to a simmer for 15 minutes, or until potatoes are tender.
Stir the reserved clams and bacon into the pot and add a good amount of black pepper (I use 1 teaspoon to start, then add more to my bowl - taste to find your sweet spot), to taste. I usually find that clam chowder does not need any extra salt, especially if you've used canned clams, as the bacon adds some, too; be sure to taste before automatically adding some in. Let sit for 30 minutes, then remove the thyme stems and bay leaf. Warm slightly before serving, if you wish.
Stir in the parsley just before serving, with oyster crackers on the side.
note:
If you want to use fresh clams, you'll need about 48 small hardshells. Place the clams in a large pot and cover with 1-1/2 quarts of water. Set pot over medium-heat heat and bring to a boil, then cover, and reduce to a simmer. Cook until all the clams have opened, about 12 minutes; discard any clams that don't open. Set a strainer over a bowl and line it with cheesecloth or a damp coffee filter; pour the cooking liquid through the strainer. Remove the clams from their shells. Use this liquid where the recipe calls for clam broth.
You can also use a mixture of fresh and canned clams. Just use enough canned clams to make up for what you don't have in fresh.





Sunday, October 12, 2014

Friday Friend Recipe #27 -- Spaghetti Sauce #2


Making my way thru my Friday Friend Cookbook, one recipe at a time.

Friday Friend cookbook:   I have about 50 of my closest friends and family on an e-mail forum which I called the Friday Friends.  At first, most of them didn't know each other, (they knew me) but over the past 15 years, we've answered and shared silly--and serious---questions,  exchanged Secret Santa Christmas gifts,  had a dieting contest in which we paid a $1 a week and that money went to a scholarship fund for a Friday Friends son's memorial scholarship, and we went on a great vacation for my 52 birthday.

AND,  we contributed recipes for a cookbook.
Which brings me to this... recipe #27

Robbie Milton's
"Little" sauce
the 2nd in the FF spaghetti sauces




The only thing harder than taking a photograph of salad is taking one of spaghetti.  Well, actually, many spaghetti dinners--and making  them look different.
You will just have to bear (or is it bare?) with me, because I asked all of them, my 50 Friday Friends, how they made spaghetti and 24 of them answered me...so I have 24 spaghetti dinners to post for you.
This is number 2.

You can't really go wrong with any pasta, so I will just forgo the description of how good this tasted.  
For the record--it did.

I am probably the only person in the world who still makes red sauce from scratch and not out of a jar.
The jar tasted fine tho, AND it's about the memories I have when I make a friend's recipe from this book.


Little Sauce
(That's what Barb, the publisher named it---she was trying to name 24 red sauces. LOL)
by Robbin Milton via the FF Cookbook.

Brown and season hamburger
Add one jar of Ragu
Add some basil, garlic, and other seasonings.
Simmer and serve over pasta

There you have it. 
That's it.




see Robbie here:  (all of her recipes I mean)

Robbie is on the right in the photo below.
(my friend Jean on the left)

Robbie and her husband John are our Friday Night Friends.  The ones we have dinner with every Friday night, IF neither of us is doing anything else.
We've been doing it for years and years.
17 to be exact.
It is so comfortable and normal I can wear my slippers over there if I want to.
And sometimes I do.




Robbie will probably not like this picture below, as I caught her in the middle of eating a cracker.
BUT---if you notice she is looking at THE FRIDAY FRIEND COOKBOOK!

It was, of course,  Friday Night and we have wine and food, our husbands are playing cribbage.

I love our Friday Nights!




I am going to link up with 



I know it's not an original recipe or even something out of the ordinary, but
Michelle says:
When someone says "I'm making a gumbo," it means family and friends are invited.
And this cookbook, which my family and friends contributed to, is fun for me!

and 


Because.... this is  a food related post with random thoughts.




Saturday, August 9, 2014

Saturday Snapshot


 My Saturday Snapshot!







Why are the Handyman and friends making faces? 
Because they thought they were getting some really good champagne.
Some Dom Perignon.

And.... um, you can tell by their faces.... it wasn't very good.

In fact, we didn't finish it.
But it was fun giving it a try!

It was given to  my friend Robbie by a good friend of hers for their anniversary ---or birthday or something--whatever it was, it was a celebration!
This great vintage of 1995.....or is it 1985?
The bottle didn't match the box.
Maybe it was re-gifted?






Every Friday night we have dinner with our friends, The Miltons.  Unless one of us is busy of course.
We've been getting together on Friday nights for the last 17 years.
Sometimes our kids join us, this night at their house, their son and his girl friend were there to help us taste the spoils.  (that's almost not a joke!)

We always have a great time.
All we do is have dinner---sometimes we/they have even gone home before 9pm.
We just eat and have great discussions around a beautiful table.







I am linking to Saturday Snapshot.
Be sure and stop by to check out other Saturday Snapshots at West Metro Mommy Reads.


Sunday, November 8, 2009

Lamb Chops with gorgonzola butter sauce

The problem with being way behind both in my blogging life AND technology, means that I am having trouble with "Blogger". I am hoping it is just me and that I need some "reminders". Last night I couldn't "cut and paste" in a blog that I was writing. Today I can't move pictures around, but I can cut and paste  (hooray!)
I just want things to be easy in my blogging life.
I loved everyone's comments about "putting up".  I didn't actually get anything "put up" this fall, but I do have some pickles from my mom and sister-in-law, and some apple butter from a friend.
 
Speaking of friends, our Friday Nights, if we are not busy, are spent with our friends, the Miltons.  So, actually, the Handyman and I are busy every Friday night.  It started years ago, and has become a tradition.  If neither the Miltons or us have other plans we get together for supper.   Robbie and I like to try different recipes --our husbands like meat and potatoes--we are trying to broaden their lives with good food.
 
This is one meal, I made over the summer, and everyone loved it.
Lamb Chops  (I guess the men, do have a broader palate than some, as not everyone likes lamb) with Gorganzola Butter.  (not everyone likes gorganzola either)
I found this recipe at  "What's Cooking America"    (click on the  link for the entire recipe).
 
What to pick up at the market:
for the chops
extra virgin olive oil  ( 1/2 cup)
chopped shallots  (1/4 cup)
minced garlic (2 Tblsp)
finely chopped rosemary, (4 tsp fresh)
coarse salt and coarsely ground pepper
rack of lamb cut into 8 double chops (2 1/2 pounds)
 
for the gorgonzola butter
butter  ( 1/2 cup)
minced shallot  (2 tsp)
minced garlic  (1 tsp)
gorgonzola cheese  (2 oz)
extra virgin olive oil (2 Tblsp)
freshly squeezed lemon juice  (1 Tblsp)
 
The Gorgonzola butter actually becomes a sauce, that is spooned over the chops.
You grill the chops and melt the butter ingredients together and then plate them up.
Here are my pictures....  in no particular order, because I can't seem to move them around  ( I also can't find spellcheck on this new blogger look....am I just going crazy?  I know that I haven't blogged in a while. These changes are probably old to you)
 
A platter full of grilled lamb chops with the gorgonzola butter sauce








My dinner plate.



A better pic of the platter of chops





One must marinate the chops before grilling them.... (I told you, they were in no particular order.  LOL )




I had also made bruschetta from tomatoes in my garden.




Cherry tomatoes.  And I toasted some bread with garlic olive oil.



Well, I guess the tomatoes weren't from my garden!   It was August when I made this meal.
It was a great meal tho.... I suggest you go the link to find out how to make it.  It was very company worthy.
(messy kitchen---Friday night after work--trying to make a "company" meal.)





Friday, August 22, 2008

Friday Night Food at our House

Friday Night Food at our house is usually dinner with our friends, The Miltons. But this Friday night the Miltons were not home. So we had to fend for ourselves.

Earlier when I got home from work, there was a box waiting for me. A Birthday gift from Theda (my oldest friend... in years of friendship, not in age. LOL ), who is ANOTHER original Friday Friend. NO ONE gives a gift like Theda. She sent me a few of her favorite things...she said if it was good enough for Oprah, it was good enough for her.
So... there were a few of her favorite kitchen gadgets. But they were wrapped, or rolled up in a recipe of hers. A recipe that she liked. It was just way to clever and cute. she just copied or printed out a few of her favorite recipes, or ones she wanted me to try and rolled the gadgets up in them.
She just has a knack with gifts and I love her for them.
Anyway, one of her recipes was a flank steak marinade which I was going to try, but I needed to go to the store to get some flank steak.
Rich went with me. Outside the market they were "fire roasted" some chilies. They smelled good.
So, Rich decided that he was going to make tacos.
Okay, fine, I didn't have to cook.
He bought chicken and onions and tortillas and the fresh-fire roasted chilies.
We came home, he bbq'd the chicken and made margaritas and he was just basically busy going in and out from the kitchen to the grill, when all of the sudden he said, "oh sure, you don't take pictures of MY food."

So.......

I don't really have a recipe, EXCEPT these were by far the best chicken tacos I have ever had!!!
It was the fresh-fire-roasted pablano chilies, I'm sure.
Everything was smoky flavored because he did it all on the grill. Smoky-fresh-chipolte.
OH MY GOSH!!!!I'm gonna quit cooking and leave it up to him!
They were so good!!

mmmmm.....mmmmmm.....mmmmmm

here is his stuff (and remember, just random pictures because he said "so you never take pictures of MY food) so very, casual.

He grilled it all....
onions
chicken
re-heated the fresh-fire-roasted-chilies
tortillas




Then set out the fixings on the kitchen counter




Wah- LA!!!grilled chicken chipolte tacos!!!!




But this post has kind of screwed up Barb's bbq chicken pizza post, that I was going to do (see left )
oh well....that's next.
It's late....hahahaah OKAY, IT'S NOT LATE, I just looked and it's 10:10 on a Friday Night, but it's dark...Rich is watching a movie, with no lights on except me and the computer (I say light when I said me, because there MUST BE a light bulb atop my head....the brilliance, you know. LOL) Anyway, dark, the crickets are chirping outside, and dinner was over a few hours ago... but I WANT ANOTHER ONE!!!
It was the fire-roasted chilies, I tell ya.

Cooking Club--Fondue

Gather, Cook, Share, Repeat. 💖💕💗💞 My heart looks like this when we're together. This is Doug. Doug is not happy.  Doug is a fireman....