Author Archives: lindsey1

Kick off barbecue season with these burger recipes.

In all our patriotic glory, we’re ready to serve up one of our all-time favorite burger recipes.

What’s in your best burger recipe? Do you stick to the basics when it comes to your burger or prefer something cuter like this Pokemon burger from Down Under? Or, maybe you like something that bites back? In that case, there’s always the roasted tarantula burger — yes, it’s a real thing!

Whatever you fancy when it comes to the best beef (or chorizo, veggie or chicken) burger, these delicious burger recipes will keep guests happy throughout grilling season.
COOK TIME: 10 minutes
PREP TIME: 15 minutes
SERVINGS: 4

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Why not mimic the burger favored by Adam Rippon, Ina Garten and Guy Fieri? This copycat In-N-Out burger is so good, you’ll be going animal style in no time.


Give your burger a little extra love with a California-style treatment by topping it with Gruyere, cumin and green chile sauce.


Cheddar Bacon Ranch Burger Bowls

Nathan Congleton

SERVINGS: 6

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Cheddar. Bacon. Ranch. This easy and cheesy burger just may be the American dream.


Black Bean Burger with Sweet Hoisin Glaze

Dee Dee Pernell's Hoisin Burgers

Nathan Congleton

COOK TIME: 5 minutes
PREP TIME: 25 minutes
SERVINGS: 8

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Want something lighter yet still flavorful? Try this black bean burger with a hoisin glaze. It’s packed with protein, fiber, iron and many other vital nutrients. Plus, it tastes amazing!


Trisha Yearwood’s sweet pea burgers have a garbanzo bean and sweet potato base, and are tasty as they are sweet. She serves them on onion burger buns to balance the sweet with a little savory.


Chicken Chorizo Burgers

Chicken Chorizo Burgers

Nathan Congleton

COOK TIME: 25 minutes
PREP TIME: 10 minutes
YIELD: 8 burgers

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This flavor blast of a burger uses ground chicken and chorizo instead of beef. The chorizo keeps the chicken meat extra moist during the grilling process, but you can swap in sweet Italian sausage or ground turkey if you’re prefer a less spicy burger.


 The Perfect Burger (aka The Crunch Burger)

Bobby Flay's Crunch Burger

Samantha Okazaki

SERVINGS: 4

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For all the pickle lovers who prefer a crisp sensation over a pickle juice slushy, Bobby Flay’s burger recipe is the one for you. This is the one, the only, the perfect “crunch” burger.


Sunny’s Nacho Bacon Burger

Nathan Congleton

SERVINGS: 6

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The secret to this burger’s over-the-top flavor is in the center. Hiding inside is a molten pocket of gooey nacho cheese dip. It’s a little crazy, and totally delicious.


Perfect Bloody Mary Burgers

Justin Chapple's Bloody Mary Burgers

Nathan Congleton

COOK TIME: 10 minutes
REP TIME: 20 minutes
SERVINGS: 4

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Love a good bloody mary? This burger version uses everything from celery seeds to hot sauce to create a savory fix to sink your teeth into.


Bacon-Stuffed Turkey Burgers with Grilled Peaches

Jamika Pessoa's Bacon-Stuffed Turkey Burger

Nathan Congleton

COOK TIME: 25 minutes
PREP TIME: 15 minutes
SERVINGS: 6

Get the recipe

This turkey burger takes classic country flavors to the next level. Stuffed with crumbled bacon and topped with pepper jack cheese and grilled peaches, it’s just the right combination of savory, spicy, smoky, sweet and juicy.

 

Pity the fool who can’t love pasta fazool

Pity the fool who can’t love pasta fazool

Original Source: https://thetakeout.com/recipe-pasta-fagioli-fazool-1826733332

If you’re like me (from New Jersey with a last name ending in a vowel), you very likely grew up eating “pasta fazool,” long before we found out that it’s actually “pasta fagioli”—technically pasta e fagioli or “pasta and beans.” Neapolitans, who have their own group of dialects, call it “fasule,” hence the Italian-American pronunciation.

Recipes vary from family to family, but, for the most part, they all include three core elements: pasta, white cannellini beans, and a tomato base. It’s hearty, peasant comfort food in its purest form.

Full disclosure: For the first 17 or so years of my life, I didn’t love it. The main reason was I’d always been a pasta-and-red-sauce fiend. I’m pretty sure the first word that came out of my infant mouth was “macaroni,” and I felt that its bean-heavy cousin was a subpar imposter (impasta?) that didn’t really need to be a part of the bi-weekly dinner rotation. For one thing, the presence of the beans lightened the color of the sauce, giving it a pinkish-orange hue—it literally paled in comparison!

For another, the recipe usually called for a lesser, B-list noodle, like ditalini (the micro-tubes) or tiny elbows. I was a fusilli and cavatelli kid. It didn’t help that the pasta was usually overcooked, broken, and generally mush.

I also had weird, inexplicable texture issues with the beans. When I knew it was going to be fazool night, I begged my parents to purée the cannellini in the blender so I didn’t have to see or feel them.

You probably can sense where I’m going with this. My tastes matured, I got over my bean-phobia and I developed a deep nostalgia for the flavors of my youth. While that’s certainly all true, it’s really only half the story. Somehow I managed to reach adulthood without realizing that pasta fagioli is supposed to be a soup. The version I’d grown accustomed to was unnecessarily “dry,” thanks to an over-abundance of macaroni—the noodles absorbed most of the liquid. I learned only recently that this was my dad’s fault. I was over at my parents’ house and my mom was making chicken soup. I asked her why she dumped an entire one-pound box of wagon-wheel pasta in the pot and the conversation kind of went like this:

Mom: That’s the only way your father will eat it.

Me: You mean chicken “soup” with the faint suggestion of broth?

Mom: Don’t start.

(To her credit, it was delicious. I just don’t think you could legally call it soup.) And then there was the question of noodle consistency.

Me: Why are you letting it cook so long? Don’t you want it to be al dente?

Mom: Your father doesn’t like it al dente.

Everything finally made sense. (Love you, Mom and Dad. Never change).

Since then, I’ve fine-tuned my own recipe for pasta fagioli, using my parents’ iteration as a jumping off point—keeping the small, soup-friendly ditalini and elbows—and jazzing it up with more intense flavors (read: exponentially more fresh garlic and a more generous handful of crushed red pepper), color (fresh spinach and/or arugula), and, well, meat (usually pancetta, but sometimes guanciale when I really feel like splurging. If you don’t indulge in the sins of the flesh, I’ve also included a recipe for the vegetarian version below).

The Ciolettis’ original instructions call for a can full of water, but I opt for chicken or vegetable stock.

Finally, the tomatoes make a world of difference. Most of the time I use canned tomatoes, since the window for really good fresh tomatoes is incredibly narrow and I typically crave this dish in the less agriculture-friendly seasons. I absolutely swear by the San Marzano variety because they really are the best plum tomatoes in the world (it has something to do with the volcanic soil in which they grow). Usually a 28-ounce San Marzano can will cost you $2 to $3 more than a comparable container of your average peeled tomatoes, but you will taste the difference. And caveat emptor: If the label says “San Marzano,” it doesn’t necessarily mean it’s the real deal. If the package doesn’t include “D.O.P.” (Denominazione di Origine Protetta, like an AOC), the contents aren’t authentic. Unless you go for the uber-pricey guanciale as your pig meat of choice, the $5 can of tomatoes is likely to be your biggest expense in this easy and economical belly filler.

Cioletti Family’s Improved Pasta Fagioli (Pasta Fazool)
3 Tbsp. olive oil
1 large can (28 oz.) D.O.P. San Marzano tomatoes
6 oz. pancetta, finely chopped (for richer flavor, use guanciale, but it’s pricey)
1/2 pound small, dry pasta (ditalini or elbows)
6-8 cloves of garlic
5 oz. fresh spinach or arugula, or a combination of both
2 cans (15 oz.) of cannellini beans
2 cups chicken stock
Large pinch crushed red pepper flakes
1-2 tsp. salt, plus more for pasta water
2 tsp. oregano (optional)
Grated Pecorino Romano to taste
2-3 quarts water

Chop the pancetta into small cubes (it’s available pre-chopped, if you want to save some time). Cut each garlic clove into quarters—I like big pieces, but feel free to mince or slice if you don’t want chunks. Crush the canned tomatoes in a blender or food processor.

Then, in a medium-size pot, heat the oil for about one minute over medium heat. Add the pancetta and sauté for 3 to 4 minutes or until it shows signs of mild crispiness. Toss in the garlic and stir with the pancetta for another 3 minutes or so, or until it starts to soften and show little bits of brown. Sprinkle in the red pepper flakes and let infuse the oil for about 30 seconds. Add the tomatoes and 1 teaspoon of salt and combine with the ingredients already in the pot. Bring to a simmer, stirring repeatedly.

Pour in the beans, liquid and all and continue stirring. After about a minute, add one bean-can full of chicken stock. Stir again, and after another minute, add the optional oregano. Lower the heat and let cook for about 15 minutes, uncovered. Stir occasionally and keep an eye on the consistency. If the broth/sauce gets too viscous, add more stock, an ounce at a time. Also, check periodically for salt level and add more, to taste.

While the sauce is cooking, fill two-thirds of a medium-size pot with water and bring to a boil. Generously salt the water as it starts to boil. Add the pasta and cook until al dente (see directions on the box) and strain. Return the noodles to the empty pasta pot and turn off the heat under the sauce pot. Scoop about 3 tablespoons of the cooked pasta into the bottom of a bowl, ladle in the sauce/broth and stir together. Grate as much cheese as you desire on top and combine with the rest of the soup.

There’s enough pasta for about four servings, with plenty of broth left over to freeze and reheat for another meal. For a larger party, cook a full pound of the pasta. Do not combine pasta with the leftovers before freezing, unless you want a big, mushy mess.

For a vegetarian version, swap out chicken stock for vegetable stock and omit the meat.

by: Jeff Cioletti

Sweeten your standard sloppy joe recipe with cola

Source: https://www.avclub.com/sweeten-your-standard-sloppy-joe-recipe-with-cola-1818489532

Welcome to MmmPop, our exploration of unexpected ways to use soda pop in recipes.

A colleague of my dad’s—it was either Poz or Ratt or someone he met tending bar in the ’70s, I can’t recall—gave him a sloppy joe recipe that I’ve now been making for over 20 years.

Just ketchup and Coke?” I remember asking my dad. It sounded like Ratt’s handiwork, in hindsight. I had concurrent thoughts of “you’re pulling my chain, that’s disgusting” and “that sounds easy to make.” When pressed, he just shrugged and confirmed by repeating the two ingredients.

This happened when I was 17, the perfect age to not question the recipe’s plausibility and just run with it. It was easy to remember and cheap to make. Oddly, nobody in my family had made it when I grew up (a red flag if there was ever one), so there was no frame of reference.

But after 20 years of tinkering, adding more ingredients, and a lot of trial and error, I think I’ve nailed it down. The ketchup and cola actually work well together: The caramel flavor of the cola concentrates as it cooks down, and the ketchup’s tomato-onion-garlic savoriness tempers the sweetness. A few extra savory and spicy balancers like mustard and Worcestershire sauce give it character. Using pepper strips instead of diced peppers adds that earthy bell pepper flavor to the beef, but makes it way easier to fish out than those little veggie chunks.

The result is a sloppy joe that puts a canned mix to shame. Of course, this is like saying it’s the best sweatpants you own. It’s not something you’ll pull out when the guests are over, but it’s perfect for something to put on the back of the stove on a weekend afternoon. It’s more Red Roof Inn than Ritz-Carlton, but I sure love it. As do my kids. Thanks, Ratt. (Or Poz—or was it Lack?)

Cola sloppy joe

1 pound ground beef
1 cup ketchup
1 cup cola
1 red pepper
1/2 cup chicken broth
1 tsp. onion powder
2 cloves minced garlic
A few dashes of hot sauce
4-5 dashes of Worcestershire sauce
A one-Mississippi two-Mississippi squirt of yellow mustard
Salt and pepper to taste

Cut the top and bottom off a red pepper, removing the seeds and white flesh. Cut it into thin strands. Mince two cloves of garlic.

In a Dutch oven, sauté ground beef over medium-high heat, adding salt and pepper to taste. Cook until brown, about five minutes. Once browned, pour out much of the rendered fat from the beef (otherwise, your sloppy joes will have a waxy texture). Add onion powder, then the minced garlic, sautéing for another two minutes. Now deglaze the bottom of your pan by adding the half cup of chicken broth (or water). Scrape off that crusty brown stuff—that’s flavor, baby.

Add the red pepper strips and a cup each of cola and ketchup, and simmer at a medium-low heat. After a few minutes, add more black pepper if you’d like, a few shakes of hot sauce, and a few spirals of yellow mustard.

Continue cooking this over medium-low heat for about 30 minutes. Let it hang out there, stirring occasionally, lid off, so it’s still simmering, and reduce until it’s a really thick sauce. Eventually, all the sauce will reduce down, until it ceases to be soupy, and more ground meat enveloped in the sauce.

Taste as you go. It won’t lack sweetness. It may, however, need some salt or vinegar to balance it out—and you may consider adding more mustard, Worcestershire, or hot sauce. Trust your instincts.

Heap high and generous on hamburger buns. Pairs well with potato chips, a cold beverage, and a recital of the Pledge Of Allegiance.

“Naked” Lobster Rolls

naked-lobster-rolls-recipe

Source: http://domesticate-me.com/naked-lobster-rolls/


Yield: 4 servings

Ingredients
  • 4 1½ lb live lobsters (or 1 lb picked lobster meat if you’re feeling lazy)
  • 3 tablespoons kosher salt
  • 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided
  • 2 cloves garlic, mince
  • 3 tablespoons minced shallots
  • 1¼ teaspoons lemon zest
  • ¼ cup dry white wine
  • 1 tablespoon fresh tarragon, chopped
  • 4 New England-style hot dog buns
  • 1 tablespoon softened butter

Instructions

  1. Fill a large stockpot half full with water. Add the salt and bring the water to a rolling boil. (If you do not have a giant stockpot, chillax. You can use the largest pot you have and cook your lobsters two at a time.)
  2. Plunge your lobsters headfirst into the boiling water and put the lid on immediately. Boil your lobsters for 10-15 minutes (hard-shell take longer to cook than soft-shell…ask your lobster purveyor to tell you which type of shells you’re working with), or until the shells turn bright red. When cooked, remove the lobsters from the pot using tongs and drain them in a colander.
  3. When your lobsters are cool enough to handle, it’s time to pick the lobster meat. (I like to put the lobsters in a baking dish and stick them in the freezer for about 10 minutes to cool them down more quickly). First, pull the arms from each of the lobsters (the arms are attached to the claws, obviously) and set them aside. Then pinch near the top of each tail and twist to separate it from the body. Discard the heads/thorax (or if you are a fancy chef, you could use them to flavor a lobster or seafood soup). To pick the meat from the claws, hyperextend the lobster’s thumb and pull it off. Use a cracker, knife, kitchen shears or your hands to break the shell and remove the meat. Use a cracker to break the shell of the knuckles (the connection between the claws and the body) and remove the meat using a small fork. To pick the tail meat, you can either split the tail down the center with a knife or pull the edges of the tail shell firmly apart, snapping it apart. You may see some green tomalley on the tail meat where it connected to the body. Don’t freak out, just wipe it with a paper towel and forget about it immediately.
  4. Roughly chop all of your picked Lobster meat into large chunks. I like to only chop the tail meat, leaving the claws and knuckles intact, but feel free to chop everything if you like.
  5. Heat 1½ tablespoons of butter in a sauté pan. When melted, add the garlic, shallots and lemon zest and sauté for about 2 minutes until the shallots have softened and the garlic is fragrant.
  6. Add the white wine and allow it to evaporate completely. This should take about 3 minutes.
  7. Add the remaining 4½ tablespoons of butter to the pan and whisk until melted and foamy.
  8. Add your picked lobster meat to the pan and cook in the butter sauce for about 1 minute or until heated through. Remove from the heat and mix in the chopped tarragon.
  9. Heat a grill pan over medium heat. Lightly butter the outside of each bun with softened butter. Grill the buns for 1 minute on each side until they are toasted and have some badass grill marks.
  10. Fill each bun with your buttery lobster meat and go to town.

You Can Now Use Google Image Search to Find Recipes

Source: http://skillet.lifehacker.com/you-can-now-use-google-image-search-to-find-recipes-1797507669

Scrolling through pictures of food has always been fun, but you can now use Google image search on your phone to easily find recipes while browsing through your favorite food porn.

The change seems to come from newly supported schema around images and video, but what it means is that you can find tons of delicious looking (and hopefully delicious tasting) recipes using your phone. To do this, one simply:

  1. Types the food they desire into a Google image search.
  2. Clicks on the little “recipe” tags they wish to further investigate.

Once you find a recipe you like the look and sound of, you are able to make that delicious-looking image into a delicious-tasting reality, though you’ll probably have to go to the grocery store first.

Google image search now shows videos and recipes | Search Engine

How to Use Up Pretty Much Any Leftover Berries by Turning Them Into Salsa..

Berry recipes tend to veer towards the dessert end of things, but their juicy, sweet-and-tart nature can brighten up a whole world of savory. If you find your CSA basket runneth over with one particular type of berry—and just don’t feel like turning on the oven for a pie or cobbler—consider making a fresh and fruity berry salsa.

To transform pretty much any berry into a salsa—I say “pretty much” to ward off berry pendanticalness; I know bananas are technically a berry—you will need the following:

  • 2 cups of your favorite, plentiful berries
  • 1/2 of a small red onion, diced
  • 1/4 cup chopped cilantro
  • 1 jalapeno pepper, de-seeded and diced
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • Juice of half a lime
  • 1/2 teaspoon of cumin

The type of berry you use is going to dictate how you proceed, but basically, you want a nice mixture of larger, firm berry pieces, mashed up bits, and extracted juice. I start by mashing up half of my berries with a fork, not so much as to totally obliterate them, but just to get everything nice and juicy.

I then roughly chop or halve the remaining berries or, in the case of blueberries, leave some whole. Mixed the mushed berries with the not-so-mushed berries, and add the onion and cilantro. Stir it all together and let it hang out while you turn your attention to the garlic. Now, you could just mince your garlic, and that would be fine, but I prefer to make a paste. Just peel and slice a couple of cloves, and place them in the bowl of a mortar. Sprinkle on a big pinch of salt (to draw out moisture and mellow the bite), and mash ‘em up with your pestle.

Add the pungent paste to your berry mixture, and give it another stir. Add the lime juice and cumin, and stir once more (with feeling). Taste and adjust your seasoning if needed (maybe just a little salt). If your berries are especially tart, drizzle in a little agave syrup.

Top with lime zest, a few cilantro leaves, and some more onion if you like. Eat as you would any delicious salsa.

I’ve made this salsa with cherries, blueberries, strawberries, and marionberries (pictured above), and all are good. There’s also no need to stick to one type of berry; this is an excellent way to use up an stragglers from other recipes. You could just devour the whole batch with some good corn chips, but I love berry salsa on fish, grilled chicken, pork chops, and skirt steak. Oh, and if you have excess liquid, don’t throw it away. It makes excellent marinades and salad dressing, and I wouldn’t rule out mixing it with a little tequila.

Source: http://skillet.lifehacker.com/how-to-use-up-pretty-much-any-leftover-berries-by-turni-1796995979

Mexican Street Corn Salad

Source: https://www.frontiercoop.com/community/recipe/homemade-mexican-street-corn-salad

  • Total Time: 35 mins
  • Hands-on Time: 20 mins
  •  Makes: 4 to 6 servings

Ingredients:

Directions:

  1. Heat grill or grill pan. Cut sweet corn in half and place in a bowl.
  2. In a separate bowl, stir together the mayo, sour cream, chili powder, salt and cayenne. Spoon into the bowl of corn and stir/toss until the corn is well coated with mixture.
  3. Transfer corn to the heated grill. Cook, turning occasionally until the corn is lightly charred on all sides (about 8 to 10 minutes). Remove from the grill and let cool.
  4. Place the cooked quinoa, black beans, tomatoes, cheese and cilantro in a bowl. Carefully remove the kernels from the cooled ear of corn by placing one end on the cutting board and slicing down between the kernels and the cob.
  5. Place the corn in the bowl and toss until everything is well combined. Squeeze fresh lime juice and dash with salt before serving.

The corn can be grilled 24 hours ahead of time.

3-Ingredient Happy Hour: Strawberry Citrus Cooler

Happy weekend, and welcome back to 3-Ingredient Happy Hour, the weekly drink column featuring super simple yet delicious libations. This week we’re pairing summery strawberries with one of my favorite citrus liqueurs around: Pierre Ferrand Dry Orange Curaçao.

Unlike its violently blue, much sweeter cousin, dry curaçao is balanced and juicy with a nutty warmth and a nice bittersweet flavor. It’s tasty enough to be enjoyed on its own, but I like pairing it with muddled strawberries and fresh lemon juice before pouring it over crushed ice for an almost slushy-like experience. Not only is it the epitome of a summer sipper, it’s a great use for any berries that didn’t make it into a pie.

To make it, you will need:

  • Strawberries (4-5 small or 2 large)
  • 2 ounces dry curaçao (do not get any other curacao for this drink)
  • 3/4 ounce fresh lemon juice

Muddle strawberries in a shaker and add all other ingredients, along with some ice. Shake vigorously for at least 30 seconds, and strain into a lowball 3/4 full of crushed ice. Garnish with lemon zest from your juicing lemon, squeezing the oils over the finished drink before placing the zest in the glass.