Category Archives: Appetizers

Appetizers

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.

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

Here are the taco jalapeño poppers you didn’t know you needed in your life.

Bacon Wrapped Taco Poppers

Here are the taco jalapeño poppers you didn’t know you needed in your life.
>> thrl.st/2nlu7ol

Posted by Thrillist Food and Drink on Sunday, May 21, 2017

Gordon Ramsay’s – Tamarind Spiced Chicken Wings Recipe

Tamarind spiced chicken wings spring onions coriander 2 web 1

Looking for Six Nations food ideas? You can’t beat our Six Nations Recipes such as these delicious tamarind chicken wings!

INGREDIENTS

serves 4-6

  • 1kg of chicken wings

Sauce for Marinade:

  • 4g chili powder
  • 4g cumin
  • 2g coriander powder
  • 2g tumeric powder
  • 10g paprika
  • 2g garamasala
  • 20g onion powder
  • 10g garlic salt
  • Juice of 1/4 lemon
  • 2g Dijon mustard
  • 20g flour
  • 6g corn starch
  • 2 eggs
  • pinch of salt
  • 10ml oil

Flour Mixture:

  • 250g regular soft flour
  • 20g corn flour
  • 15g garlic salt
  • 20g onion powder

Tamarind Sauce:

  • 200g tamarind
  • 20g dry chili
  • 65g fennel seeds
  • 65g cumin seeds
  • 7g black peppercorns
  • 85g tomato paste
  • 165g ketchup
  • 3 onions
  • 1 clove of crushed garlic
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 500ml Worcestershire sauce
  • 165g brown sugar
  • 200g honey
  • 5 litres of chicken stock
  • 100ml white wine vinegar
  • 165ml oil
  • coriander stems
  • Pinch of salt
  • 50g coriander seeds

METHOD

Marinade:

  1. Mix all marinade ingredients together in a large bowl
  2. Add chicken wings and leave to marinate for at least an hour, but preferably overnight

Flour mixture:

  1. Mix ingredients to make flour mixture
  2. Coat marinated wings evenly in flour mixture

Tamarind Sauce:

  1. Roast all the spices in a pan and course grind them
  2. Heat the oil in a pan, add the garlic, chopped onions and bay leaves, and cook well
  3. Add the roasted spices, vinegar, sugar and honey, and cook
  4. Add the tomato paste, tamarind, and Worcestershire sauce, and cook
  5. Add the chicken stock and reduce to a glaze
  6. While the sauce is cooking, fry the floured chicken wings until cooked through
  7. When the tamarind sauce is reduced, pass through a sieve to ensure it is smooth
  8. Adjust seasoning as required
  9. Add cooked chicken wings to pan and mix to ensure even coverage of sauce
  10. Serve and enjoy!

Source: Tamarind Spiced Chicken Wings Recipe

Gordon Ramsay’s – CHILLI BEEF LETTUCE WRAP RECIPE

Asian Fried Minced Beef Cups 132

INGREDIENTS

  • Olive oil, for frying
  • 200g lean minced beef
  • 200g minced pork
  • Toasted sesame oil, for frying
  • 2 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped
  • 5cm piece of fresh root ginger, peeled and finely chopped
  • 1–2 red chillies, deseeded and chopped
  • 1 tbsp light brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp fish sauce
  • Zest of 1 lime, juice of ¹/³
  • 3 spring onions, trimmed and chopped
  • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 little gem lettuces, separated into leaves, to serve

FOR THE DRESSING

  • 1 tbsp soy sauce
  • Juice of ½ lime
  • 1 tsp sesame oil
  • ½ red chilli, thinly sliced
  • Small bunch of coriander leaves, chopped
  • 1–2 tsp fish sauce, to taste
  • 1 tsp light brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp olive oil

COOKING INSTRUCTIONS

SERVES 4

  1. Heat a large frying pan and add a little oil. Mix the minced beef and pork together. Season with salt and pepper and mix well to ensure the seasoning is evenly distributed. Fry the mince in the hot pan for 5–7 minutes until crisp and brown and broken down to a fine consistency. Drain the crisped mince in a sieve – this will help it stay crispy. Set aside.
  2. Wipe out the pan and add a tablespoon of toasted sesame oil. Add the garlic, ginger and chilli. Fry with a pinch of salt and the sugar for 2 minutes. Add the drained mince and stir to mix.
  3. Add the fish sauce and heat through. Stir in the lime zest and juice, then add the spring onions, stirring for 30 seconds. Turn off the heat.
  4. Mix all the dressing ingredients together and adjust to taste.
  5. To serve, spoon some of the mince mixture into the lettuce leaves, drizzle with a little dressing and serve.

https://www.gordonramsay.com/gr/recipes/chilli-beef-lettuce-wraps/