Monday, December 31, 2012

Last of the Dragon's Breath!


The new year rolls around and a new batch of wings is born.As we are about to leave the Dragon's year I thought some dragon's breath wings might be appropriate. Snacking on some kettle fried jalapeno tater ', chips a little while back I thought 'Hmmmm,could be a nice coating for some hot wings"! So, idea born and on new year's eve brought to fruition.
  The main idea here is to make wings to the heat of your liking so look in the pantry/fridge for condiments with the heat you desire. In this case we chose a commercial buffalo wing sauce, some habanero hot sauce, cholula hot sauce, alegro marinating sauce, sweet,spicy mango marinade and some pace medium picante sauce.

The frozen wing sections came in  a 4 pound zip closure bag so we used that for the marinating process...
  The night before you want wings, pour the above ingredients into the bag of chicken along with a cup of vinegar and whatever dry ingredients you think you can handle...chili powder, cajun seasoning, HABANERO powder etc...Let wings marinate overnite in cooler or fridge. Drain marinade into saucepan.
    Crush jalepeno tater chips, add a couple tsp corn starch and some hot chili powder (habanero for extra heat). Dredge wings in chips, place on lightly greased baking pan and place in 425 degree oven. After 10 minutes lower oven temp to 350, turn wings and resume cooking for another 15 minutes.  While chicken is cooking reduce marinade in sauce pan to make dipping sauce. Grab a bunch of napkins, a cold drink and eat 'em up! Happy New Year!


Thursday, December 27, 2012

Shlappy Happy Holiday


A new favorite recipe I found from a NY Times article, and have tested and tweaked over the last couple of days.  In addition to the sharp ginger zip, this puppy packs  a "punch" and is as sweet or not as you like...

Monday, December 24, 2012

Desperation Chili

You are desperate for chili - a thick, rich, steamin' bowl but NOT Wolfbrand.  Alas, no time to prep Keefer Ranch beef and other additives to let simmer all day long.  Here is a 1 to 2 hour option.
 
1 lb coarse ground beef (chili grind)
1 lb ground buffalo (available at Walmart if you can believe it) or use 2 lbs of that chili grind
1 lb Jimmy Dean Regular pork sausage
1 can fire roasted diced tomatoes (Hunts)
1 package of Williams Chili Seasoning
3 or 4 canned chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, chopped
1 c chopped onion
1/2 t habaƱero pepper powder (optional - more if you dare)
4 cups water with beef, chicken or tomato bouillon (add more or less to desired soupy-ness)
 
Get out that big chili pot
Saute onion in a little olive oil
Brown beef, buffalo, and sausage
Add chipotle, bouillon, habaƱero and chili seasoning mix
Simmer 1 to 2 hours, adjust liquid, skim fat, and serve with the following:
 
Grated cheddar cheese
Sour cream
Chopped avocados
Chopped onion
Fritos
 
Yummo

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Rum Balls - For Medicinal Purposes

Step one
- buy RUM

- Bacardi 151

The original recipe is the Bourbon Ball recipe in the Joy of Cooking. If you use the cookbook version, the dough is always to dry.
So my rule of thumb is -
add more rum.
·2 T cocoa
· 1 c powdered sugar - sift cocoa and sugar together in a large bowl
· 1/4 to 1/2 c rum ( sometimes I add a little Triple Sec)
· 4 T light Karo - mix in 1 c measure (you may need more of the rum/Karo mixture if the dough is to dry)
· 2 1/2 c vanilla wafer crumbs - that's about 1 box vanilla wafers ground up in the food processor (the original recipe allows for ginger snaps as an option - might be good)
· 1 c chopped pecans
Add crumbs and nuts together with the cocoa and sugar in the large bowl. 
 Add liquid and mix.
If crumbly, make more rum/Karo mix and add a little at at time.
The dough should be a bit sticky since the cookie crumbs soak up liquid as they sit.
Form into bite sized balls and roll in granulated sugar
Store in air tight container until time to serve.
These are very strong - use regular rum if you want milder Rum Balls (a bit dull...)
Do not eat and drive.

Monday, December 10, 2012

Rock Hard Polish Babka - Still Tasty




Careening thru "how to prepare the perfect loaf" like a drunk Carny at the county fair on a Friday night, I parked my bumper car up against a page titled German Kugelhopf, but eventually staggered to the adjacent image of a frosted Polish Babka.  The above Seinfeld reference being the sum total of my cultural exposure to the Babka; sooo, with a quick tug from the vodka bottle, I grabbed my bread robot by the scruff of his neck and jumped back into action... (click below to see the recipe)



Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Tis The Season

What a fantastic bunch of recipes, and the pictures have my mouth watering like a salivating pavlovian pooch.  I can't wait to try several of these out!  This time of year I get a bit manic about cooking, so your blog is just the place for me to dwell while I have the time. Something about the baking process, and resulting smells help air out old memories of glorious holidays and great times of yore.  



My first shot across the Christmas bow started Friday night.  Gwen had brought back a library book, "Bread Machine" by Jennie Shapter.  I was more than a tad curious about how this book's secrets and my available time could combine into a bake fest extravaganza.  While flipping thru the gloriously oversized pictures of sweet and savory carbs,  I dusted off the mechanical bread robot, and while flipping thru, watched it from the corner of my eye as it stood at attention, appearing to await my any command. I finally landed on a recipe for Mixed Peel Braid, and I made do with what I had instead of what it called for.
(I've placed a jump break in, so click the blog title to view the recipe)