Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Cube Steak Parmesan Recipe

When, out of curiosity, I looked in the dictionary for the definition of cube steak, I found "A thin slice of beef tenderized by cubing". This cube steak parmesan recipe is one that really impress for its delicate mix of flavors.

6 4-ounce cube steaks
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon pepper
2 eggs
2 tablespoons water
1/3 cup parmesan cheese, grated
1/3 cup saltine crackers, finely crushed
½ teaspoon basil
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 15-ounce can tomato sauce
2 ¼ teaspoons white sugar
1 clove garlic, minced
½ teaspoon oregano, divided
4 slices mozzarella cheese, halved
1/3 cup grated Parmesan cheese

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). In a shallow dish, stir together the flour, salt and pepper. In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs and water with a fork. In a third bowl, or shallow dish, mix together the cracker crumbs, 1/3 cup of Parmesan cheese and basil.

Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Dredge the cube steaks in the seasoned flour, dip into the egg mixture, and coat with the cracker crumb mixture. Place them in the skillet, and fry just until browned on each side. Arrange steaks in a single layer in a greased casserole dish.

Bake for 25 minutes in the preheated oven. Meanwhile, in a medium bowl, stir together the tomato sauce, sugar, 1/4 teaspoon of oregano, and garlic powder. Spoon over steaks when the 25 minutes are up. Top each steak with mozzarella cheese and remaining Parmesan cheese; sprinkle remaining oregano over the top. Bake for 5 more minutes, or until the cheese is melted, and the sauce is hot.

About the Author:
Ray Torres is an IT consultant by day and a gourmet aficionado by nigth, and founder of Great Free Online Recipes.com and it's recipes and cooking blog. "A celebration of cooking and great food!"
Article Source: http://www.articles411.com

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

THE COOKING PENNY PINCHER

So, just what is a penny pincher;
Someone that can squeeze a penny until it screams?
Someone that shops at thrift shops and yard sales?
Maybe someone that makes their own from scratch instead of buying all of the prepared items?
Or someone that can put on a dinner party for four to six guests and spend less than $2.50 per serving on the main dish?

How about all of the above when it comes to being a penny pincher.

You can make your own and save money. I know it’s so easy to go to the grocery store and pick up all of those prepared items. But let’s look at what you are paying for.

If you buy it at a store; you get fancy packaging, 50 to 85% higher cost, convenience and oh yes, don’t forget those preservatives. With all of the preservatives the average person consumes nowadays it’s a wonder they still have to embalm someone prior to burial.

Maybe you prefer the convenience; over making your own, but I like to cook and these tips help me save money.

SHAKE AND BAKE

I used to buy that product, so easy just open the package and follow the directions, right? Well, yes, but so easy and cheap to make your own.

I use everything, crackers of all kinds, bread crumbs (crust included) potato chips, you name it, to make mine. I even had some stale Cheetos and made crumbs and added it to the mixture.

Add your spices, seasoning salt, dried onion flakes, parsley, etc. Just keep adding to the mix whenever you have the ingredients.

Keep it in a zip lock bag or other container in your refrigerator, it is there and ready to use when you need it.

You don’t have to check your pantry to find out you forgot to buy it the last time you went to the grocery.

REFRIED BEANS

Love Mexican food and would like to serve refried beans with your tacos, tamale or whatever?

It’s so cheap and easy to make your own. If you cook your own pinto beans as I do then simply drain the liquid off, place the beans in your blender or food processor with a small chopped onion, a little salt and blend.

Heat and serve with grated cheese.

If you don’t have any precooked beans, you can buy canned pinto beans, follow the directions above, but be careful with the salt. Taste first.

FRENCH FRIES

Like to serve French fries with that steak or sandwich, but buying frozen is far too expensive?

Make your own ahead of time. Cook, be a penny pincher.

Cut up the potatoes, the whole bag, into the size of fries you like. Rinse and dry the potatoes. Heat your deep fryer or oil in a deep frying pan. Fry the potatoes for about one minute, remove and drain well.

If you are using part of them for the evening meal, cool in the refrigerator until ready to use. Fry again until golden brown, salt to taste and serve. Chilling and frying the second time is the secret.

If you want to store them for later, spread onto a cookie sheet and put in the freezer.

After freezing, put into one big zip lock bag or smaller serving size zip lock bags. They are ready for you to remove and fry until golden brown, salt to taste and serve.

Make your own, I know I like it better.

If I could tell you how to make numerous main dishes for less than $2.50 per serving, would you be interested? How about if many of them cost less than $2.00 per serving, is that better yet? Below is a sample recipe for one of the dishes I’m talking about:

Salmon Cakes with Soy-ginger Mayonnaise

1 1/2 lb. potatoes (peeled, cut in 1 in. chunks)
1 1/2 tsp. salt
1 (14 3/4 oz.) can salmon (drained, cleaned)
1 tsp. lemon juice
4 tsp. vegetable oil
1 med. onion (chopped)
1 tbs. + 1 tsp. fresh ginger (grated)
1 lg. egg (lightly beaten)
1/4 tsp. black pepper
1/3 c. mayonnaise
1 tsp. soy sauce
6 lettuce or Romaine leaves (sliced or torn)
1 lemon (cut in wedges)
3 – 4 c. rice (cooked)

Cook potatoes in water and 1 tsp. salt until fork tender, drain. Place potatoes in lg. bowl, coarsely mash. Set aside. In skillet, heat 2 tsp. oil and sauté onion until golden, add 1 tbs. ginger; cook 30 sec. Add onion mixture to mashed potatoes, stir to blend. To potatoes add salmon, egg, pepper and remaining salt. Stir to mix well.

Shape salmon mixture into 12 (3 x 3/4 in.) patties or cakes. Use about 1/3 c. for each. In same skillet, heat 1 tsp. oil and fry half of cakes 5 – 6 min. or until cooked through and brown, turn only once.

Repeat with remaining oil and cakes. Transfer to plate and keep warm.

Prepare sauce: In sm. bowl mix lemon juice, mayonnaise, soy sauce and remaining ginger. Let stand for 15 min. to blend flavors.

To Serve: Place lettuce on lg. serving platter and place salmon cakes and lemon wedges around sauce boat set in the middle. Put lg. bowl of cooked rice and extra soy sauce on table. (complete meal – serve with dessert)

With main dishes like that you could be a cooking penny pincher with flair. No one would even suspect that you were a penny pincher. But they would be impressed by your cooking. You don’t need to tell them you have saved any money.

Cook like a penny pincher and appear like a gourmet.

There is a new cook book out it’s called the “Penny Pincher Cook Book”. In it you will find 150 delicious and taste tempting main dish recipes. The one above is a sample of the type you will find in the cook book.

If you want more information on the book or more great penny pinching tips, you are going to have to go to Grandma’s web site at: http://www.pennypinching-grandma.com

For information on the cook book click on the Penny Pincher button.

About the Author:
Cal Bolton is the webmaster for Grandma who is the actual content provider of: http://www.pennypinching-grandma.com.
This article was posted on August 28, 2006
Article Source: articlecity

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Smoked Turkey Recipe

If you’ve never smoked a turkey before, I urge you to try it. Oven roasted turkey is what most of us have eaten all our lives. Turkey and dressing with gravy is an American tradition and we wouldn’t want to change that. Keep the dressing and gravy the same, but let’s see if we can liven up that ole turkey!

First step is buying a turkey. Buy a bird that is 13 lbs or less. A large smoked turkey will take too long to get out of the temperature danger zone (40 to 140 degrees F) when using lower smoking temperatures. We prefer Butterball turkeys because the breast meat has been deep basted to increase moisture and flavor. Butterball turkeys that are Fresh, not Frozen, are not basted. So we prefer the frozen ones because of this. Also, a frozen turkey can be bought well ahead of the time needed to cook, not so with fresh turkey.

A frozen turkey needs to be thawed in the refrigerator, not the kitchen sink or counter top. Thawing a 10-13 pound turkey may take up to 3 or 4 days in the refrigerator. Check the temperature setting on your appliance and raise the temp setting if needed, but remember the turkey should always be kept well below 40 degrees to avoid spoiling.

Alright, besides the turkey, you will need a sweet onion, an orange, two red apples, and three stalks of celery. We will also use extra virgin olive oil to help the skin brown and cook evenly. The oil will also act as a binder for the rub applied.

After removing the neck and giblets from the bird, wash with cold water. Then use paper towels to dry the turkey skin. Drying the skin will help the olive oil coat evenly and this will make the smoked turkey’s skin more evenly colored when done. Now we can coat the turkey with the olive oil. Rub the olive oil into the skin and make sure to apply some inside the cavity of the bird.

Next we cut up the onion, apples, orange, and celery. Stuff the cavity with these ingredients with as much as you can fit into the turkey. This is not a stuffing that you would want to eat. The purpose of this stuffing is to help add moisture and flavor to the turkey. You could go a step further and pour a can of Coke into the cavity. This adds a unique flavor and can further help in the moisture level of the turkey.

Now it’s time to rub the turkey. I used Paula Deen’s Spices for my rub. It was 2 teaspoons of each of these seasonings: Butt Massage, Seasoned Salt, and House Seasoning. The 6 teaspoons of seasoning were added to one cup of brown sugar for the finished rub. If you can't find Paula Deen's spices, just use 6 teaspoons your favorite rib or butt rub. The rub is applied first under the skin on the breast. Work your fingers under the skin and then pull it back far enough to coat the breast meat well. Then cover the entire bird with the rub, gently rubbing it into the olive oil on the skin.

You could cook the smoked turkey directly on the smoker’s cooking grate, but with any poultry cooked on a smoker or a grill, the fat rendering out can cause some mighty big flare ups. We used a wire rack inside of a large disposable aluminum pan. The pan catches all of the juices cooking from the turkey which can be used to baste the turkey. And the wire rack keeps the bird from sitting in the meat juices. The turkey is placed on the wire rack with the breast side facing up during the entire smoking process.

Most slow cooked barbeque is cooked at 250 degrees F or less. But for smoked turkey we jump the smoker temperature up to 325 degrees F. Cooking at higher temps will help to conserve moisture in the meat and also gets the turkey out of the danger zone more quickly. A 10-13 pound bird should take no more than 4 to 4.5 hours at 325 degrees F. The turkey will be done when the temp in the thigh reaches 180 degrees F. The temp probe should be placed in the thickest part of the thigh, making sure not to touch any bones. Another doneness test is to grab the drumstick and give it a wiggle. If it feels like it will pull loose easily from the body of the turkey, then the bird is probably done. Also check that the meat juices flow clear when piercing the thigh with a fork.

After about an hour of smoking the turkey with a combination of hickory and apple wood, check to see how the skin looks. If any area appears to be getting too brown, covering that area loosely with foil will help to prevent burning. About the two hour mark of cooking, loosely cover the breasts to keep them from cooking faster than the leg and thigh meat. After the three hour mark you can baste the turkey with melted butter every half hour until done. This will help to keep the skin from drying out and make the turkey a more golden brown color.

Now you may be asking why didn’t you brine the turkey or at least inject the turkey? I just find with the Butterball turkey you don’t have to do all of that to get a great finished product. The turkey will be moist and flavorful without injections and brines. It’s real easy to get carried away with flavors on turkey. This recipe keeps it fairly simple and you don’t have to start prepping the turkey days before cooking.

One last thing about carving turkey and this applies to all turkey no matter how it is cooked. A cold turkey carves much better than a hot turkey, so it is better to cook the turkey the day before you plan to serve it (this tip came from my wife’s mother who is an outstanding cook). Refrigerate it overnight and slice away the next day. The slices can be easily warmed in a foiled pan in the oven.

About the Author:
Bill Anderson
For more information on slow smoking competition quality ribs, butts, chicken, and brisket, please visit Bill Anderson's web site at www.bbq-book.com
Article Submitted On: October 31, 2006
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Italian Sweets

The regional cuisine of Italy is surely a delight to the senses. With the pasta, seafood, savory meats and cheeses, and delicious crusty breads, it is hard to stop yourself from eating until you are packed full. However, if you do not remember to save a little room, you may miss out on the best part: dessert. No one does desserts quite like the Italians. From simple fruity finger foods to savory layered tortes, the Italian’s make desserts for every palette. From the chocolate lover to someone looking for something lighter and more refreshing, you are sure to find something to your looking in an Italian bakery.

One of my favorite Italian desserts has been a staple of my Grandmother’s dessert table at holiday dinners for as long as I can remember. The best part is that it is something that I was always able to help with. Stuffed dates were always a task that the kids could do, by simply taking the pre-sliced dates and stuffing about a tea spoon full of cream cheese into them and then dotting them each with a pecan, we could be happy to know we had helped. Even if we ate a date or two along the way.

A variation on this dessert, which is popular in Milan takes a little bit more grown up help. After the dates are stuffed with the cream cheese, a grown up can dip the date into a mixture of bittersweet chocolate and milk and then let them harden. The product is a delicious, almost candy-like concoction that appeals to the sweet and the salty taste buds.

There are desserts that many people take for granted. Rice pudding, for example, is one of the simplest pleasures for Italian households. Milk, sugar, rice, and cinnamon are the staples of this favorite, but it can be substituted to taste with extra sugar, honey, nutmeg, or raisins. My personal favorite is with extra cinnamon and dried cranberries. Another simple that many people forget about, or perhaps even loathe, is the Panettone, otherwise known as fruit cake. A staple on many Christmas tables, the Panettone has gotten a bad rep in the United States, perhaps because of its strong Anise taste. When done right though, a Panettone can be truly delightful.

Other than the cannoli, the most popular Italian dessert is undoubtedly Tiramisu. This alcoholic spongy cake has taken the world by storm with relatively young origins. No one seems to know exactly how the Tiramisu was invented, or by who. What does seem to be agreed upon is that is was invented sometime in the 1960s in the Veneto region of Italy. The ingredients of Tiramisu are basic, but everyone seems to do it a little bit different. Mascarpone, espresso and zabaglione cream make up the complimentary tastes of this delicious dessert, but it would be impossible to create without the base of savoiardi cake, otherwise known as lady fingers. These spongy biscuits make trouble for pastry servers with their delicate spongy nature, but like all Italian desserts are well worth the trouble.

About the author:
Kirsten Hawkins is a food and nutrition expert specializing the Mexican, Chinese, and Italian food. Visit http://www.food-and-nutrition.com/ for more information on cooking delicious and healthy meals.
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