It's So Hot...Drunken Roasted Peach Froyo Was a GOOD Choice


If you get the reference in that title, good job. If not, it's a quote from the movie Anchorman.



Basically July in Richmond is hotter'n the brass hinges of hell, so I decided to make something cool and refreshing. Plus, there's alcohol in it, so win-win! And not just any alcohol, my favorite kind: red wine. It's also peach season right now, and those little firey globes are aflush with yellow, orange, and red skins, just waiting for you to pick 'em and make this creamy froyo loaded with roasted deliciousness. 

First start by slicing your peaches lengthwise and pitting them. I use the opposite end of my melon baller. This side is used to do melon decorations, but it works perfectly for sliding under the pit and slicing it out.


Then drizzle some extra virgin olive oil on a cookie sheet and place the peaches flesh side down. Put a little dollop of raw honey on each half and drizzle with some Chianti wine. Place the sheet in a 400 degree F oven and roast for 20-25 minutes. 



They will look like this when done. The golden, velvet skins will have shriveled a bit and pulled away from the flesh, which is soft and charred on the edges. Let them cool for at least 20 minutes (explanation later).


Peach heaven.


Now for the additional drunken part of these drunken peaches. You'll want to make a Chianti caramel. I KNOW, RIGHT? No more words are necessary about how great that is. 


Start by melting 1.5T butter in a pan with 4oz. of the Chianti (TayTip: 4oz is the liquid equivalent of 1/2c). Add 2T brown sugar and 2tsp of pure vanilla extract. 


Then grate some fresh whole nutmeg into the pan. About 1tsp. 


Cook over medium-high to high heat until boiling then remove from the heat immediately as the sugar can burn very quickly. 


Now back to the cooled peaches. Toss them skins and charred parts and all into a food processor or blender and puree until smooth. 


Will look like this when finished. (TayTip: at this point you could use the peach puree as a marinade or sauce for pork, chicken, or fish)


Then add your gorgeous, tawny caramel and blend until incorporated. 



Now for the "yo" part, and the reason why the peaches had to cool. If you mix piping hot peaches with cold yogurt, it is going to separate. As in curds and whey, and I don't see Little Miss Muffet anywhere, so it's best to take your time with this one. Add 2.5 cups to the peach mixture and blend. 


Pale and sunny. 


The last thing to do is put it in a container in the freezer for at least 4 hours, but overnight is best. (TayTip: use the old yogurt container to store some of the froyo in the freezer)



The peaches are no longer sour because the roasting process eliminates most of the initial acidity, but they have this incredible depth of flavor. The Chianti is a dry red wine, but still very fruity, and melded with the molten brown sugar to create a caramel, it's just insane. The nutmeg doesn't really have a flavor comparable to anything else; it's incredibly nutty. If you've ever had eggnog or a béchamel, you know how great nutmeg is with cream. Top with strawberries, shaved dark chocolate or just enjoy this froyo on it's own. Cool down with this perfect treat for the sweltering later summer months! Buon Appetito!

Mom's Crazy Little Mix: Egg Scramble with Ham, Gouda, and Sauteed Veggies




Most mornings, I make breakfast for my family. Let's face it, I usually make lunch and dinner too! My mom is particularly a fan of eggs--scrambled, omelettes, fried, frittatas, etc.--so I typically make some sort of egg dish with our breakfast for her. I, on the other hand, have an egg intolerance. I'm not sure if it's mentally or physically rooted, but they make me feel sick to my stomach if I eat them. As a cook, that's a double bummer for me because they're such a versatile ingredient, and I don't get to enjoy the fruits of my "labor." Besides, cooking is not only about nourishing your body and having a creative outlet, but is also mostly about the love you put into it for the people you cook for (even if it's just for yourself). 



So anyway, there's this running joke in our family that when my mom cooks, she's very free with whatever ingredients she has, putting things together that you wouldn't normally expect to be in a dish. When I ask her what she made, she'll usually reply with "Uhh I don't know, it's a crazy little mix." And 9 times out of 10, it's fantastic! I have to say that I admire her for that, and am so thankful that she did that while we were growing up because it taught me to not be afraid of cooking. It taught me to be creative in the kitchen, and to just make things up and see if they taste good; try two things together that you wouldn't typically pair with each other and just go for it! Like dark chocolate and brie, for example (Which I've done...go try it now. It's delicious.). Those are two ingredients you wouldn't expect to taste good when combined, but let me tell you, the creamy and slightly salty brie with the strong and partially bitter dark chocolate is ridiculously delectable. So the trick to this recipe is to get a little unconventional. Change it around to your liking and add one ingredient you wouldn't normally use! Ok, here we go...



Start by melting 1T butter in a pan over med-high heat and adding 1/4 finely diced red onion. Grind a couple cracks of pepper in the pan. (TayTip: don't add salt to your onions when sauteing. This makes the water seep out of the onions and you won't get a good browning, but rather they will steam in their own liquid.)



Then grab two large handfuls--about 4 cups--of mesclun greens or baby spinach and add it to the pan. I know this seems like a lot, but they will wilt down to almost nothing, so you need a lot. 


It will look like this when finished...see all wilted!


Then add 4 cleaned and sliced button mushrooms. 



Next is 1/4 cup finely chopped tomatoes, and 2  chopped slices of Smithfield ham. The best ham comes from Virginia, and the best ham in Virginia is Smithfield. This is one of those no-skimp ingredients. Get the deli counter to slice it thick for this dish. 



Cook until the mushrooms have softened and the ham is browned in spots. Mmmm steamy!


The eggs are simple: crack three of them into a glass bowl with high sides. You'll need lots of protection when whisking. Add a splash of heavy whipping cream or half and half, this produces a nice fluffy scramble that won't separate. Pinch of salt and a few turns of the peppermill. 



Now go to town on 'em. Hold the bowl at a 45-degree angle with your non-dominant hand and whisk away from yourself for about a minute and a half until everything is incorporated and you have a little froth on the top.




Reduce the heat to medium and pour in the eggs. Cook 'em low and slow until they form little golden clouds. (TayTip: Never rush your scrambled eggs. Cooking them under lower heat and taking your time will produce a softer egg.)




It's right at this moment that I add my secret ingredient for this particular dish: a couple shakes of ground cinnamon. It's bitter, so a little goes a long way, but it really increases the smokiness of the dish, and gives a hint of spice.  




Top with shredded gouda and wait...patience is key here because that mild tangy cheese needs time to melt. 



See aren't you glad you waited? Top with a couple shakes of hot sauce if you like, and serve.  




Little, soft, blond egg pillows interwoven with perfectly cooked veggies, topped with a creamy melted cheese, and shaken up with a little spicy cinnamon. Protein, fiber, and it'll make your taste buds soar. What could be a better start to the day? Buon appetito! 

Tangy and Sweet Asian Marinated Chicken Appetizer


There comes a time in every person's life when they are faced with one of life's most perplexing and stressful situations: the potluck dinner. DUN DUN DUN. They lure you into their homes whispering sweet promises of free alcohol and good company. Maybe it's a cookout, and there'll be cornhole or a pool. They talk it up, and then right at the last minute of the phone call or line of an invitation they say the words that make babies cry: bring a dish to share. Ok, ok, maybe it's not that anxiety-ridden, but it can definitely be a challenge when you're making something for people for whom you don't normally cook. When I'm asked to a potluck or a cookout, I usually stick to appetizers or desserts. Usually there is more of a variety present at the gathering with these courses, and if people don't like your dish, they can shove it they obviously have other options than the usual one or two main courses. So, save yourself some trouble and bring an app to share!

This recipe came about like most of mine do: by chance. I was scratching my head as to what to make for dinner one night, and opened the pantry to see what ingredients I had. Noticing an Asian trend, I developed the marinade. Marinating is incredibly important, by the way, when cooking meat, as opposed to veggies. With the water content in veggies, it's hard to dry them out unless you really try. Meat and fish, on the other hand, can dry very easily. (TayTip: to get the most out of your marinated meat, keep it in a fridge for a minimum of an hour; 3-5 is good, and overnight is best.) I used chicken drumettes for this recipe since it's an appetizer, but have recreated it many times with whole breasts, pork loin, tilpia, etc. This is also a great grilling marinade, but my current lack of grill throws that idea out the window, so I roasted mine in the oven. Now to the good stuff!


The first thing you'll want to do is start your marinade. First get the wet ingredients: sriracha, white rice vinegar, agave nectar, sesame oil, and low-sodium soy sauce. I'd be lying if I said I measured everything out perfectly. I really don't have an exact method, because I'm going by taste here. But, for 10 chicken drumettes, I used about 3T of sesame oil and 3T of rice vinegar, 1tsp of sriracha, 1T of agave nectar, and 1.5T soy sauce. (TayTip: if you're just starting cooking or just don't trust your instincts in the kitchen yet, measure your single ingredients over an empty bowl, rather than your mixing bowl. That way if you over measure, you don't ruin your marinade)


Now onto the solid ingredients in your marinade. For this you'll need 3 sliced button mushrooms, 1T grated ginger, 1/4 cup chopped pineapple, and 1 garlic clove (not pictured). 



For the ginger, you'll want to cut away the fibrous outer peel before you grate it. (TayTip: if you don't use it often, keep fresh ginger in the freezer. It lasts forever and makes it easier to chop or grate when needed)




Add it straight into the marinade. 



Then grate your garlic.


Next, you'll want to clean and prep your mushrooms. Never clean your mushrooms by running water over them. Mushrooms are like a sponge and will soak any water you put on them (and you want them to soak up the marinade!). Instead, take a damp paper towel and gently rub any dirt off the outside. The way I see it, if anything left on the mushrooms makes it through the roasting process, it deserves to kill me!


Slice them lengthwise with the stem up.


Place them in the roasting dish with the drumettes and squeeze half a lemon over the top. This keeps the mushrooms from oxidizing.


Now you'll want to chop your pineapple and throw it into the pan with the chicken and mushrooms. 


And the last step is to pour the marinade over the chicken. Cover it in plastic wrap and let it rest for as long as possible, but no more than overnight. Turn the pieces over halfway through the marination process. 


To roast, cover your chicken with aluminum foil and bake at 350 degrees F for 20 minutes. At this point, you're just trying to thoroughly cook the meat. It will look like this when done. 


Then drizzle a tiny bit more agave nectar on top of each piece of chicken, and roast an additional 7-9 minutes uncovered. It should look like this when finished.






Garnish with chopped flat leaf parsley and a couple lemon wedges. This is the ultimate summer appetizer. It's basically chicken wings taken up a notch. The acidity of the rice vinegar against the sweet agave and the tangy and salty soy sauce is a trifecta of flavor gold. Marinating the chicken makes the flavor present in every juicy bite, not just the outside. The sriracha and ginger add a spicy kick. And not only are these drumettes delicious, but they're also super healthy! The ginger and garlic are packed full of magic that can help increase blood flow and work as anti-inflammatory agents. The lemon contains vitamin-C, and the agave is a real sugar, unlike non-nutritive or artificial sweeteners. Sesame oil has been around so long (both as a cooking oil, and in ayurvedic practices), that people aren't sure from which country it originated; it helps lower blood pressure, and improves your immune function. So next time you're asked to a potluck or cookout, bring these tangy and sweet little morsels of goodness. People will be begging for more! Buon appetito! 

Lemon Infused, Brie-and-Tomato-Stuffed Pork Chops; Sauteed Broccoli with Spicy Citrus Yogurt Sauce


The idea for this recipe came from a conversation I had with a friend (shout out to FP) about how hard it is to find that sweet spot in cooking lean meats where they're perfectly cooked, but not a dry piece of shoe leather. We were particularly talking about turkey burgers with a 97/3 fat count. I had the thought of stuffing the burger with some cheese and maybe a grape tomato or two. The idea being that as the burger cooked, the tomato would slowly almost poach inside the meat and break, the juices permeating the meat and keeping it from drying out. Well I decided to take it a step further and get some thick-cut pork chops from the butcher at the grocery store. About a 2-inch cut, (TayTip: you are not limited to whatever fresh meat is already packaged at the store; just ask for the butcher to cut your meat however you want! You're paying for it, aren't you? I've found that they are typically more than happy to oblige.) and I would apply the same principle. So, here's what I created!

First I took the chops, stood them in their sides lengthwise with the fat side down, and using my paring knife, I made an pocket incision, leaving the fatty edge, and two sides intact. It should look like a pita when you're done. Make sure to move in one direction when making this incision. You're not sawing away here, that's why the paring knife isn't serrated. Don't attack the chop! 


Next, I wanted more surface area inside the pocket's width. More surface area, more room for cheese and tomatoes! This next step is also important in tenderizing the pork, and in ultimately reaching our goal of a juicy chop. So I laid them down on my cutting board (TayTip: ALWAYS use a plastic or marble cutting board when dealing with raw meat or fish of any kind. Never wood! The bacteria from the raw meat penetrates the wood, and no matter how much you wash, stays in there. Impermeable cutting board means impermeable to everything, especially the things you don't want to be eating.) covered them in plastic wrap, and wacked away. No making fun of my makeshift meat mallet, it works just as well as the traditional kind. I've even used a sturdy coffee cup or my glass measuring cup when my pasta strainer escaped me. Pound the chops until you've gained a couple centimeters in all directions. You shouldn't, however, be making it thin enough to see holes in the meat; you want it in tact. The fatty side won't thin out, that's ok. 


So once you've taken out all your anger and frustration on these poor little chops, it's time to get to the citrus infusion part. Everyone loves that crispy edge you get from searing meat in a pan, but I decided to take it a step further and add a little extra flavor. I took 2 T of salted butter and 1T of extra virgin olive oil and melted them in my pan over med-high heat. (TayTip: if you are using butter and not ghee, always put a little bit of olive oil in the pan. The oil keeps the milk solids in the butter from burning by raising the flashpoint, or temperature at which the butter burns.) Then, I added 1T of fresh minced dill and the used my microplane to get the zest of one lemon. Make sure it's organic since you're using the zest. If you only needed the juice, I'd say go for the cheaper non-organic kind; the thick rind on most citrus keeps any chemicals out. But any time you use the peel, skin, or zest of any fruit or vegetable, you have to go green. No need for added toxins and wax! Add it to the butter/oil mixture so it infuses all throughout. You want to cook this at the high heat for about 3 minutes, then take the pan off the burner completely, but leave the heat on. You'll be busy for a couple minutes, and don't want the zest and dill to burn. 




Now it's time to get stuffing! For my cheese I chose this great mushroom brie that I found at the store.When I saw it staring up at me from the cheese cooler, studded with little brown bits of mushroom, I just had to take it home with me. Plus, brie is such a great melting cheese, that I figured it'd be perfect. If you don't like brie, you can use fontina (milder flavor, and not as salty), which is an Italian cow's milk cheese that originated in the Alps. It's semi-firm, unlike the soft brie, but it's also pretty much, in my opinion, the king of Italian melting cheeses. So next time you're making a homemade pizza, set aside the mozz for some fresh fontina.  


I cut the rind off the brie because I wanted it to be as smooth as possible. Normally I eat the rind and all, but in keeping with the smooth factor, I nixed it off (and munched on it while I was cooking). I know it doesn't look like much, but you'll fix that in the next step.


I rarely cook anything savory without adding garlic. Unless I'm going for a very mild flavor, two or three cloves are usually in there somewhere. But I knew putting the cloves inside the chops whole would be too overpowering when you're eating it, so I decided to finely mince two medium cloves and mix them into the cheese. Do it right there on your cutting board--no need to dirty another bowl--and use your two best instruments in the kitchen: your hands! Make sure there are no rogue pieces of garlic floating out of the mixture. It should look like this when you're done.


Next is assembling your chops. Lie them open so that you can stuff all the cheesy tomato-y (?) goodness inside their nice little pork beds. Add the cheese and garlic mixture first. 



Then add the tomatoes. You'll also want to return your pan to the burner and get it screaming hot. It's really important for the pan to be hot for you to get that nice sear on the meat.



Close the pockets and season the top side with fleur de sel (I use this one) and  freshly ground black pepper.




Then place them in the pan (TayTip: put them in the pan seasoned side down so you can season the other side.) and listen for the sizzle. Let me tell you, it's quite the glorious sound. Sear on one side for 4 minutes. I know all you'll want to do at this point is look at the beautiful crust being formed on the pork, but resist the urge to touch the meat at all. If you move it at all, you'll lost the contact with the pan and won't have as good a crust.




AAAAAAAAAND flip.




Cook for another 4 minutes. Some of the brie will melt out, but that's fine, you won't waste it. I'm a BIG proponent of not wasting anything. It drives me crazy when TV chefs pour things out of a bowl or pan and leave a bunch in there. Grab a spatula and scrape that out! Anyway, getting back to the pork. At this point, it won't be cooked all the way through, just on the edges. So, take out a baking dish (I used my oval le creuset) and nestle those little piggies into sleep. Cover them up with some aluminum foil, and bake for an additional 15-20 minutes at 375F, or until a meat thermometer inserted reaches 145F. This might seem like a low temperature for pork, but actually the USDA has recently approved this as an acceptable  internal temperature  for medium rare pork. 




Now onto the broccoli! First I made the sauce that I would drizzle over top so it could chill (haha see what I did there?) in the fridge while I cooked the actual broccoli. Start by taking the lemon from earlier and juicing it. (TayTip: if you're like me and don't use a lemon juicer or press, to get the most juice out of your lemon, place your hands one on top of the other on the lemon and roll it on your cutting board a couple of times before you slice it in half. This will release the juices from the flesh before you even start squeezing it!) I put my small mesh strainer over my container to catch the seeds. Depending on the size of your lemon, you'll get 2-3T of juice.




The remaining ingredients are 2T of extra thick greek strained yogurt. NOT "greek style." It's not the same. In "greek style" yogurt they add thickening agents, and no one wants any unnecessary chemicals, right? Then add 2tsp of sriracha (hot chili sauce with vinegar and garlic). The last is a great seasoning that I bought a couple of months ago. It's this great paprika, lemon, and lime spice blend from The Gourmet Collection. In addition to those three ingredients, it has some really flavorful herbs and spices like coriander, parsley, and celery seed to name a few. (full ingredient list in the link above). A good buy, and a little goes a long way! Add about 3/4tsp. Combine all ingredients and pop it in the fridge until you're ready to serve.




Next, take your washed broccoli, cut the florets from the large stem, and put them in the same pan that you cooked the pork in. Add 1T of butter, a little drizzle of olive oil, and pinch of salt and pepper, respectively. Cook over med-high heat until the broccoli gets brown in parts. It will soften, but still have a great crunch to it. No mushy baby food-like greens here!




It should look like this when you're done.




At this point, you're pork should be done. You'll see a lot of rendered juices that have formed in the bottom of the pan. DON'T throw those away. I freeze them and use them as bases for soups, stir fries, chili, just about anything. You don't, however, want the pork to sit in them and get soggy, so check it with a thermometer, and if you're good to go, plate it up!





The majority of the cheese will be left inside because you put it in first, and the second you cut into this little meat pita, the brie will start to ooze out. The garlic is cooked, not so that it melts in your mouth, but to the equivalent of al dente pasta. Just with a little bit of bite left to it. The tomatoes are gleaming rubies roasted in their own skin, incredibly sweet, and pop open with just the weight of your fork put on them. The broccoli is charred a bit and still has some crunch. The tangy and spicy citrus yogurt sauce is packed full of protein, good bacteria, vitamin-C, and plenty of delicious flavor. So put aside your hot pocket, and make this meat pocked instead! Lean meat, incredibly low on carbs, creamy brie, and a green leafy vegetable topped with a non-mayo based, high protein sauce. Buon appetito!



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