The Hip Hostess

Menus, tips and ideas for hosting with style!

Latkes (Potato Pancakes) with Pomegranate Crema December 2, 2009

Check out my recipe for Latkes (Potato Pancakes) with Pomegranate Crema on the POM Wonderful site:

http://pomwonderful.com/community/latkes-potato-pancakes-with-pomegranate-crema/

Vote for it as a favorite to help me win the community favorite POM receipe contest!  You don’t need to register to vote.  Click on the words 2009 Fresh Recipe Contest at the top of the link to my recipe.  That will take you to the contest recipes.  Go to the bottom of that page and click to page 3.  This recipe is the 3rd recipe down.  Click on the words  Vote for this Recipe.  [If you don't see the Vote for this Recipe link click on the recipe and click the add it to your favorites - you should then see the vote for this recipe link.]

Thanks for your support!

 

Tuscan White Bean Salad August 1, 2009

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Serve this simple yet hearty summer salad at a picnic, bridal or baby shower luncheon or serve over mixed greens for a light supper.
 

This salad is best prepared several hour (or up to 3 days) in advance so the flavors have time to merry.  I used navy beans, but cannellini beans (aka white kidney beans) are more traditional in Tuscan cooking.   Canned beans are a fine substitute, but fresh cooked will have a sturdier texture.

 

Tuscan White Bean Salad

 

1 cup dried white beans (or 2 cans white beans)

½ lb. (8oz) fresh mozzarella, cut into ½” cubes

1 pint grape tomatoes, quartered

1.5 Tbs. extra virgin olive oil

1.5 Tbs. balsamic vinegar

1 small garlic clove, minced

2 Tbs. fresh oregano, chopped

2 Tbs. fresh basil, chopped

½ tsp. salt

fresh-ground black pepper

 

1.            Soak beans in cold water overnight.  Rinse beans and cover with water.  Bring to boil over medium-high heat.  Reduce to simmer and cook, uncovered, for about 40 minutes, or until tender but not mushy.  Drain and cool to room temperature.

 

2.            Combine olive oil, vinegar, garlic, oregano and basil in large bowl and whisk until fully combined.  Add mozzarella, tomatoes and beans and toss until well coated.  Chill for several hours and serve at room temperature.

Serves 6

 

Seared Scallops Over Basil-Pea Puree April 30, 2009

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This dish tastes like spring on a plate.  It’s sophisticated, yet so simple.  It’s a great recipe for entertaining because it can be made in minutes.  Serve it as an entrée, or serve a smaller version (3 scallops per plate) as a first course.

 

The basil-pea puree can be made up to 8 hours ahead and warmed as the scallops cook.  If you are short on time you can skip the oven-dried tomatoes, thought they really are worth the minimal effort but advance planning required.  The slow oven drying process really concentrates the flavor of the tomatoes, but you can substitute a few raw tomato wedges instead to achieve the same pop of color.

 

Serve this entrée with herb popovers or crusty bread so you can scoop up the last of the basil-pea puree.  Trust me, you won’t want to waste a single bite.

 

 

Seared Scallops Over Basil Pea Puree

1 package grape tomatoes or 6 plum tomatoes

(2) 10oz packages frozen peas or 4 C. fresh shelled peas

4 Tbs. fresh basil (about 12 large leaves)

½ tsp. kosher salt

Fresh ground pepper, to taste

15 large sea scallops, patted completely dry

Extra virgin olive oil

 

1.  Preheat oven to 250 degrees.  Slice tomatoes in half and place cut side up on a cookie sheet lined with parchment or coated with a nonstick spray.  Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with a pinch of kosher salt.  Place in oven for 2-2.5 hours, or until the tomatoes are shriveled and dry with a tiny bit of juice left inside.   Tomatoes can be oven-dried up to 2 days in advance.   

2.  Place thawed peas in a colander and rinse with cold water.  Shake to remove excess water.  Add peas to blender with fresh basil, salt and pepper.  Puree peas until smooth.  To heat pea puree, place in a small saucepan over medium heat, stirring frequently.  Once warmed through, reduce heat to low and keep warm until ready to serve.

3.  Heat a large nonstick skillet over high heat.  Once hot, coat pan with olive oil.   Add scallops to pan in a single layer with room between each scallop.  Cook for 2-3 minutes per side, depending on the size.  Scallops should have a nice crust on both sides and be barely firm to the touch.  (Do not overcook the scallops or they will become rubbery.)  Serve immediately over basil-pea puree and garnish with oven-dried tomatoes.

 

Butternut Squash Barley Risotto February 19, 2009

butternut-risotto

 

I have upped the nutritional content by using barley instead of Arborio rice for this comforting risotto.  You won’t lose any of the creaminess and you’ll have a delicious whole grain recipe to add to your repertoire.

 

Although risotto should be served immediately, there are several components of the dish – such as frying the sage leaves, roasting the squash and chopping the onions - that can be prepared in advance so you don’t have to spend too long in the kitchen once your guests arrive. 

 

Serve this as a first course, as a side with roasted or grilled meat or on its own as a vegetarian entrée.

 

Butternut Squash Barley Risotto with Fried Sage Leaves

 

1.5-2lbs butternut squash, peeled, seeded and diced

1 Tbs. extra virgin olive oil (for roasting squash)

Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

6 C. low sodium chicken broth

3 Tbs. unsalted butter, divided

1 medium onion or 4 shallots, chopped

½ C. dry white wine

1 ½ C. pearled barley

½ C. freshly grated Parmesan

A dash of grated nutmeg

16 sage leaves, washed and dried (garnish)

 

1.       Melt 2 Tbs. butter in a small sauté pan over medium-high heat.  Add the sage leaves to the pan and cook until slightly crisp.  Remove leaves with a slotted spoon or spatula and drain on a paper towel.   The sage leaves can be fried several hours in advance.

 

2.       Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Toss diced squash with olive oil, salt and pepper and spread in a roasting or sheet pan.  Roast squash for 15 minutes, toss, and roast for another 10-15 minutes or until squash is tender and golden.  Squash can be roasted up to 2 days in advance.

 

3.       Heat broth in a small covered saucepan until simmering.  Cover and keep broth at a slight simmer over low heat. 

 

4.       Heat remaining 1 Tbs. butter in a Dutch oven or heavy pot over medium heat.  Once melted, add the onion (or shallots) and cook until soft and translucent, about 5-8 minutes.  Add the barley to the pot and coat the grains with the butter-onion mixture until slightly translucent (this will prevent the barley from absorbing the liquid too quickly and makes the risotto more tender).  Add the wine and cook until absorbed, about 2 minutes.  Add about ½ C. simmering broth to the barley and cook, stirring frequently, until the stock is absorbed.  Continue adding the broth, ½ C. at a time, and stir constantly.  Let each addition of broth be absorbed before adding the next.  Cook until the barley is creamy but still al dente, about 20 minutes total.  (You may have leftover broth.) 

 

5.       Remove risotto from heat and add the squash, Parmesan and a dash of fresh grated nutmeg.  Stir until well combined.  Add salt and pepper to taste.  Garnish each serving with 2 fried sage leaves and serve immediately.

 

Makes 8 servings as a side or first course (serves 4 as an entrée)

 

·        By using a good technique to make risotto you can achieve the creaminess without the addition of any cream.  If you feel that you risotto needs a little more creaminess add 1-2 Tbs. of butter at after you stir in the squash and parmesan.

 

·        If you don’t want to bother with peeling and dicing the squash you can simply split it in half lengthwise, seed it, and roast it (cut side down) on a sheet pan sprayed with non-stick spray.  Roast until tender, scoop out the flesh and add it at the end of the recipe when you would add the roasted cubes.

 

·        Some variations on this recipe:  You can add pancetta to the risotto (dice it and cook it with the onions before you add the barley); add chopped sage or ground cumin for even more flavor. 

 

·        Don’t plan on making any extra for leftovers – I have yet to find a technique that keeps the creaminess after reheating it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Turkey & Black Bean Quesadillas with Cranberry Apple Salsa November 26, 2008

Making turkey quesadillas with cranberry apple salsa is a great way to enjoy leftover turkey.  It’s a hip twist on the traditional Turkey Day dinner and adds a little spice to change things up.  Make these up to an hour in advance and keep them warm in a 250 degree oven, on a sheet pan.  Serve with a dollop of sour cream or Greek yogurt and a sprinkle of fresh chopped cilantro. 

 

Turkey & Black Bean Quesadillas

8 whole wheat flour tortillas (10″)
2 C. roasted turkey, shredded
8oz pepper jack or monterey jack cheese
1/2 golden delicious apple, sliced
4 Tbs. cilantro, chopped
15oz canned black beans, drained and rinsed

 

Cranberry-Apple Salsa
2 C. whole berry cranberry sauce (homemade or canned)
1 tsp. ground cumin
1/2 tsp. cayenne pepper
juice from 1 lime
1/2 golden delicious apple, chopped
4 Tbs. cilantro, chopped

 

To make the salsa:

In a small saucepan over medium heat, cook the chopped apple until slightly soft.  Add the cumin and cayenne and stir for 30 seconds.  Add the cranberry sauce to the pan and stir.  Reduce heat to low and simmer for 10 minutes.  Remove the pan from the heat and add the lime juice and chopped cilantro, stirring to combine.

 

To make the quesadillas:

Heat a griddle or non-stick skillet over medium-high heat until hot.  Spray with cooking spray and place one tortilla in the skillet.  Sprinkle tortilla with cheese, ½ C. turkey, apple, black beans and cilantro.  Sprinkle a little more cheese on top (to act as glue and hold the tortillas together).  Place a second tortilla on top and spray the top with cooking spray.  Cook until under side of bottom tortilla is golden brown.  Using a spatula, flip the tortilla and cook until remaining side is golden brown and the cheese is melted.  Cut each quesadilla into 6 to 8 wedges and serve warm with cranberry salsa.

 

Black Bean Enchiladas September 15, 2008

These enchiladas are great for serving a crowd. You can prepare them in advance, giving you more time to enjoy your own party. While they are vegetarian, hungry meat eaters love them too.


Black Bea
n Enchiladas

1 can mild enchilada sauce

1 can black beans, drained and rinsed

1 can fat free vegetarian refried beans

1 red bell pepper, chopped

1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and minced (optional)

1/2 large Spanish onion, chopped

1 package 8” whole wheat or corn tortillas

8oz chipotle cheddar or pepper jack cheese, shredded

chopped cilantro for garnish (optional)


1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Coat large frying pan with nonstick cooking spray or a drizzle of olive or canola oil. Sauté peppers and onions over medium-high heat until soft.


2. Add in black beans, refried beans and 1/2 can enchilada sauce and mix into onion mixture. Cook over medium-low heat for 3-5 minutes, stirring to incorporate all ingredients. Remove from heat.


3. Pour a little enchilada sauce in the bottom of a rectangular casserole pan so that the enchiladas don’t stick to the bottom when baking.


4. To assemble enchiladas: fill each tortilla with about ¼ C. of the bean mixture and a little shredded cheese, then roll up (leaving ends open) and carefully place in prepared casserole pan. Repeat until all tortillas are filled, lining each tortilla up against the next, forming a row.


5. Pour the remaining enchilada sauce on top of enchiladas; top with remaining shredded cheese.


6. Cut a sheet of tin foil large enough to cover the pan. Spray one side of foil with nonstick cooking spray. Cover pan with foil (sprayed side down) and bake for about 30 minutes.  Remove foil and cook uncovered for an additional 5-10 minutes, until cheese is melted and bubbly. Sprinkle with chopped cilantro before serving.

  • This recipe serves 4-6 people, but can easily be doubled and you can cook two pans at once (though you may need to extend the cooking time by about 15 minutes)

  • Prepare the enchiladas up to a day in advance and bake them right before serving.
 

Coffee & Chili Steak Rub May 26, 2008

Spice up your Memorial Day menu with this smoky, sweet and spicy steak rub.  It will add a ton of flavor to your streaks without overwhelming a good cut of meat.  Have everyone try to guess your secret ingredient – most people won’t be able to identify the coffee. 

 

I like to use this rub on flat iron steaks, cooked medium-rare, sliced against the grain and topped with an Israeli-style chopped salad (chopped seedless cucumber, chopped tomato, lemon juice, olive oil, salt, pepper and dried oregano).  Use it on your favorite cut of meat and serve it with any chopped salad or slaw for a cooling contrast.

 

Coffee & Chili Steak Rub

 

2 tsp. finely ground coffee

1 ½ tsp. chipotle chili powder (or 2 tsp. ancho chili powder)

1 tsp. light brown sugar

½ tsp. ground coriander

½ tsp. salt

½ tsp. fresh ground black pepper

 

Mix all ingredients in a small bowl or plastic bag.  Pat steaks with paper towel to absorb any moisture.  Rub spice mixture onto both sides of the steaks and let it sit for about 15 minutes before grilling.  Sear the steak on high heat for the first few minutes so to form a spice crust and cook to desired temperature. 

 

Makes enough spice rub for 4 servings of steak

 

 

Crustless Spinach Quiche May 10, 2008

In my house we actually call this a fritatta (even though it’s baked in the oven instead of on the stove top).  Somehow calling it a fritatta rather than a quiche made my husband more excited about it.  Is a fritatta more masculine than a quiche?  I don’t know.  But I do know that this has become a brunch favorite among my family (including my husband!) and friends.  Serve the quiche/ fritatta as the main dish for a brunch or luncheon.  It’s also perfect for a light dinner when served with salad and whole-grain bread. 

 

The quiche/ fritatta can be baked in a square dish and cut into small pieces for a tapas party (serve it like a Spanish tortilla, at room temperature).

 

Crustless Spinach Quiche

 

8 eggs or 2 small cartons of egg beaters

1/2 container of low fat whipped cottage cheese or fat free ricotta

4oz low fat cheddar cheese, shredded

4oz Cabot chipotle cheddar cheese or pepper jack, shredded

1 large red bell pepper, chopped

1 medium yellow Spanish onion, chopped

2 garlic cloves, chopped

1 bunch of spinach, stems removed and chopped (or 1 bag of pre-washed baby spinach, chopped)

1 Tbs. olive oil (or cooking spray)

Kosher salt

Fresh ground black pepper

Splash of Tabasco sauce, optional (use if you cannot find the chipotle cheese)

 

1.       Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Coat a large ceramic fluted quiche dish or glass pie dish with a light layer of cooking spray.  

 

2.       Heat the olive oil (or cooking spray) in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat.  Sautee the onion until translucent.  Reduce heat to medium and add the garlic and red peppers.  Once the red peppers have softened, add the chopped spinach.  Sautee until spinach is completely wilted and most of the moisture has cooked off.  If you have time to cool the vegetables you can do so and add them directly into the egg mixture (below).  If they are still warm put the vegetables in the bottom of your prepared dish.  Make sure that the vegetables are evenly spread around the bottom of the dish.

 

3.       In a large bowl, whisk together the egg beaters, cottage cheese, shredded cheeses, a pinch of kosher salt and some fresh ground black pepper.  If you are using the Tabasco (not necessary if you are using chipotle cheese), add a splash to the mixture and continue whisking.  Either mix the cooled vegetables (see step 2) into the egg mixture or pour the egg mixture over the warm vegetables in the bottom of the quiche dish.  Make sure the egg mixture is evenly distributed over the vegetables so the top of the quiche is level.

 

4.       Place the quiche in the center of the oven and bake for 45 minutes.  You will know it’s done when the cheese is bubbling, the center is firm and the top is golden brown.  Cool slightly before cutting into eight wedges and serve warm.

 

 

Cumin Seared Salmon April 14, 2008

This super simple salmon recipe showcases the natural flavor of the salmon.  Serve it with a bright flavored grain salad, like quinoa salad with orange, golden raisins and cilantro or basmati rice with orange zest and toasted almonds.  Make the grain salad up to 2 days in advance and sear the salmon right before you want to serve dinner.

 

Cumin Seared Salmon

 

4 (6-8 ounce) salmon fillets
ground cumin
sea salt

fresh ground black pepper

2 Tbs. extra virgin olive oil or canola oil

nonstick cooking spray

 

Spray the top (skinless) side of the salmon with cooking spray or drizzle with oil and sprinkle generously with cumin, salt and pepper  Heat the oil in a large, nonstick skillet over medium-high heat.  Place salmon skin side up in skillet and cook until a golden brown crust forms on the underside, about 3-4 minutes.  Turn fillets over and cook for an additional 2-4 minutes, until salmon is medium rare. 

If you have very large pieces of salmon, preheat oven to 350 degrees and put the skillet with the salmon into the oven after you formed the crust on the top and flipped it so the skin side is down, and cook for about 5 minutes, or until medium rare.

 

 

Guinness Cheese Burgers March 14, 2008

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Spice up your standard burger with the addition of Guinness.  The beer adds a great deep flavor to the meet and keeps it super juicy.  The contrast of the sweet caramelized onions and the sharp cheddar will make your mouth water.  Serve with oven-baked sweet potato fries and a slaw to round out the meal.  Or make these into mini burgers (“sliders”) and serve them at a sports-theme party.  These burgers are perfect any time of year, but especially apropos for a St. Patrick’s Day celebration.
 

Guinness Cheese Burgers with Caramelized Onions

2 large yellow or white onion, sliced into rings and separated

2 Tbs. unsalted butter1 lb. high quality ground beef (85% to 90% lean)

¼ C. Guinness draught beer

¼ C. chopped yellow or white onion

1 garlic clove

2 tsp. Dijon mustard

2 (or more) splashes of Tabasco

1 tsp. salt

fresh ground pepper

olive oil

4 oz Irish cheddar cheese cut into thin slices

4 hamburger buns, lightly toasted or grilled  


1.       Heat a sauté pan or skillet over medium-high heat and add butter.  When butter is melted and starts to foam, add onion rings to the pan and stir to coat all of the rings with butter.  Cook, stirring occasionally, until onions are a deep caramel color (about 10 minutes).

  

2.       Combine next 8 ingredients (beef through pepper) in a mixing bowl and mix with your hands until just combined (do not over mix or meat will be tough).  Preheat grill or grill pan to medium-high heat.  Shape beef into 4 equal patties, about ¾” thick.  Rub each side of the patties with olive oil.  Sear burgers for about 30 seconds to seal in juices, then reduce heat to medium.  For medium burgers, cook patties for about 3-4 minutes on the first side and 2-3 minutes on the second side.  Divide cheese evenly four ways and put cheese on top of burgers once you flip them to cook on the second side. 

  

3.       Remove burgers from the grill, put on a lightly toasted or grilled bun, top with caramelized onions and other desired toppings.  Serve immediately.

Makes 4 burgers

  •  I use organic grass-fed and grass-finished beef, which tends to cook about 30% faster so vary the cooking time accordingly.
  • For juicy burgers, beef with a higher fat content (80-85% lean) is generally used, but since you are adding the beer and onions you can use leaner meat (90% lean) and still have a very juicy burger.
  • To keep juices in the meat, only flip burgers once and do not press down on the burgers while they are cooking.
  •  If the cheese is not melting fast enough you can close the cover or the grill or cover the grill pan with a lid or cookie sheet to speed up the melting process.
  • When selecting the cheese, use a cheddar aged for 1 year or less – you don’t want it to be too sharp for these burgers.

 

 
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