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Showing posts with label crab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crab. Show all posts

15 November 2014

Holiday Recipe: Appetizer Crabmeat Cheesecake With Gruyere and Mascarpone

Advocate staff photo by HEATHER MCCLELLAND --  Gourmet Galley, crabmeat cheesecake
2TheAdvocate photo: HEATHER MCCLELLAND 

From Denny:  This easy recipe is a big hit during the holidays or any big gathering!  Crabmeat is expensive, especially fresh.  What is great about this recipe is that a mere one pound of fresh crabmeat can feed a crowd because this rich recipe is set up as an appetizer.  

Fresh crabmeat is always the most tasty but if all you can procure is frozen then go ahead and use it.  Just know that if you use frozen crabmeat it may get a bit watery on the top of the cheesecake near the end of the baking time.  So, if that should happen then just pour off any of the clear liquid that might form.  

If you happen to have any leftover crabmeat cheesecake you can warm it the next day, serving a small piece with a large green salad on the side!  Bon Appetit!


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Santa Music Earring Circle Charm

Santa loves the music of the season!

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08 August 2011

Comfort Food From Louisiana: Chef Recipe: Crab Calas with Remoulade Sauce



Comfort Food From Louisiana: Chef Recipe: Crab Calas with Remoulade Sauce: "From Denny:  Chef Poppy Tooker is a New Orleans icon, much loved and respected as she is interesting.  She is like a walking trivia foodie encyclopedia and she sure does relish telling the tall tales of Louisiana food and history.

Check out some of her latest trivia offerings and appearances to tantalize your mind as much as your tastebuds:

* Louisiana's Crystal Hot Sauce was used in WWI Army field rations. I'm a bigger fan of Louisiana Hot Sauce.  It's milder than Tabasco and less vinegar.  Goes great on eggs in the morning.

* Camellia red beans are the finest grade of red beans.  Camellia buys up all the Hayward (finest top grade) beans, leaving grades A and B for the rest of the country.  Hayward grade beans are named for the family that founded Camellia in New Orleans back in 1923.  They still own it today.

Can we ever imagine the Monday wash day without Camellia red beans?  Life might never have been the same in New Orleans.  Even Louis Armstrong might not have been known for his endearing signature statement, 'Red beans and ricely yours.'"

09 August 2010

4 Easy Summer Dishes When Its Just Too Hot to Cook

*** Try some easy and quick summer recipes to beat the crazy heat - and avoiding cooking with any heat.





From Denny: Try something as simple as these sliced tomatoes and avocado with a side of cooked crabmeat and a few slices of lemon and you have a simple easy meal. Food writer, Mark Bittman ("Bittie") from The New York Times, dishes out three more easy recipes you can whip up in very little time.

It's important to eat lots of fruits and vegetables when the weather is this stifling to keep up hydration and vitamins and minerals when our bodies work overtime to keep cool. Try a little vinegar in your glass of water and you will find it helps to keep you cooler. (Sour foods like vinegar or apples helps to cool the liver. Cool the liver and you help to cool the body.)

This summer has been extremely hot all over the world. Right about now - in the "dog days of August" these cooling recipes sure look mighty good! :)



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Crab-stuffed Avocado Halves

From: Mark Bittman, food writer at The New York Times

Makes: 4 servings

Time: About 10 minutes

Ingredients:

About 1/2 pound cooked crabmeat
2 to 3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime juice
1 teaspoon grated lime zest
1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro, plus more for garnish
1 small fresh hot chile (like Thai), seeded and minced
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 large avocados


Directions:

Pick through the meat to remove all remaining shell, being careful not to shred it too finely. Gently toss the crab with the lime juice, zest, cilantro and chile, and season with salt and pepper. If you have time, refrigerate for 1 hour, stirring occasionally.

Cut the avocados in half lengthwise and remove the pit. Fill the center with the crab salad and serve garnished with more cilantro.









Cantaloupe Soup with Prosciutto

From: Mark Bittman, food writer at The New York Times

Makes: 4 servings

Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients:

1 1/2 to 2 pounds ripe cantaloupe, peeled, seeded, and chopped
3 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon or lime juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon or lime zest
1/2 cup apple juice, white wine or water, or more as needed
Salt
2 ounces prosciutto, torn into thin strips


Directions:

Put the cantaloupe, lemon juice, zest and apple juice in a blender and purée until smooth, adding a bit more juice if needed to thin. Sprinkle with salt and taste for seasoning. To serve, ladle into bowls and top with the torn prosciutto.






Shrimp and Mango Romaine Rolls

From: Mark Bittman, food writer at The New York Times

Makes: 4 servings

Time: 20 minutes

Ingredients:

1 head romaine lettuce
3/4 pound cooked shrimp, halved lengthwise
2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime juice
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 cup cooked white rice, optional
1 mango, peeled, seeded, and sliced
1 cup bean sprouts


Directions:

Separate the head of romaine into leaves and lay them on a clean work surface. Toss the shrimp halves with the lime juice and sprinkle with salt and pepper.

If using the rice, put about 2 tablespoons at the base of each leaf, top with a couple shrimp halves, a couple slices of mango, and a small handful of bean sprouts. Working from the end closest to you, fold the sides of the lettuce leaf in to secure the filling and then roll from the bottom up as you would a burrito. Repeat with the remaining leaves and filling and serve.



*** Avocado photo by Andrea.Pacheco @ flickr

*** Slices of tomato and avocado photo by jronaldlee @ flickr

*** Cantaloupe photo by Kabsik Park @ flickr (Royalty free images collection)

*** Shrimp photo by Laurel Fan @ flickr



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23 January 2009

Recipes: Crab Fingers, Doorstop Pork Chops, Hazed Ribs

Louisiana’s Abita Brewing Company is a bit hit!

This is the place where Louisiana’s Abita Brewing Company began. Since 1994 it has moved to a larger location, growing to more than a local and then regional beer; it now has national presence. Examples of Abita beer: Winter Warmer, a delicate spice taste; Amber Light; Wheat, a summer brew; English Bitter, which has a bite to it; Cask Condition Double Bock, a non-filtered, self-carbonated, hand-pumped, English-style bock; Purple Haze; Turbo Dog and many others. The names as are colorful as the Louisiana people. They also make some great non-alcoholic root beer.

This full service 100 table restaurant in Abita Springs, Louisiana (near Baton Rouge) still retains the original brewing equipment of the brewery’s humble beginnings. Abita Beer can be viewed by diners making special small batch brews for the restaurant.

Martin and Vula Essaied have owned the Abita Brew Pub since 1998. Vula is a native of Greece and Martin is from Tunisia. They met while working in a restaurant in Canada. They say they use beer in 75% of their recipes at the pub.

It didn’t take long for this couple new to Louisiana to start giving Louisianans what they love: seafood and meat dripping in sauces and marinades. They chose to promote locally brewed Louisiana Abita beer. Here are three of their most popular dishes. When you visit south Louisiana, make sure to come by this Abita Brew Pub (985 - 892 – 5837) and the Abita Brewing Company’s site nearby for an enjoyable visit!

***

Brewers’ Crab Fingers


Yield: Serves 4 to 6 as an appetizer

From: Martin and Vula Eaasied, Abita Brew Pub, Abita Springs, Louisiana

Ingredients:

4 Tablespoons butter, softened

2 ounces Worcestershire sauce

4 sprigs fresh rosemary

3 cloves garlic, chopped

Salt, black pepper, Creole seasoning, Tabasco sauce to taste

1 pound crab fingers

8 ounces Abita Amber beer


Directions: Combine all ingredients except the crab fingers and the beer.

Heat sauté pan and add butter mixture. Saute crab fingers in butter.

Add beer and let simmer no more than 4 minutes. Serve with hot French bread.


***

Doorstop Pork Chops


Ingredients:


Cornbread (1 pan of your favorite cornbread recipe)

4 to 6 double-cut (thick) pork chops

Salt, black pepper, Creole seasoning, oregano, thyme to taste

2 green bell peppers, diced

1 large onion, diced

4 stalks celery, diced

½ pound andouille sausage, diced

6 Tablespoons butter or oil

Root Beer Glaze (recipe follows)


Directions: Prepare a pan of your favorite cornbread recipe. Break up cornbread into small pieces.

Combine
salt, black pepper, Creole seasoning, oregano and thyme and rub on pork chops. Grill chops and set aside.

Dice peppers, onion, celery and sausage. Sauté in butter or oil until soft.

Combine vegetable sausage mixture with cornbread pieces.

Place a mound of cornbread mixture on plate; top with a grilled pork chop and spoon Root Beer Glaze over chop. Serves 4 to 6.


Root Beer Glaze


3 cups Abita Root Beer

A few sprigs rosemary

Directions: Place root beer and rosemary sprigs in saucepan on simmer. Reduce until you have a thick glaze. It’s ready when it coats a spoon.


***

Hazed Ribs

Yield: Serves 6.


Ingredients:


3 racks baby-back ribs

1 ounce whole black peppercorns

¼ cup Zatarain’s Crab Boil

Salt and black pepper to taste

Abita Purple Haze beer, enough to cover ribs

16 ounces Brewmaster’s BBQ Sauce or your own favorite barbecue sauce recipe

6 ounces Abita Golden Beer

1 bell pepper, diced

½ onion, diced

1 stalk celery, diced

Vegetable oil


Directions:

Combine ribs, peppercorns, crab boil, salt and pepper in a baking pan. Add ribs and enough Abita Purple Haze Beer to cover ribs. Bake in a 350° F. oven for 2 hours or until tender.

Meanwhile, sauté diced vegetables in enough vegetable oil to coat bottom of pan (about 2 tablespoons) until tender. Add barbecue sauce and Abita Golden Beer. Let simmer until mixture thickens.

Grill baked ribs, basting with vegetable-barbecue sauce mixture, until warmed through. Fall-off-the-bone good! Serves 6.


Note: For other recipes visit my other fun blog -
Romancing The Chocolate
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