Author: marga (Page 46 of 112)

Meal Kit Review: HelloFresh Pork and Poblano Tacos Review & Kiwi Salsa Recipe

Rating: 7.5/10

It’s true, sometimes all it takes is one trial.  After trying the Plated meal kit for Vietnamese Meatballs with Chile-Lime Dressing,  and being impressed by the convenience and taste, I decided it was finally time for me to join the 21st century and try  other meal kits.  There are a myriad of companies selling these, of course, but I settled on Hello Fresh because I’d gotten tons and tons of coupons for it with other stuff I’d bought online.

I didn’t look at the menu until after I signed up & paid, and I was actually disappointed once I saw the options.  Most of the offerings seemed to be mainstream American food with a little twist.  I was further disappointed that many of the recipes that sounded more exciting and that included steak or other more expensive ingredients had a $12 premium! A $12 pp meal is no bargain, but at $18 pp, we’re talking about restaurant prices.  Still, I was able to find a couple of recipes that sounded good.  If you want to try Hello Fresh, use this link and you’ll save $40 off your first delivery (and I’ll get $30 off my next),  which gives you a better deal than the promo I used!  Remember to cancel within 2 days of getting your first box to not be charged again.

 

Review

I wasn’t expecting much of this dish based on the title.  We’re not big taco eaters at home.  However, this dish was better tasting than it had any right to be.  The kiwi salsa was particularly refreshing and unusual, and I can imagine making it again (recipe follows).  I had never thought of mixing sour cream with lime juice before, but it was a good idea and I’ll do it again as well..

The pork itself was pretty tasty and while the Mexican spice almost gave it the flavor of Mexican chorizo, it was mild and tasty.  This is not my favorite flavor, however.

The meal made four tacos, so two per person.  It was just the *right* amount of food to satisfy me, though as I had an early dinner, I was hungry later.  So far this have been the same problem with all the kit meals I’ve made.

In all, I thought the meal was great for the discounted price I paid for it, but I can get very good tacos for less than $12 pp at my corner Mexican restaurant (albeit not with this great kiwi salsa).

Kiwi Salsa

  • 1 Roma tomato, chopped
  • 1 Kiwi, chopped
  • 1 small onion, chopped
  • 5 cilantro stalks, leaves removed & coarsely chopped
  • 1 small lime, halved
  • salt & pepper to taste

In a bowl, mix together the chopped tomato, kiwi, onion and cilantro.  Squeeze a lime half on the chopped vegetables.  Season with salt and pepper and mix well.

 

Plated Review: Vietnamese Beef Meatballs over Rice with Chile-Lime Dressing

Vietnamese Beef Meatballs

This photo comes from Plated.

A few weeks ago, I discovered that Safeway delivery sold Plated meal kits.  I had always been curious about these kits, but had never bought them because they seemed too expensive for what they were and I was afraid the portions were too small.  Plus, if I’m going to go through the trouble of cooking, I want to have leftovers for the next day!

Still, I was curious so I bought one that sounded good and it ended up being delicious, far better than I expected.  The portion was *just right*, though, as I suspected, I started feeling hungry later in the evening (this has happened with all the kit meals I’ve made, and it may be my fault for staying awake until so late).

The meal was fairly easy to make, though this particular one necessitated lots of chopping of different ingredients.  Fortunately, I discovered that I could save myself from washing lots of little bowls by using a sectional serving tray for the chopped produce.    After that, it’s just a matter of following the very detailed instructions.  The kit includes a card with photos and step by step instructions on how to make the meal.  You can also find the recipe at the Plated website.

The ingredients all seemed to be very good quality and, as I mentioned, the results were delicious.

I feel conflicted, however, about the packaging of the meal.  The Safeway version comes in a large plastic box with everything you need.  It would be hard to fit more than one or two in the fridge, however.  Still, it was super convenient to just take it out and have everything ready.  Most of the ingredients come wrapped in plastic, however, so there seems to be a lot of plastic waste.  The box itself is recyclable in theory, but apparently plastic recycling is no longer happening much in the US – low oil prices means it’s cheaper to make new plastic -, so a lot of it ends up in landfills.  So there is a pretty high environmental cost at getting these kits at Safeway (I don’t know how their packaging is for their subscription).

At Safeway, this kit was about $20 for a kit serving 2 people, and because it came as part of my Safeway order, “shipping” was free.  My Safeway delivery offers 3-5 Plated kits per week, and they vary in cost from approx $17 to $23, depending on the ingredients.  If you subscribe to Plated, their two-person kits cost $24 plus an additional $8 shipping if you buy only 2 kits at the time – shipping is free if you order more.  Kits for 3 and 4 people cost $30-$40 respectively with free shipping.  While the kits are generally cheaper at Safeway, they have much less variety – only 3 to 5 kits per week.

This particular recipe  didn’t have any strange ingredients, so it should be fairly easy to hack and do at home.

 

Grand European Pasteurized Processed Gruyerère Cheese Product – Review

I found this item today at Grocery Outlet San Leandro, while looking for actual Gruyère cheese for a recipe.  Normally, I would stay away from anything that calls itself a “cheese product,” but nothing in the ingredient list seemed scary (though it does contain sodium phosphates, emulsifying salts and sorbic acid) so I figured, why not?

It was a great choice. This cheese tastes *just* like Laughing Cow cheese, but it’s more solid.  You can cut it into slices and have it melt on your burgers.   As other processed cheeses, it melts beautifully.  It’s also damned tasty to eat by itself – and I’m thinking of including it on my Christmas Eve dinner cheese plate.

It turns out that processed cheeses can last a long time because they have preservatives added.  Plus they are fattier.  Amazingly, a lot of the cheeses we know – such as Mozarella, Cheddar, Brie, Camembert and Swiss – are processed cheeses.  Who knew?

 

Amazingly, I haven’t been able to find any references to this cheese in the internet.  Grand European is a trademark of Pacific Cheese Co., located in Hayward (next door to San Leandro), which distributes it.  Costco sells a Havarti and a Gouda with the same label.  This Gruyere cheese products says it’s made in Germany.

My fear is that this cheese will be difficult to find – cheeses at Grocery Outlet come and go.  Fortunately, it’s very cheap ($2.20 for about 7 oz) and it will last until March next year.

 

Plated Hack: French Onion Burgers with Salad

Rating: 5/10

I have recently started trying “meal kits” and while I love the idea of simple meals I can make in under an hour, I hate how expensive they are.  At $20-$28 per entree for two people, they cost about the same as take out and there are no leftovers!  Still, they are super convenient.

Today, I decided to try to recreate one of those kit-meals buying the ingredients myself to see how they worked and whether I saved money.  Now, if you are a professional billing $500/hour (or even $100), the time spent at the supermarket hunting these ingredients will surpass any savings you may have – so these meals are really ideal for people for whom time is literally money.  But my time is far cheaper than that.

I chose this recipe for French Onion Burgers with Gruyere and Arugula because I had read good things about it while looking through Plated reviews and it has fairly common ingredients, which I hoped I could easily find at the quirky discount grocery store near my house.  I wasn’t able to get all the ingredients I needed, but I think the substitutions worked well enough.  I haven’t tried the Plated kit dish, so I don’t know how it compares to mine as far as flavor goes, but I don’t think it’s likely to have been significantly better.  My version was far cheaper, however. While the Plated meal for 2 costs between $22 and $28, depending on where you buy it, I spent a mere $15 in groceries and had enough food for 3 people (alas, neither of my kids would eat this, so we have leftovers for tomorrow) with groceries remaining.

Here is a list of the ingredients in the recipe, what I bought and the price.

PLATED Ingredient My Substitution Cost
Beef Stock, 1 container Beef broth, 1/2 cup pantry
Yellow Onion, 1 small Yellow Onion, 1 regular $0.70
Thyme, 1/8 oz. Living thyme plant $2
Lemon, 1 Lemon, 1 $0.80
Ground Beef, 12 oz Ground Beef, 16 oz $3.50
English muffins, 2 English muffins, 3 $2.80
Baby Arugula, 3 oz Mixed Greens, 5 oz $3
1 Tbsp Flour, 1 Tbsp pantry
Gruyere, 2 slices Processed Gruyere Cheese product, 7 oz $2.20
Unsalted butter, 3 packets 1 Tbsp pantry
Dijon mustard, 2 packets Coarse Dijon mustard pantry
TOTAL  $15

Note that I had to substitute baby arugula for mixed greens as all the packages of baby arugula at the grocery store had expired yesterday.  The price was the same than for the mixed greens, however.

Where I did save a lot of money was by using “Gruyere cheese product” instead of Gruyere.  Unfortunately, my discount grocery store didn’t have it and I decided to substitute with this product as at least it had Gruyere as its main ingredient.  Alas, it didn’t take anything like Gruyere and rather it was a more solid version of Laughing Cow cheese.  Delicious, but far cheaper and different than real Gruyere.  In reality, I don’t think the substitution mattered – the flavor of the onions was so strong that I doubt any cheese would have broken through.  The cheese did add to the creaminess of the burger, however.

All in all, I felt the burgers were interesting and tasty but the combination of burger and fresh onion flavors wasn’t a big winner for either me or my husband.  I sort of liked the English muffing for a bun substitution, but that’s because I was smart enough to eat the burger with knife and fork.  My husband didn’t and wish he had a bun instead.

Neither of us were that fond of the lemon juice/olive oil dressing on the greens, however.

Still, I’m left with 4 English muffins I can have for breakfast, some newly discovered and delicious cheese “product” I’ll eat as a snack (indeed, it’s so fun and unexpected that I may serve it as part of my Xmas cheese course), some more greens to eat as a salad and a very cool thyme plant.  I can’t complain at all.

Le Village Buffet at the Paris Hotel – Las Vegas, NV – Review

We have been going to Le Village Buffet at the Paris Hotel in Las Vegas annually for several years.  My kids love going there and insist that it be part of our annual trip (my husband goes for a conference, I go for the pool, the kids just come along). In these years, I’ve noticed a substantial decline.  We visit it with a Buffet of Buffets pass, which means we pay about $20+tax per person for the meal.  For that, it’s not a bad deal. But at the $32 full price, it’s not in the least justifiable.

We visited Le Village Buffet both for a weekday dinner and breakfast last week.  I noticed the dinner buffet to be poorer and less French than in previous years.  Gone was the tri-tip from the Savoy section, for example, replaced by roasted cauliflower!  You could still get chicken or sausage, but no beef.    The prime rib had been replaced by roast beef – it had a nice flavor and it was a large piece, but it wasn’t special.  There was no roasted lamb or pork belly.  There was duck a l’orange, but it was a failure.  Once again the meat was too dry and the flavor lacking to justify the dish.  I was sorry I tried it. If they are going to kill a duck, they should honor it by cooking it properly.  Mashed potatoes and mushrooms were good, but pedestrian.

A mushroom crepe, cooked with cheese and sprinkled with some sort of truffle sort, OTOH, was delicious.  I did have to wait for half an hour to get it – the Paris was apparently too cheap to have two crepemakers working on tandem -, but at least I enjoyed it.  I also enjoyed the leftovers of my daughter’s caprese crepe (but note that the mozarella they use is not fresh, despite their claims).  She liked the truffled mac & cheese.

Desserts, as usual, did not awe, but some were OK. Mostly not worth the calories, however.

Breakfast for me the next morning was a strawberry ricotta crepe.  The wait wasn’t as long, but again they could have used a second crepe-maker.  The crepe was delicious – but not worth the $22 price, even if we add the average coffee and non-fresh orange juice that I also consumed.   But the crepe was too filling to want to eat anything else.  My daughter had the cookie dough crepe which she felt was really good but too sweet.  The more traditional banana/nutella crepe was also good.

The choices for crepes (same for dinner and breakfast) have also gone down.  They used to have mixed berries and sliced hazelnuts available in the past, but they do no longer.

Note that Le Village Buffet is the only buffet in Vegas that accepts Open Table reservations. Make them and save yourself the line.

Le Village Buffet at the Paris Hotel & Casino
3665 Las Vegas Blvd S
Las Vegas, NV
(702) 946-700
http://www.parislasvegas.com/restaurants/le-village-buffet.html

Weekday Breakfast $22/13, Weekend Breakfast $24/15, Weekday Lunch $25/15, Weekend Brunch $31/20, Weekday Dinner $31/18, Weekend Dinner $31/20. Groupon deal often available. Available with Buffet of Buffets pass.

Marga’s Restaurant Reviews

Marga’s Las Vegas

The following review is from 2014

For years, Le Village Buffet at the Paris Hotel and Casino was my favorite buffet in Vegas.   I appreciated the combination of French classics and regional dishes, and looked forward to tasting dishes that I don’t encounter that often otherwise. My daughters love the atmosphere – the buffet is decorated so that you feel you are eating al fresco in a French village square.  However, my last visits to the buffet – for dinner and breakfast in August 2014 – were really disappointing, and I don’t look forward to going back.

DINNER

We went to dinner at 8 PM, later than in previous occasions, but not what I would consider particularly late for Las Vegas. The place was hopping and there were enough people in line that I was happy we had made a reservation through Open Table and were sat immediately (however, we were put in the non-decorated room near the bathroom, nor a particularly nice dining location).  The food, however, left much to be desired.  They were out of several dishes and the quality and taste were inferior to previous occasions.

This time I started with the cavatappi with truffle sauce, which I had raved about the previous year.  It was almost as good.   The duck a l’orange was overcooked and a little tough, but not too greasy and the orange sauce was good.  Scalloped potatoes were as good as I remembered – as was the tri-tip.

Other dishes were a failure.  Both the prime rib and the stuffed lamb were dry, the former was also chewy.  The mac & cheese had peas instead of bacon, and even my 9-year old didn’t like it.  The sole was cooked Florentine style this time, and also seemed dry.  They were out of quiche. The pork belly, which had been served in a cute individual plate last year, now had the texture and flavor of pork shoulder, but still managed to feel dry in my mouth.  I usually like my dishes salty, but I felt most of the meat was oversalted.

For dessert I had a made-to-order crepe with mixed berries (they were out of strawberries) and bananas inside, and caramel sauce, powdered sugar, whipped cream and candied hazelnuts outside.  It was outstanding, delicious, perfect.  I would much recommend.

The creme brulee was also quite good, and there was a square cheesecake with berry fruit inside which was also delicious.  Other cheesecakes weren’t, but I didn’t  try too many of the desserts.

Service was good, but all in all, I didn’t think it was a particularly noteworthy meal.

BREAKFAST

Breakfast the following morning was also disappointing – or would have been if I had paid full price for it.  None of the pastries looked appetizing, they weren’t French and they were served cold.  My daughter likened them to pastries from Costco.  We didn’t actually try them, however, so perhaps they tasted better than they looked.  My daughter had a muffin and enjoyed them.

My husband said the slab bacon was pretty good.  They have a wide assortment of savory dishes, but I prefer sweet fare in the morning. I had one of their #1 crepes, with banana and nutella, and it was very good.  However,  there is a creperie right outside selling crepes for $11, which is a better deal than the breakfast buffet.

The coffee was OK, the orange juice was low-quality bottled stuff.

We’ll be staying at the Paris again this year, so I may still give the restaurant a try if I get a good daily deal.  Regular price for Total Rewards members vary from $23 to $34 depending on meal and day.

August 2013 review

I will admit that what keeps us returning to Le Village is, more than anything, the setting.  The buffet is made to look as if you are eating in the middle of a French village, under the  late afternoon sky.  Sure, it’s a little bit Disneyesque, but charming nonetheless and a huge favorite of my oldest daughter, Mika, now age 11.

We wouldn’t go back to Le Village if the food wasn’t good, however, and indeed the food here is at least a notch or two above that of other buffets.  Not everything is a winner, of course, but there are enough wonderful dishes to keep any French food lover happy.

The buffet is divided in stations which purport to present dishes from different regions of France.  In addition to these, there is a large salad, soup and seafood station as well as a dessert station.  The food at the regional stations is not always true to the provinces it represents, but they at least try to make the effort.

During both of our most recent stays, we enjoyed the grilled meats in the Savoie station.  They are nicely seasoned and cooked, just make sure to forgo the sauces.  Don’t miss the cheeses at this station either.

Next to it, the Brittany station specializes in crepes.  They have both savory and sweet offerings. I haven’t tried the savory yet, but make sure you leave room for a sweet crepe at the end of your meal. They are very, very good. I particularly enjoy the hazelnuts on top.

The Normandy station specializes in seafood, and if you must have sushi while at Le Village here is where you’d find it.  I had the stuffed sole instead, which was very good. I hadn’t enjoyed the quiche when I had it in 2012, but by 2013 it had become more flavorful.

No Vegas buffet can survive without the obligatory carved-to-order roasts and other American traditional foods, and Le Village has decided to place this in the Burgundy station.  The prime rib was very good, so I guess I can’t really complain.  The mac & cheese was lacking back in 2012, but by 2013 it was made with brie and bacon and could satisfy both kids and grownups alike.

Food in Alsace also got better.  In addition to the traditional bakeoff, this year there was an amazing pork belly, fork tender and extremely flavorful. Don’t miss it and get some scalloped potatoes and caramelized onions while you’re at it.

I’ve always left the Provence station for last, but perhaps next time I should change that.  The cavatappi pasta in truffle sauce I had this year was, easily, the best dish I had in Vegas.  It would not be out of place at a 5-star restaurant and I think next time I’ll begin by having half a plate of it.  Alas, I remember this same dish lacking the year before so hopefully my good experience wasn’t a fluke.

Dessert wise, if you must try something other than a crepe (and you probably must), Le Village does a particular good job with its chocolate pastries and its creme brulee. The kids like the frozen custard, very much like soft ice cream.

When we were there, Le Village also offered an “all you can drink wine, champagne or mimosas” for $14.  According to their website, they’ve now changed this to all-you-can-drink Blue Moon or Miller Lite beer, house red and white wine or bloody marys for $12.  The house wines are undrinkable, however, so unless you really like Blue Moon (which I haven’t tried), you may want to stick with water or soda.

Service was competent both times we went, however it was much friendlier the second time. She got a much better tip.

The one issue I have with Le Village buffet is that it’s rather expensive.  It’s between $30 and $33 for dinner ($3 off if you have a Total Rewards card)  for adults and $18 to $20 for children, but Le Village defines as an “adult”anyone over the age of 8.  I hope that they don’t apply the same standards to their labor practices.    In any case, I wouldn’t pay full price to go to Le Village, but keep your eye on groupon for special deals (we got dinner and unlimited drinks for 2 for $45).  Le Village also participates in the Buffet of Buffets deal.

July 2012 Review

My husband and I love French food and had been happy enough with our last experience at the Paris Buffet (back at the turn of the millennium), that we decided to give it a try again for dinner when we visited Las Vegas last month (July 2012).  This despite the fact that the buffet now gets mixed reviews.  In all, I have to say we were pretty happy and it was easily the best of the four other buffets we ate in Vegas using our Buffet of Buffets pass (Planet Hollywood, the Rio, Harrah’s and Main Street Station).

Three things make the Paris buffet special.  One is the Disneyiske setting, in an open-air plaza, under a fake sky, surrounded by cute French-looking houses.  My kids loved it, but so did I.  A second is the fact that the food actually tries to be regional French, it doesn’t always succeed, but it’s a valiant effort.  Finally, it’s the fact that the menu is limited enough to at least give you a chance to try everything you want to try (not everything there is, of course).  I tried a lot of stuff.

The food stands are divided by French region, though there is a station dedicated to soup, salads and seafood and another to desserts.  I tried the French Onion soup here and was underwhelmed.  The onions had not been caramelized enough and the broth was too weak.

The first region I visited was Provence.  Here I tasted some beef braised in a dark sauce.  My husban liked it quiet a bit, but I felt the dish needed some sweetness, some wine in the sauce or caramelization on the beef.  The saffron rice tasted like plain buttered rice, it was good but there were no hints of saffron.  A dish of pasta in a cream sauce was quite satisfying, though I think it would have been helped by some grated cheese on top.  A stewed chicken gave a hint of having been cooked in wine, but otherwise lacked seasoning.

My next region was Alsace, a region in the border with Germany that has gone back and forth between the two countries.  I’ve both eaten and cooked Alsatian food before and I’m quite fond of it.  Unfortunately, I wasn’t too fond of the chocroute garni, the meat was a tad too sweet and too spicy for me, while the pickled cabbage was too vinegary for my taste.  The rest of the offerings were better, but not Alsatian.  The cassoulet was nicely done and the meat was flavorful,the caramelized pearl onions were delicious, though a little underdone, and the scalloped potatoes were  wonderful.

My venture into Savoie (a region I don’t know at all) was even more successful.  Here I tried the grilled pita bread, lamb, tri-tip and chicken – apparently they like to grill in Savoie.  They were all great, in particular the lamb and the tri-tip.  Don’t bother with the chateubriand sauce, however, it wasn’t that good and would have ruined the meats.

This station also includes a sample of cheeses.  The smoked gouda (or a cheese that tastes as such) was particularly delicious.

Normandy offered a stuffed sole which I loved.  It had a beautiful crust and a delicious flavor, once you added a squeeze of lemon juice.  Mike wasn’t as fond of it, and I can’t really understand why.  The ham and cheese quiche was less successful, it tasted very much of Parmessan.  There is also a small sushi section, but I didn’t try that at all.

Finally, I was surprised that there was neither beef bourguignon nor coq au vin in the Burgundy section but I then realized that this was actually the American station.   Here you can find rotisserie chicken (I didn’t try it), prime rib (very good), roasted pork with apples (so salty as to make it inedible), roasted and mashed potatoes (good enough) and mac & cheese (lacked flavor).

For dessert, I first headed to the Breton section where you could try apple crisp and bread pudding (homey, but nothing to write home about) as well as made-to-order crepes.  The crepes were the standard French variety, rather than Breton buckwheat galettes, but they were delicious.  I had mine with strawberries and bananas covered with fudge and hazelnuts.  The one problem is that the strawberries were already macerated and too sweet, so make sure you add some element to compensate for that.  Still, it was sooo good.

We also visited the dessert station and here I tried several things.  There was a chocolate mousse pastry on a hazelnut crust which was delicious and a lemon cookie sandwich that was out of this world.  The other desserts impressed less.  The cheesecake was less inspired that at other buffets and the creme brulet lacked umf.  I liked the peanut butter cookie, but the sugar cookie was nothing special.  The kids loved the soft custard (aka ice cream).

I had the unlimited mimosas/champagne/wine deal for dinner ($14, I think), and it’s a good deal if you’re planning to drink alcohol and are not too picky about quality.  I enjoyed the mimosas and the champagne.  The wine tasted like $2 chuck and I would definitely not have it again.

Probably the worst part of the evening was our waitress.  She was efficient but seemed to be having a crappy night and there was never a hint of smile on her face.  I’m sorry, but dining is an experience and unhappy waitresses bring it down a notch.

All in all this is a good buffet  and I’d definitely do it again.

 

Chicken Luisita – Recipe

I got some fresh tarragon to make Lobster Thermidor and I wanted to use what was left before it went bad.  So I went looking for an easy recipe that had ingredients I had at home.  I completely lucked out with Peter Micheli’s Chicken Louisa at Epicurious.com.   I didn’t have tomatoes, though, so I substituted with tomato puree.  I also used leftover rose champagne instead of wine.  For that reason, I’m changing the name – slightly :-).

This recipe can be done in much less than an hour. I served it with plain couscous, but it was also great with homemade white bread.

Chicken Luisita

  • 8 boneless, skinless chicken thigh fillets
  • salt & pepper to taste
  • 1 Tbsp.  olive oil
  • 1 Tbsp. unsalted butter
  • 1 shallot, finely chopped
  • 1/2 cup white wine
  • 3/4 cup heavy cream
  • 1 15 oz can tomato puree
  • 2 Tbsp. fresh tarragon, finely chopped
  • 1/2 tsp. chicken stock base
Pat chicken dry.  Season with salt and pepper.
Heat oil and butter together in a frying pan over moderately high heat.  Brown chicken on both sides, about 2 minutes per side.  Remove chicken and keep warm in a separate plate.
Add shallot and cook for one minute.  Deglaze with the wine and cook until wine is reduced by half. Add the cream, tomato puree, tarragon and chicken base.  Mix, bring to a boil, and then reduce heat to low.  Cook for 3 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
Return chicken to the pot, together with any juices on the plate.  Cook until the chicken is cooked through, 5 to 7 minutes.

Simply Homemade Bread Mixes – Product Review

countrywhiteI got a breadmaker for Christmas, and Mike picked up one of Fleischmann’s Simply Homemade bread mixes at the store.  I thought it was sort of silly, isn’t the whole point of having a bread maker to be able to throw some ingredients together and get great bread?, but after a couple of failures doing exactly that, I decided to try it.  It was delicious!  Seriously, soooo good.

I think I got the Country White, though I threw away the box and the bread was actually sort of brown.  I also cooked it for 3 hours, rather than on a rapid cycle.  You don’t get a particularly large loaf – but if what you want is flavor, this has it.  I think next time I’d select light crust rather than medium, however.

I don’t know how much the package was, my bet is that it’s not cost effective, but if I found them on sale I might buy a couple to keep to make some quick bread without having to put much thought into it.

Baked Coconut Shrimp

Last night it was V-Day so I made coconut shrimp for my husband.  I’d never made them before, but it was very simple.  You just take peeled shrimp, cover it with sweetened shredded coconut, place them on a lightly greased baking sheet and cook in a preheated 400F oven for about 15 minutes (for medium shrimp), flipping once.

It’s somehow tricky to attach the shredded coconut to the shrimp.  It just falls off.  I tried putting the coconut directly on the shrimp, coating the shrimp with mango sauce or egg whites, and then dipping it on the coconut, and doing so after dusting the shrimp with cornstarch.  They all worked equally world, and Mike couldn’t tell the difference between them flavor wise.

I made a mango sauce to go with the shrimp, but Mike preferred them without it.

 

A mess of a Frico

This week I’m cooking Friulian food, which meant that I had to make a Frico.  As I read in a blog (which I can’t find now), “frico” is what you made in the dead of winter, when nothing was growing and all you had was old cheese and old potatoes.  At its simplest, frico is just Montasio cheese, shredded and fried with some flour into a thin wafer.  It can be eaten as a snack or with soups.  Montasio is a cowmilk cheese, eaten at different stages of its development, somewhat similar to Parmesan.

More complicated versions of frico will include thinly sliced potatoes, as well as chopped onions and pancetta (if you’re rich!).

I found a recipe that looked great and incorporated all those elements and wanted to make it. But then I lost it.  Rather than go with one of the other recipes, I tried to remember the steps on that one but made a HUGE mess of it.  First I fried the onions and chopped bacon together (didn’t have pancetta), then added slices of potatoes I’d previously boiled and topped with a lot of grated cheese.  I didn’t have Montasio, so I used a mixture of Parmesan and San Joaquin Gold, a cheese from the Cowgirl Creamery, which despite the cheesemakers claims that it’s a Fontina-turned-Cheddar, is actually very similar to Parmesan.

The cheese was supposed to melt, caramelize and harden, so that I could then flip the whole thing and cooked in the other side.  Of course, that didn’t happen. Instead the onions started to burn before the cheese melted and when I tried to flip it, I just messed the whole thing up.  It was still very tasty, but not what it was intended to be.

I may try again, actually following a recipe.

 

Hormel Natural Choice Apple Gouda Chicken Sausages – Review

AppleGoudaChickenSausage-largeI got these at Grocery Outlet yesterday.  They were only 50-cents, or so, as today was the expiration day.  I was going to use them in quesadillas, but we ended up eating them whole.

All in all, they were good, but so sweet that none of us wanted to have a second sausage (and at 3 oz, they aren’t that big).  My youngest particularly enjoyed how juicy it was.  The cheese, indeed, seems to be there more to provide juiciness than flavor.

They are actually made from “natural” ingredients: chicken, Gouda cheese, dried apples, brown sugar, vinegar, salt, paprika and spices.  They are in pork casings.

I don’t know that I’d buy again, unless they were on sale at 50-cents.

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