Showing posts with label cheese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheese. Show all posts

Friday, June 10, 2011

Summer Bites


This was last night's dinner: mozzarella, grape tomatoes, and fresh basil from our CSA speared like mini kabobs on toothpicks, drizzled in olive oil and balsamic vinegar. Delicious and perfect for the 101 degree hot and humid day, which found me around six o'clock scratching my head in our kitchen trying to figure out what to eat when neither of us were hungry, most likely due to the fact that it was still above 90 at that time. This hit cold dish hit the spot.
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Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Homemade Pizza

Who loves a good pizza? Everyone! It's the perfect bang for your buck, great for lunch, dinner, a midnight snack, the morning after, AND believe it or not, if you make it yourself I think it tastes better than when ordered in, is far less greasy, and can arguably be healthier.

Let's say you're in a rush and/or you either don't want to deal with or don't have time to make the dough and allow it to rise. No sweat. Most grocery stores sell pizza dough balls. We get ours from Trader Joe's and I always go with two, not only because the leftovers are tasty but because two pizza dough balls are the perfect size to make a Sicilian pie on one of our 9x13 baking sheets.

Let the dough sit at room temperature for about twenty minutes before spreading it out and attacking it with your ingredients. This is a great time to preheat your oven to 400 degrees and get your toppings ready. Before rolling out your dough, toss a loose handful of flour across your workspace and spread it about. I like my dough a little thick so I don't use a rolling pin but rather stretch, toss, and spread it out with my hands (Don't get too excited; I look nothing like people in Italian commercials working with dough). I work each ball separately, pinching them together in the middle of the baking sheet and pinching a good size crust around the edges of what will be the pie.

Sauce. Any Marinara will do - homemade or otherwise. I use about 13 ounces, spread out not too thickly, not too thinly, but just right across the dough with the back of a spoon. Cheese. Mozzarella. Grated and sprinkled across the top. I use about 1 pound. Parmesan. Grated. Sprinkled around the edges and on the crust. Herbs. Oregano. A definite must have.

At this point you can add any other toppings you wish - fresh veggies, sausage, pepperoni, anchovies, whatever - and then pop it in the oven. Give it about 15-20 minutes, depending on how you like your crust. We like ours crispy, so I'll generally lower the oven to 350 degrees and cook it for about 20-25 minutes to ensure the crust is the way we like it and the pizza doesn't burn (Very Important. Burnt pizza is such a disappointment).

Let it sit for about 5-7 minutes before cutting it, either with a pizza slicer, medium sized non-serrated knife, or a good pair of kitchen scissors (I do not jest - scissors are great for pizza), serve, and buono apetite!

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Chicken Gorgonzola over Red Potatoes and Fire Roasted Vegetables

Trader Joe's has a frozen meal that is "chicken gorgonzola" but I'm not really a fan of the meal-in-a-box, so I decided to recreate the dish. I stuffed the chicken with some gorgonzola cheese and then melted down some gorgonzola with butter and lemon and poured that over the potatoes and fire roasted onions, green peppers, and red peppers. Once the chicken was ready to cook with the other components, I chopped fresh parsley and rosemary and sprinkled the herbs across the top along with a dash of salt.

The dish cooked for about forty five minutes at 350 degrees and came out incredibly well. The gorgonzola that I stuffed into the chicken melted and was absorbed by the breast to give it a lovely tenderness that complimented the rest of the dish.