Showing posts with label Cheese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cheese. Show all posts

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Stuffed Chicken and Sautéed Radishes with Peach Arugula Salad

We just got home from our vacation in Spain with all of the married Hamanns - including the newlyweds, who joined us straight from their honeymoon!  As a family, we spent a few days on the beach in Sitges and a week in Barcelona, enjoying the sun, beautiful sites, and amazing seafood... probably too much of it.




Now that we're back, Carsten is into full-on study mode for Boards part 2.  He's got a strict schedule he follows, including his breaks for lunch and exercise and dinner.  That's my job for this month: making him a yummy and healthy dinner each night.  Full of veggies and protein.  It's only been one week, but I'm enjoying the challenge of coming up with a delicious and healthy well-rounded meal day after day.  As we normally eat vegetarian when it's just the two of us, it's proved even more challenging to mix up the protein sources...


Tonight was definitely a success.  I know, because he suggested I blog it ;)

The stuffed chicken I adapted from a recipe I found at From Calculu∫ to Cupcake∫.  Maybe I was drawn to it because I relate to math and baking name, or maybe it was just the mouth-watering picture, that looks like anything but a boring chicken breast.

The sweet sautéed radishes I found over at The Endless Meal.  The fabulous photographs are definitely what got me on this one.

And the peach salad I threw together because I was lucky enough to find some fabulous peaches at the grocery store.  I could eat this salad all day... it's like a healthy dessert.


Stuffed Chicken
Ingredients
serves 2
2 boneless skinless chicken breasts
2 oz cream cheese (I used fat-free)
4 oz frozen spinach, thawed
4 oz mushrooms, chopped into small 1/4-inch pieces (I used mini porcini mushrooms)
1 Tbs drained and chopped sun-dried tomatoes
1 tsp cooking olive oil
salt and fresh black pepper to taste
paprika
any other seasoning of your choice

Procedure
Let the spinach thaw enough to separate out 4oz.  Return the remaining spinach to the freezer for later use.  Place the chicken on parchment paper, and using a meat tenderizer mallet, pound each chicken breast until about 1/4 inch thick.  Fold the paper over the chicken, and place in the fridge until ready to use.
Add olive oil to a pan over medium heat, and sautée the mushrooms until most of the moisture has been released and evaporated.  Add the sun-dried tomatoes and the cream cheese, and stir until the cheese is melted and well-incorporated.  Squeeze all of the liquid out of the spinach, and add it to the pan.  Mix well, and add salt and pepper to taste.  Set aside to until cool enough to handle.
Remove the chicken from the fridge, and evenly distribute half of the filling onto one end of each breast.  Roll up the breast, taking care not to let the stuffing fall out the sides.  Secure the chicken with tooth picks or kitchen twine.
Drizzle or spray each roll with a little olive oil, then sprinkle with salt, pepper, paprika, and any other seasoning you desire.  Return chicken to the fridge until ready to cook (you can prepare these up to a day in advance).

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.  Place chicken rolls on a baking sheet, and bake until chicken is fully cooked but still moist, about 15 minutes.  Remove tooth picks or twine before serving.


Sweet Sautéed Radishes
Ingredients
serves 2-3
1 bunch of radishes, about 10 in total
1/2 Tbs olive oil
1 tsp butter
1 Tbs honey
1 Tbs sherry vinegar (or vinegar of your choice)
dash of sea salt

Procedure
Twist the leaves off the radishes and wash the radishes well. Thinly slice 2 radishes into rounds and set them aside. Then cut the remaining radishes in half lengthwise. Wash the leaves well, place them in a large bowl and set them aside.
Heat the olive oil in a cast iron or non-stick frying pan over medium high heat. Add the radishes, cut side down, to the pan. Sautée them for 3-4 minutes, or until the bottoms are brown. Remove them from the pan and place them in the bowl with the radish greens.
In a small sauce pan, heat the butter, honey, vinegar and salt over medium heat.  It will come to a boil.  Cook until the glaze thickens, then pour the glaze over the sautéed radishes and radish greens.  Toss well to coat.
Transfer the sautéed radishes and greens to a serving plate, scatter the thinly sliced radishes around the plate and sprinkle the top with a little extra sea salt.


Peach Arugula Salad
Ingredients
serves 2
2 handfuls arugula
1/4 cup chopped pecans, toasted
1 Tbs crumbled goat cheese
1 ripe peach, peeled and chopped

olive oil
balsamic vinegar

Procedure
Assemble the ingredients on two plates in the order listed, top with a light drizzle of olive oil and balsamic vinegar.


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Saturday, May 3, 2014

Tiramisu Cupcakes


 April seems to be birthday month around here, and I love it.  Last weekend I got to spend all Saturday afternoon baking cupcakes with Clare, and helping Jake (along with Clare, Stewart and Alicia) prepare an amazing gourmet pizza party for Michele.  If you're looking for a good party idea, this one turned out splendidly.  We were expecting twenty guests around 7:30.  So at 4:00 we started 6 recipes of this pizza dough.  It's my absolute favorite pizza dough recipe (although beware, it needs more flour than it calls for).  We let the dough rise while we made a trip to the grocery store for the sauce ingredients, then began the sauce.  About an hour later, I divided the dough into 24 equal personal-pizza-size portions, and began rolling them out while Jake and Stewart fired up the grill.  We grilled each dough for just a couple minutes, until they were about half cooked.  Then all the guests brought different ingredients with them, and everyone got to make their own personal pizza!  Once the toppings were arranged to each person's liking, it was just popped back on the grill for less than 5 minutes, and voilà! delicious, gourmet, piping hot personal pizza!  It was a blast.




And these cupcakes were the perfect way to round off the meal :)  Clare and I discovered the recipe over at the BrownEyedBaker.


Ingredients (makes 18 cupcakes)
For the Cupcakes
1 1/4 cups cake flour, sifted (I didn't have any, so I made my own using this tutorial)
3/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 cup milk
1 vanilla bean, halved lengthwise, seeds scraped and reserved
4 Tbs unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into pieces
3 whole eggs plus 3 egg yolks, at room temperature
1 cup granulated sugar

For the Coffee-Marsala Syrup
1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon freshly brewed espresso
1 ounce sweet marsala wine
1/4 cup granulated sugar

For the Mascarpone Frosting
1 cup heavy cream
8 oz mascarpone cheese, room temperature
1/2 cup confectioners' sugar, sifted
Unsweetened cocoa powder, for dusting



Procedure
For the cupcakes
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Line standard muffin tins with paper liners. Sift together cake flour, baking powder, and salt. Heat milk and vanilla-bean pod and seeds in a small saucepan over medium heat just until bubbles appear around the edge. Remove from heat. Whisk in butter until melted, and let stand 15 minutes. Strain milk mixture through a fine sieve into a bowl, and discard vanilla-bean pod.

With an electric mixer on medium speed, whisk together whole eggs, yolks, and sugar. Set mixing bowl over a pan of simmering water, and whisk by hand just until sugar is dissolved and mixture is warm, up to 6 minutes. Remove bowl from heat. With an electric mixer on high speed, whisk until mixture is fluffy, pale yellow, and thick enough to hold a ribbon on the surface for several seconds when whisk is lifted.

Gently but thoroughly fold flour mixture into the egg mixture in three batches.  Stir 1/2 cup batter into the strained milk mixture to thicken, then fold milk mixture into the remaining batter until just combined.  Don't over mix, or the batter will deflate!

Divide batter evenly among lined cups, filling each three-quarters full (they rise a lot!). Bake, rotating tins halfway through, until centers are completely set and edges are light golden brown, about 20 minutes. Transfer tins to wire racks to cool completely before removing cupcakes.

For the syrup
Stir together hot espresso, marsala, and sugar until sugar is dissolved. Let cool.

Brush tops of cooled cupcakes evenly with coffee-marsala syrup; repeat until all syrup has been used (don't worry, they won't be soggy!). Allow cupcakes to absorb liquid 30 minutes.

For the frosting
With an electric mixer on medium speed, whisk heavy cream until very stiff peaks form (be careful not to overbeat, or cream will be grainy). In another bowl, whisk together mascarpone and confectioners' sugar until smooth. Gently fold whipped cream into mascarpone mixture until completely incorporated.  Do not beat further after the cream and cheese are combined, or the cream will break. Use immediately.

To finish, dollop or pipe frosting onto cupcakes; refrigerate for an hour or up to overnight in airtight containers. Dust generously with cocoa powder just before serving.



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Crustless Spinach Quiche

Photo Credit: Jay Eads

Last month, my dearest Oma passed away.  She came into my life when I met Carsten, and she adopted me as another one of her granddaughters when Carsten and I were married.  Every minute I had with her over the last seven years was treasured.  There was more love and selfless generosity, more adventurous spirit and zest for life packed into that one tiny lady than I'm likely to find in another person in this lifetime.

On Easter weekend, every single family member joined together to celebrate her life, and the moments we were blessed enough to share with her.  Many emotional tears were shed, and laughs were expelled as we reminisced over our memories.  The morning of the memorial service, everyone gathered at Uncle Gregg's house for a family breakfast.  This recipe I discovered there, and I've slightly adapted it (adding spinach), just to fit my personal taste.  But this quiche will always remind me of that family gathering.

Ingredients
1/4 cup butter
1/4 cup flour
3/4 cup milk
1 1/4 cup cottage cheese
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp ground mustard
1/4 tsp salt
5 eggs
6 oz cream cheese (low fat works just fine!)
6 oz Jarlsberg or Emmental cheese, shredded
1/4 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
1 10oz pkg frozen spinach, thawed and squeezed to remove all moisture

Procedure 
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  In a small saucepan, melt the butter over medium low heat. Whisk in the flour until smooth, then gradually add the milk while continuing to whisk. Bring up to medium heat, and continue to stir.  When it begins to bubble, continue to cook for 2 minutes, until thickened. Remove from the heat and let cool for 15 minutes. 

Meanwhile, in a small bowl, combine the cottage cheese, baking powder, mustard and salt. In the bowl of a standing mixer, beat eggs. Slowly beat in the cream cheese, then cottage cheese mixture and roux (butter/flour/milk mixture) until well combined. Fold in the Jarlsberg and Parmesan, then the spinach.

Pour into a greased 9 inch pie pan. Bake for 35-40 minutes or until a knife inserted near the center comes out clean. Let stand for 5 minutes before cutting. Serve warm.



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Saturday, April 12, 2014

Berry Mascarpone Cream Tart



I've put off posting this for far too long.  Mostly because the task of actually writing out the recipe has just been too daunting.  But it was far to delicious and memorable not to post here, so I'm going to give the most brief recipe possible (sorry!).  I found the recipe over at Apt. 2B Baking Co. and it looked like exactly what I was craving.  Something sweet, but light and fruity.  And beautiful.  Yossy's photographs of her tart are absolutely gorgeous.  Carsten keeps telling me I should take some food photography lessons, or at least read a few books about it.  Maybe I should give it some more thought...


Anyway, I made this tart for Ana's birthday.  I didn't use the crust from the recipe, because I had a left over pie crust in my freezer.  My crust was extremely crispy and flaky, (baked in a buttery flaky crust!), but probably completely different than the shortbread crust in the recipe.  In other words, make this tart in whatever crust you want, and it will be delicious!

So, instead of writing out the entire recipe, I'll just direct you here.



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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Bruschetta



In honor of Carina and Jamie's birthdays, we decided to throw a party - so that they could meet most of our good friends and because we just can't help ourselves.  We will throw a party for nearly every occasion.  Any excuse to have our friends over and enjoy some good food with some quality company, we'll take it!  This time we decided to make it bruschetta themed.  We were inspired by one of our favorite restaurants in Phoenix: Postino Wine Cafe.  Every time we go there, we get four different kinds of bruschetta, and their combinations are mouth watering!


My sisters and I went to a few different grocery stores to pick up tons of different topping options.  We, in part, followed a few recipes we discovered online that looked delicious, but we also let ourselves be inspired by the interesting produce we discovered at Trader Joes (pea sprouts, champagne grapes, etc.)


It made for a beautiful spread.



Here are the recipes I found online - each of them tasted amazing.  A few of them I adapted as I saw fit :)

Gorgonzola, Golden Raisin, and Arugula
Adapted from here
Ingredients
1/2 cup Mascarpone cheese
1/3 cup Gorgonzola cheese (more or less, to taste)
1 cup golden raisins
1 cup Marsala Wine
Arugula
Procedure
Mix the Mascarpone cheese with the Gorgonzola.  Use more or less Gorgonzola, as you see fit.  I'm not a big fan of strong blue cheese, so I tend to use less.  In a small sauce pan, combine the raisins and Marsala.  Cover, and let simmer until raisins look nice and plump.  Add more wine if necessary.  You should end up with plump golden raisins, with very little liquid remaining. Spread the cheese on toasted bread, top with a generous amount of raisins, and finish with fresh arugula.

Farmers Cheese, Beet Green and Arugula Pesto, and Crispy Pancetta
Adapted from here
Ingredients 

Fresh Farmers Cheese
Pancetta
Pesto (recipe here, only I added a few handfuls of arugula in with the beet greens, as well as the juice of half a lemon)
Procedure
Crisp the pancetta in a skillet over medium high heat - as you would with bacon, only don't cook quite as long. Spread some farmers cheese then beet green arugula pesto atop toasted bread.  Top with crispy pancetta.


Beet, Garlic Labneh, and Beet Green and Arugula Pesto
Adapted from here
Ingredients  

1 cup plain Greek yogurt
3 cloves garlic
1/2 tsp salt
3 large beets, with greens attached
Pesto (recipe here, only I added a few handfuls of arugula in with the beet greens, as well as the juice of half a lemon)
Walnuts
Procedure
Remove the beet greens, and set aside for the pesto.  Roast beets in the oven at 350 for about 30 minutes.  You want the beets to be slightly tender, but still slightly crunchy.  When beets have cooled, peel them (a potato peeler works well), then slice them into even slices.  I used a mandolin on the thickest setting.  Combine the garlic and salt in a mortar and pestle.  Grind into a paste.  Add it to the Greek yogurt and stir well to combine.  Store in the fridge for about an hour, to meld the flavors.  Make the pesto according to the recipe above.  I included arugula and lemon juice, for lack of enough beet greens, and for flavor.  Spread toasted bread with the Labneh (greek yogurt mixture you just made!).  Top with a couple beet slices, a dollop of pesto, and a few walnuts. 


Brie, Apple, and Bacon Onion Chutney
Adapted from here and here
Ingredients
Brie Cheese
sliced Granny Smith Apple (about 1/4" thick)
Bacon Onion Chutney (recipe here)
Procedure
Top toasted bread with a slice of Brie, apple slices, and a generous scoop of the bacon onion chutney.


Sweet Ricotta, Strawberry, and Chocolate
Adapted from here
Ingredients
2/3 cup Ricotta cheese
1/3 cup Mascarpone cheese
1 Tbs powdered sugar
1/4 tsp ground vanilla bean (optional, but makes it delicious and so pretty!) found here
sliced strawberries
dark chocolate shavings
Procedure
Mix all ingredients except the chocolate and the strawberries.  Spread onto toasted bread, top with strawberry slices, then sprinkle with chocolate shavings.


A few things I set out on the table that weren't from any of these recipes:
- chopped tomatoes tossed with cubed fresh mozzarella and fresh basil
- sliced fresh figs
- Jarlsberg cheese
- whole grain mustard
- balsamic vinegar reduction
- honey
- marionberry jam
- pomegranate jelly
- pea sprouts
- champagne grapes
- Parmesan cheese 


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Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Carrot Cake with Cream Cheese Swiss Meringue Buttercream



A friend form school turned 30.  Time for a celebration, am I right?  So I started planning a fun dinner party.  First things first - get the house ready.  Having people over is the best way to get myself to give the house a good cleaning.  And this time my house (all of it by my bedroom and the eagle's nest) got a good deep cleaning.  Carsten and I also took a self-guided tour through the garden section of Home Depot, and picked out some new plants for the back yard.  So the back patio got a makeover and the house got a face lift.  Thank you Parker for turning 30!


I asked the birthday boy what kind of cake he wanted, and he requested a carrot cake.  I was so excited, because I'd recently found a carrot cake recipe that looked amazing.  I had been trying to learn how to frost a cake properly for Carsten's birthday, and found this great video tutorial on BraveTart.  The cake she uses in the video is the most delicious looking carrot cake I've ever seen, so I decided to use her recipe, substituting walnuts for her pecans or pistachios, and allspice for her mace.  I also meant to add raisins, (because every carrot cake should have raisins!) but alas, I forgot.  I also used the BraveTart recipe for Cream Cheese Swiss Meringue Buttercream frosting, but ran into some troubles...

I've made Swiss Meringue Buttercream frosting three times before this (three times in the last 4 months), and have never had any problems, so I didn't even think that there might be an issue.  Usually, you make the meringue, then whip in the butter.  Sometimes it gets a little soupy (if the meringue is a bit too warm), but it always seizes up and turns into the perfect thick frosting texture.  However, something about adding part cream cheese instead of butter messed it up.  It first turned lumpy (my fault - I probably didn't let the cream cheese come completely to room temperature before adding it), then soupy.  And it stayed soupy no matter how long I whipped it.  I didn't want to give up on it.  It was a whole pound of butter, an entire pound of cream cheese, and ten egg whites.  I couldn't let it go.  I probably continued to whip it for 30 minutes, hoping that it would magically transform.  But it didn't.  So I began scouring the internet for solutions.  I found someone who had done the exact same thing as me, and had come up with a solution.  Her advice (Briana's Kitchen) was perfect.  Her solution was to take a small batch of successful butter cream frosting, and slowly whip in a little of the soupy cream cheese mess at a time.  It worked.  I made a new half batch of plain Swiss meringue butter cream, which turned out perfectly (thank the Lord!!), and slowly added a 1/4 cup of the cream cheese soupy frosting at a time.  After each addition, I waited until it was fully incorporated to make sure that the frosting was holding it's perfect texture.  I ended up adding over 3/4 of the original mixture.  Not quite all of it, because I didn't want to push my luck.  And because I now had PLENTY of frosting.  Fortunately, I'm told this frosting freezes beautifully, so I saved all the leftover and will use it later :)

All that to say, if you're going to make this cake and this frosting for a party, just give yourself plenty of time.  I made the cake the night before, wrapped each layer tightly in plastic wrap and stored them in the fridge.  The frosting I made the day of (recommended), but thank goodness I had plenty of hours to spare!

Credit: I found the cake recipe here, and the frosting recipe here



For the Cake (adapted slightly from BraveTart):
Ingredients
16 oz unsalted butter
14 oz sugar
7 oz brown sugar
1 Tbs baking soda
1 ½ tsp baking powder
1 ½ tsp salt
2 tsp cinnamon
1 ½ tsp ginger
½ tsp allspice
½ tsp nutmeg
½ tsp cloves
6 eggs
16 oz whole wheat flour, sifted
1 Tbs vanilla extract
32 oz carrots, peeled, trimmed, and shredded
16 oz walnut pieces, lightly toasted
(If I had remembered, I would have added about 1 cup of raisins)


Procedure
Preheat the oven to 350° and line three 9” cake pans with parchment paper. Lightly grease them and set aside.
In a small pot, melt the butter over low heat. Once it has melted completely , turn up the heat to medium. The mixture will begin to bubble, possibly spit, and make a bit of noise. You’ll notice brown bits forming on the bottom of the pot. When the butter stops bubbling and goes completely silent, you’re done. Set the butter aside to cool.
Using a hand or stand mixer fitted with a whisk attachment, combine the sugar, brown sugar, baking powder and soda, salt, spices and eggs. Whip on medium to medium high speed until light and fluffy, about five minutes.  (I should have taken a picture at this point.  It was beautiful!  I set the timer and let it whip for five minutes, I'm glad I did, because otherwise I probably would have stopped way too soon).
Reduce the speed to medium low and with the mixer still running, slowly drizzle in the brown butter, making sure to include all of the browned bits from the bottom. Add the vanilla next, then reduce the speed to low and add in the sifted (important!) whole wheat flour all at once. Mix until just incorporated.
Shut off the mixer and use a rubber spatula to fold in the nuts and shredded carrots (and raisins if you so choose).
Measure 32 ounces of batter into each 9” cake pan (or about 3 ounces into each cupcake liner if you're making cup cakes). Bake about 25-30 minutes for cake or 15 minutes for cupcakes, or until the cakes have puffed and lightly browned. A toothpick inserted into the center of the cake should come out with very few to no crumbs stuck to it.
NOTE: I found a secret to baking perfectly flat cakes, that rarely need to be leveled before frosting!  Cut strips of towel (I cut them about 4 inches wide, and doubled them over to be extra thick).  Saturate the towels in water, and lightly squeeze out water, just so that the towel strips aren't dripping.  Tightly wrap the towel strips around the cake pans.  I used safety pins to secure the strips.  The more evenly the pan is surrounded, the flatter the cake.
Allow cakes to cool about 10 minutes before removing them from the pan.  Once completely cooled, wrap in plastic wrap and store in the fridge until you're ready to assemble the cake.



For the Frosting (adapted out of necessesity from BraveTart, using help from Briana's Kitchen):
Ingredients
10 oz egg whites (about 10 egg whites, it’s okay to go a tad over)
10 oz sugar
1/2 tsp  salt
the scrapings from 1 vanilla bean or 1 tsp ground vanilla bean (I use this)
1 lb unsalted butter, cut into 2" chunks and softened to a spreadable state
1 lb cream cheese, cut into 2" chunks and softened to a room temperature
Juice of 1 lemon
AND If need be...
5 oz egg whites (about 5 egg whites)
5 oz sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1 lb unsalted butter, cut into 2" chunks and softened to a spreadable state

Procedure
Combine the egg whites, sugar, salt, and vanilla bean together in an clean metal bowl. Set the bowl over a pan of water and turn the heat to medium low. You don’t need the water to even simmer, you just want it hot enough to steam, since steam is what actually heats the whites.
Whisk frequently to prevent the eggs from cooking on the sides. Aim to get the mixture to 145° for food safety reasons, I just used a candy thermometer.
When the mixture is sufficiently hot, remove from the heat.  If using a stand mixer, wipe the condensation off of the bottom of the bowl (to prevent any water from getting into the egg whites), and transfer mixture to the bowl of your stand mixer. Use the whisk attachment to whip on medium high speed until the mixture has doubled in volume and turned snowy white. Continue whipping until the meringue is cool. Use your hands to feel the bowl itself, rather than simply testing the temperature of the meringue. You want it to feel perfectly cool to the touch with no trace of warmth. Note: if you are using a glass or ceramic bowl, even if the meringue has cooled, the bowl itself may still be quite warm and continue conducting heat into the buttercream over time. If you are using a glass or ceramic bowl, transfer the meringue to a new bowl before proceeding or continue mixing until the bowl itself is cool.
Turn the mixer down to medium-low and begin adding in the butter, one chunk at a time. If you didn’t let your meringue cool enough, this is when you’ll really regret it. By the time you’ve added all the butter, you may need to scrape down the bowl to fully incorporate any butter or meringue that’s stuck at the sides.  Then add the cream cheese one chunk at a time.  Continue whipping until the mixture is smooth.  Whip in the lemon juice.  If you're lucky - unlike me - the frosting will become the perfect thick texture of a Swiss meringue buttercream.  If, on the other hand, it turns to a soupy mess and doesn't thicken after 15 minutes of whipping, transfer the soupy mixture to another bowl, and set aside.  Use the remaining ingredients to make another half batch of regular Swiss meringue butter cream.  Once you've completed the procedure and have a perfect frosting, continue whipping on medium speed and start adding the soupy mixture a 1/4 cup at a time.  Let the soupy mixture fully incorporate after each addition.  Continue adding the soupy mixture, paying close attention to the thickness of the frosting.  I stopped when I had added a little over 3/4 of the soupy mixture, but you might be able to add it all without compromising the thickness.  You're finally done!  You should use it to frost your cake right away.  Any leftover frosting can be frozen for later use (just thaw in the fridge, and whip again before using).



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Saturday, January 30, 2010

Hamann Manicotti



Ingredients
1 egg, beaten
15 oz Ricotta cheese
1/4 lb. mozzarella cheese grated
3 Tbs of Parmesan Cheese
1 Tbs of sugar
1 Tbs of parsley, dried or fresh
1 8 oz box of manicotti shells
26-36 oz pasta sauce

Procedure
Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. In a large mixing bowl combine egg, cheeses, sugar and parsley. Fill the uncooked manicotti shells with filling. Pour enough pasta sauce to cover the bottom of a 9 x 13 baking pan. Lay the filled manicotti shells on top of the pasta sauce. Pour enough pasta sauce to cover the shells. Cover pan with aluminum foil and bake for 40 minutes. Remove aluminum foil and bake for an additional 10 minutes. If desired, sprinkle some grated mozzarella over the pan before returning it to the oven for the last 10 minutes.

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A Hamann Family Recipe

Friday, October 31, 2008

Cheese Sablés



Ingredients
2/3 cup butter
1 cup flour plus some for dusting
1 1/2 cup grated cheese
1 egg, separated
sesame seeds

Mix flour and grated cheese together in a bowl. Cut butter into small cubes and add to cheese flour mixture. Mix with fingers until combined. Stir in egg yolk to form a dough. Wrap dough in plastic wrap and chill in the refrigerator for 30 min.

Roll dough a quarter inch thick on lightly floured surface and cut out circles. Place dough circles on ungreased baking sheet. Brush the surface of each circle with egg white and sprinkle with sesame seeds.

Bake at 400 degrees for 20 minutes.

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Adapted from a cook's library recipe