2306. CHICKEN-BACON CAPRESE CUPS

yields 24 servings


1 non-stick cooking spray
1 tablespoon of white balsamic vinegar
1/4 teaspoon of kosher salt
1 teaspoon of minced garlic
8 large fresh basil leaves
8 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 tablespoon of dry italian seasoning mix from envelope
6 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled
1 cup of cooked, boneless, skinless chicken breast, diced
8 ounces of tube refrigerated crescent dough sheet
3/4 cups of shredded mozzarella cheese

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Lightly spray 24 mini muffin cups with no-stick cooking spray. In a medium size bowl, place the tomatoes, vinegar, salt, and garlic. Chop the basil leaves and add. Toss gently to combine;set aside. In another medium size bowl,combine the cream cheese, seasoning mix, bacon and chicken. Open crescent sheet and unroll on a flat work surface. Using a sharp knife or a pastry wheel, cut 24 even squares. Press each square into a cup of the mini muffin tins. Spoon even amounts of the chicken mixture into the cups (about 1 heaping teaspoon). Top each with even amounts of the cheese (about 1/2 teaspoon). Bake for about 14-16 minutes or until dough is light golden brown. Remove from the oven to a cooling rack. Allow to cool about 5 minutes. Remove cups from the pans and arrange on a serving tray. Top each with about 1 teaspoon of the tomato basil mixture. Serve warm.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Pamela Shank, Real Women of Philadelphia

2305. CHIPOTLE BEET GREENS and BACON SCRAMBLE

makes two servings


4 strip bacon
5 whole eggs, beaten
2 tablespoons soy cream
1 whole small onion, chopped
2 whole chipotle peppers in adobo, diced
2 bunches beet greens, chopped
goat cheese, optional
salt and pepper, to taste

Heat skillet on medium high heat and add bacon. While the bacon fries, add cream to the beaten eggs. Once bacon is crispy and cooked, remove to a paper towel to drain. Once cool, crumble. Into the bacon grease, add the onion and a dash of salt and pepper. Saute until onion is starting to turn translucent. Add chipotle peppers and beet greens. Stir occasionally to keep onions from burning and to wilt greens (if you have a lid for your skillet, use it â€" this will speed up the wilting process). Once the greens are wilted, add bacon back to the skillet and pour in the egg mixture as evenly as possible. Allow to set a little bit before stirring. Continue to stir until eggs are your preferred scrambled consistency (about 2-3 minutes). Top with goat cheese. Serve with potatoes or toast or both.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Michelle, Tasty Kitchen, March 10, 2011

Product Review: Fully Loaded Burger Stuffer


While “Jucy Lucy [sic]” style burgers have been around since the mid-50's, the trend of stuffed burgers has exploded in 2011. BurgerBusiness.com even declared 2011 as the year of the stuffed burger. 


Like with any food trend, there is a myriad of products trying to strike while the iron is hot and today I'm reviewing one of those â€" the Fully Loaded Burger Stuffer byHeadchefs.


I've used the Burger Stuffer a few times and here are my observations:

Upside
  • They are very well manufactured. The silicone and plastic parts fit together well.
  • The tapered cup design balances out the stuffing to the burger. The edges are thicker which ended up grilling perfectly with zero “cheese ruptures”.
  • Easy to clean.

“Not so up” side
  • I still ended up having to hand seal the edges to get a good closure. Despite the thicker edges noted above, they just didn't mix together in the tool.  Then again, no burger stuffer tool I have tried did not require some hand sealing at the end.
  • Price point â€" it's a bit pricy for a uni-tasker tool that you might use a handful of times per year

Another thing is the 7 step process required per burger. On one hand, it is entertaining to use in a “playdough fun factory” kind of way. On the other hand it is a bit convoluted compared to just doing it by hand. 


The burgers I made tonight were stuffed with pepper jack cheese and 1 Tablespoon of homemade salsa. I grilled them on my Big Green Egg at 450f using GrillGrates


I served them with a roasted red pepper mayo (1 Tbsp diced roasted red pepper and ¼ cup mayo). 


The flavors were simple and less extravagant than some of the over the top “burger stuffed with Himalayan yak cheese, shaved fennel and sodium free kosher salt” kind of things I've seen. But you know what? It worked.

[Standard Disclaimer] I received the Fully Loaded Burger Stuffer as a free review sample. I received my GrillGrates free at Kingsford University earlier this year but I would totally buy a set if someone stole mine â€" don't get any ideas, stay off my deck!

2304. ROASTED CORN PIZZA with LEEK SOUBISE, BACON and RICOTTA

pizza dough
thick cut bacon, chopped and cooked until crisp
fresh corn, shucked, grilled or roasted and removed from the cob
ricotta cheese
Leek Soubise (recipe below)

Leek Soubise:
2 tablespoons butter
2 medium sized leeks, split sown the middle, washed, cut into 1/4-inch thick half moons
(discard most of the green parts of the leeks)
1 cup heavy cream
2 cups whole milk
salt

Melt the butter in a large sauté pan. Add the leeks and cook slowly until they have wilted down a bit, 10-15 minutes. Add the milk and cream and cook, uncovered on low heat until the milk has evaporated and the mixture is thick and creamy. This should take about 45 minutes to an hour. Add salt to taste. The original recipe says to blend the leeks once cooled, but I wanted texture, so I didn't puree the leeks.

Assemble pizza: Place pizza stone on bottom rack of the oven (if you have one). Preheat oven to 500. Shape pizza dough into desired shape and place on a floured and cornmeal dusted cookie sheet that has been flipped upside down. Spread a layer of the leek soubise on the pizza dough, next the corn, followed by spoonful’s of ricotta and last, but of course not least, the bacon. If you don't have a pizza stone, place cookie sheet (with pizza on it) on the bottom rack of the oven and bake until crust is golden brown. If you have a pizza stone, very quickly slide the pizza from the cookie sheet to the pizza stone. Bake pizza until crust is golden brown.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Breanna, Breanna's Recipe Box, July 21, 2011

2303. PADDLEFISH STEW with BACON

makes four servings


1 lb. raw cubed paddlefish
3 bacon slices, chopped
1 medium onion, thinly sliced
1 16-oz. can whole potatoes, drained and halved
1/8 teaspoon thyme leaves
1/4 cup ketchup
1 teaspoon Worcestershire
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1 16-oz. can tomatoes

In a 2-quart saucepan over medium heat, cook bacon until just limp; add onion and cook until onion is browned. Stir in potatoes, tomatoes with their liquid, ketchup, Worcestershire, pepper and thyme. Cook 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add fish and cook about 10 minutes longer or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork, stirring often.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Glendive Chamber of Commerce & Agriculture, 808 North Merrill, Glendive, Montana 59330

Grilled Potato Salad


There was NO tailgating this morning for Trevor's game since we had to leave the house before dawn to be at his last pre-season bowl game this morning.  We had to be there at 7am. 

He is #50 and nailed this tackle.

But tailgating season is upon us and one of the common side dishes found at a tailgate is the ubiquitous potato salad. If you want to make your potato salad stand out as something special, try grilling it. Take your favorite potato salad recipe and grill some of the main components. This is a trick taught at Kingsford University. Grilling your potatoes and veggies will boost their flavor. 


Before you can have a side dish, you have to have a main dish so I smoked three racks of spare ribs.
Rubbed and on the Big Green Egg.  Used hickory & cherry wood.

Grilled Potato Salad

2 lb red bliss potatoes, halved
1 ear corn, shucked
1 ea jalapeno
2 ea green onion
1 stalk celery (trim leaves and reserve for the dressing, see below)
2 Tbsp vegetable oil
1 tsp kosher salt
½ tsp black pepper, ground

Dressing
3 oz Dukes mayonnaise
2 Tbsp coarse ground mustard
1 Tbsp red wine vinegar
1 tsp fresh thyme
1 tsp fresh parsley, finely chopped
1 tsp celery leaves, finely chopped
1 tsp fresh cayenne pepper, seeded and finely chopped (sub ½ tsp red pepper flake)
½ tsp fresh sage, finely chopped

Toss potatoes in oil, salt and pepper. Place on skewers and microwave for 3 minutes. Flip and microwave another 3 minutes.

Whisk the dressing ingredients together.

Place the potato skewers, corn, and jalapeno on a 350f grill. Cook for 8 minutes, turning it all every 2 minutes. 


In the last 2 minutes add the green onion and celery.


Remove the potatoes from the skewers and cut in half (so they are now quartered). Cut the kernels off of the ear. Peel, seed, and dice the jalapeno. Chop the celery and green onion.

Toss all of this into a large bowl. Mix with the dressing. Taste and season with additional salt and pepper as needed. Chill for at least one hour.

It's hard to make potato salad look awesome but ribs help!

Served with BBQ ribs and Bush Original Barbecue Beans.

[Standard Disclaimer] I am currently in a partnership with Bush Beans for some upcoming events but this post has nothing to do with that. Specific products named in this post are just because I like them. I wasn't compensated for this post.

2302. POACHED SKATE GRENOBLOISE with SAUTEED NEW POTATOES with BACON and AUTUMN TRUFFLE

serves four


4 small skate wings, edges trimmed
good pinch of sea salt
10 black peppercorns
3 star anise
cayenne pepper
1 fresh bay leaf
1 sprig parsley
1 sprig thyme
1 lemon, peeled and sliced

To serve (optional):
mixed salad leaves
squeeze of lemon juice
splash of extra virgin olive oil

For the potatoes:
1 tablespoon olive oil
400 grams cooked new potatoes, peeled and sliced
40 grams lardons of bacon, blanched
20 grams fresh truffles, grated
4 spring onions, green part included, finely sliced
3-4 juniper berries, crushed
1 tablespoon chopped chervil
20 grams butter
black pepper

For the Grenobloise:
200 grams unsalted butter
1 heaped tablespoon capers, crushed
1 generous dash of red wine vinegar
juice of 1/2 lemons
1 tablespoon chopped flat leaf parsley
2 tablespoons small garlic croutons
black pepper

Put the skate wings in a large saucepan with enough water to cover. Add the seasonings, herbs and lemon slices. Bring to a really gentle boil, and simmer for 1-1 1/2 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat and leave the skate to finish cooking in the hot stock for 8-10 minutes.

While the skate is cooking, fry the potatoes. Heat the oil in a large non-stick frying pan over medium-high heat. Add the potato slices and fry for 1-2 minutes until they start to become nice blond colour. Add the blanched lardons and fry for another minute. Add the truffle, spring onions, juniper berries and chervil. Finish with a knob of butter and fry for 30 seconds. Season with salt and pepper, and transfer to a warm serving dish. Check the seasoning just before serving.

Now make the Grenobloise sauce. Put the butter in the same pan used for the potatoes. Melt it over medium heat until bubbling and golden nutty brown. Add the capers and cook for just a few seconds. Deglaze the pan with a splash of vinegar and lemon juice. Finish by sprinkling with the croutons and parsley. Season to taste. Immediately remove from the heat and pour into a warm jug.

Drain the skate and remove the bones. Transfer to warm serving plates. Add the potatoes and dress with the sauce. If you wish, serve with mixed salad leaves tossed in a little olive oil and lemon juice.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Pascal Proyart, Good Food Live, Good Food Channel/UK-TV

2301. SALT CODFISH with BACON and EGG-CAPER SAUCE

serves four


1 1/2 lb. salt codfish
2 strips bacon, fried and crumbled
1/4 cup American cheese, cubed
2 cups milk
2 tablespoons flour
1/4 stick butter
4 hard-boiled eggs, chopped
1 tablespoon capers
salt and fresh ground black pepper

Soak the codfish 24 hours, changing the water several times. Boil it gently for 20 minutes. Drain, remove the skin and bones and cut the fish into 2-inch squares; keep it hot. Fry the bacon until brown and crisp; drain it and crumble it.

Melt the butter in a skillet, remove from the heat and add the flour; mix well, then add the milk a little at a time, stirring constantly. Return to the fire and add the cubed cheese, capers and crumbled bacon; mix well. Place codfish pieces on heated serving plates, cover with the egg sauce and serve at once.


bacon recipe courtesy of: The Provincetown Seafood Cookbook by Howard Mitcham, page 199. Provincetown, Massachusetts: The Hermit Crab Press, 1975

2300. BACON and ONION BRATWURSTS

makes four servings


2 slices bacon
2 medium onions, sliced and separated into rings
1 medium green pepper, cut into strips
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
4 links fully cooked bratwurst or knockwurst
4 frankfurter buns, split and toasted
Dijon mustard

In a large skillet cook bacon till crisp. Drain bacon, reserving 2 tablespoons drippings. Crumble bacon and set aside.

Cook onions and green pepper in reserved drippings, covered, over medium heat about 5 minutes or till tender, stirring occasionally. Stir in the 1 tablespoon mustard. Score bratwurst 1/4-inch deep at 1-inch intervals; add to onion mixture. Cover and cook for 10 to 12 minutes or till heated through.

Spread buns with additional mustard. Place bratwurst in buns. Top with onions and green pepper. Sprinkle with bacon.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Better Homes and Gardens' New Cook Book, page 238. Des Moines, Iowa: Better Homes and Gardens Test Kitchen, 1989

2299. CRUMBLED BRAINS and BACON

makes four servings


4-6 sets lamb's or calf's brains
1 small onion, halved (optional)
1 tablespoon vinegar
2 tablespoons flour
2 teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 egg, beaten with 1 tablespoon water
dry breadcrumbs
oil for frying
4 oz bacon rashers, rind removed

Remove skin from brains under running cold water. Place in a saucepan and cover with cold water. Add onion, if used, vinegar and 1 teaspoon salt and bring to simmering point. Allow to simmer gently for 20 minutes. Lift brains out, drain and allow to cool. Slice brains and pat dry. Mix flour with salt and pepper and coat each piece of brain. Dip in egg and coat with breadcrumbs, pressing them on firmly. Place enough oil in a frying pan to cover base about 1/4-inch in depth. Heat and fry brains until golden on all sides. Cut bacon slices in half, roll and place on skewers. Grill until cooked. Place brains on a heated serving platter and garnish with bacon rolls.


bacon recipe courtesy of: ifood.tv

2298. MUSSEL, SCALLOP and BACON SKEWERS

makes four servings


1 medium eggplant
fine sea salt
1 1/2 teaspoons white wine vinegar
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 medium tomatoes
16 mussels, scrubbed and beards removed
4 slices bacon, cut in half crosswise
1/4 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
1 large egg
1/2 cup plain breadcrumbs
8 sea scallops
baby lettuce for garnish (optional)
8 8-inch wooden skewers

Cut 8 (1/4-inch-thick) rounds of eggplant from widest part of vegetable (reserve remaining eggplant for another use). Heat a large non-stick skillet over medium-low heat. Add eggplant rounds in a single layer and season with generous pinch salt; cook until softened, about 3 minutes. Transfer rounds to a baking dish and drizzle with vinegar and 1 tablespoon oil; set aside.

Bring a medium pot of salted water to a boil. Add tomatoes and boil for 30 seconds; drain, peel, quarter and seed. Cut quarters in half crosswise.

In a medium saucepan, combine mussels and 1 tablespoon oil. Cook over medium heat, covered, until mussels just open wide, checking frequently after 3 minutes and transferring open mussels to a bowl using a slotted spoon. (Discard any mussels that remain unopened after 8 minutes.) When cool enough to handle, remove mussels from shell; discard shells.

Wrap 1 slice bacon around two mussels; repeat with remaining bacon and mussels. Heat a non-stick skillet over medium heat. Add bacon bundles to hot pan, seam-side down; cook, turning occasionally, until bacon is cooked through, about 4 minutes per side.

Place flour in a shallow bowl. Lightly beat egg in a second shallow bowl. Place breadcrumbs in a third shallow bowl. Lightly flour 1 scallop, then dip in egg, letting excess drip off, then gently press into breadcrumbs to generously coat all sides. Transfer to a large plate. Repeat with remaining scallops.

Heat remaining 1/4 cup oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add scallops and cook, turning once, until scallops are just cooked through and breading is crisp and golden, about 8 minutes.

Remove eggplant rounds from marinade. Thread scallops, tomatoes, mussels, and folded eggplant rounds onto skewers. Serve garnished with lettuces, if using.


bacon recipe courtesy of: "Treasures from the Sea," La Cucina Italiana, pp. 38-40, July/August 2011

Saratoga Springs

As soon as I pulled out of the Harpoon parking lot I began thinking about what to do next. I knew there was a Friday-Saturday contest five days later in Saratoga Springs, with a relatively small field and $12,000 in prize money. Decided, why not make the drive up there and throw a dart at the dartboard? Figured that even on a bad day we could win enough of the prize money to cover fuel costs. Unfortunately, all we won was gas money.

Since my work days off are Friday-Saturday, didn't have to worry about getting time off, which is helpful. I can get Sundays off but don't like to dump that on my bosses on short notice.

Got to the site, which was a harness racing track and casino. Looked like a nice place, although I didn't explore at all.



As soon as I got the trailer unpacked and the basic set up done, the skies opened up. Naturally. Fortunately it poured for 15 minutes and and was great the rest of the two days.



The contest site itself was great. It was the first time I have ever met the organizer Arlie Bragg, but I knew going in that he runs some serious events. I wish more organizers had come up to see how he runs things, as the guy clearly knows how to take care of the teams. There was awesome power, as my air conditioner was on from the moment we arrived until I pulled out to leave and we had no problems. He also built a fenced in area with a full restaurant dish washing station, a commercial ice cooler filled with bags and bags of ice, and ash dump exclusively for the teams. As contest setups went this guy is first class.



Our site.



We were set up with Meat@Slims next to us and Sean Keever and Big Guns BBQ behind us. Couldn't have asked for better neighbors.





Sheila had to work all weekend and did not make the trip, but we made some basic garnish boxes and I brought them to the site, where they were transferred to the actual boxes. This was our first time trying this method and we will definitely do this again. On turn in day, my sisters Jenny and Kathleen fine tuned the boxes, including doing touch up with parsley I have been growing on my patio. The home grown stuff is really nice, next year I will be raising an entire parsley garden.



But our turn in boxes looked great. Best appearance scores we have ever had, all but three scores on the entire sheet were 8 or 9. A lot of that had to do with the overall massive scores that were being handed out at the event, but I feel we deserved the high scores.



Anyway, on to the meat. Chicken I thought came out decent, but was a little on the salty side. It took 7th place call out of 16 teams. Ribs were next, I thought they were good, but they were also 7th place. With such a small field I knew I was screwed as far as winning the contest and the $3,000 first place. Bummer.

Anyway, pork was a disaster at Harpoon, and I was determined not to let that happen again. Another call, this time 6th place.

Final category was brisket, and while it was decent, I just wasn't happy with the results, but it was good enough for 4th place. Although the category score was a 173, which at most contests is good enough to win the category. But this was a weekend of massive scores, the trademark of upstate New York contests.

So in the end we were 5th overall, and walked away with a mere $325 of the $12,000 prize purse. It's ok though, sometimes you go to an event just to have fun and wind up winning some dough, other times you go with the goal of trying and win money and end up having a great time. That's what happened here.

Was the first time that I was able to get a massage after turn ins. Was a nice way to end what was a a fun weekend of BBQ.

On Our Grills August

It is time for the monthly On OurGrills â€" 4 Ingredient Challenge


It's a monthly challenge (not contest) in which a group of grilling/BBQ friends are presented with a list of 4 ingredients that they must use to create a meal from the grill. The challenge ingredients for August are:

Protein: Beef Short Ribs
Vegetable: Celery
Starch: Gluten Free Pasta
Fruit: Peaches

I cheated on this one. I had an ace up my sleeve and I consulted the Gluten Free Grillmeister himself, Dave of Food and Fire for advice. I decided to TRY to make the entire meal gluten free. 



Beef Short Ribs
Full of connective tissues, these are a prime candidate for low and slow and/or braising. I went with both and used this Chris Lilly recipe that you can find at Grilling.com. I smoked the ribs as directed and used a mix of Kingsford and peach wood that I got from Larry last year (BigDude's Eclectic Ramblings). The second part of the cook braises them where I did slip up on gluten free since I could not get gluten free soy sauce.

Celery
Does celery even COUNT as a vegetable? I mean, it's fiber and water. Outside of “ants on a log” or as a side to hot wings, whoever wants celery? Actually I like the flavor of celery, it's the texture that I dislike. I hate biting into dishes and getting a huge, raw chunk of celery. I solved that problem tonight by using very thin slices on a bias. Just look at the difference.


Gluten Free Pasta
This was my biggest surprise. I expected some chewy, gross pasta substitute. We used Notta Pasta Rice Spaghetti and we LOVED it. I made a veggie pasta side dish on the grill while the beef rested.


On Our Grills Challenge Made Me Make This But I Really Liked It Pasta
Serves 2

2 Tbsp butter
1 stalk celery, sliced thin on a sharp bias
1 leaf sage, sliced
¼ cup roasted red pepper, diced
1 green onion, sliced
¼ tsp Lawry's Seasoned Salt (gluten free, don't ya know!)
4 oz Notta Pasta Rice Spaghetti, cooked according to directions

Preheat a skillet over high heat and then add the butter. Saute celery and sage for 2 minutes.

Add the pepper, onion, and season salt. Saute another 1-2 minutes.

Add cooked pasta and toss to coat.

Peaches
Once the meat had smoked, I grilled the peaches over the peach wood embers while Alexis made our basic home made ice cream. Grilling fruit concentrates the natural sugars. 


After peeling and dicing the peach halves, Alexis poured about 1 Tbsp of Agave nectar over them and tossed them. The warm peaches melted the ice cream before I could get a decent photograph but the taste was well worth it. 
 

Smoke Hollow
I used 3/4ths of my SmokeHollow grill/smoker combo cooker for this dish.
  • Offset Smoker â€" smoked the beef ribs until the point they were foiled
  • Charcoal Grill â€" grilled the peaches over the peach wood embers
  • Gas Grill â€" finished cooking the ribs once foiled, sauteed the veggies
I love our two Big Green Eggs but the Smoke Hollow combo cooker is great because I can be using 3 cooking surfaces at once doing different things. I want to get it out on our deck with the Eggs but need to get a 7 foot long grill cover first.

The On Our Grills Troupe
Check out the creative meals that the rest of the gang came up with:

The Daily Dish â€" August Challenge Post
Kristina has been writing "The Daily Dish" for www.BetterRecipes.com for the past two years. The blog covers a wide variety of recipes, but firing up the grill truly lights up her passion for food! She was named "America's Next Pork Personality" by Guy Fieri for one of her grilled pork dishes, won the outdoor grilling division of the National Beef Cook-Off, and her winning grilled lamb-burger took her all the way to the land Down Under with Meat and Livestock Australia. The "4-Ingredient Challenge" is a fun and exciting way to get creative on the grill!

The BBQ Grail â€" August Challenge Post
The BBQ Grail website was created in 2007, initially to document the author’s quest to find the perfect backyard BBQ experience. Since that time The BBQ Grail has become one of the more popular BBQ blogs on the internet and is listed on Alltop.com as one of the top BBQ blogs.

No Excuses BBQ â€" August Challenge Post
The No Excuses BBQ website was started in January of 2009 as a way to record the author's goal of cooking outdoors at least once a week throughout the year and showing the results to the world. Somewhere along the way things got out of control...

Oshawa Ogre's Views, News & BBQ's â€" August Challenge Post
Wilfred is somewhat of a newcomer to the BBQ scene having only done standard grilling for most of his 50 years, He found and became passionate about Low & Slow about 2 years ago. and that passion also morphed into a second hobby which is writing. Oshawa Ogre’s Views News & BBQ’s has been a project that has taken on a life of it’s own and blessed him with many many new friends in the BBQ community on Twitter, facebook and through the blog.

Grill Aventures â€" August Challenge Post
Grilladventures by broadcastmarc is started on march of 2010.I started the BBQ thing when I was 30,before that we eat a lot outside.have fun,but when the kids came in our life We start serious cooking.Most of it is realy healthy I think;-)The grill has a special place in my heart,We love to do things outside..Everything I make is an adventure,and sometimes we use the books.We try to grill as much as we can year round.

Jason's Barbecue Adventures â€" August Challenge Post
Jason’s BBQ Adventures was started in 2007 when Jason fell in love with real BBQ the first time and tried to smoked a pork shoulder and soon after started smoking ribs, brisket, and chicken. After a while he started to experiment with grilling and smoking just about anything and ultimately fell in love with the entire cooking process.

The Dutchess Cooks â€" August Challenge Post
After years of cooking, grilling, baking and reading other people’s blogs, I thought “why not start my own blog??” And I did, in 2010, but already after a short period of time, a blog wasn’t enough, and I started my own website. It’s not my goal to publish or come up with fancy and difficult recipes: just good and delicious food with an international twist! Straight from my plate to yours!

2297. STUFFED PORK LOIN CHOP with SWISS CHARD, BACON, SAGE and CHIANTI SAUCE

yields four servings


3 tablespoons olive oil
3 cloves garlic, lightly smashed
2 lb swiss chard, center veins removed
salt and pepper to taste
4 slices bacon cut crosswise into ½” strips
1 cup day old rustic style bread, crust removed and cut into rough pieces varying between ¼” and ½”
3 tablespoons pine nuts
8 pieces of oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes cut into ¼” dice
8 sage leaves, cut crosswise into very thin strips (chiffonade)
11⁄2 cups fruity red wine (such as a chianti)
additional sage leaves, left whole
2 sprigs thyme
2 tablespoons italian parsley, chopped
20 small round red potatoes
2 medium shallots, peeled and cut in half
1 sprig
2 boneless pork loin chops, 2 inches thick
4 additional slices bacon (left whole)
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
2 more sage leaves, finely chopped as garnish

Heat the olive oil in a large skillet set over medium-high heat. Add the smashed garlic cloves to the hot oil and swirl them around the pan. After a moment, remove the garlic cloves and discard. Add the Swiss chard, and a little salt and pepper. Cook stirring and tossing continuously until it is barely wilted, about 4 minutes. Put the chard into a colander to drain. When slightly cool use a paper towel to press out as much moisture as possible. Chop the chard and add it to a mixing bowl.

Using the same skillet, wipe the bottom and sides with a paper towel and set it over medium heat. Once the pan has reheated Add the cut bacon strips to the pan, stirring occasionally. Once it begins to brown, but is not yet crisp remove it to a paper towel lined plate to drain. Reserving the bacon fat in the skillet still set over medium heat.

Add the bread cubes and pine nuts to the skillet and cook giving the pan all of your attention until everything is toasted and golden brown. Then add the bread, pine nuts and cooled, cooked bacon to the same bowl as the Swiss chard. Add the diced sun dried tomatoes, sage chiffonade, and a pinch of pepper (salt is probably not necessary, but check). Set the stuffing aside.

Add the red wine, one whole sage leaf, one sprig of thyme, and chopped parsley to a small saucepan. Bring the mixture to a boil then lower the heat and cook until reduced to a syrupy consistency. Strain the herbs out and set the sauce aside.

Put the red potatoes, shallot halves, the remaining sprig of thyme, the sprig of rosemary and a good amount of salt into a large pot. Add enough cool water to cover the ingredients by 2 inches. Bring the pot to a boil and cook about 10 minutes. The potatoes should be cooked through, but still quite firm. Drain the potatoes and then immerse them in cool water. Set aside in the cool water while you prepare the pork.

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F. Working with one pork chop at a time, lay one on it’s side in front of you and insert the tip of your knife into the center cutting a pocket into the chop. Making sure to leave 3 sides intact. Season the insides with salt and pepper and fill its cavity with about ¼ of the chard stuffing. Press the meat closed around the mixture, pressing to evenly distribute the stuffing. Lay the chop flat again and top with four or 5 whole sage leaves. Wrap the pork with 2 strips of raw bacon, covering the sage leaves and winding the bacon around the chop slightly overlapping. Make sure you enclose the stuffing completely. Use toothpicks to secure the ends of the bacon slices. Continue until both chops are stuffed and wrapped.

Find a pan with shallow sides (such as a cast iron skillet) that is ovenproof and large enough to hold both of the chops and all the potatoes. Use this skillet to warm the vegetable oil on a burner set to medium. Lay the chops in the pan in a single layer; cook 6-8 minutes, turning the as needed to assure even browning of the bacon. Add the potatoes to the pan surrounding the chops. It’s ok if the potatoes cover the chops somewhat. Move the pan to the preheated oven and cook another 5-7 minutes, until the pork has reached an interior temperature of 140 degrees F for medium rare. Move the chops to a cutting board and let them rest about 8 minutes. In the meantime put the potatoes on a warm serving platter.

Once the pork has rested, slice each chop on a diagonal, across the grain into ½-inch thick slices. Top the potatoes with the sliced pork and drizzle about ½ of the Chianti sauce over the chops and toss the chopped sage across the platter. Serve warm with the remaining sauce passed at the table.


bacon recipe courtesy of: Key Ingredient, Key Ingredient Corporation, PO Box 1824, Austin, Texas 78767

Reverse Seared Ribeye with Oyster Mushrooms


An oyster mushroom tries to get into an exclusive night club but the bouncer says, “Sorry little fella, this is a trendy place. I only let the most fun and hip people in.”

“Oh come on, people love me!” pleads the oyster mushroom, “Just ask anyone and they'll tell you that I'm a fungi!”

Sorry about that. I couldn't help myself!

Brewer's Mushrooms was at the newly opened Turkey Creek Public Markets yesterday. They sell gourmet mushrooms and grow your own mushroom kits, pretty cool stuff. 


Chef Amber Sue did a cooking demo on the grill with oyster mushrooms. 


These were much better than store bought mushrooms, even quality ones. The freshness makes a difference. They have a meaty texture, the earthy taste associated with mushrooms and just a hint of umami. I bought a ¼ pound, got some ideas from Chef and headed home with a plan.

I set my Big Green Egg up for indirect heat (plate setter in, legs up) at 250f. I rubbed a thick ribeye with Steven Raichlen's Lone Star rub and put it on the grill. 


It took 50 minutes to reach an internal temperature of 125f. I pulled it off to rest.


Next I switched the grill back to direct heat and cranked the temp of the grill to 550f. I used a spider rig (the wire looking thing) to drop my Craycort cast iron grate as close to the coals as I could. Then it was just a quick sear for 1 minute per side and it's done.


While the steak rested, I made the sauteed mushrooms. Sure this is nothing new but the ultra fresh mushrooms shine in this dish.


Oyster Mushroom Steak Topping
adapted from Chef Amber Sue
Makes enough for 1 or 2 steaks

1-2 Tbsp olive oil
¼ cup yellow onion, diced
4 ounces oyster mushrooms
1 tsp Draper'sAll-Purpose Rub (or other bbq rub)
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 Tbsp thyme
2 Tbsp butter, unsalted

Preheat a cast iron skillet over medium high heat on the grill. Add the oil and let it heat up until it is shimmering.

Add the onion and saute for 2-3 minutes. Add the mushrooms, season with the rub, and cook another 2-3 minutes.

Remove the cast iron skillet from heat and immediately add the garlic, butter, and thyme. The carryover heat of the skillet will saute the garlic and melt the butter.

Serve over steak.

The reverse sear gave me the wonderfully even medium rare from edge to edge.  


I've done sauteed mushrooms for steak plenty of times but these were the best I've ever had.  The freshness makes all the difference in the world.