Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Party Review #3 - Desserts

 I will now take a moment to gloat just a bit about how darn good every single dessert item was. Admittedly two of them I had to find a second recipe that was actually worthwhile but the search paid off.

#1. Pumpkin seed brittle. If you only make one thing, make pumpkin seed brittle. I'm pretty sure it would keep in a freezer for a good two months. It's a great foodie gift, it's economically viable as it consists basically of sugar, butter, and pumpkin seeds, it looks a bit like stained glass, and its so addictive! Also you should know, if you have a candy thermometer this recipe is pretty darn easy but beware of boiling sugar! It is REALLY hot and if you spill it on yourself - blister burns.....

#2. Orange spice pumpkin cakes. If you had slightly adventurous children, I think these would be delightful at a birthday party. Two-bite sized, golden-hued, and redolent of fall. I did make these in advance and freeze them, but in retrospect, I would only make them the day before or the day of and keep them at room temperature in a sealed container. I think they stay moister that way. I have not tried the glaze, as I found them perfect without. The only questionable instruction is the juice of two oranges - size is not specified. I ended up going with some larger oranges rather than smaller oranges.

#3. Chocolate peppermint cookies. My one piece of sage advice: things have changed since childhood. DO NOT assume that red candy canes are peppermint  - oh no, it's part of a grand conspiracy to trick you into buying revolting cherry flavored candy canes! I loved this recipe and the children seemed drawn to the sparkly crushed candy cane bits on top of dark chocolate cookies.

#4. Walnut jam thumbprint cookies. This recipe was for childhood nostalgia. I can my mom baking these at Christmas time and the way they tasted - buttery walnut crust and sweet tart jam.

Raspberry thumbprint cookie (48 cookies)

1  c. walnuts
1/2 c. sugar
3/4 c. butter (salted is fine)
1 tsp vanilla
1/4 tsp salt
1 3/4 c. flour
1/4 c. seedless raspberry jam

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
2. In food processor, blend  1 c. toasted walnuts with sugar until finely ground.  Add butter, salt, and vanilla-process till evenly blended.  Add flour and blend until mixed.  Remove knife blade, and press dough together.  
3. Roll dough into 1 " balls using about 2 tsp dough per cookie. To make this easier, you can break the dough in half, then in halves again, then in halves, then in thirds to get right amounts.  Place balls about 1 1/2 " apart on large cookie sheet.  With thumb,make small imprint.  Fill with 1/4 tsp jam.  Bake 20 min.. Cool on wire rack. 


#5. Orange candied ginger cookies - vegan from Extraveganza - I'll post this recipe soon. But very gingery, and quite nice fresh from the oven.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Party Review #2 - Mains

By mains, I mean something a bit more elaborate than dips! Though dips can be an art form in themselves.

Mains that we had:

#1) Miniquiches - the one photo!! I believe I made about 120 or so of these in advance and froze them. They were ALL gone by the end of the night. I sing the praises of this beautiful recipe: you don't have to deal with mini pie crusts, incredibly flavourful and you can make it two weeks in advance, freeze, and have it taste spectacular on the day of. Follow exactly other than substituting vegetarian sausage for meat if needed AND pay attention to the quantity/type of salt. In fact I'm posting the recipe below because of my fear that one day this link won't work...

Ingredients:
2 tablespoons melted butter
½ cup Panko* bread crumbs
4 large eggs
⅓ cup half and half
**½ teaspoon sea salt  OR  1/4 tsp of regular kosher/dinner table salt**
1 small potato, about 2 ounces, cooked, cooled and diced
1 link chicken sausage, pre-cooked, crumbled
3 medium green onion, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh basil
1 cup shredded Cheddar cheese
fresh ground black pepper

Directions:
1. Heat oven to 350°F.
2. Generously spray 24 mini-muffin cups with cooking spray, then wipe with a paper towel to completely coat. Place a small amount of melted butter in each muffin cup (about 1/4 teaspoon)
3. Pat 1 rounded teaspoon of Panko in the bottom of each cup.
4. Beat eggs, half-and-half,  salt & ground pepper in medium bowl until blended.
5. Mix cheese, potato, Italian sausage, green onion and fresh basil in a separate bowl. Spoon about 1 tsp of filling into every muffin cup. Add enough egg mixture so the muffin cup is about 3/4 of the way full. Spoon evenly into the mini-muffin cups, about 1 tablespoon each.
6. Bake on lowest rack in 350°F oven until lightly browned and set, about 15-20 minutes (err on the side of 15 if not certain!). Cool on rack 5 minutes. Loosen quiches from sides of muffin cups with a thin knife. Remove from cups; serve warm. Garnish with finely chopped fresh herbs, if desired.
7. If freezing, place on wire racks of baking tray in freezer. Once frozen, transfer to freezer ziplock bags. To reheat, place quiches on baking tray and bake directly from freezer at 350 degrees F for 12-14 minute until hot.

#2) Prosciutto cups with minced pear & goat cheese - so incredibly popular I could not keep these on the serving trays. The goat cheese addition is an absolute must! You can bake the prosciutto cups one day before and prep the pear the morning of (as long as you squeeze a bit of lemon juice over it) and assemble as the party goes along.

#3) Feta Walnut Date Cigars - basically a feta walnut date mixture rolled into buttery phyllo goodness. Delectable! Can be made up to a week in advance & frozen. The only thing I would say in retrospect is they were a little dry -- perhaps a Tbs or so of cream or evaporated milk in the filling might help with that? Also, adding in a Tbs of chopped dried rosemary to the filling is a must. Can y also use a bit more dates if desired - I probably used closer to 2/3 c.

#5) Peanut butter & scallion topped pineapple cubes - oddly addictive and more of a hit than I anticipated! This recipe required some tweaking though which was not recorded - if I had to stretch my memory, I would say it required more peanut butter, a lot of coriander, possibly some sweet chili sauce and a lot of lime. I would make the topping one to two days in advance to really let the flavors develop but don't cut up the pineapple early - as I learned the hard way, it turns brown! And canned pineapple  just doesn't compare.

#6) Smoked salmon on rye with horseradish cream. Surprisingly the least popular and the most effort to assemble right before/during the party. If I did it again, I think I would just have the smoked salmon on a tray with sauce in a bowl along side and baguette or crackers for people to serve themselves. Note that I am not complaining about having 300 g or so of freshly smoked salmon left over to eat during the week!

#7) Stuffed grape leaves (dolmades) from scratch! Honestly quite proud of myself for this one. I've never bought grape leaves before and I had so many that I ended up testing two recipes: one in a crockpot which I would not recommend - it seems the dolmades fall apart quite easily and become like a stew at the bottom, and the one I linked to above which was so flavorful and looked beautiful piled in the cast iron skillet. My only substitution was veggie broth for chicken broth. No other changes needed! The ONE downside of serving this for a party food is if you are like me and only like dolmades hot, it's very difficult to pull off. In the future, I would save this as a dinner party recipe as opposed to a finger food that is out all evening becoming colder and colder...

#8) Spiced almonds. Doesn't really fit into the mains or dips & crackers list, but SO GOOD. Such a great foodie gift as well. You can make them and store them in the freezer for weeks - they taste perfectly fresh when brought out! (I actually loved snacking on the leftovers straight from the freezer for about two weeks).  spice combination I used was as follows:

1/4 c. white sugar
1 tsp kosher salt (like dinner table salt)
1/2 tsp cinnamon
3/4 - 1 tsp cayenne
1 Tbs water
1 Tbs honey
1 tsp olive oil
for 2 1/2 c. almonds

Wednesday, January 09, 2013

Party Review # 1 - Drinks & Dips

Well I can't say that I made any new year's resolutions about this blog but I at least wanted to get one post up for 2013. Especially after promising so much with the party menu from my last post, I confess I've been putting off the follow-up post because I didn't take any pictures of all the food once it was set out!! I was so busy ensuring continual rounds of hot drinks and hot appies that photo documentation fell by the wayside, but I still want to reflect on the experience. I learned 1) that menu could probably feed a party of about 60, whereas I had a party of about 36 - ergo much unused food; 2) mini-quiches are extremely popular; and 3) pumpkin seed brittle is a huge hit!

DRINKS
#1 Mulled wine by Jaime Oliver. Definitely would make this recipe again - extremely flavorful & the big perk is that you can make the syrup a week in advance and keep it in the fridge. On the day of the party, you simply heat the syrup with a bottle or so of red wine and voila! Done! I actually made three batches of syrup and used them all over the course of the party.  The only change I made to the recipe was to reduce the sugar to about 150g for a single syrup batch. If needed you can always add more sugar later, but you can't take it out!

#2 Mulled cider. Went through almost 2 gallons! Excellent, really you don't need a recipe but you can use Bobby Flay's for a starting point. Use any combination you want of cinnamon sticks, orange, cloves, star anise, allspice berries, cardamom etc.

DIPS & CRACKERS

#1 Curried Sweet Potato Hummus. The most popular dip recipe by far -here's the recipe I created!

Curried Sweet Potato Hummus (*cut this recipe in half for a reasonable amount of dip*)
3 c. roasted (or cooked) sweet potatoes
1 c. cooked chickpeas
2 cloves garlic
1/8 c. sesame seeds (optional, can replace with 1/2-1 Tbs tahini)
Juice of 1 lime
2-3 Tbs olive oil
3 tsp madras curry powder
1/2 -1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp garam masala curry powder
1/4 -1/2 c. liquid depending on texture of dip - can use broth from cooking chickpeas, or water from boiling sweet potatoes or a bit of orange juice
salt and or pepper to taste

1. If the garlic isn't minced, put it in the food processor first. Then add the rest of the ingredients. Process until texture and flavor is to taste. Best if it sits for 4 hours or ideally one day and readjust seasoning if needed the following day.

#2 Beet & Walnut Dip
I personally loved this beet & walnut dip made exactly to directions- so beautifully red and incredibly refreshing to eat. A great summer dip! Would be fantastic served alongside goat cheese.

#3 Hot Artichoke Spinach Dip
Of course, every single person I know loves a good hot artichoke spinach dip. This is a recipe I return to time and time again because it doesn't involve mayonnaise which is my complaint about many versions of this dish. I always laugh at this recipe because it says it feeds 54. I doubled it once thinking I would run out - don't double it unless you have to feed a football team :)  It does make a lot, but we only had about 1 cup left at the end of the party :) I unfortunately have no idea where I originally got this recipe but it's not mine!

ARTICHOKE SPINACH DIP
1/4 c. butter (salted)
5 cloves garlic, minced
2-  10 oz packages frozen spinach
14 oz can artichoke hearts drained & chopped
8 oz package cream cheese
16 oz container sour cream
1 c. fresh grated parmesan cheese

1. Sauted garlic in butter until golden. Stir in spinach and artichoke hearts. Cook until tender (or heated through).
2. Stir in the remaining ingredients. Cook until thickened about 10 minutes.
3. Spoon into casserole dish. Serve directly or can refrigerate for one day. To prepare from refrigerator: put the dish into an UNHEATED oven. Set to 350 degrees F for about 40 minutes-1 hour (covered) until heated through.

#4 Edamame
I made this edamame dip that looked beautiful but honestly I hated it and it required so much adapting that I completely unrecommend this recipe. I do have a good edamame dip elsewhere that I'll dredge up.

#5 Crackers! People were gobsmacked that we made about 400 crackers from scratch, but compared to the purchase price of raincoast crisps - making them yourself totally pays off. We also tried a new first of making crackers with the pasta maker. If you're making anything like wheat thins or a regular cracker, I'm convinced this is the way to go - makes a uniform thickness dough and thin enough that the crackers reach desirable crispiness in the oven!

Check out this recipe for Olive Oil & Seed Crackers. The two recommendations I would make are reducing the salt to 3/4-1 tsp. And you may need a bit more water in the dough so it doesn't fall apart when rolling through the pasta maker.