Posted on 07/13/2016 4:35:36 PM PDT by Jamestown1630
When we were married, one of our wedding gifts was a beautiful, copper beehive Oster blender. (I was collecting 'everything copper' back then, and my copper Oster toaster is still going strong, and will probably last my lifetime.)
The blender has also been a great tool and lasted a long time, but has been on its last legs recently; and my husband decided a while back that he wanted a Breville as soon as we were ready to budget it. (I think he had seen it highly rated by Americas Test Kitchen.)
We happened to be in an off-price department store last week which had the Breville for about $75 dollars less than we had expected to pay; and with that, the Breville Hemisphere Blender traveled to the top of the wish list, and all the way home.
I will miss the very retro look of my old blender; but the Breville is pretty whiz-bang, with pre-programmed settings for blending/crushing/liquefying; and its very easy to clean and maintain. Were having a lot of fun with it.
The manual came with recipes, and this soup caught my eye; Ill be saving it for the cold-creeping-in Autumn days:
CHICKEN, CORN AND GINGER SOUP
Serves 4
1-½ tablespoon Peanut Oil
4 Green Onions, thinly sliced
2 inch piece fresh Ginger, finely chopped
3 cups fresh or frozen Corn Kernels
4 cups Chicken Stock
1-½ tablespoon Soy Sauce
1-½ tablespoon Rice Wine
½ teaspoon Sesame Oil
2 small Chicken Breast fillets, thinly sliced
¼ Cup roughly chopped fresh Cilantro leaves (optional)
White Pepper to taste
1. Heat oil in a large saucepan, add onions and ginger and cook, stirring, for 2 minutes. Add corn and cook, stirring occasionally, for a further 3-4 minutes.
2. Add stock and water and bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from heat and allow to cool slightly.
3. Transfer half of the mixture to blender jug, place lid on blender jug and blend on speed 2/MIX for 30 seconds. Return pureed soup to remaining soup in saucepan with soy, wine, sesame and chicken. Cook on a medium high heat until soup starts to simmer and chicken is just cooked through.
4. Serve with fresh chopped coriander (cilantro)and white pepper to taste
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I went looking for a new smoothie recipe to try, and found this one:
1 Cup Pineapple Juice
1 large Banana, cut into chunks (I usually use a frozen banana)
1 Cup frozen Strawberries
1 Cup frozen Blueberries
Pulse to get it started, and then blend until slushy.
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The Breville Manual also had a recipe for a version of my husbands favorite mixed drink:
Margarita Cocktail
(Serves Two)
¼ Cup Tequila
¼ Cup Cointreau
1/3 Cup Lime Juice
1/8 Cup fresh Orange Juice
¼ Cup Simple Syrup
12 ice cubes
Place all ingredients in a blender jug.
Use the Ice Crush function or the Liquefy function (adapt for your blender) and blend until well combined and ice is crushed.
Serve in salt-rimmed glasses.
-JT
I used to keep a big glass jar on the counter into which I would put roughly chopped banana peels with water. The mess kind of fermented over days and then at some point I’d pour and scrape it into the soil around the roses.
I still have a Fry Daddy, but I haven’t used it in at least 16 years. If I want a French fry, I steal one from the kids happy meals. Sometimes I buy fried fish or fried chicken livers from the deli.
I just don’t fry anything other than eggs, and an occasional hash brown - stuff you can cook on a grill, or in an iron skillet with a tsp. of oil, but nothing that requires deep fat frying.
I stick the banana peels in the freezer. Then put them in a blender with water and whirl and use the same day. I’m not much on fermenting stuff.
CHOCOLATE P/BUTTER ICE CREAM / from his book Perfect Scoop
METHOD First make the Peanut Butter Patties added to ice cream base.
PATTIES: Form 6 tb chilled p/butter, 2 tb conf into 1/2" patties. Cover a dinner plate with plastic wrap. W/ spoon and finger, scoop up 1/2 tsp peanut butter mixture, drop onto wrap-covered dinner plate--may need to frige a few min to reduce stickiness; now freezer plate overnight.
ICE CREAM BASE whisk/heat 2 cups hnh, 1⁄4 c dutch cocoa, 1⁄2 cup sugar, pinch salt; when at rolling boil (will start to foam up) set offheat; whisk in 1/2 c smooth p/ butter, stir/thoroughly blended. Chill thoroughly then freeze as per mfg.
FINAL After youve removed the ice cream from the machine, stir in peanut butter patties by hand.
SERVE sprinkled with chocolate shavings.
Yes, that is the one! I love his stuff too and I lived in francophone Europe for 4 years (France 1, then later Geneva for 3).
And I have made that ice cream and it was sooooooooo good.
The Perfect Scoop is the name of his ice cream recipe book. I love it. You can tell because the pages are dirty in my copy. :)
Try the fresh mint ice cream and add the straciatella, which is melted chocolate, near the end, so it makes ribbons of chocolate and bits like chips.
Crostata di Fichi / Fig Tart / filled with Di Sarono Amaretto Pastry Cream\
METHOD Roll pastry 1/4" thin. Place in 9" tart pan w/ removable bottom or pie pan; trim excess; chill firm; dock. Bake blind/lightly golden 375 deg 1015 min. ASSRMBLY add almond mixture to par-baked crust; Smooth w/ back of spoon. Arrange 14-1/4'ed figs (skin side down) on top. Press gently to secure; bake puffed/golden 375 deg 4045 min. FINAL Lightly Glaze figs. GLAZE Right before removing tart from oven, micro-warm/liquefy 2 tb honey/tsp water in 10-sec intervals. Mix well. FILLING Proc/Grind smooth 3 min 2 c slivered almonds, 2/3 c sugar, 3 eggs, tsp vanilla, 2 Tb amaretto, 1/4 tsp salt, 2 Tb butter, 2 tsp lemon zest; should be slightly flowing paste. SERVE at room temp.
OMG.....David’s version of mint chip ice cream sounds extraordinary.
I do love figs, and that is beautiful.
-JT
I only use my little deep-fryer a couple of times per year (one of the reasons I’ve been slow to get an ice-cream maker - it would probably get used infrequently and take up space) but I do love the fryer. We like making the deep-fried battered vegetables that we get at the Fair.
I think one of the most useful things I have gotten recently is a little rice-cooker from my brother for Christmas. You can do so much with it! It makes steel-cut oats perfectly.
-JT
To make the home made version just make a simple syrup with a cup of water and a cup and a half of sugar. Then add in one and a half cups lemon juice.
I always add in the zest from at least two of the lemons.
I make this up in quantity and freeze it in two and a half cup portions for use in the summer.
Just let it cool and then put in zip top bags.
It is a great way to use up lemons that you get on sale.
Love his recipes and cookbooks. This ice cream looks delicious.I will make it.
Brought a fig cutting from our previous home in CA. I am happy to say it is thriving here in SC. I am so looking forward to figs again. Thanks for this fig recipe Liz.
We got a fryer as a wedding present but gave it away many years ago, because we didn’t use it very often. We moved with it twice before we decided it was dead weight for our family. Neither of our children, now grown, have one either.
Yep!
FIGS / HONEY / BLUE CHEESE
METHOD For this recipe, its okay if figs arent perfectly ripe because
broiling softens and caramelizes them a bit. Just lay fig halves on sheetpan,
cut-side up; broiler about 2 minutes....just warm and slightly brown the
edges. Out of broiler, place fig halves on pretty plates, then sprinkle on
blue cheese (as much as you you want).
SERVE drizzled with honey.
We are overrun with tomatoes so am making this tonight. Recipe is from a blog site, using an immersion or regular blender. I will see how it tastes. Per the comment section, you can also freeze this.
Homemade Ketchup
Serves: 32 ounces
Ingredients
5 lbs fresh tomatoes (the better tasting the tomato, the better tasting the ketchup)
¼ tsp cayenne pepper
¼ cup apple cider vinegar
1 tsp salt
2 Tbsp molasses
2 Tbsp honey
¼ tsp ground clove
¼ tsp ground cinnamon
1 Tbsp brown or Dijon mustard
½ tsp Worcestershire sauce
¼ tsp ground pepper
¼ large onion, diced
½ clove garlic
Instructions
Depending on the size, halve or quarter tomatoes so that they’re approximately 1 - 1½” pieces.
Place in a large stock pot. Using a wooden spoon or a potato masher, gently mash the tomatoes to release their juices. Cook the tomatoes on a low simmer for 30 minutes.
Using an immersion blender or a regular blender, puree the tomatoes until they are mostly smooth.
Pour tomato puree into a slow cooker. Add remaining ingredients and cook on low overnight, or 8-12 hours. Using an immersion blender or a regular blender, puree the mixture again until it is mostly smooth.
Using chopsticks or dull knives, prop open the lid of the slow cooker on opposite sides so that the lid does not touch the slow cooker. Cook the mixture on medium/high setting until the mixture has cooked down to the desired thickness, checking every hour or so. This takes approximately 3 hours.
Taste ketchup and add additional seasoning or sweetness as desired. (I ended up adding one more tablespoon of honey.)
Using an immersion blender or a regular blender, puree the mixture one final time.
Ladle or scoop into glass jars for storage. Alternatively, you can re-use old ketchup bottles for your new, homemade ketchup.
What a luxury, to be ‘overrun with tomatoes’!
I’m glad to have a recipe for Ketchup - my husband is always complaining because when he goes to buy ketchup, it usually has high fructose corn syrup, instead of sugar. I will save this.
And this reminds me: Miss M., I happened to find in the grocery yesterday, just by chance, both Liverwurst and Branston Pickle!
I bought the pickle, and it’s very interesting - it reminds me a little of mincmeat; and I think it would go well as a condiment for pork. But I read that the stuff available in the US has the corn syrup, while the one sold in the UK still has ‘real’ sugar - so we looked at the ingredients.
Ours is real sugar!
-JT
You always put Branston Pickle on Cheddar Cheese in a sandwich. That’s really the only way to eat it. It’s a type of chutney and very delicious despite the corn syrup. I, personally, wouldn’t put it on pork. Sharp cheddar cheese is the only way to go so that it would offsets the sweetness.
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