Category: Ingredients (Page 23 of 25)

Mikey’s Desert Island Foods

I know you’ve been waiting all day for this, haven’t you? Here are my five desert island foods, and please put yours in the comments section below so we can keep this going…oh, and please spread the word to your friends and on your Facebook pages….

1. Pizza–there is no single food item that satisfies like pizza, and it has or could have all of the four food groups.

2. Buffalo wings–I can’t survive without the occasional taste of Buffalo wing sauce, so why not have it in the format it was meant to be on–chicken wings

3. Pineapple–hear me out. You’re on a desert island like Gilligan anyway, but also, you need fiber and you need some good vitamins. And have you ever had a bad-tasting pineapple. I know I haven’t, ever. So bring it on.

4. Meatballs or meatball sandwiches–Aside from the chicken wings, we need protein, and meatballs are the perfect protein. If we can have them in sauce, all the better. If we can have them in sauce and on bread, better still. Man, I’m getting hungry.

5. Chocolate chip cookies–really, is there a better dessert or sweet snack food than good chocolate chip cookies? I don’t think so.

So let’s go…I want to hear your choices…….

Desert Island Dinners

Our buddy Jeff Giles at Popdose.com runs the “Desert Island Discs” feature where musical artists list their top 5 albums that they wouldn’t mind being stranded on a desert island with.

And that got me to thinking……listing our top 5 desert island dinner items might be kind of cool and interesting. But it would be more fun to list mine and then have you all comment on them with your own choices. I’ll do my first post tomorrow on this, so get to thinking about it….

Super Bowl Spread III

It’s that time again, and here are my all new recipes for Super Bowl Sunday that were posted on Bullz-Eye’s Grub for Guys last night. Hope you dig!

Super Bowl Spread III
Buffalo Chicken Nachos, Brat & Wisconsin Cheddar Pizza, Deep Fried Pierogies, and Apple-Bacon Brownies

You would think coming up with new and interesting Super Bowl recipe ideas would be difficult to do year after year, but when you think about the endless combinations of food that are available, it’s not that difficult. What IS difficult is trying not to eat all of everything when something you create tastes good. That’s a problem I encountered when making Buffalo chicken nachos, and hopefully you will enjoy them as much as I did. And with that, here is this year’s Super Bowl spread, and we included one recipe each to represent Green Bay and Pittsburgh. And while each recipe serves 4-6, that will vary based on how hungry everyone is, and also what else there is to eat at the party.

Buffalo Chicken Nachos

Ingredients:
1 bag sturdy tortilla chips (or 3-4 cups)
3-4 chicken breast halves, trimmed of visible fat
Cooking spray
Salt and pepper
1 cup Buffalo chicken hot sauce (Frank’s is always a good choice)
½ cup chopped tomatoes
1/3 cup chopped celery
½ cup crumbled blue cheese
¼ cup pickled jalapeno peppers

Directions:
Spread chips in a large baking dish and set aside. Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Mist a large nonstick grill pan or large nonstick skillet with cooking spray, sprinkle some salt and pepper over chicken, and grill for 4-5 minutes per side or until no longer pink in the center. Let rest on a plate for a few minutes, then cut into bite-sized pieces. Place chicken pieces in a medium saucepan over medium-low heat, and add hot sauce. Let simmer for 3-4 minutes, then pour chicken/sauce mixture over nachos. Sprinkle with remaining ingredients, and bake for 5 minutes or until blue cheese is melted and chips just begin to brown. Serve immediately, and be ready to make more.

Brat and Wisconsin Cheddar Mini Pizzas (Green Bay)

Ingredients:
2 small ready-made pizza crusts (such as Mama Mary’s)
Olive oil
1 small green pepper, diced
1 small sweet onion, diced
1 pre-cooked bratwurst (Johnsonville beer brats are awesome), sliced
1 cup shredded extra sharp cheddar cheese (Wisconsin cheese is really good, but any kind of good cheddar will do for this pizza)

Directions:
Pre-heat oven to 450 degrees. Brush pizza crusts with a bit of olive oil and set aside. Heat about 2 teaspoons of oil in a large non-stick skillet over medium heat, and fry pepper, onion and brat slices for about 5 minutes or until onions are translucent. Sprinkle pizza crusts evenly with cheese, then spread brat mixture over the top. Bake for about 7-8 minutes, or until the edges of the pizza begin to brown. Cut into slices or bite-size pieces and serve.

Deep-Fried Pierogies (Pittsburgh)

Ingredients:
1 box frozen mini potato and cheese pierogies (Mrs. T’s are always good)
Vegetable oil for deep-frying

Directions:
Heat about two inches of oil in a medium saucepan over medium-high heat (or use a deep-fryer if you have one and prefer that) until you can feel the warmth easily when placing your hand about an inch away from the oil, or until a safe cooking thermometer shows the oil to be about 350 degrees. Remove pan from heat briefly, and very carefully lower about 10-12 frozen pierogies into the oil. Cook for 3-4 minutes, or just as they begin to brown, and then remove with a slotted metal spoon or spatula to a paper-towel lined bowl. Repeat process for as many batches of pierogies as you need, making sure the oil rises to cooking temperature before adding pierogies each time. Serve with ketchup for dipping on the side.

Apple-Bacon Brownies

Ingredients
1 box Brownie mix (with or without walnuts)
1 egg
¼ cup vegetable oil
¼ cup water
1 small apple, peeled and diced
4 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled
2 tablespoons applesauce

Directions:
Prepare brownies according to package directions (you usually have to add egg, oil and water), adding apple, bacon, and applesauce. Bake for 40-45 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Let cool for about 15-20 minutes and then slice brownies into small squares to serve.

The Minimalist Mark Bittman’s favorites from his column

Mark Bittman’s “The Minimalist” column ceased publication in its New York Times home last week, but he wrapped things up by choosing his personal 25 favorite recipes from his run.

Okay, so I haven’t tried any of these per se, and some of them, like braised squid with artichokes, and Crisp Braised Duck Legs are not food you’d see me preparing too often. But most of them are intriguing–like the spaghetti with fried egg; no knead bread; curried eggplant; or stir-fried chicken with ketchup. Bittman’s work has also appeared often in mags like Men’s Health, and some of those I have tried. And I can vouge for one thing–the man is a master at recipe creation, and anything I’ve tried was usually simple to make, delicious, and with no crazy ingredients. I’m guessing that was the premise of his column too–no elaborate ingredients or instruction.

So check out the link to Bittman’s 25 faves, where you can link to each recipe to try them. I know I’m going to do the same very soon….

Super Bowl Spread I

A couple years back, I posted some Super Bowl recipes on Grub For Guys. Since I did this in 2009 and 2010, I’ll post the first one for you here to make for the championship games this weekend, and the 2010 version for Super Bowl week. Enjoy!

Grub For Guys’ Super Bowl Spread
Slow Roasted BBQ Ribs, Spicy Salami Sliders, Killer Taco Dip, Veggie Panini, and Savory Cilantro Chili Corn Muffins
By Mike Farley

One of the best things about Super Bowl Sunday, aside from the actual football game and even the commercials, is the license to serve and eat great party food. If you like the standard pizza and wing fare, there is nothing wrong with that. But if you want to go a little above and beyond for your Super Bowl party, I’ve come up with some great finger foods that in some cases will leave you with another hand to hold a cold beer. Most of these are real easy, even the ribs, which are simple but time consuming. But with kickoff at around 6:20 ET, you have all day to prepare anyway. So with that, here we go…..

Slow Roasted BBQ Ribs
Does the thought of making ribs with homemade BBQ sauce intimidate you? I felt the same way, until I watched Guy Fieri and Tyler Florence do it on the Food Network. The key is patience, because the actual cooking process is pretty simple.

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