20 April 2020

Peanut Brittle (the best)

Made this back in December/holiday time.  Family recipe: this is my late Aunt Sue's recipe for peanut brittle, which is the best I know of (far better than the one my mom and I tried a few years back at my old house).  Easy and tasty--10/10!


Ingredients:

2 c. sugar
1 c. light corn syrup
1/2 c. water
10-12 oz. raw peanuts
1/8 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 T. unsalted butter, plus more to butter pan(s)


Instructions:

1. Prepare a large baking sheet or two by buttering it/them well (original recipe calls for 14 1/2" x 17" sheet).

2.In a large, deep pan/pot, stir together sugar, corn syrup, and water over medium heat, until sugar dissolves.  Place lid on pan and cook for 3 minutes.

3. Remove lid and continue cooking, using a candy thermometer to monitor temperature.  Stir occasionally and cook until reaches 234°F (soft ball stage).


4. Add peanuts and stir frequently, continuing to cook until mixture reaches 300°F (hard crack stage).  Immediately remove from heat (at 300°F) and stir in remaining ingredients (salt, baking soda, vanilla, butter).



5. Pour onto prepared sheet(s) and spread out as much as possible.


6. As candy cools, loosen edges and pull gently to stretch candy thinner (be very careful of the peanuts--they stay hotter much longer!)  Break hardened pieces off and set aside until you have all small pieces.  Enjoy!


19 April 2020

Duck Breasts with Sautéed Mushrooms & Port Wine Sauce

Delicious!  10/10, though tricky to cook correctly on my mom's stove (as it is electric).  We had to cook longer than what it said, and even then, it was still a bit underdone (and thus returned to the pan again).  Still, highly recommend to make it, plan to do so again at some point!  And when I do, I'll be sure to add in the pix (thought I had some, but apparently not).

Link to original recipe: http://www.chefjacques.com/by-htm/

Ingredients:

(for the mushrooms)
3/4 lb. assorted mushrooms (we used a dried/reconstituted mushroom blend plus some dried/reconstituted porcini--highly recommend!)
2 T. olive oil
1 heaping tsp. finely chopped shallots
1/8 tsp. of bottled minced garlic
sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

(for the sauce)
1/2 c. port wine (I think we used ruby port)
1 tsp. balsamic vinegar
1 tsp. butter
sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

(for the duck breasts)
1 duck breasts, 5-6 oz. each
2 T. butter
1 T. oil
sea salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste

Instructions;

1. Clean (or reconstitute and drain, if using dried) mushrooms.  Heat the olive oil in a medium skillet over medium-high heat.  Add mushrooms and sauté for 2-3 min.

2. Add the shallots and garlic, sauté for 1 more min.  Season with salt and pepper, then transfer to a plate and keep warm.

3. In the same skillet used for the mushrooms (still over medium high heat), add the port wine and vinegar.  Bring to a boil and keep cooking until reduced to 1/4 c. (around 4 min.)  Remove from heat and whisk in the butter.

4. Lightly salt and pepper the duck breasts.  In a large skillet over medium to medium-high heat, melt the 2 T. of butter and 1 T. of oil together.  When the butter and oil combo just starts to brown (watch carefully!), add the duck breasts, skin side down. Sauté for 2-3 minutes per side, depending on the thickness of your duck breasts (ours should have probably gone 4-5 min per side).  Remove from pan and allow to rest for 5 min. before serving with sauce.  Enjoy!

18 April 2020

Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Bars

Another great recipe from here in France!  I modified it just slightly based on ingredients I had on hand.  Again, I plan to make this again once I'm back home to compare--it's very good, everyone here has been enjoying it :)

Link to original recipe: https://www.errenskitchen.com/chocolate-chip-spiced-oat-bars/


Ingredients:

2 1/2 c. all-purpose flour (I used 1 1/2 c. of type 55 and 1 c. of type 65)
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. baking soda
slightly more than 1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1 1/4 c. salted butter (I only had unsalted, so I added just over 1/2 tsp. to it), melted
1 1/2 c. light brown sugar, packed
1/2 c. sugar
2 eggs at room temperature
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2 c. rolled (old-fashioned) oats
1 1/4 c. chocolate chips, divided

Directions:

1. Heat oven to 375°F.  Lightly grease and flour a 9" x 13" baking dish (I used glass).

2. In a small bowl, whisk together flour, salt, baking powder, baking soda, and cinnamon.  Set aside.


3. In a large bowl, whisk together melted butter, brown sugar, and sugar.


4. Whisk in the eggs and vanilla.

5. Stir in the oats.


6. Stir in the reserved flour mixture gradually, followed by 1 cup of the chocolate chips.



7. Spread mixture into prepared baking dish and transfer to oven.  Bake for 30 min, or until center is set.  Let cool in pan, serve, and enjoy!



16 April 2020

Leek and Roquefort Quiche with Lardons (diced bacon)

This is the best quiche I've made ever!  While I still do love the zucchini one a lot, this one is even better, I think.  It is so very tasty--I could have eaten far too much of it, honestly.  I'm hoping I can replicate the results back in the states.  I modified the recipe that I found on the link below (which is in French).  Enjoy!

Link to original recipe: https://www.marmiton.org/recettes/recette_quiche-roquefort-et-poireaux_16147.aspx


Ingredients:

1 refrigerated pie crust (pâte brisée in France)
5 leeks, about 1" diameter each, white and light green parts only (was about 5" of stalk for each)
olive oil (guessing around 1 T.)
125g (around 4.5 oz) chopped bacon (lardons in France--used fumée (smoked) kind)
3 eggs
pepper, to taste
1/2 c. crème fraîche (épaisse (thick))
3/4 c. 2% milk (demi-écrémé)
90-100g (around 3.25oz) roquefort cheese, coarsely crumbled

Directions:

1. Heat oven to 400°F or the temperature indicated on the package for baking the crust.  Roll out crust to line a pie plate and prick all over with a fork.  Bake according to package directions.  (My package had no directions, only baked for 5 minutes.  It wasn't fully baked, but that worked out fine.)  After shell has baked, reduce oven temp to 375°F.


2. Meanwhile, cut prepared leek sections in half, then cut in 1/4" sections crosswise to make half-rounds.  Heat olive oil in a medium skillet over medium-low to medium heat (I'm really not sure, as this isn't my stove--just know that you don't want too much heat or you'll burn up the leeks!)  Add the leeks and cook, stirring frequently, until leeks reduce and start to just very slightly brown.  Transfer to a bowl.


3. Add the chopped bacon/lardons to the skillet and cook until just starting to brown at edges.  Remove using slotted spoon and transfer to same bowl as leeks.


4. In a mixing bowl, whisk together the 3 eggs and pepper.  Add the crème fraîche and milk and whisk in.



5. Whisk in the reserved leek and bacon mixture, followed by the crumbled roquefort.


6. Pour into the prepared pie shell, then transfer to oven.  Bake for 35-40 min, or until the center is set.  Let cool and enjoy!!




11 April 2020

Vanilla Buttermilk Cookies

Another tasty cookie recipe tried out here in my French friend's kitchen :) As with the other cookie recipes I've tried here, I will hold off on rating it until we get back and try with American versions of the ingredients--this time including the buttermilk (I used the powdered version from back home as a substitute, following the directions on the canister; will try with regular buttermilk back home).  Even so, these are very tasty!  I made simple icing/glaze (powdered sugar, milk, vanilla) instead of what was listed in the original recipe, and only made half original recipe amount, as flour is not easy to come by here, plus didn't know if we'd like them, so didn't want to waste ingredients.


Link to original recipe: http://jensfavoritecookies.com/2014/04/08/vanilla-buttermilk-cookies/

Ingredients: (amounts listed are for half batch)

3/8 c. unsalted butter, softened
3/4 c. sugar
1 egg
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1/3 c. buttermilk (made with the powder substitute version (plus the water, which was added after wet ingredients as indicated on canister)
1/4 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. baking soda
1 1/2 c. all-purpose flour (I used half type 55 and half 65 again)

Icing (if desired; they are also good without, but I recommend icing them): scant 2/3 c. powdered sugar, milk (didn't measure, but guessing I used maybe 2 T.), small splash vanilla extract

Directions:

1. Heat oven to 350°F.  Line baking sheets with parchment paper.

2. Using electric mixer, combine and cream butter and sugar.


3. Mix in the egg and vanilla.


4. Mix in buttermilk.

5. Mix in all dry ingredients (salt, baking soda, flour).


6. Drop rounded spoonfuls (dollops around 1" in diameter) of dough onto prepared baking sheets, spacing 2" apart.

7. Bake for 11-12 min, or until edges are golden brown.  Remove from oven and let cool on cookie sheet for 2 min. before transferring to cooling rack.


8. If icing: whisk icing ingredients together in a small dish.  Use just enough milk to make a thick, sort of syrupy consistency (if it is too thick, it won't stick; too thin, it will soak into the cookies or just run off of them).  Once cookies are cooled, dip each, top side down, in the icing, just enough to coat.  Place cookies on cooling rack for excess to drip off, or, if you don't mind some excess on your plate, just put them on a plate :)  Enjoy!


10 April 2020

Chocolate chip cookies with melted butter

These are pretty good--but as I made them here in France with slightly different ingredients than back in the US (butter, flour, and vanilla are not the same), I'll rate it once I try it back there, as it's super easy and quick, makes a nice, small batch.  I must have made the cookies smaller than the original recipe, as I ended up with 30 rather than 20. 


Ingredients:

1/2 c. unsalted butter, heated until just melted
1/2 c. brown sugar, packed
1/4 c. sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 1/2 c. all-purpose flour (this time I used half type 55 and half type 65)
1/2 c. chocolate chips
optional: flaky sea salt, for garnish (I did not use this time, but I think it would make a good accompaniment)

Directions:

1. Heat oven to 350°F.  Line baking sheets with parchment paper.

2. Whisk the butter together with the two sugars until well combined.


3. Let mixture cool for a minute, then whisk in the egg and vanilla.


4. Sprinkle the baking soda and salt atop the mixture and stir in, followed by the flour.  Stir until fully combined and dough forms consistent texture throughout.


5. Stir in the chocolate chips.  Form the dough into balls (mine were about 1" in diameter), and place on prepared baking sheets 2" apart.



6. Bake for 9-10 min, until edges are golden crisped (middles will look slightly underdone).  Remove from oven and let cool on sheet 5 minutes before transferring to cooling rack.  Enjoy!



08 April 2020

Stuffed steak rolls with mushrooms and cheese

Mmmm these were ever delicious--another recipe made here in France!  I based the idea loosely on a rolled flank steak recipe I'd done before.  I did not measure anything, just put it together, so that is why the amounts are missing.  You can adapt it to your taste, of course :)  10/10, will make again for sure!  Served with rosemary potatoes.


Ingredietns:

butter (around maybe 1.5 T.)
8 oz. button mushrooms, quartered (I ended up with some leftover, which I just served alongside)
salt and pepper, to taste
1 large clove garlic, minced large
dry white wine (I used Chardonnay, would guess maybe 1/4 c. at most)
bread crumbs
Italian parsley, chopped
thyme (I used dried, but think it would be even better with fresh)
4 thinly sliced steaks (each one was slightly larger than the size of my palm spread open wide, maybe 3/8" thick)
4 slices of prosciutto
shredded Gruyère (used maybe 1 T. per steak roll)
Roquefort, crumbled (used maybe 1/2 T. per steak roll)
olive oil

Directions:

1. In a medium saucepan over medium to medium-high heat, melt the butter, then add the mushrooms and salt and pepper.  Cook for around 2-3 minutes (when mushrooms begin to give their liquid), then add the garlic.  Cook for additional 2 minutes, stirring often.


2. Deglaze pan with the white wine, cook until evaporated (should be fairly quickly).  Transfer mushrooms to a dish and set aside.


3. Combine the bread crumbs, parsley, and thyme in a bowl. (I forgot to get pic after I combined them lol.)



4. Lay steaks out on a work surface.  Place 1 slice of prosciutto on each, then top with a thin layer of the breadcrumb mixture.


5. In the middle, make a row using the reserved mushroom mixture.  Top with Gruyère and Roquefort.


6. Roll up gently and tie with kitchen string (or, if you don't have any (like I didn't here), you can make strips of crumpled aluminium foil--works great!).


7. Reheat the same pan used for the mushrooms over medium-high heat.  Add steaks and drizzle with olive oil, turning to coat all over.  Cook until desired doneness (I didn't quite get them done after going around 2 minutes per "side" (they cooked on 4 rolled 'sides'), so I had to return them to pan and cook another couple of minutes.  I would guess they should take around 10-12 min total, depending on thickness of the steaks.  Serve with the excess mushrooms and desired sides.  Enjoy!