Monday, November 28, 2011

Vietnamese Beef with Mushrooms and Snow Peas



I’ve been craving Chinese food. I wanted to go to Panda Express yesterday but my wife talked me into tacos. So, today I asked her to go onto the internet and find me a Chinese recipe that she thought sounded good. She came up with Vietnamese Beef & Snow Peas.

She said the snow peas sounded good. I read the recipe and then went looking at beef broccoli, kung pao beef, and some others and decided to kinda make one up. To make the wife happy, I left the name but added mushrooms.

You know I love fresh mushrooms. Then I added some fresh green onions. Sirloin is on sale this week so that’s the meat I used.

I gotta say, it came out fantastic!




Mix together:
1 lb thinly sliced beef (I marinated it in Italian dressing while I cut the veggies)
1 tbsp corn starch
1 tbsp soy sauce
2 tbsp oyster sauce (store bought)
1 tbsp wine
1 tbsp minced garlic

Pour 2 tbsp sesame oil in wok and stir fry the above mix until beef is no longer red.
Move it to a dish and pour another 2 tbsp sesame oil in wok.
Stir fry (about 6 minutes):
½ lb snow peas
½ lb mushroom slices
Two chopped (sliced) green onions
One sliced and seeded green bell pepper

Add the meat back into wok with veggies.
Add:
2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tbsp corn starch
¼ tsp cayenne pepper
¼ tsp black pepper
¼ tsp salt
¼ tsp msg (accent) (optional)
2 tbsp oyster sauce

Cook and stir until thick and bubbly.
Serve over rice. I cook my rice in chicken broth

I loved it and my wife liked it too.
Mmmmm!
Enjoy!

Monday, November 14, 2011

Prime Rib


This week , our favorite grocer has rib roast on sale for $3.99 a pound. I jumped on the opportunity and bought one for tonight’s dinner and a couple more for the freezer.

We like the rib roast because, well, it’s prime rib. The dogs like it because they get a bone.

I’ve always said that I hate ordering something in a restaurant that I can do better at home. I am happy to say, prime rib is no longer on the restaurant menu.




They are so easy to cook and oh so good. Since there’s only two of us, I usually only get a 3-4 pound, two rib roast. I like the two rib like I said, because I’ve got two dogs.

When ya get it home rinse it off, rub it down with some vinegar and set it in the fridge until you’re ready to cook it. I use a red wine vinegar. When you are ready to start cooking, fire up the oven on bake at 325 degrees. While it’s warming up, put just a touch more vinegar on it. Don’t worry it’ll cook off. You need it to hold on the kosher salt you’re gonna rub into it next. Finish the process with some coarse ground or cracked black pepper. This is called “pepper encrusted.”

Pop ‘er in the oven. I use a glass baking dish with a wire meat rack on it. Place the roast on the rack. I prefer the bone down but I have trouble with a small roast wanting to fall over, so I put it bone up. (With a larger roast, definitely bone down.)


Cook it for about 2 ½ hours checking the temperature of the meat with a meat thermometer after the the first 1 ½ hours and every half hour after. When the internal roast temperature gets to 140, you got a rare prime rib. 150 is medium rare and 160 is medium. I always make sure I get at least 140 but never let it go above 160. Just a matter of taste. If you want, 170 is well done, and anything higher is a waste of money. Throw an old shoe in the oven, and get a sharp knife.

Ok, how simple is that?

Prime rib is traditionally served with au jus and a horseradish/sour cream. I like it like that, but…

If you read my Tournedoes Chasseur recipe in Feb 2010, you’ll know that I like chausseur (hunter style.) Since then, I have perfected this sauce for simplicity.

The original recipe for Chasseur Sauce calls for shallots. I use just a half of a regular ol’ onion either thinly sliced or chopped. Then the recipe calls for 1 ½ teaspoons of tomato paste. What the heck do ya do with the rest of the can? It usually ends up getting tossed, so I have replaced it with ketchup. I like Heinz. I also increased the mushrooms to a ½ pound. I use fresh cremini mushrooms because my grocer always has them. Rinse them, dry them, and slice them with your egg slicer. Lastly, I increased the flour from 2 teaspoons to 2 tablespoons. I just like a thicker sauce. If you like a thinner sauce, stick with the original.

Here’s what your recipe card will look like.

Prime Rib
Rinse then rub roast with vinegar
Cover with kosher or margarita salt
then with coarse or cracked black pepper
bake on a meat rack over pan at 325 degrees
until internal temperature is 140-160
Give bones to dogs, slice and eat the meat.

Chasseur Sauce
½ pound sliced mushrooms
½ onion (sliced or chopped)
Saute mushrooms and onions in 2 tablespoons butter
In a shaker blend:
1 ½ teaspoons ketchup
2 tablespoons flour
1 can beef broth
Dash, pinch or a shake each Salt and pepper
Add to mushrooms and onions
Cook til thick and bubbly. Serve over prime rib.

It is Fantastic!
Enjoy!

Friday, November 4, 2011

Two Great French Dressing Recipes



When I was in intermediate school (now known as Junior High), I had a classmate named Nick DeGrace. Nick’s parents, Philip and Elizabeth, owned a local restaurant called the Manor House (Liberty, Mo 69 Hwy.) The restaurant was operated by Nick’s big sister Rosalie. I remember there was a fire there, but I don’t remember if that’s why they closed.

I never went there that I can remember, but I do remember my parents going there for parties and dinners. They always seemed to enjoy the place.

Now, as I remember going to other restaurants about that same time (around 1966) you usually only had two or three choices for salad dressing. Those were French, Italian (vinegar & oil), and if you were real lucky, thousand island.

My mother loved the Manor House’s Coronado Court salad dressing and the DeGrace’s graciouly provided her the recipe. It’s easy to make and it’s delicious.

Coronado Court – from the Manor House Restaurant, Liberty, Mo

½ cup sugar
1 cup vinegar
1 cup oil
1 cup catsup (or ketchup)
½ tsp salt
½ tsp tobasco
1 whole garlic button

Mom always mixes it up in a big mason jar, shakes it like crazy, then lets it sit for At least 24 hrs before serving.

In the early 90’s, Marie Calendar’s had a tomato vinegarette that reminded me of Coronado Court dressing but it had tomatoes in it. So, I decided to add a can of drained whole tomatoes to the recipe. It turned out great.
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I met my wife in 1980 and we started dating January 1981. My wife is originally from North Platte, Nebraska. Nebraskans love Dorothy Lynch French salad dressing.

The salad dressing was made in Duncan, Ne. Dorothy and her husband sold the recipe in 1964 to a company called Tasty Toppings for $40,000 and a contract for a 1% royalty. Tasty Toppings opened a production facility in Columbus, Ne. Dorothy died in 1975. In 1987 Tasty Toppings changed the recipe and reduced the calorie content. Arthur, Dorothy’s husband died in 1992. The company again made some changes to the recipe and quit paying the Lynch family the royalties. The Lynch family sued and it went to trial in 1996 at the Platte County, Ne courthouse. The royalties were recovered.

Every time we go to Nebraska, we have to pick up a few bottles of Dorothy Lynch to bring home. In 2009, our local Wal Mart carried the dressing for about three months but then stopped.

Sometime in the 90’s, my wife ran across this recipe which is pretty close and very good.

Dorothy Lynch French Salad Dressing

Mix in blender
1 cup sugar
1 cup oil
1 can (10 3/4 ounces) Campbell’s tomato soup, undiluted
1/2 cup vinegar
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 teaspoon pepper
1 teaspoon celery seed
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder

Enjoy!

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

String Pie




This recipe originally comes from the North Dakota Beef Commission. In the early 90's, one of my co-workers, Ina, made this for us at work. She had added just two items and doubled the recipe for the work potluck.
I also like to add a little extra mozzarella just because.

Here's the original recipe:
Click Here

Make note that the recipe calls for teaspoons of butter instead of tablespoons ( I have no idea what would happen, but Ina underlined it on the recipe)

Here's the two items Ina added. It adds a really nice PIZZAZ and I suppose you could say changes it from Italian to Mexican.

-- 1 can (7-3/4 oz) of Marca El Pato brand Jalapeno Salsa
-- Add some "nacho sized" jalapeno slices on top of the cheese before baking (this picture doesn't have the sliced jalapenos on top.)

A great recipe for anytime- Pumpkin Bars



A friend of mine sent me this recipe.
Rather than retype it here, here's the link:
Click Here
It's easy to follow and prints out on a single page.

Ok, so here's what happened. I'm a dummy at times and I used the wrong sized pan. So instead of a sheet cake for pumkin bars, I made this nice pumkin cake. Same ingredients and same delicious taste.


The icing comes out thick. Don't cover it until you've cooled it in the fridge giving that icing plenty of time to harden some.

I also wondered what to do with leftover cream cheese since it only calls for a pkg and a half. So buy some sliced ham and make some pinwheels. :)