Daily Archives: February 12, 2014

Rice Pudding

ImageIf you’ve got lots of leftover rice and want to make rice pudding, try this leftover rice pudding recipe. This is a decadent and creamy rice pudding recipe that you can serve either as a sweet breakfast or for dessert. Rice pudding is a great way to use up all your leftover rice.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups milk
  • 1 cup leftover pre-cooked rice
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/3 tsp cinnamon (or to taste)
  • 1/3 cup raisins

Preparation:

Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees.In a medium saucepan, heat the milk and rice, stirring frequently so the milk doesn’t burn. Bring to a slow simmer.

In a separate large bowl, combine the eggs, sugar and vanilla. Add to the milk and rice and allow to cook for just a few minutes, stirring occasionally.

Pour into casserole or baking dish and bake for 20 minutes. Allow to cool slightly before serving.

Source: http://vegetarian.about.com/od/desertrecipes/r/ricepudding1.htm

Greek Rice Pudding

Image
Serves 4

INGREDIENTS
1 litre / 1¾ pints milk
120 gm / 4¼ oz short grain or Arborio rice
2 tablespoons sugar
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon clear rosewater syrup
1 teaspoon cornflour
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1.   Place milk and rice in a heavy-bottomed saucepan and heat gently, stirring occasionally, while you bring the milk to a simmer.
2.   Lower the heat just before the milk comes to the boil and cook gently, uncovered for 30 to 40 minutes, stirring occasionally, until each grain of rice is tender but still shapely.
3.   Add sugar, vanilla and rosewater syrup, and stir well until sugar dissolves.
4.   Mix cornflour to a paste with an extra tablespoon of milk.
5.   Add cornflour paste to the rice, raise the heat slightly, and stir well until the mixture thickens to a creamy texture.
6.   Pour into 4 shallow individual bowls.
7.   Sprinkle with cinnamon.
8.   Serve warm or cold.

Tips:
If you prefer a baked rice pudding with a crusty top, pour the cooked rice into a buttered ovenproof dish, dot with a little butter and bake at 180ºC / 350ºF for 20 minutes until the top is golden brown.

Homemade Tortillas

Homemade Tortillas Recipe photo by Taste of Home
Homemade Tortillas Recipe photo by Taste of Home

 

TOTAL TIME: Prep/Total Time: 30 min.

MAKES: 8 servings

Ingredients
2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup water
3 tablespoons olive oil

Directions
In a large bowl, combine flour and salt. Stir in water and oil. Turn onto a floured surface; knead 10-12 times, adding a little flour or water if needed to achieve a smooth dough. Let rest for 10 minutes.
Divide dough into eight portions. On a lightly floured surface, roll each portion into a 7-in. circle.
In a large nonstick skillet coated with cooking spray, cook tortillas over medium heat for 1 minute on each side or until lightly browned.
Keep warm.
Yield: 8 tortillas.
Source: http://www.tasteofhome.com/recipes/homemade-tortillas

How-To: How to Make Homemade Tortillas
Originally published as Homemade Tortillas in Taste of Home June/July 2010, p36

Flour Tortilla Recipe – How To Make Perfect Flour Tortillas

TortillaCook5

This recipe and photos are courtesy of Cynthia Detterick-Pineda of Andrews, TX. More of Cynthia’s Southwest Recipes.
or
What’s Cooking America

Recipe Type: Quick Bread, History
Cuisine: Southwest, Mexican
Yields: Approximate 15 tortillas
Prep time: 15 min

Ingredients:
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
4 to 6 tablespoons lard or vegetable shortening
1 1/4 cups warm water (approximate)

Preparation:

image In a large bowl, blend the flour, baking powder, and salt together.

With a pastry cutter/blender (unless you are one of those, like my teachers, who always used their hands) cut in the lard or shortening. You want these ingredients to cling together slightly and hold a form when squeezed in your hands.

If the mixture crumbles, you do not have the shortening mixed in well or have too little (if it makes a hard clump them you need more flour and less shortening).

image

Add the water all at once and mix the dough quickly with a fork or by hand until the dough forms a mass.

Work it in the bowl, moving it around the sides to pick up any flour remaining in the bowl.

Knead the dough by folding it in half, pushing it down, and folding again. It should take about a dozen folds to form soft dough that is no longer sticky.

BlendBallCover the dough with a towel or plastic wrap to let it rest for about 5 to 10 minutes.

Allowing the dough to rest lets any of the liquid absorb into the flour, which will give you a softer tortilla after cooking.

KneadBall2   KneadBall   DoughBall2

Take your ball of dough and begin pinching off 1-inch diameter balls. Knead each of these into a tight ball by folding them over with your fingers, turning and repeating until it is shaped like a fat disk.

Place it to one side of the mixing bowl and continue to do this until you have used all of the dough.
Before rolling out the tortillas, allow the dough balls to rest at least 10 minutes. This will permit the gluten to relax and make them much easier to shape and roll.

  DoughBall  MasaBall1   MasaBall2

 inch thick and 8 to 10 inches in diameter.

NOTE: You can roll the thinner or thicker, if you like. Just remember to adjust the cooking time for how thick they are rolled. I roll mine the way they are done in New Mexico – slightly thicker than any store bought ones.

Mexican Comal Heat a Comal, cast-iron griddle, or small skillet to about 450 degrees F. over medium to medium-high heat until water droplets “dance” when dropped on the surface. You might have to increase or decrease the heat after you cook your first tortilla, but you should be able to tell if the tortilla is cooking too fast on the outside and still raw on the inside, or increase it if your tortilla is taking more than 30 seconds to begin to “puff” when placed on the comal.

Comal Definition – Mexican Comal or cast iron plate used to make tortillas. If you do not have a comal, a large cast iron skillet or griddle works well, or even an electric griddle can be used when heated up to 400 to 450 degrees F.

TortillaCook2 TortillaCook3 TortillaCook4 TortillaCook5 Place the raw tortilla on the preheated Comal and allow it to cook until it begins to puff up with air pockets, turn carefully since not only is the comal hot, the tortilla is hot and the air pockets may release steam that can burn. Each side should cook about 30 seconds, leaving the tortilla puffy. Press on a center part of the tortilla slightly to be certain the inside is cooked. If it looks as though it has compressed down and is a darker color, your dough is not cooked in the center and will need to be returned to the comal.

Notes on cooking tortillas: I, along with others who have been making tortillas for quite some time, will roll the next tortilla while the previous is cooking. Unless you feel very comfortable doing this, I would recommend either having someone else flip the tortillas and pull them off the comal, or wait until the present tortilla is cooked before starting to roll a new one. You will find that tortillas can cook very quickly (approximately 1 minute), and they can burn very quickly! If you are using a cast iron comal, and the tortilla burns, you will need to scrape off the char and use a damp rag to wipe down your comal before continuing to cook. The flavor of one burnt tortilla can ruin the remainder of the batch.

As you pull the tortillas off the comal, place them in a tortilla warmer or on a plate (lined with a dish towel or paper towels to keep them warm).

Storing fresh-made tortillas:
The tortillas can be place in bags or containers and kept for several days in the refrigerator, and they can be frozen (although I do not recommend this as the taste changes some when they are thawed).

The dough can be frozen easily before cooking and thawed later.

Store extra tortillas in a plastic bag in the refrigerator. Since they don’t have preservatives, they will spoil after a couple of days on the counter.

Sopapillas: This recipe can be also be used to make savory sopapillas. Simply cut your rolled out rounds into wedge shapes and deep fry in 400 degree F. oil until they are puffy and browned. Remove from the oil and drain on a slotted rack of paper towels. These “sopapillas” are a quick easy way to make “double duty” of your masa (dough), but a good sopapilla should have milk instead of water as the liquid for making the dough. Check out Cynthia’s recipe for making Sopapillas.

Greek Stewed String Beans

I love green beans, and these look delicious!

Linzer's Kitchen

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My friend and I recently went to a delicious greek restaurant in NYC and has stewed string beans as a side dish. We devoured them. I knew I would have to recreate the dish for myself.

You will need

  • string beans
  • one large yellow onion
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • half jar of tomato sauce

Chop the onion and sauté in a pan with garlic.

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Add the string beans to the pan after about 5 minutes.

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Let them cook for about 5 minutes. Add salt and pepper. Then pour approximately half a jar of tomato sauce along with a cup of chicken stock into the pan.

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Let the string beans get tender in the pot from the sauce and chicken stock mixture. Let them cook for about 10-15 minutes.

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I love this dish. It’s the perfect side to any protein and its super healthy too!

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