Archive for September, 2009

Garlic Goat Cheese Cigars

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

dsc_0012

I can never get enough of that pop followed by the tiny sizzle when biting into a crispy egg roll. But why must the filling consist of ground pork and shredded carrots and cabbage? I adore pigs…baby back ribs, shredded pork sandwiches, pork chops, pork rinds. I love cabbage. I even like shredded cabbage–steam-sauteed with a little red wine vinegar for a quick veggie side to accompany weeknight meals. Unwrap and separate traditional egg rolls for me, please. I’ll take this new spin any day.

I saw a “recipe”, if you can even classify it as a recipe, for fried mozzarella sticks. The author wrapped string cheese in an egg roll wrapper blanket and gave them a dip in hot oil. Why would one spend that much time on a recipe that includes rubbery string cheese? My version sports the pungent bite of garlic woven into a creamy cloud of cream cheese and tangy goat cheese. For color and subtle heat, minced scallions. If you’re using the avocado creme to dip, tuck chopped cilantro into the rolls for continuity. A perfectly decadent little pick-up for any get-together.

1 (8 oz.) package cream cheese, room temperature

1 (3 oz.) package goat cheese, room temperature

3 garlic cloves, minced

1/4 c scallions, minced

1/4 c cilantro, minced

1 package egg roll wrappers

vegetable oil for frying

Mix together cream cheese, goat cheese, garlic, scallions and cilantro. Spoon 1 T onto one corner of each egg roll wrapper. Moisten edges of wrapper with water. Roll, tucking in ends, to form a cigar. Moisten last edge with water and press against cigar to seal. Fry until golden brown and crispy. Serve with avocado creme for dipping.

Avocado Creme

2 ripe avocadoes, peeled pitted and roughly chopped

2 limes

1 c sour cream

1/4 c chopped cilantro

2 T water

1/2 t salt

Toss avocadoes with juice of two limes. Combine avocadoes, sour cream and cilantro in a blender or mini food processor. Pulse until pureed, adding 1 t water at a time until desired consistency is reached. Season with salt.

Mom’s Cheese Biscuits

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

DSC_00076

It wouldn’t matter if Mom and I used the same recipe, same cooking utensils and same baking dishes…hers will always taste better. Is it a secret potion moms know how to sneak in whatever it is they are serving up? I hope at some point that transformation occurs for me. You know how boys love their mothers’ home-cooked meals!

My mom cooked breakfast and supper every day for our family. Even when we were all busy with work, piano lessons, dance class, church, cheerleading, softball and basketball, she made sure we ate those two meals together as a family sitting at our round wooden table. We lived in an old Victorian with creaky floors and drafty windows and doors. The central heat never seemed to keep up in the winter. Dad would build a fire in the evenings, but we relied on trusty space heaters in the mornings. Katie and I would argue over who sat in the ladder-back chair closest to the kitchen heater in the winter. Mom and Dad eventually solved that dilemma by rotating our seats each winter. Sibling rivalry was ferocious in our household. Yes, even with seating assignments at the dinner table.

I don’t remember when Mom first began the tradition of cheese biscuits on Saturdays. My sister was a cheese-aholic. She primarily dined on a diet of cheddar cheese, baked potatoes, chicken cutlets sauteed in soy sauce and hamburger patties for several years during childhood. She has since branched out, but Mom might have added cheese to her biscuits to coax Katie into trying anything new.

When all the cousins would travel to the beach for our annual vacation, Mom and Aunt Zanne would take turns cooking breakfast with Aunt Gee for all the kids. Mom never forgot her box of Pioneer biscuit mix for her morning. The biscuits have garnered a following over the years. Donnie looks forward to weekend get-togethers at Mom and Dad’s for Mom’s breakfast as much as the fellowship. Even my picky little eater, Jack, loves Dodie’s cheese biscuits.

Light and fluffy inside with a little crunch on the outside…best enjoyed right from the oven. The shredded cheddar makes little pockets of oozing cheese inside the biscuits. Donnie and Jack eat theirs with fruit preserves, but I like mine plain.

Dodie’s Cheese Biscuits

3 cups Pioneer Biscuit Mix

1 cup milk

1 cup shredded cheddar cheese

vegetable oil

Stir together biscuit mix and milk until combined. Gently mix in cheese. Sprinkle counter with 1/4 cup baking mix. Turn dough onto floured surface. Knead a few times. Roll 1/2-inch thick. Cut biscuits with a 2-inch cutter. Pour 2 T vegetable oil in 9 x 13 baking dish. Place biscuits in dish, turning each biscuit over once coating both sides with vegetable oil in baking dish. (This is her secret for perfectly crisp outside and fluffy inside!) Bake at 450 degrees for 12 to 15 minutes.