Showing posts with label Pepper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pepper. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Kauai Inspired Cilantro Salmon Wrap


My hubby & I just got home from a fabulous week on Kauai's east shore.  We ate all our meals based on Yelp reviews!  We found things that made our taste buds dance and sing.  I'm not normally a fish person, but ahi, ono, and mahi mahi fresh from the Pacific sure made me a happy vacationer.

Our favorite hole-in-the-wall was a very popular establishment called Mermaids Cafe.  I had the Ahi Cilantro Wrap... not once, but two times during our stay!  So, of course, I had to create something reminiscent of my fabulous experience when I returned to the mainland.  All I had on hand was salmon, brown rice, and boring ol' flour tortillas, but that just had to do!  So I asked the man of the house to prepare the salmon on the grill and I set to work trying to create a cilantro sauce.  I have no idea what they put in their recipe, so I looked up "cilantro pesto" on the WWW, and got an idea for ingredients other than the obvious.  Of course I didn't measure, and it's all on taste, but here ya go:

2 cloves of garlic peeled, smashed and chopped
1 bunch of cilantro with the stems cut off
2ish tablespoons of fresh lemon juice
2ish tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil
1ish teaspoon of pepper

Put it all in the food processor until it resembles pesto.

I had leftover brown rice in the fridge from yesterday's lunch, so we dumped it (cold) on top of the tortilla along with the cilantro mix and the sliced salmon, and rolled it up like a burrito.  The flavors were pretty fantastic and I must say it will be a staple dinner in my house from now on.  Sure, it's a "summer in the sun" kind of meal, but hey, it's practically summer all year 'round where I live.

For next time:
I'd like to try a little dash of cayenne in the cilantro mix, and some sliced cucumber in the wrap.
Also, the hubby had a second wrap, and we were out of rice by then, so he used wasabi mayo from TJ's with the salmon and said it was very tasty!

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Comforting Potato Soup

I didn't get an appetizing picture of this meal...  It really looks like mush to be honest with you, but it tastes so good!  I used this potato soup recipe as my base and came up with this:

First, cook this stuff:
4 baked potatoes (baked for an hour at 400°, cooled, peeled and very coarsley mashed)
1/2 pkg mushrooms, sauteed (in copious amounts of butter and salt...  I have the hubby do it)
1/4 lb ground turkey
1 Cup chicken stock (I use the organic stuff from Costco)
  1. Get the potatoes scrubbed, poked with a fork and into the oven.  They do take about an hour (until they're tender), so once you have them cooling go ahead with the rest of the instructions.
  2. Like I said, I have the hubby cook the mushrooms because I can't stand to put that much salt on anything, but he cooks them to taste, so however you cook them will be just fine.  Fry them up in a sauce pan, add butter, salt, garlic, whatever.  Once they are cooked to your liking, put them in a bowl and set aside.
  3. Using the pan you cooked your mushrooms in, cook up your ground turkey.  Once it's browned (from the left over butter that was in there from the mushrooms) return the mushrooms and add the chicken stock to soak up any remaining yummy-ness from the pan.  Let simmer on low, or if you decided to cook this ahead... stick it in the fridge until you're ready for it.  I am only guessing with my measurements because I was dealing with leftovers.
  4. Without burning your fingers...  Peel those potatoes and mash them coarsely.  They should be in bite size pieces, but not unrecognizable...  Cube them if you must.
In a large pot/stock pot/dutch oven:
2 tablespoons flour 
6 cups Milk
  1. BEFORE turning on the heat, dump your flour into the pot, and stir in the milk a few tablespoons at a time while using a whisk to mix well.  You don't want it all lumpy and bumpy.  
  2. Once all the flour/milk mixture is a nice paste, turn on the heat to medium low and continue adding the milk while stirring.
  3. Go ahead and turn up the heat to medium high and continue stirring until thickened.  Let it boil a little, but make sure to scrape the bottoms and sides to keep those lumps away.  When desired thickness is reached, turn it down to a simmer.
Now for the good stuff!
1 tsp pepper
2 dashes cayenne pepper
1 chive sliced
3 small stalks celery with leaves, chopped
1 large carrot sliced
3 1/2 inch slices fresh mozzarella
  1. Add your potatoes, and your mushroom/meat mix to the milk/flour mix and stir.
  2. Add  the rest of the ingredients (pepper, cayenne, chive, celery, carrot & mozzarella).
  3. Stir well and let simmer for about 10 minutes or until the celery and carrots are no longer super crunchy.
We like to eat this soup with a nice warm piece of garlic bread.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Ranch Dressing, Please, Heavy on the Dill!


We ran out of ranch dressing a while back...  And, well, I just did not have it in me to run to the store that evening when I discovered I was out!  Dinner was on plates and headed to the table.  So, I did what I always do, and that was type "ranch dressing recipe" into my little search engine.  To be honest, it probably would have been faster to throw on shoes and drive the two blocks to the grocery store, but I figured "why put on shoes when I probably have all the ingredients...?!"  Plus, the store is usually a zoo around dinner time.

I found this lady's delightful ranch dressing recipe, and used what I had in my fridge.  That's what she'd do anyway, right?  So here's what I used, and I totally didn't measure...  I just scooped ingredients into my dressing thingy until it looked right and mixed it up:

Mayonnaise
Sour Cream
Milk
Fresh Green Onions
Dill (I can't get enough of this stuff!)
Pepper, lots of pepper
Cayenne Pepper
Dried Oregano
Dried Parsley
Fresh Garlic (pressed)
Salt

I stirred it up and tasted it, and poured it over our dinner that fateful night.  The hubby liked it, and I haven't bought it at the store since!  It's probably better for us anyway, right?  The salad pictured above includes fresh spinach, red bell pepper, feta cheese, leftover BBQ tri-tip, and of course, the dressing sprinkled with fresh ground pepper.  I served it with peas, corn and sourdough garlic toast.  I got the spinach and peas from a friend who was going out of town and couldn't use them before she left.  She got them from a local farm, and I have to say, they were really tasty!  The peas were still in the shell, so I had to pop them out and boil them, and that was a fun new experience.  I'm excited to change this recipe around and try using some more of my basil, that some may begin to consider a short tree!