Aunt Bea’s Cooking Recipes

Aunt Bea’s Cooking Recipes

Archive for March, 2007

Recipes for home cooking

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

From a Sunday meal, an everyday lunch, to a special holiday occasion, peruse numerous cooking recipes to try, share, and enjoy recipes from Aunt Bea’s.

Preparing and sharing a delicious meal is a simple yet meaningful way to spend time with family and friends. Often, out of necessity, a quick and easy cooking recipe is needed. Over 80,000 pages of delightful recipes from family favorites to gourmet creations. Numerous restaurants and executive chefs have contributed their favorite recipes.

Whether you’re cooking the traditional favorite recipes or looking for updated classic recipes for a party or get together these recipes provides a collection of culinary delights that are sure to warm your heart and be well received at the dinner table.

Recipes include appetizers such as stuffed artichokes. Chicken recipes, such as oven roasted garlic chicken, chicken cacciatore. Oil and vinegar salad dressings and vinaigrettes. Garden salads, antipasto salads, potato salads and more.

Many recipes are from family favorite cookbooks that have been used for generations. Discover new main dishes, appetizers, and desserts recipes.

The best recipes are only as good as the fresh ingredients in them. Remember it is a requirement for excellent food preparation to always include the freshess ingredients available. There’s no better way to ensure freshness than to select many of the important ingredients yourself at the local market.

recipes, cooking recipes, home cooking recipes, gourmet recipes

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Good food and home recipes

Wednesday, March 14th, 2007

Good cooking will compel many families to come together, at least momentarily. Remember Aunt Bea’s recipes and her constant kitchen presence?

The kitchen is the center of many American homes. Especially so, in many ethnic family settings. On Sundays and holidays the kitchen becomes full of activity as relatives and guess arrive bringing cooking samples, side dishes, and other favorite culinary delights. The smell of bubbling soup or tomato sauce, fresh ground herbs, and oven roasting meats permeates not only the kitchen, but the entire house, letting the neighborhood know good food and good friends are nearby.

Ever popular Italian food. Mediterranean ingredients and recipes are becoming an integral part of the home kitchen. Cold pressed olive oil is now important to the chefs and cooks of the United States as it has been for centuries to the Europeans. The Mediterranean diet is fast becoming recognized as not only healthy but also delicious with an abundant selection of traditional Italian cooking recipes to choose from. The use of herbs and spices garlic and olive oil contributes to heart healthy and low cholesterol diets.The Mediterranean cuisine can be characterized by one premiere flavor, and that would be fresh pressed olive oil. Food prepared with the fruity and compelling taste of quality olive oil, along with its ever present companion, garlic, brings to mind the Tuscan climate, culture, and heritage. Authentic Italian cuisine can nearly transport one’s mind to the terraces and olive groves of Italy.

Appetizers and hors d’oeuvres are popular additions to full course meals. One style side dish is antipasto. Antipasto is a term that really means “before the meal”. Anitpasti can be hot or cold cooked or raw, very simple, or made with a gourmet flair. It should be easy to make, and made from the freshest ingredients available. The main ingredients of antipasto can be sliced tomatoes, asparagus spears, mozzarella cheese, green olives, kalamata olives, marinated baby onions, salami, and numerous variations of pasta. Family kept recipes will include appetizers, soups, main courses, side dishes, garden salads, vegetables, and desserts.

aunt bea recipes, Italian food, Italian recipes, Mediterranean diet

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Oil and Vinegar the condiment pair

Monday, March 19th, 2007

Oil and vinegar has been recognized for centuries as ideal culinary companions. These two ingredients seem to have been made for each other. Vinaigrettes, mayonnaise, and other cold emulsions, along with fresh made salsas, depend on the flavors of olive oil and vinegar. It is important to know as a good cook that you should taste your oils and vinegars before combining them. Based upon your personal taste and your continued experience you will know what works together and what does not.

Homestyle bread with oil and vinegar

Pour extra virgin olive oil onto a serving dish or shallow bowl. Add a small quantity of balsamic vinegar about one quarter as much vinegar as olive oil. Serve as a dip with hot bread or fresh rolls. Aged balsamic vinegar, sherry vinegar, and red wine vinegar are the best choices. A very crusty bread is the best bread to use.

Rice and vinegar If you enjoy steamed rice and would like a healthy alternative to rice and butter, try drizzling your favorite vinaigrette dressing over hot rice.

Simple marinade

Before grilling beef or lamb, marinade the meat for one hour in your favorite red wine vinaigrette. For chicken and seafood marinade with a champagne wine or light-colored vinaigrette.

Chicken finger sandwiches

Grill sliced boneless chicken breast, place on a hot baguette or French roll, then drizzle two tablespoons of mustard vinaigrette and garnish with a handful of fresh garden greens. Arugula works well too.
oil and vinegar, olive oil, recipes for oil and vinegar

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Oil and vinegar vinaigrette

Monday, March 19th, 2007

Vinaigrette dressing

An oil and vinegar vinaigrette can be simple or complex, mild or spicy, it can also be made to be served cold or warmed. Vinaigrette dressings can be used in a broad range of culinary dishes. They are most commonly associated with green salad dressings. A good vinaigrette will double as a marinade for vegetables, poultry, red meats, and seafood.

A simple vinaigrette is one part vinegar to three parts olive oil. Be sure to use a good quality extra virgin olive oil as the main ingredient. For a milder vinaigrette increase the olive oil to four parts. With the advent of an increased variety of vinegars arriving on the market, the choices of vinegars has dramatically risen. Aged Italian balsamic vinegar is also becoming more desirable as an ingredient for gourmet vinaigrette dressings. In nearly all oil and vinegar mixtures salt is used to blend all the flavors together. Sea
salt is becoming more popular to use, especially in flavoring gourmet cooking dishes.

Oil and vinegar vinaigrette recipes can be found at Aunt Bea’s Recipes.

oil and vinegar, vinaigrette recipe, aunt bea’s recipes

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Oil and vinegar marinade

Monday, March 19th, 2007

A marinade is usually made of two primary ingredients: oil and vinegar, otherwise known as oil and acid. A marinade’s primary purpose is to spread flavor through immersion and helps to tenderize the meat or vegetables which is soaking in it. A marinade can also provide cooking lubrication on the grill for grilled foods. Olive oil is the normal choice ingredient for most marinades, it adds a pleasing flavor and provides the necessary lubricant for a hot grill. The acid counterpart of olive oil is usually vinegar but it can also be citrus juice, tomato juice, pineapple juice, wine, or even soy sauce. A quality marinade can greatly reduce the game flavor from wild game meats to make them much more palatable.

A variety of flavors can enhance the taste of the marinade. Herbs, onions, shallots, and garlic are the most common additions to marinade. Other ingredients such as ginger, mustard, sugar, and Worcestershire sauce, can also be used. A good mustard vinaigrette, red raspberry vinaigrette, or a red wine vinaigrette is often used as a practical marinade.

Oil and vinegar vinaigrette recipes can be found at Aunt Bea’s Recipes.

oil and vinegar marinade, marinade recipe, aunt bea’s recipes

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Bruschetta Italian style bread

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Bruschetta country style bread

An Italian toasted bread served soaked in olive oil, is called bruschetta. In old Italy, bruschetta was a wintertime dish to be eaten right next to the fireplace as it was being made. It is often enjoyed with red ripe tomatoes and arugula rubbed or placed on top.

Take one loaf of crusty country style white bread and several garlic cloves peeled and cut lengthwise. Cut the bread into slices about three quarters of an inch thick. The traditional way to toast the bread is over a grill in a wood fireplace. We can improvise with an outdoor grill. Place slices on the grill and turn when the first side becomes golden brown. When the bread is golden crisp on both sides, serve a piece along with two or more sliced garlic cloves. Rub the toast with garlic until the garlic virtually disappears into the bread. Drizzle a fine quality olive oil all over until the toast is completely saturated. Sprinkle with sea salt and fresh ground pepper. Serve as an appetizer. Be sure to use plenty of napkins.

bruschetta recipe, Italian bread

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How to make Italian Crostini

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

How to make home style Crostini Crostini is a Italian style mild garlic flavored toast. It has many uses and is an ideal accompaniment to antipasto, soups, or can be topped with numerous cheeses or olive oil toppings. You can make Italian crostini yourself in just a few minutes. Cut a thick sourdough baguette into slices about 1/2 inch thick. Using a quality extra virgin olive oil, brush both sides of each slice lightly. Preheat oven to 350°. Place bread slices on a baking sheet and toast until golden brown. You may have to turn them over so both sides are equally crisp. Remove from the oven, and while the toast is still warm rub the top side with minced garlic cloves.

You can top your Crostini with thin sliced Parmesan cheese and drizzle with a fine quality olive oil. You may also want to try a mild cheese melted on top of the crostini under the broiler with thin sliced mushrooms that have been marinated in a balsamic vinaigrette. Sometimes just a drizzle of oil and vinegar works well, or serve alongside a fresh garden salad. Always serve hot, just out of the oven.

Italian bread, crostini recipe

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Antipasto recipe

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Antipasto with Balsamic

Makes twelve servings
Prep: 1 hour 15 minutes
Start to Finish: 2 hours

Ingredients:

3/4 lb. sliced Genoa salami
3/4 lb. sliced prosciutto de Parma
3/4 lb. thinly sliced Soppressata or other cured sausage
2 lb. lightly salted fresh mozzarella
2 lb. smoked mozzarella
1 lb. Parmigiano-Reggiano, cut into small chunks
Sliced red ripe heirloom tomatoes sprinkled with sea salt and fresh basil
Extra-virgin olive
oil and balsamic vinegar
in separate cruets

Pepper grinder
2 cups purchased mixed marinated pitted olives
2 cups roasted salted almonds
1 recipe Roasted Red Bell Peppers with Rosemary and aged Balsamic Vinegar (see
next recipe)
1 recipe Grilled Vegetables with Pesto (see following recipe)
1 recipe Sweet-and-Sour Onions (see following recipe)


Directions
1. Arrange meats, cheeses, and heirloom tomatoes on platters. Serve with cruets
of oil and vinegar, and pepper grinder on the side. Arrange garlic toast in
a basket. Place olives and nuts in separate bowls. Arrange platters of Roasted
Red Bell Peppers With Rosemary and Balsamic Vinegar, Grilled Vegetables With
Pesto, and Sweet-and-Sour Onions on table. Makes 12 servings.

Roasted Red Bell Peppers
With Rosemary and Balsamic Vinegar

Makes 12 servings
Prep: 10 minutes
Start to Finish: 15 minutes

Ingredients:
6 red bell peppers (about 3 lbs.)
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
1-1/2 teaspoons coarsely chopped fresh rosemary

Directions:
1. Preheat broiler. Cut sides off peppers and arrange in a single layer on a
large sheet pan. Brush peppers with oil and season with salt and pepper. Broil
5 inches from heat, turning, until charred in spots and flesh is tender, about
5 minutes. Immediately drizzle vinegar over peppers and broil 30 seconds more.

2. Transfer peppers with any juices to a bowl. Add rosemary and salt and pepper
to taste; toss to combine. Makes 12 servings.


Grilled Vegetables With Pesto

Makes 12 servings
Prep: 15 minutes
Start to Finish: 25 minutes

Ingredients
1 cup packed fresh cilantro sprigs
1 cup packed fresh basil leaves
1/2 cup chopped fresh chives
1/2 cup pine nuts, toasted
1/2 cup freshly, finely grated Parmesan cheese
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus additional for brushing
1 teaspoon chopped garlic
2 pounds eggplant, cut lengthwise into 1/4-inch-thick slices
2 pounds zucchini and summer squash cut lengthwise into 1/4-inch-thick slices

Directions
1. Puree herbs, nuts, Parmesan, oil, and garlic in a food processor until smooth;
salt and pepper to taste.
2. Preheat grill. Brush vegetables with oil, season with salt and pepper and
grill over moderate heat, on lightly oiled rack, turning, until golden brown
and tender, about 4 minutes. Transfer to a platter; serve with pesto. Makes
12 servings.


Sweet-and-Sour Onions

Makes 12 servings
Prep: 10 minutes
Start to Finish: 25 minutes

Ingredients
4 medium red and yellow onions, cut into 1-inch-thick wedges
2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons unsalted butter

Directions
1. Preheat broiler. Arrange onion wedges in a single layer on a large sheet
pan and brush with oil. Season with salt and pepper. Broil 5 inches from heat,
turning, until golden brown, about 8 minutes.
2. Bring vinegar, sugar, and 1/2 cup water to a simmer in a medium saucepan;
add onions and butter. Simmer, covered, until almost tender; about 5 minutes.
Uncover pan and continue to simmer, stirring, until sauce thickens, about 2
minutes. Salt and pepper to taste. Let stand until cool. Makes 12 servings.

Source: Ladies’ Home Journal

antipasto, balsamic recipe, oil and vinegar, grilled vegetables recipe

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A taste of Rome at the Oscars gala
Napa Valley Register
Available this time of year, Oenotri chef Curtis Di Fede serves it with a lemon anchovy vinaigrette and Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese at his Napa restaurant. He is also offering it to attendees at the annual Oscars viewing gala at the Robert Mondavi ...




Dallas Morning News (subscription)

Lemon vinaigrette makes salad special
Dallas Morning News (subscription)
The secret to this salad from Bumble Bee's Baja Grill in Santa Fe, NM, is the bright, lemon vinaigrette dressing. In Santa Fe, NM, Bumble Bee's Baja Grill has a memorable salad topped with braised lamb, skirt steak or pork carnitas.




Focus28 Launches New Diet Friendly Salad Dressings
San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
Their new salad dressings are available in two popular flavors, Honey Mustard and Balsamic Vinaigrette. Both flavors are low in calories, carbohydrates and fat. Focus28 is proud to announce a new addition to their line of high protein diet products.

and more »



Dining Notes: Corner Taco redefines taco truck
Florida Times-Union
The only ingredients made in advance are a couple of sauces, including his Fresh Thyme Vinaigrette, which he sells at Grassroots Natural Market, The Fresh Market, Native Sun Natural Foods Market and through Amazon.com under his Corner Natural Foods ...

and more »



Los Angeles Times

Culinary SOS: Cleo's Brussels sprouts
Los Angeles Times
It's kind of like a salad — Brussels sprout leaves tossed with a tangy vinaigrette, capers and toasted almonds — except that the leaves are deep-fried first, giving the whole dish a surprising texture and crunch. My first couple of bites were a ...




Get figgy with it: Rich, thick fig jam is versatile in the kitchen
The Times and Democrat
Fig jam is used to create a sweet-and-savory vinaigrette for a tomato, avocado and feta cheese salad. A jam would seem an unlikely ingredient to be overlooked. After all, legions of parents rely on the many offerings of the grocer's PB&J aisle to ...

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SMORGASBORD: More than a vinaigrette . . . Mailing magnolias . . . Pie ...
Grand Forks Herald
The richly flavored Woodford Reserve Bourbon Sorghum Vinaigrette was created by a chef at the Kentucky distillery, with a slightly sweet (thanks to that molasses-like sorghum) and tangy blend, that gets a bit of a kick from Tabasco and paprika.




Grilled Tuna with Curry Vinaigrette and Chili OIl
The Journal News | LoHud.com
Steaky: Grilled yellowfin Tuna with curry vinaigrette and chili oil. / Seth Harrison/The Journal News Start the day before: in a glass jar, combine the olive oil, chili powder and garlic clove and let them sit overnight in a dark place.

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The Guardian (blog)

Blanche Vaughan's perfect purple sprouting vinaigrette
The Guardian (blog)
Steamed lightly and dipped into a thick mustardy, garlicy vinaigrette, nothing more needs to be done for the first of the season enjoyment of this beautiful brassica. PURPLE SPROUTING VINAIGRETTE Serves 2-4 as a starter or light snack 1 small bunch per ...




Pan-Roasted Ridgeview Farms Chicken With Squash in Chevre Vinaigrette and ...
Arizona Republic
Continue adding the oil until the vinaigrette emulsifies into a smooth, fluffy-looking sauce. Season with salt and pepper. Set aside. In a food processor, pulse basil, garlic, lemon, adding oil to suit your preference. Heat oven to 350 degrees.


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