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Showing posts with label Joe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe. Show all posts

We Were Golden!

Sunday Night the 68th Annual Golden Globes were on television. Joe and I, in our concentrated effort to see movies with Oscar buzz, inadvertently saw most of all the Golden Globe nominated movies as well. So, to wrap up our great week, date night and wind down in "style" {such a loose term around here}, we celebrated with a gold themed evening.
We had golden spider mums, a golden bottle of wine from the wine refrigerator (I promise this happened to be in there and not bought for the theme!), Golden Globe Cookies, Golden Roasted Chicken and Golden Baked Fontina Cheese as an appetizer with our wine. We had a great time cooking, talking, drinking our wine, and taking the pictures for the blog. This was a team effort and Joe is definitely a contributing writer and editor for this post! Here are the pictures and recipes which we both highly recommend. Yum!
Golden Roasted Chicken Recipe
Ingredients:
1 5- to 6-pound chicken
Kosher salt
Ground pepper
Fresh thyme
Fresh rosemary
Fresh sage
1 head garlic, cut in half
1 stick butter (1/2 cup)
1 sweet onion, thickly sliced
2 lemons
 

Moral Support and Taste Tester: Bear




Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

Scatter the onion slices in a roasting pan and place the chicken on top.  Liberally salt and pepper the inside of the chicken.  Stuff the cavity with 4 tablespoons butter, thyme, rosemary sage, garlic and 1 lemon (cut in quarters).  Rub 1 tablespoon of butter on the outside of the chicken and then sprinkle again with salt and pepper.  Melt the remaining 3 tablespoons of butter and pour over onions.  Cut the other lemon into thin slices and place on top of onions.

Roast the chicken for 1 hour, 15 minutes, or until the juices run clear when you cut between a leg and thigh.  Remove the chicken to a platter and slice immediately.  Serve with the onions.
 

Golden Roasted Chicken: DELICIOUS!

Gold Spider Mums from the grocery store and a nicely packaged bottle of wine that I had on hand because I love it!! Makes for a great way to set the tone for the evening!

 Golden Baked Fontina Cheese
from my favorite cook Ina Garten

How Easy Is That? Cookbook by Ina Garten

Ingredients:
1 1/2 pounds Fontina Cheese, rind removed and cut into 1 inch cubes
1/4 cup good olive oil
6 garlic cloves, thinkly sliced
1 tablespoon fresh thyme
1 teaspoon minced fresh rosemary leaves
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 crusty French baguette to dip into the golden mixture

This took less than 5 minutes to assemble and throw into the cast iron pan

Golden Heaven in 6 minutes!
Preheat your broiler and position the rack 5 inches from the heat.

Throw the cubes of Fontina evenly around the cast-iron pan (Ina suggests a 12 inch pan, no idea what mine is but that looks about right to me). Drizzle the oil on the cheese, distribute the other ingredients evenly on top of the cheese and oil. Sprinkle your salt and pepper next, place under the broiler for 6 minutes, until the cheese is melted, yummy, browning or in my case...golden!

Joe and I ate it, as suggested by the Barefoot Contessa,gathered around the pan with our baguettes ready and wine in hand while watching bits of the Red Carpet show. 

Golden Globe Cookies
original recipe by Rebecca Rather 

The Pastry Queen by Rebecca Rather's Pretty-in-Pink Shortbread Pig Recipe
I have made these cookies a million times in a million different shapes. I got the idea to just make plain ol' round cookies with gold icing simply because it fit the theme and I have never made the cookies yellow before. The original recipe is called Pretty-in-Pink Shortbread Pigs. I have made pink pram cookies for showers and welcome-baby hospital visits, blue prams, butterflies, dragonflies, and all sorts of shapes. I wanted to get a really simple and classic shortbread recipe under my belt that was versatile for my children. I hope in many, many years after many holidays, parties, and worn cookie cutters, my lambs and baby bear can look back at this recipe and fondly call them "my favorite cookie my momma makes" in retrospect of their childhood. They are delicious and adorable. Be as creative as you want or plain looks pretty darn good to me too.
Ingredients for the Shortbread:
4 sticks of unsalted butter at room temperature
1 1/2 cups powdered sugar
2 tablespoons vanilla extract
4 cups all purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line baking sheets with parchment paper. Using a mixture with a paddle attachment, beat the butter and sugar in a large bowl on medium-high speed until fluffy. And the vanilla and beat until just combined.


In a separate bowl, stir together the flour and baking powder.

Add the flour mixture slowly to your butter mixture on a low speed (if you don't, well, then flour goes everywhere!). STOP beating as soon as your flour mixture is incorporated. If you over beat your dough, your cookies will be tough instead of light and flaky.

Form the dough into a ball and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for 30 minutes before rolling it out.

Flour your surface (I use wax paper to cover the counters because I hate the mess), roll the chilled ball down until 1/4 inch thickness. Cut out with cookie cutter of your choice and use a spatula to transfer to your parchment paper lined cookie sheet. You can re-roll your dough to cut out more cookies. The recipe warns not to roll out more than twice total because it will make a tough cookie. I have never followed this advice and have never turned down these cookies but consider yourself warned!

Round cookie cutter for the golden globe themed evening. The spatula is the only way I have gotten these little gems off the paper without breaking them or ruining the shape. {I flour my spatula and my cookie cutter too.} Bake for 10-12 minutes until light brown/golden around the edges. Cool the cookies on the baking sheet for about 10 more minutes. Remove with another {clean} spatula and cool completely on racks.
 Ice as desired!
Powdered Sugar Icing:
2 cups powdered sugar, sifted
1/4 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla or almond extract (optional)
food coloring

*I have made this icing a million times. Tips to NOT SKIP if you want perfectly iced cookies. Use whole milk {you are not making diet cookies}. Use the almond extract, it makes the cookie a little more special than the vanilla extract. I also add 2 tablespoons of melted butter to thicken up the glaze. Whisk all ingredients together and then let the icing begin. You can either dip the cookie into the mixture (this sometimes works but sometimes gets crumbs in your bowl) or get a spoon and swirl until your little heart is content!

I liked the plain golden globe cookie look. These are addictive, light {flaky light but probably not too low-cal!}, and delicious. Enjoy and let me know what shapes you make.

Joe preferred the decorated version with GG for Golden Globes on it. Either way...still tastes great!
We had a great time making a plain Sunday night special with minimal effort. $3.99 flowers, an on-hand bottle of wine, cheesy appetizer that takes 6 minutes to make, and a delicious roasted chicken for Sunday Supper. Joe and I enjoyed celebraing the evening on our hobbies, enjoying each other's company, and rooting for the films we had seen and loved. I will have to come up with some new ideas for the Oscars but this time....we were golden!

The Birthday Celebrations Continue

Whew....birthday season is over at our house. My husband just celebrated his big birthday on Monday. In this house, we have four birthdays all right in a row. Mary Ellie and Fenley are November 25th. Bear is November 27th. Joe, my husband, is December 6th. This makes for the craziest time of year if you throw in Thanksgiving AND preparing for Christmas too.
I made Joe dinner for his birthday. Pretty yummy if I say so myself. I made per his request the following menu: steakhouse steaks in the oven with my special mushroom sauce, roasted rosemary potatoes, asparagus, and he got his favorite cake from his favorite bakery to top the evening off.
The next night his family came into town and took him (us) out to celebrate at a fancy, yummy restaurant in town. So needless to say, I think I should never eat again after all these cakes, cupcakes and celebratory meals. The crazy birthday season has come and gone. I can rest on my laurels for another year! Happy Happy Birthday to my sweet family! Thank you for letting me be part of your big day(s).

We celebrated the twins' birthdays on Thanksgiving right after their nap. Mary Ellie was soooo worn out and miffed. Her motto was "It's my party and I'll cry if I want to". I hope she appreciates what a little character she was when she sees these pictures of herself in the future.


                                                                        Mommy and Daddy trying to NOT burn down Honey's house with the candles while trying to rouse the sleepy children into a festive mood. I think the Turkey Trot, Thanksgiving meal, nap and birthday celebration all in one day was maybe a little much for them. Happy Birthday anyways, Twins!
 
Not a huge fan of me-pictures but I could not resist this sweet picture taken of Baby Bear on his First Birthday. (the real birthday not the par-tay). He never sucked his thumb until the week before his birthday. Maybe he was having a 1 year life crisis? :) It is pretty cute and I love this picture of my baby.
 Oh Bear....Happy First Birthday! Mommy cannot believe you are 1. My how time flies.
  Mary Ellie celebrating Bear's first birthday. I am still debating whether she is cleaning her face or determined to not miss a lick of icing.
 This is Fenley who is a trooper to wear his hat to celebrate Baby Bear's birthday. To be fair, Mary Ellie wanted to wear hers but the ribbon fell out and by the time I fixed it she had moved on to the cupcakes and lost interest in her hat. Fenley was engrossed in the cupcake and did not mind at all!
 I asked my husband if he wanted all ??? candles on his cake for me to sing to him (solo, the kids were in bed). He decided he did so this is what a really old guy's cake looks like. Just teasing, Joe! Happy Happy Birthday to you!
And I could not resist....this is what it looks like when you blow that many candles out...there is SMOKE everywhere. I told him if he keeps wanting all the candles lit I need a bigger cake next year too! Until the smoke clears....here are the yummy recipes he got to enjoy that night as well.


Steakhouse Steaks by Ina Garten (my hero and directly copied from her with my notes in Festive Green)
  • 2 (10-ounce) filet mignon
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil (don't hold back here, I did and they stick to the pan)
  • 1 tablespoon fleur de sel (i did not have this. note to self: pick this up and try)
  • 1 tablespoon coarsely cracked black peppercorns (i actually did not have peppercorns either but i have a grinder that finely grinds...whatever)
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, at room temperature, optional (again...USE butter, when has something been bad with butter)
  • Roquefort Chive Sauce, recipe follows (I omitted this because the hubby wanted Mushroom Sauce. I will write that recipe out)

Directions

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
Heat a large, well-seasoned cast iron skillet over high heat until very hot, 5 to 7 minutes.
Meanwhile, pat the steaks dry with a paper towel and brush them lightly with vegetable oil. Combine the fleur de sel and cracked pepper on a plate and roll the steaks in the mixture, pressing lightly to evenly coat all sides.
When the skillet is ready, add the steaks and sear them evenly on all sides for about 2 minutes per side, for a total of 10 minutes.
Top each steak with a tablespoon of butter, if using, and place the skillet in the oven. Cook the steaks until they reach 120 degrees F for rare or 125 degrees F for medium-rare on an instant-read thermometer. (To test the steaks, insert the thermometer sideways to be sure you're actually testing the middle of the steak.) THE PAN will be SERIOUSLY HOT. She fails to mention this and I burnt my hand. So, I drank more vino to dull the pain. Haha.
Remove the steaks to a serving platter, cover tightly with aluminum foil and allow to rest at room temperature for 10 minutes.
Let the steaks rest while you whip up the mushroom gravy.

Mushroom Gravy Ingredients:
12 baby portabellas, sliced
12 shitake mushrooms, chopped
2 T. butter
2 T. flour
2 c. beef stock

Directions:
preheat large skillet over medium heat. Add Extra Virgin Olive Oil to Pan. I throw in butter after that as well. Season mushrooms to taste in the skillet with salt and pepper. Saute 3-5 minutes until tender. Do not overcook or they get rubbery and tough. Sprinkle in the flour and cook 2 more minutes and whisk in the stock until thickened. Viola! Mushroom gravy that Joe loves and claims he could eat on anything. Nothing fancy and the steaks are easy. Yum! Yum!
Also, a side not, really, do not overcook the meat in the oven because it still cooks under the aluminum foil. I am sure everyone else knows this but alas, I did not!

Okay, I wrote these recipes and edited in haste because we are off to load the car and drive back home to visit our familes for an early holiday trip. I will add the Christmas pictures tonight to get this blog into the spirit of the season too. This blog entry took me all week to finish due to the craziness of the week so fingers crossed there will be more downtime on my trip.