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    The SketchUp recipe book

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    • G Offline
      Gidon Yuval
      last edited by

      @john sayers said:

      Thanks Gidon - that first recipe is officially a Beef Wellington.

      Thank you, John. I was shown this dish about 20 years ago and loved it but had no idea it had a name. And all this time I thought the guy who showed it to me was a genius. Don't get me wrong, I still think he's a great cook, I just think that maybe he should add a dash of humility to his recipes (and I use the word 'his' loosely πŸ˜‰ ).

      Is there an official name for the other recipe I posted? The Aubergine dish?

      If you don't know where you're going, you're never going to get there.

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      • John SayersJ Offline
        John Sayers
        last edited by

        Not that I know of Gidon - the deep fried Camembert is a standard recipe in it's own right though. The asians have a deep fried ice cream that is similar πŸ˜‰

        cheers
        john

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        • G Offline
          Gidon Yuval
          last edited by

          Ron! There are 6 very happy people looking over my shoulder as I write this 'thank you' note for the grilled peaches recipe.
          Too bad you can't hear the applause!
          Take a bow, Ron. πŸ˜„

          If you don't know where you're going, you're never going to get there.

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          • John SayersJ Offline
            John Sayers
            last edited by

            My local ABC radio program broadcast this on "Thank God It's Friday". Apparently a restaurant sued a reviewer over a review he wrote for a local restaurant.

            So the program requested the 3 guests to review their home dining experience.

            301 Moved Permanently

            favicon

            (johnlsayers.com)

            anything like your household?? πŸ˜„

            cheers
            john

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            • RonSR Offline
              RonS
              last edited by

              Gidon,
              They are a big winner here to. I eat them all of the time. Around 4 or 5 times a week when they are in season. Tell everyone I said thanks. πŸ˜„

              Design is not just what it looks like and feels like. Design is how it works.
              Steve Jobs

              RonS

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              • D Offline
                diana
                last edited by

                There's a small Northwestern Oklahoman town grocer that had these once a week but you had to get there before they sold out. They offered them in a couple variations but they fill a dough and fry them so they had a fried pie texture which I'm not so crazy about. (love the filling though) My mother made these for our family in my youth, always cooked in her electric skillet and served on hamburger buns. This is one of my husband's favorites.

                Bierox (Serves 4-6)
                Serve in split hard rolls, on crackers or hamburger buns, in pita pocket bread or baked inside a bread dough or on tortillas.

                1 lb ground beef or any 50/50 beef and ground pork, turkey or sausage
                (some have used wild game mixed with with beef or pork)
                1 large chopped onion, white or yellow
                1 small or 1/2 a large head of red or green cabbage (or mix them), shredded or chopped (a bag of coleslaw mix, even with carrots, will work too for a fast shortcut)
                1/2 cup very hot water
                1 tsp beef bouillon crystals or one cube dissolved in the hot water
                cracked black pepper to taste
                salt to taste

                Brown meat with onions, drain off excess grease. Stir in cabbage and beef flavored water, about 1/2 tsp salt and pepper. Simmer/steam loosely covered until cabbage is tender, stirring occasionally. Adjust seasoning to taste. I usually go heavier on the pepper but the bouillon is salty so more salt is not usually necessary.

                Variations:
                Add a cup of picante salsa before simmering cabbage and mix in 1 cup shredded monterey jack or cheddar/jack mix cheese after cabbage is done, blending until cheese is melted for a spicier cheese Bierox. (this is my favorite variation)

                Add chopped hot peppers of your choice with the cabbage for spicy Bierox, cheese optional.

                Add 1 cup or more monterey jack or cheddar/jack mix cheese when cabbage is done and stir in until melted for plain cheese Bierox.

                Bierox Pinwheels: Spread well drained fully cooked mixture on a 12" x 9" rectangle made from thawed frozen or homemade bread loaf dough, roll up pinwheel style on the long side making a 12" long roll, pinch seam. With seam side down, slice in 1" thick rounds, place on a greased baking sheet and bake at bread recipe or package recommended temperature until well browned. Serve hot. You can use any meat mix variation for the filled dough Bierox but a drier mix is best. Monterey jack cheese does help to hold it together. Makes 12 1" rolls, two per person.

                Bierox meat pies: Thaw a package of a dozen frozen yeast roll dough or make some fresh dough, flatten and roll out each roll size dough piece into a square or small rectangle, spread a generous amount of well drained fully cooked Bierox mixture on half of each square or rectangle, fold over and pinch edges to seal to make a meat pie. After making one or two, you'll know how much you can fit reasonably well in each pie. Place on a greased baking sheet. Brush each pie with melted butter and bake at temperature recommended on roll package or the recipe until the pies are brown. Remove from pan after a few moments and serve hot. Makes 12 small pies, 2 per person.

                Bierox is obviously just beef, cabbage and onion served on any bread or cracker product so you can come up with hundreds of variations. Drained diced tomatoes & peppers (Rotel product as example) go well in it, so does adding a bit of frozen mexicorn, one or two bunches of green onions (cut in thin rings with kitchen shears) instead of white or yellow onions is good, use the green onion tops and bulbs. You can top the cooked meat mixture with biscuit or pie dough and bake it like a casserole if you like. It can be as fatty or as healthy as you want and it can be a one pan meal if you like.

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                • John SayersJ Offline
                  John Sayers
                  last edited by

                  Pea and Ham soup

                  as we are in winter downunder I love to cook this soup.
                  I get my butcher to cut up the ham bone from the "Ham off the Bone"
                  I then simmer the bones with a big bunch of mint and a couple of bay leaves for around 3- 4 hours.
                  Drain and reserve the liquid and allow the cooked bones to cool.

                  Finely chop an onion and a couple of carrots (I stick them in the food processor) and slowly fry in some olive oil for around half an hour. Add the ham stock and a 1kg (2lb) packet of frozen peas and simmer till the peas have totally softened. (about an hour)

                  remove the best of the meat from the cooled bones, finely chop and add to the soup - yum πŸ˜‰

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                  • T Offline
                    trs
                    last edited by

                    A slightly different take on John's yumo pea soup.
                    2 -3 Ham hocks, they're smoked and usually available.
                    A couple of large onions
                    bag of carrots
                    1 bag of dried split peas
                    bay leaf's
                    salt
                    pepper
                    a spec of good chili powder, (2 tsp.) optional

                    Split the skin and boil the ham hocks; stock pot maybe 2 -3 qts of water.
                    They will render a rather greyish looking foam. Skim that off until there is no more.
                    Add the coarsely chopped onions and the carrots.
                    Add bay leaf and the salt and pepper.
                    Simmer until the ham meat starts to fall of the bone. This will take a couple of hours. When things start smelling really good you are getting close.
                    Rinse the dried split peas and add.
                    When the peas start to soften remove the ham bones and strip the meat.
                    Add the meat back and cook down till the whole thing is nice and smooth. Stir occasionally, as it cooks down it will start to stick to the bottom of the pan.
                    Remove the bay leafs.
                    Taste and adjust seasonings. Thin with water or wine if it gets to thick.
                    Cool slightly,and serve with a nice crusty bread, or soda crackers.
                    and of course a good dry white wine.
                    As you might expect, it gets better over the next couple of days.
                    TR

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                    • John SayersJ Offline
                      John Sayers
                      last edited by

                      Thanks TR - I've never thought to split the skin on a Ham Hock - it would make a big difference. πŸ˜‰

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                      • T Offline
                        trs
                        last edited by

                        You are welcome
                        TR
                        It's all in the details

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                        • P Offline
                          pmiller
                          last edited by

                          This thread seems to be light on desserts, so here is the best pie I have ever had:

                          Old-Time Chocolate Meringue Pie (from "Sweety Pies" book)

                          Ingredients:
                          One nine-inch pie crust

                          Filling:
                          3 large egg yolks
                          1/2 stick unsalted butter melted
                          1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder (dutch process is best if you can get it)
                          1 14 oz. can sweetened condensed milk
                          1/2 cup water
                          1 tsp. vanilla extract

                          Meringue:
                          3 large egg whites
                          1/4 tsp. cream of tartar
                          1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
                          1/4 cup sugar

                          Pre-bake pie 9" crust (425 F - 8 to 10 min.), cool

                          Make the filling:
                          Beat eggs yolks, set aside
                          Heat the butter in medium-size saucepan low heat until it melts.
                          Add cocoa, condensed milk and water, stirring constantly with spoon or wire whisk until smooth.
                          Stir in the egg yolks and vanilla and cook until thickened and smooth (medium heat, 'till it just begins to boil).
                          Remove from heat, beat out any lumps that may have formed, pour into pie crust.

                          Make the meringue:
                          Combine the egg whites, cream of tartar and vanilla in medium bowl and beat with electric mixer 'till soft peaks form.
                          Add the sugar one tablespoon at a time and continue beating 'till stiff peaks form and sugar is dissolved.

                          Mound in center of pie, then spread around the edge of the crust, sealing meringue to the crust. Bake (350 F) until meringue is golden, 8 to 10 minutes.

                          Let cool completely on a wire rack.

                          Best intense deep chocolate pie, ever. Would also be fine with whipped cream instead of meringue.

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