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Vegetarian Recipes

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Chef Michael Stebner’s True Food Kitchen Brussels Sprouts with Umami Sauce

Brussels sprouts chef recipe True Food Kitchen

Have you been to a True Food Kitchen restaurant? Everything, EVERY SINGLE MENU ITEM there is so freaking amazingly fresh and delicious. The brainchild of health and nutrition guru Dr. Andrew Weil, True Food’s motto is “honest food that tastes really good”. YOU MUST GO.

Onward! We are sticking with our New Year’s resolution, avoiding Trader Joe’s cookie butter, and eating all of the green things. Today we share with you True Food Kitchens recipe for Brussels Sprouts with Umami Sauce. Created by Executive Chef Michael Stebner, here is what he has to say about this dish:
” Most people who say they hate Brussels sprouts have never had them properly prepared. The secrets: Choose fresh, smallish, young sprouts; do not overcook them; and enhance them with the right seasonings. Here, halved sprouts are quickly stir fried with garlic, then tossed in True Food’s Umami sauce. Spring these on a Brussels sprouts hater and change a life.”

 

Brussels Sprouts with Umami Sauce

Brussels Sprouts:
1 ½ teaspoons expeller-pressed canola oil
1 ½ pounds Brussels sprouts, halved
2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
1/3 cup Umami Sauce (see below)
2 teaspoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
½ teaspoon freshly grated lemon zest
¼ teaspoon salt
¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

Umami Sauce
1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
1 cup flaked nutritional yeast
3/8 cup tamari (low-sodium)
1 c olive oil
1/2 cup water
6 cloves garlic, mashed

Umami sauce instructions:
Add everything to food processor except oil.
Then, with motor running, add oil in a thin stream.
Umami sauce is great on salads, vegetables, etc. Use flaked yeast, such as Red Star brand, not powdered.

Brussels sprouts instructions:
Heat a wok or skillet over high heat. Add the oil. When hot, add the Brussels sprouts and garlic, and sauté for 1 minute. Add ¼ cup water, cover, and cook for 2 minutes, tossing to cook evenly. Remove the cover and stir in the Umami Sauce, lemon juice, zest, salt, and pepper. Continue to cook while occasionally tossing until the liquid is reduced to a thick sauce, about 7 minutes. Transfer to plate and serve hot.

Drink Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Chef Merrick Schoenfeld’s Cherry Guanabana Smoothie Recipe

Happy Summer Solstice!   Today we are sharing our friend Chef Merrick Schoenfeld’s deliciously exotic frozen Cherry Guanabana Smoothie recipe!

What is guanabana?    Also known as soursop, guanabana is a fruit indigenous to Central America and also grown in Southeast Asia.   It’s flavor?   Additively tart, with notes of lime or citrus, strawberries, and bananas.  Sadly, guanabana is rarely imported to the US, but the frozen pulp or the nectar juice may be purchased at a Latino grocery store or an Asian market.     In a Latin market you can look for frozen Goya Guanabana Puree, and Chef Merrick says you may substitute Goya or Jumex Nectar juice by simply freezing beforehand. If you are shopping an Asian market, it will be in the frozen section as Soursop puree.

For more from Chef Merrick, consider purchasing his cookbook Jungle Fusion, which features modern recipes using healthy fruits and vegetables while celebrating the culture of Costa Rica.   We’ve made several of his recipes and they are consistently  simple to follow and truly amazing.

 

Cherry Guanabana Fruit Smoothie

Total Time: 5 minutes

Yield: 2

Ingredients

  • 1 cup guanabana or soursop frozen puree
  • 2 cups pitted and frozen cherries (Merrick likes Ranier)
  • 2 cups ice
  • 1.5 cups water

Cooking Directions

  1. Blend the guanabana puree and the frozen cherries together. Pour, add straws, and enjoy!

 

Chef Schoenfeld (far right) at the James Beard House

Appetizer Recipes Side Dish Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Cherry Love: Chef Michael Symon’s Pickled Cherries

Chef Michael Symon loves to pickle things.  In his cookbook “Live to Cook”, he devotes an entire chapter to it, with recipes for pickled ramps, chilis,  onions, tomatoes, kraut and more.   The chef says “what began at Lola as a way to preserve the best food we could find became part of the defining style of our dishes.  It’s not only allowed us to deliver dynamic flavor, but also has enhanced and deepened our relationships with local farmers by making it possible to buy more of their produce during their growing season and use it throughout the year.”

Michael recommends serving these refrigerator pickled cherries as a sweet and sour condiment with duck, pork belly, foie gras, or a blue veined cheese and bread.  Another option would be to dice the cherries,  add chicken broth and reduce via simmer for a saucier topping for poultry or pork.    Note that the cherries may be kept in the fridge for up to a month, they may have a touch of color fade or wrinkling, but will still taste delicious.

Buy the book here (check the rave reviews!), and follow Michael on Twitter here.

Pickled Cherries
Chef Michael Symon
Makes about 2 quarts

Ingredients:
2 pounds bing cherries
2 cups red wine vinegar
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 tablespoons kosher salt
2 strips orange zest, removed with a vegetable peeler
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
2 cinnamon sticks
1 tablespoon coriander seeds
1 bay leaf

Instructions:
Prick each cherry with a fork several times and put them in a nonreactive jar or container.
Mix the vinegar, sugar, salt, orange zest, black peppercorns, cinnamon sticks, coriander seeds, and bay leaf in a nonreactive saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat so the liquid simmer, and cook for 10 minutes. Remove from the heat and let cook for 10 minutes.
Pour the liquid over the cherries (they should be completely submerged). When the concoction is completely cool, seal or cover the cherries, and refrigerate for up to 1 month.

Craving more cherry recipes?  Check out Chef Bugher’s Cherry Basil Pasta recipe, and Chef Ben Davis’s Cherries with Chianti recipe.

Breakfast Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Brunch Bliss: Eggs Benedict on Potato Waffles With Spinach Parmesan Sauce

The restaurant version, via Flickr user PetroleumJelliffe, thank you!

Have the breakfast blues? Try this creative twist on the traditional Eggs Benedict recipe from Executive Chef Brian Ellis of the gastropub The Smith restaurant on 3rd Avenue in NYC’s East Village. Brian is a seasoned NYC chef who has worked with Rocco DiSpirito at the Union Pacific and Brasserie 360. Currently overseeing the kitchen and staff at The Smith, he serves innovative dishes with free range meats and local organic produce. About the waffle, Chef Brian says: “The potato waffle soaks up the runny eggs and hollandaise in a way that no English muffin can”.

This video was filmed with Chef Brian and the staff of Better Tv. Enjoy and have a wonderful weekend! P.S. Happy Mother’s day to all of the worlds wonderful moms! ♥

 

Potato Waffle Benedict With Creamed Spinach Parmesan Sauce
Chef Brian Ellis
The Smith Restaurant

Serves: 2-3

Potato Waffle:

2 Idaho potatoes coarsely grated (Chef Brian says Idaho work best as they have less starch)
2 tbsp Spanish onion coarsely grated
2 whole eggs
1/2 cup flour
pinch salt and pepper
2 tsp baking powder

Combine all ingredients in a food processor. Spray a waffle iron with non-stick spray, then pour the batter in and cook until golden brown.

Creamed Spinach & Caramelized Onion Sauce:

2 cups cream
2 cup blanched spinach
1/2 cup caramelized onions
1/4 cup Parmesan cheese
salt and pepper, to taste (use salt sparingly because of the natural saltiness of the Parmesan)

In a large frying pan over medium heat, pour in the cream and reduce by half, then add the rest of the ingredients, stirring until well incorporated.

Place two poached eggs on top of the waffles, then liberally drizzle the sauce over the eggs. Serve immediately.

(Note: if your are without a waffle maker, you can make the recipe making a potato pancake rather than a waffle in a pan or griddle.)

Drink Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

A Fresh Start! Chef Chad Shares His Healthy Smoothie Recipe

We bring to you a great augmentation to your New Year’s fresh start!   Chef Chad Luethje of Miraval Resort and Spa in Arizona shared this gem with us recently:  A delicious and simple smoothie recipe with healthy omega 3 fats, both flax seed and hemp seed oils.   All you need is a blender, ice, and  6 simple ingredients.   Enjoy and cheers to a healthy 2011!

Recipe is for 1 serving.  240 calories, 3 grams of fat

Ingredients:

1 teaspoon flaxseed
1 teaspoon hemp seed oil
3⁄4 cup apple juice
1⁄2 banana, sliced
1 teaspoon cardamom
1 teaspoon cinnamon
12 ounces of ice

Preparation:
Combine all ingredients in blender and puree. Garnish with orange slices or the fruit of your choice.

Ingredient Spotlights Side Dish Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Ingredient Spotlight: Asparagus With Chef Chris Fischer

This may be the most adorable family cooking and gardening video ever.  It’s from our friends at Plum Tv, featuring Martha’s Vineyard Chef Chris Fischer, his Grandfather Ozzie, and their dog.

Wise asparagus words from Ozzie, quite the dapper grandfather:  “Now when you’re raising asparagus, you don’t pick it the first year, the second year, temptation gets too strong, you pick some.  Then the third year you go at it. ”  (Ozzie  is referring to the need of time for the perennial  asparagus root systems to develop and grow, typically they are not fully developed until the third year.  Read more here.)

Ozzie likes creamed asparagus, so chef Chris makes him an improv recipe on the grill.   Quite simply, here is his technique:  Chris washes and salts the freshly picked asparagus stalks, rubs the hot grill with butter, and places the stalks on the grill perpendicular to the grids.  Chris grills some fresh spring garlic stalks, and warms with butter, garlic, salt, lemon juice, and milk, as he also toasts sliced Ciabatta bread to a crispy brown.    The entire mixture of  creamy garlic sauce and asparagus is simply topped onto the grilled bread, as deliciously simple as farm fresh rustic cooking should always be.   Cheers to Plum Tv and Chef Chris, thank you for sharing your recipe and and a taste of family life with us!

[pro-player width=’550′ height=’353′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9vitjaoatY[/pro-player]

For more amazing asparagus chef recipes, don’t miss these:

Cream of Aspragus and Crab Soup from Chef Aaron McCargo Jr
Kurt Gutenbrunner’s White Asparagus With Vinaigrette Recipe
Asparagus with Eggs From Chef Lidia Bastianich
White Asparagus with a Blood Orange Reduction From Chef Cedric Tovar
Truffled Egg Toast with Grilled Asparagus and Fontina Cheese From Chef Marlon Manty

Salsas and Dips Vegetarian Recipes

Green Dips: Watercress and Tofu

We’re obsessed all things green lately, and not just for St Patrick’s day.  Green smoothies, green soups, and green dips are a wonderful way to celebrate Spring.    This watercress green dip chef recipe comes to us from Miki Knowles, a former Disney chef turned food stylist.

Watercress and Tofu Dip

• 2 scallions
• 2 bunches or 2 bags of B&W Watercress (8 ounces)
• 2 garlic cloves
• 1 12-ounce package silken tofu
• 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
• 1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
• 1/2 teaspoon salt

Place all ingredients in a food processor or blender. Mix until smooth. Serve with crackers, fresh veggies or spread onto pita bread or warm baguette slices.

watercressWatercress facts:  Packed with antioxidants, phytochemicals, iron, folate, calcium and vitamins B and C, watercress is a true superfood.  Recent research has shown that it may also have cancer suppressive properties.

For more watercress chef recipes and green goodness, check out our Watercress Soup Recipe, and Chef John’s mouthwatering version of Julia Child’s Chicken with Watercress.

Asian Recipes Salad Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Papaya Salad From The Tonga Room

If you have not been to the Fairmont Hotel in San Francisco you must put it on your list! It’s a gorgeous historic hotel in the Nob Hill area, with stunning architecture and amazing service. Does your wallet say “no” to decadence? If it’s not financially possible to dine or book a room there, say yes to this: affordable alternatives include an afternoon tea service or cocktail in the elegant Laurel Court Bar. We spent several hours there sipping while people watching, highly recommended!

Today, the fabulous chefs from the Tonga Room Restaurant in the SF Fairmont have shared with us a healthy delicious recipe. It’s an exotic Asian green papaya salad with chili garlic dressing topped with honey roasted peanuts. Enjoy!

Papaya Salad
Papaya Salad
The Tonga Room Restaurant, Fairmont Hotel San Francisco
Serves 6

Sweet Garlic & Chili Dressing:

• 1 tbsp minced garlic
• ¼ cup rice wine vinegar
• 3 tbsp lime juice
• 1 tbsp minced ginger
• 1 tbsp dry mustard
• ¼ cup sweet chili sauce
• 2 cups canola oil
• salt and pepper to taste

Candied Peanuts:

• 2 lbs peanuts
• 1 cup honey
• ½ cup water
• ½ cup sugar
• 2 tbsp of salt
• 1 tbsp cayenne pepper

Salad:

• 1 green papaya peeled & julienne (cut 1/8″ X 1/8″ X 1 ½”)
• 4 scallions chopped
• 1 carrot julienned
• 1 red bell pepper julienne
• ¼ lb rice noodles cooked al dente
• 1 heart of romaine lettuce chopped

Prep:
Sweet Garlic & Chili Dressing:

• Mince ginger and garlic.
• Place in blender with the sweet chili sauce, vinegar, lime juice and dry mustard.
• Blend ingredients and slowly add oil and emulsify.

Candied Peanuts:

• First roast peanuts until golden brown.
• Then put peanuts in a thick bottom stock pot over medium heat.
• Add honey, salt, sugar, water, and cayenne and cook for 3 minutes constantly stir.
• When done pour onto a sheet pan with parchment paper and let them cool.
• Once they are cooled rough chop them in a food processor.

Salad:

• Mix ingredients with ¼ cup of dressing and 3 tablespoons of candied peanuts in a bowl and serve.
• Garnish with the candied peanuts.

Side Dish Recipes Thanksgiving Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Mashed Sweet Potatoes Three Ways

Billy Strynkowski is the executive chef,  recipe developer, and writer for Cooking Light Magazine.  In this video, he shows us 3 amazingly simple ways to prepare mashed sweet potatoes, a perfect Thanksgiving side dish recipe time saver.

Starting with the mashed sweet potatoes mixed with butter, salt, and pepper, his first method blends in mashed bananas for a Caribbean flavor.  The second method blends in light coconut milk.  In his third method he simply folds in orange juice concentrate.

We tried the mashed bananas version last night.  We steamed 2 cut and peeled sweet potatoes for 20 minutes, added 1 tbsp of butter, salt and pepper to taste, and added one mashed banana.  We  garnished it with a few dried cranberries, and it was delicious.

[pro-player width=’550′ height=’353′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhj68LC8RHU[/pro-player]

Care to step it up a notch? Try one of the above techniques using homemade butter instead of store bought. Read this post to learn how simple it is to make in less than 15 minutes –> How to make butter.

Appetizer Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Chef Christopher Cina’s Restaurant Recipe, White Bean Pate

{ Savory Tv is pleased to introduce you to Chef Christopher Cina.  A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Christopher is a well seasoned chef, international traveler, and food photographer.  He has worked in restaurant venues around the world, including San Francisco, Europe, and Denver.   He currently lives and works in Denver, Colorado, and has a beautiful food blog at ChristopherCina.com.  Please join us in welcoming Chef Christopher, as he shares a restaurant secret and favorite appetizer recipe with us in this very special guest post! }

©Christopher Cina

White Bean Pâté

In restaurants, the name of the game is money. In your better restaurants, this is tempered somewhat by quality, meaning that chefs and owners are willing to pay more for better quality. The most ‘high end’, well respected and nationally known restaurants have the luxury of passing the cost of quality on to the customer. Not so much for the little guy. Independent operators with talented but unfamous chefs are forced walk that fine line between being overpriced and serving lesser quality ingredients. You would expect to pay $44 for a hangar steak at Robuchon, but would you pay that at a local restaurant downtown that didn’t have a chef with 4 restaurants, a cookbook and a gaggle of Michelin stars?

“Necessity is the mother of all invention.” Never have truer words been spoken and this is a common mantra at every ‘middle-of-the-road’ restaurant trying to watch costs. If there is a cheaper way to do it without sacrificing quality, someone in that restaurant will figure it out. It could be reconfiguring a dishwasher that the chemical guys don’t know about, building a plug out of skewers for that damn Robot Coupe bowl, or a recipe like this White Bean Pate.

In the late 90’s while at my first Executive Chef position, dairy prices were through the roof. So much so that we halved the portion of butter that we served with the bread as an option to help offset the cost. The only other option would be to reprint all the menus with higher plate costs. You see, every restaurant includes a little formula while pricing out dishes, what I call the ‘Q Factor’. It is in every one of my costed out menus. A ‘Q Factor’ is a charge for everything in a restaurant the customer sees as free, because it is not on the bill. I figure in the cost per person of my bread service, meaning bread and butter, I figure in ketchup, mustard, mayonnaise, coffee creamer, coffee sweetener, even salt and pepper. That number is figured into every dish on the menu. It’s never a big number, always less than a dollar per plate, but that helps me pay for the things customers see as complimentary.

Back to the pate, I needed to figure out something that would help my butter cost. Halving the butter portion only upset people, they would ask for more and they were getting more than they were originally before we adjusted the portion. I didn’t want to go back to the olive oil, everyone else at that time was doing olive oil, plus it was expensive for really good oil and I wasn’t going to skimp there. I was forced to come up with something original that would act as a butter substitute, hence the white bean pate. It was vegetarian, used a third of the butter and it was different. My guests loved it, they always asked for more, and because the ingredients were so inexpensive, it worked out well. We started getting a lot of requests for the recipe. So many that we began to put a stack of the recipes at the host stand every night.

I use a little more butter in my home version, I’m not worried about the cost as I would be making a much larger batch and who doesn’t love butter? Once made it will keep in the fridge for up to a week. Truth be told, it’s at its best about the 3rd day, when all the flavors have become intertwined.

This recipe makes about 2 quarts of pate.

  • 1 ½ # Great Northern Beans
  • 1 ¼ # butter, softened to room temperature
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 large red onion, julienned fine
  • 1 cup balsamic vinegar
  • ½  cup whole garlic cloves
  • olive oil, about a cup and a half
  • 1/2  cup chopped parsley
  • salt and white pepper to taste

Method

  1. Simmer (do not boil!) the white beans in unsalted water with bay leaves just until they start to split, about 2 ½ hours.
  2. While the white beans are simmering, in a small sauté pan, cover the garlic cloves with oil.  Place them on medium low heat and allow them to soften and turn golden brown.
  3. Allow the garlic to cool.
  4. Drain the oil and reserve in the fridge.
  5. In a small mixing bowl, mash the garlic with a fork.  Reserve until the beans are done.
  6. Heat a larger sauté pan with 2 Tbs. of oil, place on medium high heat.
  7. When the pan is hot, add the onions and cook until they start to develop some color, about 5 minutes.
  8. Add the balsamic vinegar to the onions, reduce by half and remove from heat.  Reserve until the beans are done.
  9. When the beans have finished, remove the bay leaves and drain.
  10. While the beans are still hot, begin to mash them with a large spoon.  You can also mash them in a mixer with the paddle.
  11. Once you’ve mashed the beans, add the butter, half pound at a time and continue to mix until all the butter has been incorporated.
  12. Add the mashed garlic, onions and vinegar, and parsley and mix well.
  13. Season with salt and white pepper.  Keep in mind while seasoning hot ingredients that will be served cold, you want  to slightly over salt as the saltiness will dissipate considerably when served cold.
  14. Remove to a serving dish and chill for at least 4 hours.
  15. Serve with breads, crackers or anything else you might use with a spread.
Vegetarian Recipes

Top Chefs Take on Tofu, The Recipes

After watching Top Chef Las Vegas Wednesday night, we began to think about tofu in a different light.  Chef contestant Hector Santiago created a citrus ceviche with mango and cilantro mint pearls and tofu, a dish that impressed celebrity chef and judge Todd English, who called Hector’s tofu “beautiful”.  (The recipe may be found here.)  Several years ago we lived with a vegetarian who prepared tofu dishes almost nightly, and became quickly bored of the bland ingredient that parasitically relies on others for it’s flavor.  Perhaps it’s time to give tofu a second look we were musing, and who better than professional chefs to turn to for inspiration?

Today’s hilarious video features another top chef contestant, Fabio Viviani, as he prepares a seared tofu with roasted zucchini, with walnuts in a balsamic Grand Mariner reduction for Ellen Degeneres on her show.   We tried it and the layers of flavor are complex and delicious,  and we are tofu fans once again.  Even if you haven’t an interest in the recipe, watch the video for a guaranteed laugh!

[pro-player width=’550′ height=’353′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7j3B_5kXM18[/pro-player]

Seared Tofu Carpaccio with Roasted Zucchini & Grand Marnier Toasted Almonds
Chef Fabio Viviani

INGREDIENTS:
Block of tofu
3 green zucchini
Salt (kosher) and fresh pepper
Extra virgin olive oil
1 cup of Grand Marnier
1 cup of toasted almonds
3 handfuls of arugula salad
Lemon
3 cloves of garlic
Mint
Balsamic vinegar
1 cup of dark or light corn syrup

Slice the tofu thin, but not too thin, marinate with a little minced garlic and mint, extra virgin olive oil, salt and fresh black pepper, reduce the balsamic vinegar to 1/2 and mix with the corn syrup. Keep reducing it and then set aside and cool it down.

Slice the zucchini pretty thin and season with olive oil salt and pepper, let them cook in a hot sauté pan until they are nice and caramelized, take the zucchini out and sear the tofu until it gets a little brown on the sides

Roughly slice the almonds and let them toast in an aluminum pan, add about a tablespoon of the balsamic glaze using a squeeze bottle, flambé it with the Grand Marnier. Now you have a kind of little thick sauce with the balsamic and Grand Marnier sliced almond, season the arugula with lemon juice, olive oil, salt and pepper.

Place the zucchini on a plate, topped with the sliced tofu and add the salad on top, drizzle with the balsamic almond sauce and serve it.

For more Top Chef Tofu recipes, check out Fritz Sonnenschmidt’s Grilled Tofu with Wilted Spinach,   and Carla Hall’s Tofu with a Pecan and Oats Crust.

Appetizer Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Michael Chiarello’s Tomato with Warm Goat Cheese and Herb Salad

After meeting Michael Chiarello and his adorable wife Eileen in Aspen, and attending his Farm to Fork talk, my pre existing respect for him has quadrupled.   Not only is he dedicated to local, sustainable food, but he is one of the more down to earth, real, caring celebrity chefs I’ve ever met.  My partners in crime, Danny from Foodie Aspen, Chef John from Food WishesAverage Betty, and Jen from Daily Blender and I all had a chance to chat with him while sipping cocktails at  the Best New Chefs Dinner at the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen.  “What did you think of our talk?”  he asked me, and “what else did you do today,  how were the other demos?”   Similar to chatting with a family member, he really wanted to hear about my day,  I loved that.     Last night while watching Top Chef Masters, I was very torn between rooting for local Boulder chef Lachlan Patterson from Frasca and Michael, it was a tough call!

No spoilers here in case you haven’t caught up, but here is a simple appetizer or vegetarian main dish from Michael Chiarello, a delicious tomato and warm goat cheese recipe served with an herbed salad.

Tomato Steak with Baked Goat Cheese and Herb Salad
Recipe courtesy Michael Chiarello

Ingredients

* 1/4 cup fine dried bread crumbs
* Gray salt
* Freshly ground black pepper
* 1 large egg
* 4 rounds fresh goat cheese, about 2 ounces each
* 4 thick, ripe beefsteak tomato slices
* 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for the salad
* 2 cups lightly packed mixed tender fresh herb leaves such as basil, chervil, tarragon, Italian flat-leaf parsley, chives (1-inch lengths), or young cress
* Red wine vinegar

Directions

In a small, shallow bowl, mix the bread crumbs with salt and pepper, to taste. In another small, shallow bowl, beat the egg just until blended. Dip each goat cheese round in the egg, and then in bread crumbs, patting the crumbs in place. Cover and refrigerate the coated cheese rounds for about 15 minutes.

Center the tomato slices on 4 salad plates and season with salt and pepper.

Heat a large nonstick skillet over moderately high heat and pour in 2 tablespoons olive oil. When the oil is almost smoking, add the cheese rounds. Cook until lightly browned, about 45 seconds. Turn them over and cook on the other side until the cheese just feels quivery, about 45 seconds longer, depending on the thickness of the rounds. Place a cheese round on each tomato slice.

In a bowl, toss the herbs with a light drizzle of olive oil, a splash of red wine vinegar, and salt and pepper, to taste. Mound the herbs on top of the cheese, dividing them evenly. Serve immediately.

Michael’s Notes: This salad looks best when the tomato slice and the goat cheese slice are about the same size. So if you can only find goat cheese in small logs, you may want to serve 2 goat cheese rounds to each diner and perch them on slices of smaller tomatoes.

More from Michael: Care to whip up Chef Chiarellos fast food Fish Balls, Shaved Brussels Sprouts and Asparagus Salad, or Goat Milk Basil Gelato with Balsamic Strawberries as seen on the show? Bravo just posted these today!

Pasta Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Roasted Garlic Pesto over Gnocchi

Our video today features Chef Brian P. McCarthy, author of the Vegan Family Cookbook, making a very simple basil pesto with roasted garlic. He serves it over gnocchi, plated with crusty bread and a salad. This video is brought to us from EveryDayDish Tv, which offers a wonderful bounty of plant based vegetarian and vegan recipes and videos. The written recipe may be found here. What we like best about this dish is that it can literally be prepared in less than 30 minutes, and roasted garlic gives a sweeter, less bitter flavor than raw garlic. Non vegetarians feel free to add Parmesan cheese!

[pro-player width=’530′ height=’353′ type=’FLV’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUJNmVDno6U[/pro-player]

And, of course, a morsel of gnocchi trivia!  Gnocchi, an Italian dumpling,  translates to the word “knot” in Italian, and the word is derived from the stem word  nocchio, meaning “a knot in wood”. It’s composition differs drastically by ingredient, and while typically made from potatoes, it is also made with various flours (often semolina), and in some areas of Italy it is made with bread crumbs.

Side Dish Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

White Asparagus with a Blood Orange Reduction

We were thinking that between the Superbowl beefy food, and Valentine’s chocolates, perhaps a short detox is in order!  Bored with steamed broccoli and even slightly tired of roasted vegetables, we are putting a shout out for new, creative ways to serve seasonal veggies and in this case, fruits.

And we so proudly announce to you a new crush, on the blood orange fruit.  For those not familiar, the blood orange is a wonderful winter fruit.  An offspring of the traditional sweet orange, blood oranges are typically native to Sicily and Spain, and are harvested from early to mid winter.  Their deep red flesh comes from a pigment called anthocyanin, a powerful antioxidant present in açaí, concord grapes, cranberries and raspberries.    How do they taste?  Less acidic than other oranges, blood oranges tend to have a rich, both sweet and tart flavor, with berry undertones.  While shopping, choose a heavy feeling blood orange with a thin skin for the juiciest fruit.  A slight green tinting of the rind is fine.  They’ll keep in the refrigerator for up to one month, or on the counter for approximately a week.

Our video today features the lovely host Carolyn Jennings from Chic Tv with chef Cedric Tovar from the NYC Park Avenue Peacock Alley Restaurant.   He whips up a gorgeous looking braised white asparagus, and serves it with a dressing made from blood orange juice.   Click the “read more” to watch the video and for the recipe.

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Culinary Tips Vegetarian Recipes

Knife Sharpening Using a Whetstone

What is a whetstone exactly? Also referred to as a wet stone, waterstone, or sharpening stone, whetstones can be natural or manmade, and are typically made of finely bonded ceramic. They are truly the best and smartest way to sharpen knives, as other methods will grind away precious metal from your knife’s blade, and shorten it’s life. One side of the stone is a coarse grit which you sharpen with first, and the other a fine grit which is used last. The whetstone is used as a primary method of sharpening, and the honing steel is used for maintenance, read more about the differences and brand recommendations here. Knife sharpening takes practice, but once you become accustomed to the technique you will be deliciously pleased with your effortless, gorgeous, even cuts of food.

Watch the video to see Chef Danilo Alfaro‘s easy techniques for knife sharpening, using a whetstone and a steel .

Appetizer Recipes French Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Holiday Appetizers: Artichokes Provençal

Colorful, warm, hearty, vegetarian and simple, Mark Bittman‘s artichokes provençal is a strong contender for the perfect holiday appetizer. In this video, Bittman shares his special recipe of braised baby artichokes, garlic, black olives, thyme, and small tomatoes garnished with parsley. Serve it with slices of warm buttered baguette, and prepare yourself for praise!

[pro-player width=’550′ height=’353′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2TZ3T5j_qVI[/pro-player]

Side Dish Recipes Thanksgiving Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Acorn squash with a nutmeg and ginger orange glaze with Chef Jeff Nathan

A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Chef Jeff Nathan is chef and host of the gourmet kosher public television show “New Jewish Cuisine”. He is featured frequently in publications such as Saveur and Food Arts, and has authored two cookbooks, “Adventures in Jewish Cooking” and “Jeff Nathan’s Family Suppers”.

As director of culinary development for the Hain-Celestial Group, he is responsible for the creation of many products commonly seen in markets.

Jeff is the executive chef of Abigael’s on Broadway in NYC (at 39th), which offers eclectic modern kosher fare, as well as an upstairs tea lounge. Find out more about Jeff and Abigael’s on Broadway here.

In this video from the Jewish Televison Network, Chef Jeff prepares a spicy and sweet acorn squash side dish, perfect for Rosh Hashanah or any fall meal.

Italian Recipes Side Dish Recipes Vegetarian Recipes

Italian Chef Gino D’Acampo makes stuffed roasted tomatoes

Chef Gino D’Acampo is from Napoli, Italy, and began his education at Luigi de Medici Catering College at the age of thirteen! From there he continued his culinary skills in many restaurants in Europe, including Perignon in Nice and as Head Chef at Sylvester Stallone’s Mambo King in Marbella. Currently, Gino is Gino the owner of a leading supplier of Italian ingredients to the UK food industry, Bontà Italia Ltd, and now manufacturing his own pasta sauces and olive oils. Gino is also a celebrity chef who stars regularly on BBC’s Ready, Steady Cook, ITV1’s Daily and Saturday Cooks as well as celebrity food contest Soapstar and Superchef. As if this were not enough, Gino has also published an Italian recipe book titled Fantastico, which won the respectable award of “Gourmet Italian book of the year”.

In this video Gino prepares a tasty treat of goat cheese, mozzarella, and basil stuffed roasted tomatoes.


Find more videos like this on FoodTube.net

Cheese Stuffed Roasted Tomatoes
Chef Gino D’Acampo
Serves 6

Ingredients

6 beef tomatoes
2 tablespoons of crushed walnuts
180g goat’s cheese, without the rind and crumbled
150g Galbani Mini Mozzarella
6 thick slices of white bread
2 tablespoons freshly chopped basil
Salt and pepper to taste

Using a sharp knife, cut a thin slice from the bottom of each tomato and discard then cut the top of each tomato and reserve. Using a teaspoon, carefully scoop out the seeds and most of the pulp and discard, keeping the tomato shells whole.

In a bowl, mix together the mozzarella, walnuts, goat’s cheese and basil. Season with salt and pepper and spoon into the tomato shells. (3 mini mozzarella balls per tomato).

With the help of an 8cm round pastry cutter, stamp out 6 rounds from the bread slices and toast on both sides. When ready, place the bread in a single layer in a lightly oiled ovenproof dish. Place the tomatoes on top of each toasted piece of bread and cook in the middle of a preheated oven at 190º (375°F, gas mark 5) for approximately 15-20 minutes until the cheese mixture looks melted and golden. (Make sure that the tomatoes are not too soft).

Serve immediately and drizzle a little extra virgin olive oil on top.

For more Gino D’Acampo recipes, visit www.galbani.co.uk