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re: TD Recipe Collection 8th Edition (with links)

Posted on 10/17/17 at 11:15 am to
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
9575 posts
Posted on 10/17/17 at 11:15 am to
Cannelloni

Pasta:

2 cups Semolina flour (you can use AP if you like)
2 (large) eggs
1/2 tsp kosher salt
2 Tbs Olive Oil
2 Tbs water (added as needed)

Salsa di Pomodoro - a very thick marinara sauce.

Tomatoes - 28 ounce. This is not a cheap dish. Fresh or canned - Buy good tomatoes. The sauce is worth it.
Small can of Tomato Paste
Onions - I used three. Chopped - the measure was a little over a cup.
Garlic - two cloves, minced
Olive oil - 2 Tablespoons - for sauté use
Basil - Two Tablespoons fresh
Oregano - one Tablespoon (dried)
Sugar - 1 teaspoon
Salt - 1/2 teaspoon
Black pepper - 1 teaspoon

Meat filling:

2 Tbs olive oil
1/2 lb Ground Round
Butter - 2 Tablespoons for cooking beef and chicken liver
1 or 2 Chicken Livers
1/2 cup chopped onions
1 clove minced garlic
6 oz fresh spinach, chopped
1/4 cup parmesan cheese fine shred
1 Tbs heavy cream
1 egg - beaten
1 tsp oregano
Salt & pepper to taste

Besciamella Sauce

2 Tbs butter
2 Tbs Flour
1/2 cup milk
1/2 cup heavy cream
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp black pepper

To make the pasta:

1. Mound semolina, make a well of flour on work surface and add eggs salt and oil to well.

2. Slowly pull the flour into the well with your fingers or a fork to incorporate ingredients. Add water as needed to make the pasta dough ball. It will most likely take the full 2 Tablespoons of water. It looks like this when properly mixed.

3. The pasta must be thoroughly kneaded to develop the gluten in the flour. The more kneading, the more tender the pasta will be. With the dough on the work surface, press the ball down firmly with the heel of the palm to compress and stretch it. Then fold the dough back over onto the pressed area and repeat again and again for 10 minutes. The ball will get firm and shiny.

4. Wrap the ball in plastic wrap and rest it for 40 minutes, while you work the rest of the dish. The pasts will be made toward the end of the preparation, just before filling it.

5. As a note - Pasta dough may be stored in the fridge for a few days. It may be made and dried to allow for several weeks storage in a plastic bag in the pantry. We only used half of this pasta dough. The second half was stored in the refrigerator for making Fettuccine al Burro on Monday night.

Sauce

1. Sauté onions and garlic in Olive Oil until translucent.

2. Crush the tomatoes - just do it with your hands. The wife is an excellent by hand tomato crusher.

3. Add tomatoes to the vegetables in the sauté pan with the can of tomato paste, basil, oregano, sugar, salt and black pepper.

4. Cook covered at a slow simmer (low heat so as to not burn the sauce) for 30 - 40 minutes, stir occasionally as it wants to stick as it gets thick.

5. The Salsa di Pomodori is intended to be thick and rich in color and flavor.

Meat filling:

1. Sauté onions in olive oil and add chopped spinach.

2. Cook the spinach until it is dry and starts trying to stick to the sauté pan.

3. Set aside the vegetables. There will be a lot less than you had when you started.

4. Cook ground round in a Tablespoon of butter with a little salt and pepper.

5. Add the cooked beef to the bowl with vegetables.

6. Sauté the chicken liver in butter with a little black pepper. This doesn't seem like much chicken liver, but the flavor helps make the dish. Sauté the liver until firm. Chop and add to bowl.

7. Leave the chopped liver pieces big enough to not get lost in the stuffing.

8. add the meats to the bowl:

9. Add shredded parmesan, the egg and a tablespoon of heavy cream. Mix well. Taste for seasoning and set aside.

Besciamella Sauce

1. Add the flour to 2 Tablespoons melted butter in sauté pan

2. Cook the flour four minutes. Do not brown the flour. This is a blond sauce.

3. Add milk and heavy cream to the blond roux and stir with a whisk until a thick heavy cream sauce forms.

5. Taste and season with salt and pepper. set aside.

Making Cannelloni wrappers

1. Finally, we return to the pasta dough, which is now a glossy, workable consistency.

2. We processed the dough through our pasta machine, several times on setting 7, folding and re-running the dough maybe four or six times, then taking it one number at a time, until we had the machine set on number 1, which is very thin pasta.

3. After processing, we cut the sheets into 4 by 6 inch pieces and placed on clean towels before cooking them off. The best way to handle them is to allow them to dry out for a few minutes, then precook the sheets in boiling salted water.

4. After two our three minutes of cooking they were removed and placed back on towels for the next step. You know it is thin pasta when you can see the stripes on the towel through the pasta.

Time to assemble the Cannelloni

1. Place a thin layer of Salsa di Pomodori on the bottom of a lightly oiled casserole.

2. Portion out the meat filling on the pasta - it doesn't take much - balance of flavor and all.

3. Roll the cannelloni tubes and place them in the casserole. Cover with Besciamella.

4. Then top with Salsa di Pomodori and the parmesan.

5. Into oven at 375 f for 20-30 minutes, until bubbly hot.

Tips
Original photo recipe at LINK /

Source: MeridianDog
Posted by Stadium Rat
Metairie
Member since Jul 2004
9575 posts
Posted on 10/31/17 at 5:46 pm to
Homemade Chili Mix by Zappas Stache

Since its chili making season, I figured I would post my chili mix recipe. Making your own fresh mix is the best way to elevate your chili game. It really makes a significant difference in the taste.

I buy my dried peppers at the grocery store, usually the Fiesta near me as they have a huge selection of dried peppers. I use an old coffee grinder to grind the peppers and then mix as follows:

8 tbl Ancho
11 tbl Cascabel
4 tbl Arbol
4 tbl Chipotle
2 tbl Pasilla
2 tbl New Mexico
2 tbl granulated garlic
3 tbl fresh oregano chopped
2 tbl cumin
2 tbl smoked paprika

This make about 1 1/2 cups by volume of chili mix which is way more than I use in a typical 12 serving batch. I can't say exactly how much I put in my chili but I do put a few tablespoons in at the start and again midway through cooking. About 10 minutes before flame out I taste and add whatever amount more I feel like the batch needs and salt to taste. I put the leftover powder in the freezer and will use it in another chili if I make one within a month of the grind. Otherwise, I will grind a new batch as peppers lose a lot of flavor really quick....which is why store bought mixes are so-so.
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