“If you could kick the person
in the pants responsible for
most of your trouble, you
wouldn’t sit for a month.”
~ Theodore Roosevelt
“If you could kick the person
in the pants responsible for
most of your trouble, you
wouldn’t sit for a month.”
~ Theodore Roosevelt
What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? The Daily Special: Quirky Quesadilla! Have you ever noticed when you announce quesadillas are on the menu for the next meal, everyone begins to feel as though they’ve been invited to a party? It’s probably due to the fact that it opens the door to endless possibilities. Do you prefer seafood, chicken, vegetables, cheese, or all of the above? No problem. Once you offer a buffet of ingredients, everyone can build-their-own. Win! Win!
QUIRKY QUESADILLA
Ingredients:
12-ounces shrimp; peeled, deveined, tail off
1 teaspoon Old Bay seasoning
1/4 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
1/4 teaspoon dill
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 chicken breasts; boneless, skinless, cubed
1/8 teaspoon seasoned salt
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 tablespoons red onion, chopped
4-6 flour tortillas
4 tablespoons butter
1 cup Queso Fresco cheese
1 cup extra sharp cheddar cheese
1 green onion
Instructions:
Sauté shrimp in 1 tablespoon olive oil, Old Bay seasoning, red pepper flakes, and dill on medium heat. Cook until pink and opaque, turning often, usually 4-5 minutes. Transfer to a dish and set aside. Using the same skillet, add another tablespoon of olive oil. Cook the chicken and onion together with seasonings. Turn heat to low. Add the shrimp. Mix gently. Sprinkle in the Queso Fresco cheese and cover. It will melt into the quesadilla filling to bond everything together. Watch carefully so the cheese does not burn. In another skillet over low heat, butter one side of a flour tortilla. Place buttered side down. Sprinkle in cheddar cheese. Add two spoonfuls of filling. Spread to within 1/2-inch of the edge. Top with another buttered tortilla. Put lid on skillet to melt cheeses. Cook until lightly brown, about two minutes. Turn the tortilla over and cook the other side until the tortilla is lightly brown and the cheese is gooey. Place on a platter to cool slightly before cutting. Repeat with remaining tortillas until no ingredients remain. Serve with salsa, yogurt, and guacamole.
*Hint: if you’re serving a crowd, it’s easy to prepare several at the same time. Place the filled quesadillas on a cookie sheet and bake them in a 375° oven for 10 minutes.
What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? The Daily Special: Prosciutto Wrapped Asparagus! For all the asparagus lovers out there, prepared to be impressed. Really impressed. And if you’ve never had the desire to taste a delicate stalk of asparagus that seems to demand an additional fee on the restaurant menu, you may have discovered a reason to give it a whirl. Prosciutto. These two ingredients were destined to marry forever and ever, in my opinion.
PROSCIUTTO WRAPPED ASPARAGUS
Ingredients:
1-pound fresh asparagus spears, ends trimmed
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/4 teaspoon seasoned salt
1/8 teaspoon Mrs. Dash Garlic & Herb Seasoning
6 ounces prosciutto, thinly sliced
Instructions:
Raise the oven rack to its highest level, which should be about 5 inches below the coils of the broiler. Preheat the broiler. Meanwhile take the asparagus spears and place in a gallon zip-lock bag. Add the olive oil and seasonings. Seal the bag, squeezing out the air, and flip to coat all pieces. Slice the prosciutto lengthwise. Taking one asparagus spear at a time, begin wrapping prosciutto midway from the tip to the stem base, spiraling as you go, overlapping the seams slightly. Place it on a baking sheet sprayed with non-stick oil. Repeat until all pieces are prepared. Before broiling, make sure there is space between the asparagus. Broil for 3 minutes, remove the baking sheet, turn asparagus with a tongs, return to the oven, and broil another 3 minutes. Pieces should slightly char and appear crisp. The secret is to keep them spaced. For best results, choose medium-size asparagus instead of very thin stalks.
What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? The Daily Special: Oven-Glazed Pears! Presenting a dessert as sweet as honey and as satisfying as a piece of pie. Make one for yourself or enough for a crowd. The recipe measurements below only need one pear, which is two servings. Perfect for dessert for two. The aroma alone will make your house smell amazing!
OVEN-GLAZED PEARS
Ingredients:
1 slightly firm pear; peeled, halved, and cored
2 tablespoons sweet dessert wine
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon honey
1 tablespoon butter, unsalted
Cinnamon to taste
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 375°. Arrange pear halves in a small baking dish, cut side up. Sprinkle cinnamon, then vanilla over pears. Dot each pear with butter. Drizzle honey over each pear half. Pour in the sweet wine. Roast for 40 minutes. Using oven mitts, carefully remove the dish from the oven. Tilt the dish so the juices pool in one corner. Take a spoon and baste the pears. Turn each pear over and return to the oven to roast 20 minutes longer or until a paring knife inserts easily. Baste occasionally for a caramelized finish. The sauce will thicken slightly. Serve warm with vanilla bean ice cream.
What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? The Daily Special: Noodle Rigatoni! When time is of the essence, and you need a fulfilling meal, this dish can be made in minutes. While the wine is slightly chilling, and you wish to keep the kitchen cool, everything works together between stovetop and microwave. Your tastebuds will be satisfied without salad or bread as well since this meal-in-a-bowl hits the spot.
NOODLE RIGATONI
Ingredients:
1 pound Italian sausage, ground
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
1/8 teaspoon cracked black pepper
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 teaspoon fennel
1/4 teaspoon oregano
1/4 teaspoon basil
1/8 teaspoon red pepper flakes
1/8 teaspoon marjoram
8-ounce jar marinated artichoke hearts, cut-up
2 cups of Italian Roma tomatoes in sauce, cut-up
1/4 cup feta cheese, crumbled
16 ounces rigatoni noodles
Instructions:
In a large skillet, brown Italian sausage until crumbled and cooked through. Drain and add garlic powder, pepper, salt, fennel, oregano, basil, red pepper flakes, and marjoram. Keep warm over low heat, stirring occasionally. Warm separately the cut up tomatoes and the marinated artichoke hearts. Keep warm. Meanwhile, bring a 4-quart pan of salted water to a boil. Cook pasta until tender; about 10 minutes. Stir often. It should be firm. Drain pasta. Place portions of rigatoni in individual serving bowls. Spoon tomatoes in sauce over noodles. Arrange artichoke hearts around edges. Lastly add crumbled Italian sausage over top. Garnish with feta cheese.
What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? The Daily Special: Meatball Marinara Moat! Lately we’ve been having some maintenance and home improvements done on the house. Whenever I have workmen around, I tend to offer them a bite to eat without hindering the project at hand. I needed something hearty and filling without anchoring them down afterwards. This savory sandwich sealed the deal when served with a portion of potato salad on the side.
MEATBALL MARINARA MOAT
Ingredients:
1 4-pack hoagie rolls, top cut
16 Italian meatballs, pre-cooked
8 slices provolone cheese
24-ounce jar of all-natural tomato and basil sauce
1/4 cup Parmesan cheese, shredded
Instructions:
Place meatballs in a covered casserole dish. Add tomato and basil sauce. Heat through on 30% power for 10 minutes in the microwave. Slice an opening in the top of the hoagie roll, hollowing out a portion to create a “moat” for the fillings. Place two slices of cheese in each hoagie, allowing them to overlap. Spoon 4 meatballs with sauce into each sandwich, lining them in a row. Sprinkle Parmesan cheese on top. Carefully wrap each hoagie in foil and place in a warm oven until ready to serve.
“If we think more about
what God has done than
what we want Him to do,
our faith will become stronger
and our joy will increase.”
~ Joyce Meyer
“Happiness is not something
ready made. It comes from
your own actions.”
~ Dalai Lama
What’s Cooking in Gail’s Kitchen? The Daily Special: Lazy “Lobster” Wrap! When you don’t live at the ocean where lobster is in abundant supply, the next best thing is an imitation variety. Alaska pollock is not only heart-healthy, fat-free, and packed with omega-3 in every serving, it’s readily available at your neighborhood market. Amazingly, this mock lobster is a surprising alternative. Eat it now and with the money you save, you can stuff yourself with real lobster when you travel to the shore.
LAZY “LOBSTER” WRAP
Ingredients:
7-ounce package of chunk-style imitation lobster
1 tablespoon lemon olive oil
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
1/8 teaspoon red pepper flakes
cracked pepper to taste
sea salt to taste
1 pat of butter
Vidalia onion slices
1 4-ounce container of crab dip, deli-style
2 flour tortillas
Spring Mix Salad Greens
Instructions:
In a medium skillet, sauté imitation chunk lobster and onion slices in lemon olive oil, garlic powder, red pepper flakes, salt and pepper. While still warm, add 1 pat of butter. Cook an additional minute to blend flavors. Remove from heat. To assemble wrap: Take a flour tortilla, spread on a layer of crab dip, top with salad greens, and add a spoonful of lobster mixture. Roll it together to form a wrap. Serve warm or cold.