Elegant Cuisine

by M-J de Mesterton, Author of Elegant Survival

Archive for the category “Cheese”

Elegant Cheeses from Kerrygold of Ireland

Ballyshannon Cheddar and Dubliner Cheeses by Kerrygold of Ireland

Ballyshannon Cheddar and Dubliner, Excellent Natural Cheeses by Kerrygold of Ireland: Consistently Good in Sandwiches, Sauces and with Wine

M-J’s Elegant Spinach Casserole

M-J's Recipe for Elegant Spinach, Lettuce and Cream Cheese Casserole Appears on The Elegant Cook Vegetable Page

Elegant Home-Made Tortilla Chips

MAKE YOUR OWN ELEGANT TORTILLA CHIPS  Posted at 12:16 PM on November 27, 2009

Elegant Home-Made Tortilla Chips, a Southwest DelicacyMAKE YOUR OWN ELEGANT TORTILLA CHIPS You don’t have to throw out your tortillas if they are past their prime. Make them into tortilla chips, which will be very popular with your family and guests, as they are pleasingly different from those bought in the store. Take a stack of tortillas and dust between the layers with salt, pressing it into them. Then, pressing into it with a large knife, cut the stack of tortillas into quarters. Lower a handful-at-a-time of the uncooked chips into bubbling hot oil. For this light and crispy batch, I used a combination of soy oil, which is now sold as “vegetable oil”, and lard. Peanut or corn oil are also good for deep-frying tortillas. Deep-Frying Santa Fe Tortillas for Southwest-Style Cocktail Party Snacks

When the chips themselves have developed bubbles and are slightly brown, it’s time to remove them from the pot with a runsible or slotted spoon. Drain them on paper towels, and dust with more salt if desired. The cooking oil may be strained, refrigerated and re-used for French fries, yams or potato chips. My recipe for Elegant Guacamole goes very well with these tortilla chips. So do sour cream or crème fraîche, and a mixture of sliced jalapeños with melted Cheddar cheese, baked on top of the chips for a few minutes in a hot oven.

 ©M-J de Mesterton 2009

 M-J de Mesterton’s Elegant Guacamole Dip: Find the Recipe on Elegant Cuisine and Elegant Cook.

Italian Easter Pie: Torta di Pasqua

Torta di Pascua

Torta di Pascua

Puff pastry or pie dough, enough to line and cover an 11-inch pie-plate

3 eggs, beaten

1 1/2 lbs. of ricotta cheese, well-strained to remove all liquid (setting the ricotta cheese in a strainer over a bowl overnight is best)

1/2 lb. mild or hot Italian sausage, sliced and lightly fried in olive oil

8 to 10 slices of prosciutto ham, coarsely chopped

1/2 lb. of diced mozzarella cheese

2 tablespoons of chopped or dried parsley

Freshly ground pepper, and salt, to taste

One egg-yolk and one tablespoon of water for glaze

Prepare your pastry. Beat the eggs into the ricotta cheese, and add the rest of the ingredients. Roll out the pastry or pie dough, and line the pie-pan with one-half of it. Pour filling into the dough-lined pan, and lay the rest of your dough on top of it, sealing, trimming, and crimping the edges. Brush the top with an egg-yolk mixed with a tablespoon of water. Make pretty slits in the top of the crust, and bake in a moderately hot 350* oven for forty-five minutes to an hour, until the top of Easter Pie is golden. Serve Torta di Pasqua either warm or at room temperature. This recipe serves 8 people.

~~Copyright M-J de Mesterton

What is Fromage à la Crème?

Cream cheese! It’s wonderful stuff, and so versatile that it is used in both desserts and savoury dishes.

Fromage à la Crème

Here is my original recipe:
pineapplemjdemestertonDole Pineapple Tidbits, No Sugar Added

One can of pineapple as pictured

One pound of cream cheese

One tablespoon of honey or sugar of your choice

Method:

Drain pineapple bits as well as possible by dumping the can contents into in a sieve and pressing with a bowl. Spread pineapple bits on a baking sheet, and drizzle with honey or sprinkle with sugar. Bake until golden brown.

In a mixing bowl, combine pineapple with cream cheese until smooth.

Use as a spread for crackers.

~~M-J de Mesterton, Copyright January 2009

Elegant Canapes and Dessert: Pâte à Choux; Choux à La Crème; Petits Choux au Fromage

Croquembouche: Photo and Recipe Copyright Elegant Survival, 2008 (click image to enlarge)

Two Cups Makes about Forty Choux or Puff Shells

In a two-quart, heavy saucepan, boil one cup of water,
Six tablespoons of butter,
One teaspoon of salt,
One teaspoon of sugar (OR one 1/2 teaspoon of pepper, depending upon whether the choux-paste will be used for cream puffs or savoury cocktail offerings),
and a pinch of nutmeg.

When butter has melted, remove pot from heat.
Pour into the mixture one cup of flour. Beat with a wooden spoon until the lot is blended.
Put pot back on cooker at high heat, and continue to beat until the contents separate from the sides of the pot. Remove pot from heat again.

Now, you will need four large eggs.
Making a well in the potful of paste, break one egg into it. Beat it into the mixture, and repeat with the following three eggs, one at a time. Continue beating by hand until the paste is smooth.

You are now ready to fill a pastry bag and squeeze the paste onto a buttered baking sheet. In the absence of a pastry bag, you may use a gallon-sized, disposable zipper-bag like Zip-Lock, cutting off a 1/2 inch at one corner of it to emit pâte à choux. If this is still a problem, you may use a spoon to drop the paste onto the baking sheet.

Preheat the oven to 425* Fahrenheit.

Use the pâte à choux while it is still warm.

Form the pâte à choux into one-inch diameter circular mounds, 1/2 inch high. Space them two inches apart.

Brush each mound very lightly with beaten egg.

Bake for about twenty minutes. When the puffs are double their original size, golden brown and crusty, they may be removed from the oven. Make a 1/2 inch slit on the side of each puff to release steam.

I like to fill these puffs with Crème Pâtissière, or pastry cream:

In a 3-quart mixing bowl, beat
One cup of granulated white sugar into
6 egg yolks. Continue beating until the mixture is pale yellow.
Add one half cup of full-fat milk.
Beat in one cup of sifted white all-purpose flour. Mix this very vigorously until the small lumps of egg-yolk disappear into the flour and sugar.

Boil 4 cups of full-fat milk. Add it gradually, in a small stream, to the egg and flour mixture, while stirring. Pour the mass into a heavy 6-quart saucepan and set the stove burner on medium high heat. Stir with a wire-whisk or an electric mixer, careful to include the mixture at bottom of pot. Scrape the bottom of the pot with a spatula at intervals. When this reaches the boiling-point, turn down the heat to low, continue to beat for 2 to 3 minutes in order to cook the flour thoroughly. Don’t let the custard at the bottom of the pot get scorched.

Remove from heat, and incorporate one tablespoon of butter and one teaspoon of vanilla.

Choux à La Crème

When the crème patissière is cool enough, use it to fill choux. Dust choux with powdered sugar, drizzle with melted chocolate or with hot caramel sauce.

Crème patissière will keep in the refrigerator for a week, or may be frozen.

Petits Choux au Fromage

To make these savoury cheese puffs: omit the sugar, add a half-teaspoon of cayenne pepper, and add a cup of grated Swiss or Parmesan cheese to the warm pâte à choux. Bake at 425*F for about twenty minutes or until golden brown. Pierce to release steam from each cheese-puff.

~~Copyright M-J de Mesterton, 2008

Pantry Essentials

Ingredients for a Well-Stocked Pantry
Elegant Survival Kitchen Essentials

  • Frozen Apple Juice Concentrate or Bottled Apple Juice

  • Cornstarch

  • Unbleached White Flour

  • Rye Flour

  • Yeast

  • Gelatine

  • Almond Extract

  • Vanilla, Imitation or Pure Extract

  • Rum Extract or Flavoring

  • Aluminum-Free Baking Powder

  • Baking Soda

  • Hershey’s Cocoa Powder

  • Chocolate Chips

  • Cinnamon

  • Salt

  • Peppercorns

  • Dried Red Chiles

  • Dehydrated Mixed Vegetables

  • Brown Rice

  • White or Basmati Rice

  • Corn Meal or Grits

  • Dried Pasta

  • Alfalfa Seeds

  • Wheat Berries

  • Dried Parsley

  • Dried Chives

  • Dehydrated Onion

  • Dehydrated Garlic or Garlic Powder

  • Soy Sauce

  • Powdered Ginger

  • Toasted Sesame Oil

  • Sesame Tahini Paste, Joyva brand of Brooklyn is best
  • Almond Butter

  • Popcorn, loose: Jolly Time Organic is better than Orville Redenbacher, at one-third the cost
  • Peanut or Corn Oil

  • Olive Oil

  • Mustard Powder, Colman’s English

  • Spanish or Hungarian Paprika

  • Capers

  • Green Peppercorns in Brine

  • Rose’s Lime Juice

  • Maggi or another brand of Chicken Bouillon Powder

  • Canned Tomato Paste: store brand

  • Canned Whole Tomatoes: store brand

  • Canned Beets: store brand or generic

  • Canned Small, Peeled Potatoes: store brand or generic

  • Canned Green Chiles, whole or chopped

  • Coconut Milk, Canned

  • Whole Water Chestnuts, Canned

  • Canned Ham

  • Canned Vienna Sausage

  • Canned Beef (usually from Argentina)

  • Canned Pineapple, No Sugar Added

  • Peanut Butter

  • Raw Walnuts

  • Almonds

  • Powdered Sugar

  • Brown Sugar

  • White Sugar

  • Molasses

  • Honey

  • Apple Cider Vinegar

  • White Vinegar

  • Boxed Red Wine, and a Cube of White Wine, both for Cooking

  • Frozen Peas

  • Dried Split Peas, Green or Yellow

  • Freeze-Dried Coffee

  • Coffee Creamer (not Coffee-Mate, which contains aluminum–check ingredients)

  • Coffee Beans

  • Tea Bags

  • Non-Fat Dry Milk

  • Powdered Buttermilk

  • Powdered Eggs for Emergencies

  • Bottled Lemon Juice
  • Herbes de Provence (a combination of marjoram, thyme, rosemary and savory, available at Costco)


To Be Continued….

Compiled by M-J de Mesterton, 2008

Make Your Own Finnish-Style Cheese: Leipäjuusto

Leipäjuusto Photo by Teemu Rajala

Leipäjuusto and Cloudberry Jam: Photo by Teemu Rajala

Click Image to Enlarge Recipe

My mother gave me a booklet in 1985, when it was published: Kitsi Finnish Foodways, a publication of Suomi College (now called Finlandia University) for FinnFest 1985. My copy of Kitsi is yellowed. I don’t think my dear, departed mother ever made squeaky cheese, but, working at Suomi College’s Finnish-American Heritage Center, she did draw the illustrations on Kitsi’s cover. Leipäjuusto is an unusual creation that I really like with rye bread, when in Finland. Here is the recipe for making your own Finnish Squeaky Cheese.

Update: I’ve just found my mother’s friend, Beatrice Ojakangas’ blog, where she hosts a richer recipe for leipäjuusto.

Here is a recipe for Finnish Apple Cake, by Beatrice Ojakangas, the Queen of Scandinavian Cooking

FINNISH APPLE SUGAR CAKE (Omenasokerikakku)
Makes 12 servings
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) softened butter
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
dash salt
3/4 cup light cream or undiluted evaporated milk
2 medium apples, peeled, cored and sliced about 1/2 inch
Cinnamon sugar: 2 tablespoons sugar mixed with 1 teaspoon cinnamon
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Butter a 9 by 13-inch cake pan.
In a large bowl, cream the butter and sugar together; add the eggs and beat until light. Stir the flour, baking powder and salt together and add to the cream mixture alternately with the cream. Mix until batter is smooth and spread into the prepared pan.
Insert the apple slices so that the outer edges of the apple slices are up. Sprinkle evenly with the cinnamon sugar and bake for 45 to 50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the cake comes out clean and dry. Serve warm.
~~Copyright Beatrice Ojakangas, The Finnish Cookbook, 1964

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