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5 Great Breakfast Recipes for Valentines Day

5 Great Breakfast Recipes for Valentines Day

Wondering what to make for your sweetheart this Valentines Day?  Breakfast in bed is the ultimate in starting the morning being pampered.

Here are 5 great breakfast recipes for Valentines Day.

HeartFrenchToast21Heart Shaped Stuffed French Toast

Wikipedia's etymology says the earliest use of the term was in 1660 and was bread fried with wine, orange juice and sugar.  I'll have to give that recipe a try!  After doing a little more digging through Google, I discovered in French it is actually called "pain perdu" which translates into "lost bread."  It was a popular recipe in many countries, not just France, as a way of making stale bread palatable.  The English call it "gyspy bread" and I think I'd like to adopt that term from now on ... sounds like breakfast with an adventurous edge!  (Read More ... )

cheddareggstrudel1Cheddar Egg Strudel with Spinach Cream

This savory and filling breakfast is a creation of the Rabbit Hill Inn located in Lower Waterford, Vermont.  It's a simple, quick and elegant recipe that would  make a perfect savory pairing with the heart shaped strawberry stuffed French toast for romantic Valentine's Day breakfast in bed.  And speaking of romance and Rabbit Hill Inn, Peter Greenburg said, "Your room could act as an aphrodisiac,"  and Cooking Light Magazine stated they had, "sensual amenities to set the mood."  Whoa.   (Read More ... )

ChocoRaspMuffins23Chocolate Raspberry Muffins

If you ever wanted dessert for breakfast, and felt a little guilty popping a single Dove's Promise's Dark Chocolate piece to melt on your tongue with your morning coffee ... then I have wicked solution for you.  A muffin.  Because even though it's chocolate, the fact that it's a muffin still makes it breakfast.  And since the stores are filled with pink hearts, chocolates and forget-me-not's, I thought this treat would make the perfect cupid's arrow  ... either for your Valentine's heart or your own.  (Read More ...)

BerryFrenchToast27Berry Bread Pudding

When I first met Marie with the Penny Farthing Inn, I have to confess, I thought she was "Penny."  And I kept adding an extra syllable to the end of Farthing, as in, "Farthing-ton," thinking it was her last name.  I've since been enlightened on what a Penny Farthing actually is, but I haven't worked up the courage to ride one!  Marie gave me a fantastic recipe for a Berry French Toast.  Though, it's a lot more like a bread pudding.  I love breakfast made in a ramekin since you end up with nice little individual servings of goodness. (Read More ... )

pouring beer 2Beer with Breakfast

This was a little outside of my box as it was not an "inn" that gave me the recipe. I found the recipe on Tom's website, BrooklynBrewery.com . Having beer with breakfast intrigued me. While I have to confess that I'm not normally a beer drinker ... this was an AMAZING flavor pairing. Since I couldn't procure the Brooklyner Weisse, I just had to use a substitute (but still very tasty) beer with my breakfast.  Follow along our fun day of drinking beer and kitchen debauchery.  (Read More ... )

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Cheddar Egg Strudel with Spinach Cream

Cheddar Egg Strudel with Spinach Cream

cheddareggstrudel1Aaaah!  The aroma of baking puffed pastry, scrambled eggs and garlic spinach cream.  It's sweet smell of redemption.   My Egg SNAFU last week was beyond rescue, so I feel relieved to carry out this recipe pretty smoothly.  (Click here to read more about Egg Snafu).  Amazing what you can get done when you don't try and do 5 things all at once and just focus on the task at hand.  Whew!

This savory and filling breakfast is a creation of the Rabbit Hill Inn located in Lower Waterford, Vermont.  It's a simple, quick and elegant recipe that would  make a perfect savory pairing with the heart shaped strawberry stuffed French toast for romantic Valentine's Day breakfast in bed.

And speaking of romance and Rabbit Hill Inn, Peter Greenburg said, "Your room could act as an aphrodisiac,"  and Cooking Light Magazine stated they had, "sensual amenities to set the mood."  Whoa.  And I was just considering going up for just a plain ole cooking class.  I'm such a kitchen dork.  But then again ... a cooking class could be hot!

If you haven't yet made Valentine's Day plans, here's a way you can bring one of Travel & Leisure Best 100 Hotels Worldwide into you're own home.

Let's start with the puffed pastry.   Yes, this is what my groggy eyes at 6 am mistook for pie crust when I created an Egg Snafu.  So here it is in all it's glory ... Puffed Pastry.  You can find it in your frozen foods section at your local grocer.  Just don't mistakenly pick up pie crust.

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Start with a dozen eggs scrambled with about a 1/2 cup of heavy cream.  If you've never had scrambled eggs made this way ... taste a little bite.  You'll never make them without heavy cream again.  Ever.  It's the secret to making them creamy, fluffy and light.  BUT ... not light on the calories.

And "Cooking Light" wrote about Rabbit Hill?  How do they make these delish recipes without some serious calories!?

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Cook them until they're set ... but still a little wet.  You're going to bake them too and don't want them to dry out.

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Spoon your scrambled eggs into the center of a puffed pastry sheet.  This pastry sheet seemed a little small for a dozen eggs, so next time I'll either cut the recipe in half or make two strudels.

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Cover in shredded cheddar cheese.

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Roll the pastry into a cylinder.  I had imagined that this would come out more like a spiral of puffed pastry rather than a burrito shape.  Perhaps I need a longer pastry sheet for that effect.

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Take a pastry brush and "glue" the edges together with just a touch of water.

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Then brush with melted butter and set in the oven to bake for 25 minutes at 350 degrees.

Next ... the spinach.

When we tried this with the Egg Snafu, I wrote down the recipe.  I should have printed it because I missed one vital word ... blanched.  Now, I must admit, I didn't quite know what "blanched" meant.  So I googled it.  I google everything I make in the kitchen.  I found this lovely step-by-step instructions on blanched spinach.

And then I blanched my own ...

Start with boiling water.  Add a whole bag of spinach.  Yes, I said a whole bag.  It dwindles down to nothing when you're done.

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After the spinach has turned a bright green, about 30 seconds to 1 minute, remove the spinach with a slotted spoon and add to an ice bath.

Sounds fancy and pampered to give food a bath, doesn't it?  Well, maybe "tortured" spinach is a better description.  This whole process reminded of my last ski strip to Steamboat Springs, CO, where we did some of hot-tubbin and snow-dippin.  That's when we've had one or two beers in the hot tub and think its smart to run out and dip our bathing suit clad bodies in freezing cold snow.  Or similar to sitting in a bath tub full of ice and water after a 22 mile run.  I can only imagine the spinach wants to yell and scream profanities as loudly as I did.

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Remove the spinach from the ice bath with clean hands and squeeze all the water out until you are left with a ball of spinach.

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Add the blanched spinach to a food processor with 1 cup of heavy cream.  Add salt and pepper to taste.  I also added a pressed garlic clove.

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Blend.

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Add the puree to a sauce pan on medium heat and reduce by 1/3 of it's volume.

The strudel bakes to golden perfection during the time it takes to whip up the Spinach Cream.

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Slice and serve.  Mmm.

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Now, about those cooking lessons with Chef Matthew ...

--Rachelle

RabbitHillInnLogo

Cheddar Egg Strudel with Spinach Cream

from the Rabbit Hill Inn, Lower Waterford, VT

Ingredients

1 sheet puffed pastry, room temp

1/2 cup shredded cheddar

1/4 cup canola oil

1 cup heavy cream

12 eggs beaten with 1/2 cup heavy cream

2  tbls melted butter

1 cup blanched spinach

salt & pepper to taste

For the Strudel

1) Preheat oven to 350 (convection oven) or 400 (standard oven.

2) Heat 1/4 cup canola oil in a large non-stick saute pan.

3) Cook eggs over medium high heat scrambling them until barely set.

4) On a small sheet or cookie pan lay out puff pastry.

5) Place eggs straight along center of pastry sheet.

6) Top with cheese and roll pastry into a cylinder.

7) Brush with butter and bake until golden brown, about 20 to 25 minutes.

For the Spinach Cream

1) Puree 1 cup of spinach with 1 cup of heavy cream.

2) Add salt and pepper to taste.

3) In a sauce pan, reduce by 1/3 the original volume.

4) Serve over strudel.

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Spicy Tomato & Chocolate Soup

Spicy Tomato & Chocolate Soup

ChocolateTomatoSoup42Kah KOW!  It sounds like a cartoon, "pah POW," doesn't it?   As if it should be in a little white cloud star burst in a comic strip when all hell is breaking loose.   I think I'll add it to my repertoire of socially acceptable expletives.  I could have used it during our last kitchen Egg Snafu.  Instead of yelling something profane, I'll really just be screaming CHOCOLATE!   And since chocolate is a great comfort food, it will only enhance using it as a silky comforting expletive slipping across my tongue.

The irony is that my kitchen Egg Snafu was a simple 6 ingredient recipe.  One that I had done before perfectly, and then really Kah KOW'd it up this last time.  Turned it into some crappy scrambled eggs.  Then I dove into this 20- ingredient-multi-step-hard-to-find-spices-recipe and it turned out great.  Go figure?!  I guess because some of the ingredients (like Harissa and Hungarian Paprika) were not in my spice rack or immediate awareness ... and the fact that I'd be combining chocolate with tomatoes ... maybe that gave me pause and I paid more attention to what I was doing.

I found the word Kah KOW when I looked up the origins of chocolate ... the phonetic spelling of cacao.  It just jumped off the page at me.  Originally, hot chocolate was not sweet at all, but very spicy.    This recipe from Chestnut Street Inn really does it justice.  Chocolate in it's most original form ...

Savory and Spicy.

Make this as an appetizer to spice up your Valentine's Day dinner... while it's not as dramatic as my Egg Snafu ... it definitely has all the trappings of a good LifeTime or Hallmark movie.  Watch and learn ...

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The character you love to hate, but still can't resist ... Harissa.  She's a spicy one.

I had a heck of a time finding Harissa.  I looked all over the supermarket.  But for you men out there, this isn't the type of character you can discover the old fashioned way.  As in  ... shopping ... physically ... in an actual store.  This one is global and high tech.  I thought I'd find it at Marx Foods.   But nope.  No Harissa.  Googled it  ... found a bunch!  And I even found a recipe to make Harissa.  Now ... I wish I would have done that BEFORE making the soup.

Enter stage left ... the stand in ...

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In my creative zen at the grocery store, since Harissa was described as a North African Chili Paste, I figured some tomato paste and chili powder sounded about the same.  And while it tasted great ... it's not really the same thing.  So here are some references for you ...

Harissa Shopping Online

Recipe:  How to make Harissa

After reading the description of some of these as "hot" and "pain is good" ... I'm kinda glad I went with my homemade thought up version.  I like the taste of a little kick, but so spicy that I can't feel my tongue is no good.

And as for character development, this is the bitch in the story ... and while I have found substitute words like "kah KOW" and "Shut The Front Door" ... I haven't found an adequate replacement for the noun referenced above.  If you have a cute one, please let me know!

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My fake Harissa ...

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Heat oil and butter in a stock pot over medium heat ... this is the plot.

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Add chopped onion and saute until translucent.  Get out the Kleenex ... chopped onion is a sure tear jerker.  What kind of Hallmark/Lifetime movie would it be without a few weepy eye moments?

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Now the Italian favorite comes in and makes a squishy, but well scented, mess of things ...

3 garlic cloves.

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A little spa action with the skin peel.

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And now all the characters are getting thrown together in the same plot ... I mean ... pot.

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Here comes the heroine of the soup story.

Hungarian Paprika.

She's also a bit spicy and mysterious ... but words like "pain" are not associated with this spice.

paprika

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Add a little wine to the moment and the plot thickens.

Funny tangent ... I was cooking at my friend Beth's house and had called and asked her if that Magnum of chardonnay I saw in her fridge only a couple of days ago had about a 1/2 cup left in it that I could cook with.

Nope.

Lush.

I told her I'd bring over a fresh bottle ... she said she'd drink that too!

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The plot thickens ...

Add the rest of the ingredients listed in the recipe and let it simmer for 45 minutes to an hour.

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And then gets whipped and turned around a bit so you have no idea where it's headed!

Side note/Sub-plot ... I actually had to blend twice ... the volume of the soup was too big for the blender.  So while you may SEE one blender shot ... know that it took two.  And ... because it was hot it sort of exploded (just a little) and got bits of red soup all over the place.  Told you there was drama.

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Add the blended soup back to you stock pot ... add the greens ...

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then add the hero ...

kah KOW!

Chocolate.

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He's smooth and rich, and while a bit bitter, he still absolutely melts with the other characters.

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Add a little honey to sweeten it up and cut the acidity.

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Sprinkle on the cheese for a nice happy finish!

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The End!

CREDITS

Spicy Tomato & Chocolate Soup

from Chestnut Street Inn, Sheffield IL

Yields: Approx. 6-8 Servings

2 Tbl Extra Virgin Olive Oil

2 Tbl Unsalted Butter

1 Onion, Diced

3 Cloves Garlic, Minced

2 Carrots, Peeled and Diced

2 Celery Stalks, Diced

1 Cup Sun-Dried Tomatoes, Sliced

Kosher Salt and Freshly Ground Pepper to Taste

3 Tbl Harissa (North African Chili Paste)

2 tsps Hungarian Paprika

2 tsps ground Cumin

1 tsp ground Coriander

½-3/4 cup Dry Sherry or White Wine

1-28 oz Can Diced Tomatoes

4 Cups Chicken Broth

¼ Cup Cilantro, Chopped

¼ Cup Italian Parsley, Chopped

3-4 oz Bittersweet Chocolate

2 Tbl Honey or to Taste

Queso Fresco, Goat Cheese or Crème Fraiche to Garnish

1) Heat oil and butter in a stock pot over medium high heat until butter melts.

2) Add onion and sauté until translucent, approx. 5 mins. Add garlic, carrots, celery and sun dried tomatoes.

3) Season with salt, pepper, harissa, paprika, cumin and coriander. Saute for a couple of minute to toast spices and soften vegetables.

4) Add wine and continue cooking on high until all of the liquid has evaporated. Add tomatoes and chicken broth. Bring to a boil. Cover and reduce heat to a simmer. Cook for 45 mins or until the vegetables are tender.

5) Pass soup through a food mill to puree (I used a blender) and remove any large particles. Return soup to pot and place over low heat.

6) Add parsley and cilantro. Add chocolate and enough honey to balance acidity. Adjust seasoning to taste.

7) Serve hot, garnished with queso fresco, fresh goat cheese or crème fraiche.

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Italian Breakfast Strata

Italian Breakfast Strata

ItalianStrata9We recently had my friend Jaden and her family up visiting our home town of Mount Dora for some holiday fun.  A little holiday shopping, a little man-made snow sledding in the park ... a lot of good food!

Ordinarily I'd happily invite friends over to stay at our home, but we've got a little 1920's  two bedroom cottage.  Hardly big enough for two families ... although, I could pitch a tent in the basement and we could make it fun like a good old fashioned grade school sleep over.  Hmm ... naaaah.

Instead, our friends Jim & Ana at the Mount Dora Historic Inn graciously hosted them at their Conch House Cottages so they could have their own home away from home.  It's literally just a few steps away from our front door.  The only condition ... we all had to do breakfast together.  Wonder what happens when you get a group of people together in the morning that love food?

Breakfast lasts aaaaall daaaaaaay!

That's my kind of morning.

We had much to celebrate after she and her son, Nathan, and I survived crossing 4 lanes of traffic led by a kamikaze pedicab driver across NYC's 5th Ave.  You can see some Flip cam action of that ride here ...

Notice that we're laughing hysterically.  Lesson learned, when in the face of death ... smile.

The photos in this post are from SteamyKitchen's talented eye and quick triggered shutter finger.  One cup of strong coffee and she's whippin around the kitchen with her 5 lb lens totally workin the food.

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In the recipe below, I kept Chef Jim's instructions just as he gave them to me.  For one, I didn't remake this one in my kitchen yet, so I have no comments other than Mmm and Yum.  But you'll notice a few of his notes will make you scratch your head and say, "really?"  Yeah, he's a joker.  He had me once asking our local grocery manager what the difference was between "hens" eggs and "chicken" eggs.  There is none.  Ha ha.

First ... a little food porn ... some drooling ... and then ... the recipe .

I have no words.  No commentary.   Just pure silence awe.

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Okay.  One small teeny little comment.  Notice the purple mug in the right hand corner.  Yeah, the one that is the size of a coffee pot.  Jim said his doctor told him he could only drink one cup of coffee ... so he just upgraded his mug.  For all the coffee lovers out there ... that's not lying, right?  It is one cup of coffee, it's just 20 ounces.  LOL!

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And one final note ... this was our 3rd course that day.  Good thing I started running as a hobby!

Enjoy!

Italian Breakfast Strata

from the Mount Dora Historic Inn

Ingredients

Egg mixtureItalianStrata6
12, large eggs
1, tsp dry mustard
4, dashes of your favorite hot sauce
Black pepper to your liking
8, ounce sour cream
½ cup whole Milk
4 oz hand-grated Cheddar
4 oz hand-grated Muenster

Ingredients for Layers
Day old Italian sandwich bread—hand-pulled into ½ inch pieces—about a 1 ½
¼ each green, red and yellow peppers—cored and diced
¼ medium onion—peeled and diced
½ lb of boiled ham—hand-pulled into small pieces
4 oz hand-grated Cheddar
4 oz hand-grated Muenster

Method for Eggs

Whip together eggs, sour cream, and milk—then add spices and blend well—electric blender works best—set aside

Architecture of the layers

1) Grease well a standard pie-dish
2) Layer enough day old bread to cover the bottom of the dish
3) Sautee your onions and peppers in little olive oil—cool—then evenly layer over the bread
4) Then spread ham over the veggies and, finally, spread both cheese over the top
5) Pour ½ of the egg mixture over the layers and let sit for 5 minutes—this allows the bread some time to soak up the egg mixture
6) Add the rest of mixture reserving 1/3 inch of space from the top of the pie dish
7) Place in pre-heated oven ... Then pour remaining mixture just to the top-edge of the pie dish—this prevents spilling of egg mixture—on your floor, in the oven and on your shoes.
8) Bake for 60 to 65 minutes at 350 degrees or check with an instant read thermometer to 180 degrees internal temperature –Allow to temper and set for 6 minutes before slicing.

Note: The Strata will get puffy on the sides first and then the middle will puff during the final minutes of cooking.  If the middle does not puff—it is not done!

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Chestnuts Roasting …

Chestnuts Roasting …

on an open fire ... jack frost nipping at your noooooose ...

Chestnuts1Okay I do apologize for getting that holiday song stuck in your head for the day.  It is one of my favorites though.

After coming back from NYC, I miss one of my favorite street snacks ...chestnuts.  Every corner had a vendor peddling these piping hot little treats.  They're one of my favorites this time of year.  Warm and hearty, kind of like bite sized bits of buttered baked potatoes.  And surprisingly, though pistachio growers would have you think otherwise, chestnuts are the lowest calorie nut around.

I've never actually roasted them on an open fire, but I do know how to bake 'em.Chestnuts2

Here's how ...

Roasting Chestnuts

Just pre-heat your oven to 425 degrees.

Place a dish towel over a cutting board (to prevent rolling nuts and missing fingers!) and cut an "x" into each chestnut. This helps with two things.

One ... it makes for easy peeling and eating.

Two ... it lets out the steam from roasting so they don't explode in your oven.

Chestnuts3It might sound nice in the holiday song ... "hear the chestnuts POP! ... pop, pop, pop!" But it wouldn't be a pleasant picture.  Quarter-sized projectiles would be a little dangerous, actually.

Bake them for about 30 minutes until the shells have started
to peel and the insides look golden brown.

Let them cool, then enjoy!

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Savory Corn Cupcakes

Savory Corn Cupcakes

CornCupcakes5At the end of Thanksgiving weekend, I hold onto the last little bits of fall before the holidays kick in.  It always seems that Christmas comes too early.  Even though Winter doesn't "officially" begin until December 21st ... snowflakes already grace store windows as garland.

So, in my last little ode to fall, I went on a little day trip with fellow Innkeepers Jim & Ana with the Mount Dora Historic Inn to a local corn maze.  A maize maze.  I thought getting lost in 6 acres of corn would be a great way to get outdoors, enjoy the weather and walk off all the tasty holiday indulgences.

It sounded quite easy, like kids play that we adults were just entertaining ourselves with.  Perhaps the gps in my car has made me too confident in my wayfinding skills, but that all changed when the stalks were 2 feet over our heads and every corner and twisted turn looked the same.  We really did get lost.  Good conversation with friends was the only thing that kept me from screaming out in a claustrophobic fit.  We got to talking about jobs we had before innkeeping and becoming serial entrepreneurs.  One of my first jobs was working in marketing for an agricultural association, so being ear-deep in corn (hehe) shouldn't have been so out of place for me.  One of the stories I shared with them was the time I was introduced to red-eye gravy.  It's a country thing, I guess.  Bacon grease and black coffee.  To be honest, I never actually tasted it.  I love bacon ... on my plate.  I love coffee ... in my cup.  But bacon and coffee mixed together.  Ew. I wrinkle my nose at the thought.  Perhaps I should be more open minded.  It is breakfast, after all.

Jim took this as a "challenge."  Picture an Einstein-mad-scientist-type, crazy hair, tongue sticking out with a wild look in his eye, groovy OKC 00670's music blaring, things bubbling, steam rising.   Now, picture that scientist in a chef's coat  and replace the lab with a kitchen ... except with clean cut hair ... but his tongue still sticking out.  Yeah.  That's Jim.  He loves experimenting a creating new things.  Especially when it comes to baking.  And I had just given him an idea.  A bacon and coffee infused dish.  Since were were lost in the middle of a corn field, I threw in the added ingredient of corn.  Poof.  Bam.  The idea was born.  A savory corn cupcake with bacon and coffee.  I didn't know whether to be intrigued or grossed out.

My first experience with a savory cupcake was in Oklahoma.  Yup.  Not some culinary capitol like Chicago or NYC.  The heartland.  Oklahoma.  So the fact that this idea was born in the middle of a farm shouldn't have surprised me at all.

The cupcake place we found in Oklahoma City was an adorable little cottage with the most perfect little cupcakes I'd ever seen.  They had red velvet, chocolate and classic vanilla.  They also had green tea cupcakes and a savory egg-y breakfast cupcake.  They were delish, so I unwrinkled my nose and accepted the bacon-coffee-corn-cupcake challenge.  It was a bake-off between me and Jim.  And I have to tell you in advance, his cupcake won!

The stars of this show ...

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Do you hear the StarWars-like music?  Duuuuuun ... Dooooooon ... Da-DOOOOOON.  Bom Bom Bom Bom Bom Bom.

Corn ... check.

Bacon ... check.

Coffee ... hmm ...

Recently Marx Foods offered to send some free salt samples to food bloggers.  I sent in my info and got a little box of all kind of chef-y sounding flavors of salt.  Things I would never in a million years find at my local grocer.  My homesick NYC neighbors squealed in delight  that they could order gourmet-to-go direct to their doorstep as flavorful reminders of home.  I was just excited and inspired to try something new.

One of those flavors happened to be ... espresso salt.

Using espresso salt in a breakfast recipe may be uncreative or cliche ... but I'm a breakfast girl so that's the first place my mind will go.  I think my neighbors used it to season their steaks.  Yum.

On with the bake-off.

First, REAL bacon bits ...

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Then, fresh white sweet corn from our local farm.  Did you know that corn has one "silk" hair per kernel?

Yup.  I learned that in the corn maze.

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Also learned that it kinda looks like blonde barbie doll hair.

Or nose hair.  See ... this is why I'm no chef-y.  I get distracted and play with my food.

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My mom says when I was a kid I used to call this "corn on the NOB" instead of "corn on the cob" because of the little corn nobs stuck into the ends.  Again ... playing with my food.

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Hmm. Perhaps I should have pulled out a bigger cutting board?  Ya think?  Naaaah ... would of spoiled the fun.

This little bow saw knife made me feel like I was playing a violin ... again ... playing with my food.

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CORN!

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Fresh.  Uncooked.  Do not try to adjust the color on your screen.  This is not yellow corn ... but sweet white corn.

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Mix together the dry ingredients (full list and recipe at the bottom of the post)

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Now... I have a question for you.

I looked it up.

My photographer friend Jim looked it up.

We Googled it.

Still ... no answer ... on the history ... of what in the heck is a "Clabber" girl ... as opposed to just the name of some baking powder.  Looks like there'd be some historical story to it, but we couldn't find it.  If you know ... PLEASE TELL US!

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Add your wet ingredients to a separate bowl ...

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Oops.  I lied.  One "dry" ingredient goes into this "wet" bowl.  Sugar.

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Some eggs.  Some Buttah'.  Some sour cream.  Jim added a lot of creamy things to this recipe.  Gives it a moist cake texture.  No classic cornbread here.

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A spoonful of bacon grease.

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A cap full of vanilla.

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Blend.

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Pour into dry ingredient bowl and "mix" ... not too much ... or they'll be tough.

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Add the corn last.

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Dollop into your cupcake/muffin pan.  This is where I went wrong.  I always use paper cups for easy servings and even easier clean up.  But these suckers stick to the paper like glue, so I would grease your cupcake/muffin tin and skip the paper.

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Sprinkle with bacon bits and espresso salt to taste.  A sort of "red eye gravy" topping.  They're both SALTY SALTY SALTY ... but it contrasts nicely with the sweet and creamy cupcake.

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Then bake!

This is also where Jim's cupcakes beat mine.  He made 6 big poofy ones.  Like a cupcake should look.  I made 12 ... so they came out kinda teeny.

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And voila.  A savory corn red eye gravy cupcake.  It was EXCELLENT hot with eggs over easy.  However, I didn't like it cold.  This is not a cupcake to keep in a pastry display for everyone to grab on the go at room temperature.  This is an eat it hot and fresh for breakfast in the morning kind of meal.  A little weird, I do admit.  But it was fun to make!

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Savory Corn Cupcakes

Ingredients

1 1/2 cup cake flour

1/4 tsp baking soda

1 tsp baking powder

pinch of salt

8 strips bacon, cooked, crisp & crumbled

1 1/2 cup corn

1 cup buttermilk

8 oz sour cream

4 oz cream cheese

1/2 cup sugar

3/4 stick of butter, melted

2 large eggs

1/4 lemon, juiced

1 tbsp bacon grease

1 capful vanilla extract

Directions

1) Preheat oven to 360 degrees.  Yes, that is 360, not 350.  Grease muffin pan.

2) Mix together flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt

3) Cream together eggs & sugar, then add bacon grease, butter, buttermilk, softened cream cheese, sour cream, vanilla and lemon juice.

4) Add to flour mixture along with corn and fold together until well blended.  Do not whisk.  Do not overmix.

5) Spoon batter into prepared muffin tins and sprinkle with espresso salt and crumbled bacon.

6) Bake for 25 to 30 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center of a muffin comes out clean.

7) Serve with eggs and enjoy!

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Posted in SavoryComments (5)

5 Great Recipes for Thanksgiving

5 Great Recipes for Thanksgiving

What are your Thanksgiving plans?  Thankfully I'm not responsible for culinary creation of the whole turkey dinner.  I'm dessert girl.  One of my favorite quotes by Jim Davis is "Vegetables are a must on a diet.  I suggest carrot cake, zucchini bread and pumpkin pie."

You can't go wrong with pumpkin on Thanksgiving ...  it's a classic.  If you're the dessert girl, appetizer boy or just need a yummy breakfast to feed a household of holiday guests, here are a few of my favorite pumpkin recipes and one heckuva Autumn Sangria to toast with.

Happy Thanksgiving!

--Rachelle

Pumpkin Muffins 29Spicy Pumpkin Cream Cheese Muffins

Here's another great pumpkin recipe for the fall coming to us from the B Street House Bed & Breakfast in Virginia City, NV.   There are two things in this recipe that make your taste buds leap off the charts ... it's spicy like gingerbread ... and it has a gooey cream cheese surprise in the middle.   There was one particular spice that I didn't have in my pantry ...  Cardamom.  There was only one brand in our local grocer that carried it and the sucker was 12 bucks.  Sheesh.  Well, if it's expensive, it must be good, right?  This inspired me to do some research. (Read More ... )

PumpkinMangoSoup53Pumpkin Mango Soup
Pumpkin and mango are two ingredients I can handle and I've never had them married together in one dish before ... so this is the dish I tried.  Call it a "brunch" recipe.  It would actually make a great Thanksgiving appetizer so it fits perfectly with the season.

This is a signature dish at the Elkhorn Inn and the ingredients are simple, fresh and it's one of my favorite regional cuisines ... Thai.  Call me a nut for peanuts, but it's pure comfort food for me.  (Read More ...)

One Bowl Pumpkin Bread

Inez with Christopher's Inn gave this recipe to me a few years back.  Her inn sort of becomes a factory for these things in October as she bakes them for her family, friends, church and anyone smart enough to take a loaf.

It has to be one of my favorite recipes because it's so easy.  Mix all the ingredients in one bowl and you've got a rich moist pumpkin bread without a whole lot of clean up.  Once you try this recipe and see how easy it is you'll add it to your seasonal holiday recipes too. (Read More ... )

Canned PumpkinPumpkin Cheesecake with Bourbon Cream

Chef Jim from the Mount Dora Historic Inn gave me a few extra little tips that gives it a little extra panache.  Follow along and I'll make you the star of your Thanksgiving dinner table.  As long as you have the right pan, every thing else is a piece of cake.  Pun intended.  If you've made cheesecake before, skip down a bit. If this is your first time, then let me introduce you to the springform pan. (Read More ...)


Fall Sangria 29Autumn Sangria

I can't think of a better way to kick off the Fall season than with a glass of spice infused Autumn Sangria.  My good friend, Maranda, gave me this recipe years ago and I always make a batch around Labor Day to celebrate the coming of Fall.

First I'm gonna show you how to make it.  Then we're gonna clink glasses and have a little toast.  Okay ... maybe just clink your glass to your computer monitor ... just be sure to not spill any on the keyboard. (Read More ... )

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Posted in Savory, Sides & Extras, SweetComments (2)

Breakfast Pizza

Breakfast Pizza

RedPeppersIf you need something to wake you out of a sugar induced coma from Halloween ... this will do just the trick.  Although, I can't say that it will help your waistline any more than Halloween candy!

It's the Hisega Lodge Breakfast Pizza.  Located in Rapid City, South Dakota, innkeepers Carol and Ken serve this to guests before they embark on outdoor adventures in the Black Hills.  But this is, not your typical pizza by any stretch.

While I must confess that ... yes ... I have ... at some point ... had cold pizza for breakfast.  In college.

And it was ... Yuk.

So the thought of having pizza for breakfast instantly brought back that memory and made my upper lip curl up like Elvis.

BUT

This is a hot and delightfully tasty good-morning version!  It's everything that is great about breakfast on a round of dough with a little added Mediterranean flavor.

And it is ... YUM!

Let's get to it, shall we?

Now, there are quite a few ingredients to this puppy ... so if you're the type of cook that usually pulls things out of the refrigerator or cabinets as you need them, I would recommend getting everything out on the counter first before beginning.  (I have the full list of ingredients and recipe at the end of the post.) You'll also want to take a quick look at how to roast red peppers.  It's really easy, but I recommend doing it the night before you make the pizza for breakfast in order to save some time.

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Pre-heat your oven to 425 degrees and place your cream cheese in a bowl next to the oven so that the heat coming from it will start to soften it up.  Ideally you want it to be around room temperature so it spreads nicely.

The Hisega Lodge makes their own dough with biscuit mix, which is another great breakfast staple to add to the mix.  But just for fun,  I chose to take the opportunity to use dough from our local pizzeria, PizzAmore.

When this clever little idea popped in my brain, I asked my boyfriend if he could pick up a "wad" of pizza dough from PizzAmora on his way home.  He stared at me blankly for a minute and then asked, "exactly what unit of measurement is a 'wad'?"  Ha!  That's where all the trouble and fun began.

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Okay, I was having a "ball" (get it? a ball!  Buwahahaha) playing with pizza dough.  This picture in particular made me giggle since it looked like I was holding it in my mouth ... though I had just tossed it in the air.

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"Look ma, no hands!"

You can see the wild gleam in my eye from the fun that Iwas having.  I did say this was the "grown up" version of pizza for breakfast, right?   Oops!

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Anyway, you want to mix a little flour and cornmeal for your surface (and your fingers) to prevent sticking.  I probably have WAY too much there.  You can use a little less.

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Pizza dough is one of those things that just doesn't want stay where you put it.  If there is one little trick I learned from watching Jessie at PizzAmore, it's that you've got to let gravity help you stretch the dough.

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Pick it up by one side ... let it start to droop .. then start moving it quickly between your hands like you are moving a wheel.

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After it is about the size you want it, place it on your pizza pan or stone.

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Even after all that stretching ... it still wants to shrink back to it's original ball like a tight pair of spandex!

Jessie has another trick for this that he calls "spanking the dough"

Eh ehm.

Well.  You could read into that if you wanted to ... but I'll tell you that I saw him try this at PizzAmore and it more like smacking it between your hands.

I'm digging myself into a hole here, aren't I?

Anyway, he then does the whole "hand tossed spin" thing with the dough above his head.  Since the dough would be mid air for a couple of seconds ... and I don't trust myself as a pizza dough spanker/smacker/twirler/etc  ... I'm going to make sure it stays on the table where I can make sure it has a good chance at becoming breakfast instead of my dog's treat.  And believe me, she's right by my feet ready and waiting ...

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On to the toppings.  Make sure your cream cheese is smooth and soft.  Almost like frosting so that it's easy to spread.

Spread it over the dough ...

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Oh, and PS ... that is a fairly new baking stone that has only had a couple of uses.  It's not "dirty" ... just needs a total bath in oil and some curing.

Okay. Now that that is clarified.  Add your hashbrowns and then sprinkle with mozzarella and Parmesan.  The recipe calls for 2 1/2 cups of hashbrowns ... but I think my pizza crust is a little smaller than what they make so I didn't need quite as much.

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Next, chop up some pre-cooked bacon and green onions and spread those on top of the cheese and hashbrowns.

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Slice up some artichoke heats ...

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Mmm ... starting to look YUM!

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Next, layer on your roasted red peppers and sprinkle on more cheese.

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Add some capers and pop it into the oven for 15 minutes while you prepare your eggs.

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Now THIS was a neat flavor that I'll have to add to other recipes.

White pepper.

It's a little more mild then regular black pepper, but then again it packs a little more heat.  Neat-o.

Add a 1/4 tsp of white pepper and 3 large eggs to a mixing bowl and whisk together.

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Take the pizza out of the oven and SLOWLY pour the scrambled eggs on top.  You want them to fill into every open nook and cranny.  If you pour fast ... they'll shimmy off the top of the other ingredients and ooze over the edge.

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Bake for another 20 minutes until the eggs are solid.  A great tip that the Hisega Lodge added was to then slice the pizza and add back to the oven for an additional 5 minutes.  It's definitely a "deep dish" style pizza,  so the extra 5 minutes helps it cook through.

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You may even need a bigger pizza cutter!  I know I did!

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I had forgotten all about the cream cheese we spread first on the crust ... until I took a bite.  Woooooow.

The cream cheese with the bacon and eggs and salty capers is mouth watering.  In fact, I'd say the white pepper and the cream cheese are the two "secret" ingredients that make this recipe pop.

Are you an Innkeeper?  Do you have a favorite breakfast recipe you'd like to share?  Email it to InnTheKitchen@gmail.com and we'll test it in our kitchen and post it here on www.InnTheKitchen.com

Hisega Lodge Breakfast Pizza

6-8 servings

Ingredients

2 cups biscuit mix

1/2 cup water

8 oz cream cheese, softened

6 green onions, finely sliced

6 canned, quartered artichokes

6 slices bacon, cooked and chopped

1/2 cup roasted red peppers, cut in strips

1 1/2 cup shredded mozzarella

2 1/2 cups frozen hashbrowns

1 1/2 tbsp capers

1/2 (additional) cup mozzarella

14 cup grated Parmesan cheese

3 eggs, whisked with 1 tbsp water and 1/2 tsp white pepper.

Directions

In a bowl, combine the biscuit mix and water and stir 20 strokes. Turn onto a floured surface
and knead 10 times. Roll into circle and put into a 12-inch pizza pan. OR roll into a rectangle
approximately 14-inch X 10-inches and place on the bottom and 1/2 inch up the sides of a
13X9 inch baking dish.

Spread the softened cream cheese evenly over the dough. Place the hashbrowns over the
cream cheese and follow with 1 1/2 cups mozzarella and the parmesan cheese. Sprinkle the
bacon, onions, and artichokes over that and arrange the red pepper strips over all. Sprinkle the
1/2 cup additional mozzarella over all and sprinkle the capers over that.

Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. Bake pizza in middle of oven for 15 minutes and then pour the
egg mixture carefully over the pizza. Bake another 20 minutes until crust is golden brown and
the eggs are just solid. I cut the pieces when the pizza is almost done and then put it back in
the oven for 5 minutes to finish baking. Let stand 5 minutes before serving. Serve pizza with
fresh tomato and spinach.

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Pumpkin Mango Soup

Pumpkin Mango Soup

PumpkinMangoSoup53Even though breakfast is my favorite food group, I do eat other foods.  For instance, I love fish.  I just don't usually cook them.  If it wiggles, has scales, gills, tales, and ESPECIALLY eyeballs ... I can't see it until it's prepared.  Call me squeamish, but I just can't look my food in the eye.  I know, some day I'll have to face my fear and chop off a fish head and roll some sushi ... but today is not that day.

So that made things real interesting when I received a couple of recipes from Elisse at the Elkhorn Inn in West Virginia.  She refers to her husband, Dan, as Hot Chef.  He's definitely a huntin-fishin-spear-em-up-cook-em-out-on-the-grill type of manly man.  Retired from the US Army and a chef, he's the type that you'd want to be-friend on the show Chef DanSurvivor.  When it comes to smokin, roastin and grillin ... guests from NYC say he can kick Bobby Flay's butt any day.

But I'm a girlie girl.  I can't look my food in the eye.  I was even considering buying a barbie pink grill yesterday ... and unless my foodie friends came over it would probably only see vegetables.  So ... I tackled the one recipe that didn't involve prepping fresh fish or smoking ribs (although I'll love eating them both!).  Pumpkin Mango Soup.

Pumpkin and mango are two ingredients I can handle and I've never had them married together in one dish before ... so this is the dish I tried.  Call it a "brunch" recipe.  It would actually make a great Thanksgiving appetizer so it fits perfectly with the season.

This is a signature dish at the Elkhorn Inn and the ingredients are simple, fresh and it's one of my favorite regional cuisines ... Thai.  Call me a nut for peanuts, but it's pure comfort food for me.

Here's what you'll need ...

PumpkinMangoSoup2

2 Cups chicken broth, 2 cups pumpkin puree, 1 1/2 cups mango nectar, 1/4 cup chunky peanut butter, 2 teaspoons rice vinegar, 1 1/2 tablespoons minced green onions, 1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger, 1 tablespoon chopped fresh cilantro, 1/4 teaspoon  crushed red pepper, 1/2 teaspoon grated orange rind, 1 garlic crushed garlic clove, and candied ginger for garnish.

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There are a lot of ingredients in here that individually are my favs ... ginger, garlic, peanut butter, pumpkin, mango ... so it's gonna be real interesting to mix them all together.  Similar to gathering all your unique friends over for a party ... will they all get along?

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Combine the chicken broth, mango nectar and pumpkin puree in a large pot.

(Make sure to get plain pumpkin, not pumpkin pie filling!)

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Mmm.  It's getting steamy.  Can you smell it?  Yum!  And we haven't even added the good stuff yet.  Cover, reduce heat and simmer for about 10 minutes.

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While it's simmering, you can prep the other ingredients.  Such as chopping your green onions ...

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And grating fresh ginger.  Jaden with www.SteamyKitchen.com actually shared this little secret trick with me last weekend when we were playing around in my kitchen.  She had an awesome recipe for wings that had a hint of ginger. And all this time I had been "chopping" my ginger.  Sheesh! What was I thinking?  This was one of those "aaaaaaah" moments where I realized I could save a ton of time AND pull out a lot more flavor.

Take off the skin/bark ..

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And then grate.  (I'm gonna try making some ginger tea now with this new little trick.)

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Then some orange ...

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Now your kitchen should smell fresh and clean ... orange and ginger zest molecules floating all around.

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Scoop out about a cup of the soup mixture into a bowl or measuring cup.

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Then add in the chunky peanut butter and stir until dissolved.  Add back into the soup pot.

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Stir in the rice vinegar ...

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green onions ...

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ginger and orange ...

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red pepper ...

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... and garlic.  Just use a garlic smasher and squeeze it right into the pot.

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Stir together an let it simmer for about 3 to 5 minutes.

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Chop up some fresh cilantro.

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Garnish and serve!

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This soup was really fabulous.  You can really taste all the flavors ... they DID get along!  First the mango, then the bite of ginger, then creamy peanut, and then a latent heat from the red pepper.  Yum.

PumpkinMangoSoup53

Elkhorn Inn's Pumpkin Mango Soup

Ingredients

2 Cups chicken broth

1 1/2 cups mango nectar

2 cups pumpkin puree

1/4 cup chunky peanut butter

2 tablespoons rice vinegar

1 1/2 tablespoons minced green onions

1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger

1 tablespoon crushed red pepper

1/2 teaspoon grated orange rind

1 garlic clove, crushed

Garnish:  fresh chopped cilantro, sugared ginger slices, mango slices

Directions

1) Combine chicken broth, pumpkin puree and mango nectar in a large pot and bring to a boil.  Cover, reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes.

2) In a large cup or bowl, combine 1 cup of the hot pumpkin soup mixture with the peanut butter and stir until well blended, then return mixture to pot.

3) Stir in vinegar and the rest of the ingredients and simmer for 3 minutes until the flavors have blended and it's heated through.  Pour into soup bowls and sprinkle with chopped cilantro.  Serve with a thin slice of mango and sugared ginger.

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New Mexico Souffle

New Mexico Souffle

NMSouffle8Want to add some color to your breakfast?  Then then read on because the blend of lavender, dry mustard, cayenne and green chilies makes this a rainbow of flavor.  But it's not sweet like Skittles. This New Mexico Souffle fills your senses with calm floral lavender and leaves you with a zippy heat from the chilies.  Get ready to have a party in your mouth, New Mexico style.

Tammy with the Mauger Estate B&B in Albuquerque submitted this recipe.    Coming from the South West, full of  bright colors and a little heat, this is a great one to bookmark and whip up in the morning when the grey winter blues stroll in.

Here's what you'll need.  Get out a pen and paper or hit your print button 'cause there's a lot of goin into this souffle casserole.  And unbelievably ... wait ... the world just stood still for a whole 1/100th of a second ... I didn't FORGET an ingredient.  WOW!

NMSouffleHmm.  Looking at the recipe again there really isn't a whole lot to it.  Didn't mean to make it sound intimidating (or LOOK) intimidating by my big menagerie of ingredients.  I think I went a little overboard with double checking and re-checking to make sure I didn't forget anything.  There are at least 4 of those in the photo that are "accoutrement" for serving.  Including:  the tortillas, sour cream, salsa, and jalapeno that I'm too wimpy for.  Anything that sets my mouth on fire and requires a fire hydrant to put out is a bit too much spice for my tongue.  But, for those that like nuclear heat, chop it up and serve it on the side.

Here's the "list" in order of appearance ...

Whisk together:

8 eggs, 1/2 cup of flour, 1 tsp baking powder, 3 tsp dry mustard, 1 tsp salt, 1tsp cayenne pepper.

Then add:

2 cups cottage cheese, 2 cups shredded jack cheese, 2 cups shredded cheddar cheese, 2 cups corn, 16 oz. green chilies, and my favorite ... 2 tablespoons of lavender.

Let's take a look, shall we?

All the color spread across my counter has got me thinking of this a a painter's pallet.  Fortunately, it doesn't require anything too artsy.   The lavender smells AMAZING.

NMSouffle Lavender

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The green chilies took me a little while to find at my local grocer.  Mostly because they have "two" Latin food areas.  After I went up and down a few aisles I ended up finding them in the most obvious location ... next to taco mix and shells.  These came in small little cans, so I had to use 4 cans to get 16 oz.  Make a note of that when you go shopping.

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And it's as easy as it sounds.  Get one great big ole bowl, whisk together your eggs, and then add the first list of ingredients.  Starting with flour ...

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Then your spices and baking powder.

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Blend.  Mmm.

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Next add your cheeses.  Starting with cottage cheese.  Can't you just hear it plop?

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Now.  The recipe called for "Jack Cheese."  I found Monterey Jack.  And Colby Jack.  But not just plain old Jack.  Then it got me thinking, who is Monterey or Colby anyway?  Where did these names come from?  Inquiring minds want to know!  Mixed cheese going into the bowl ...

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Then the corn.  You can use fresh, frozen or canned.  I opted for canned.  Just make sure you drain and rinse.

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Add in the chilies and stir.

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Wow.  Lavender. I love this little flower, but I've never cooked with it.  I've eaten it once, in a cheese that I can't remember the name of, and  it was fabulous.

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Rub it together between your fingers to release the aroma and flavor.

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Now your souffle is about ready!

Add the shredded potatoes to a 9 x 13 greased pan.

You can just spray it with Pam.

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This is my "oh my God, is it all gonna fit?" face ...

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I don't know.  I'm beginning to wonder if I should bring out a second pan.

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Well, whatdya know.  It all did fit into one pan!  Forgot about that nifty thing called gravity.

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Sprinkle on some paprika and bake at 350 degrees for an hour.

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When it's done, let it cool for a bit (maybe about 5 minutes) and then slice and serve.

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New Mexico Souffle

color vertical ii

Ingredients & Directions

Whisk together the following:

8 eggs

1/2 cup flour

1 tsp baking powder

3 tsp dry mustard

1 tsp salt

1 tsp cayenne pepper

Then add:

2 cups cottage cheese

2 cups shredded jack cheese

2 cups shredded cheddar cheese

2 cups corn (frozen or drained canned)

16 oz. green chile

2 tbsp lavender (rub between fingers/palms to release aroma and flavor)

Additional Ingredients:

2-3 cups shredded potatoes (hash browns)

tortillas

salsa

sour cream

In a 9 x 13 pan, spray with Pam and layer the bottom of the pan with shredded potatoes (frozen hash browns).

Next, pour the cheese/egg mixture over the potatoes.  Dust with paprika and bake at 350 degrees for an hour.  Serve with tortillas, salsa, sour cream and raspberry chipotle sauce.

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