Showing posts with label Sandwiches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sandwiches. Show all posts

Monday, May 30, 2011

Greek Salad Sandwich

Saw this sandwich over at Debbie's blog, Mountain Breaths, and I knew this was for me. I used store bought hummus, but would love to try it next time with the homemade. I was making some variation of this sandwich no matter because it just sounded so good to me. So I used fresh zucchini instead of cucumbers, It was really good. Too bad the picky people I live with would never try feta. Their loss. They do eat hummus though, so maybe I will be nice and make one of these for them, minus the feta. If I decide to be nice :)




Greek Salad Sandwich
Martha Stewart Everyday Food, March 2011
Source: Debbie @ Mountain Breaths
Adapted by There's Always Thyme to Cook

hummus:
1 cup canned chickpeas, rinsed and drained
extra-virgin olive oil
small clove garlic, minced
1 tablespoon lemon juice
or you can use store bought hummus

1/2 of a small red onion
Greek salad dressing, or use red wine vinegar, oil, and any herbs you like
coarse salt
ground pepper
3 oz. crumbled feta
8 slices rustic bread or pita's
1/2 medium cucumber, thinly sliced
1 tomato, thinly sliced
chopped kalamata olives

In a food processor pulse the chickpeas, garlic, lemon juice and 1 tablespoon olive oil until finely chopped.  Season with salt and pepper. Or cheat and use store bought hummus!

In a small bowl, toss the red onion with enough dressing until it's all coated. Set aside.

In another small bowl, mash the feta with 1 tablespoon olive oil.

Brush all slices of bread with the dressing. On 4 of the slices, spread chickpea mixture. Top with the cucumber, tomato and onion.  Season with salt and pepper. Spread the feta mixture on the remaining 4 slices of bread and place on top of the sandwiches.

Be sure to check out Gnoe at Graasland  for the June edition of "Whip Up Something New!"




Sunday, April 24, 2011

An Arby's clone?

You always want what you can't have and when the last Arby's closed here years ago, I really missed  those beefy cheddar sandwiches on the squishy onion rolls. Never mind that it's the usual fast food and that I really love junk food on occasion. Whenever we went out of state and saw an Arby's we stopped for me to get just one Beef n Cheddar, just one. One stop can fill a two year craving. A friend was once so nice to schlep them all the way from Arizona, except she forgot to put the ice packs in the bag, needless to say, I never did eat those. Then my friend Cindy mentioned she found an Arby's clone sauce. So I had to try. I even had the cheese that would liquefy in the micro from the last attempt at mac n cheese. And it was good. A nice, gooey, squishy sandwich. Very close. Good bye craving! Now I'm good for another few years :)






Beef n Cheddar Arby's Clone
Source: from Cindy5_NY and the Internet under Arby Clones
adapted by There's Always Thyme to Cook
Printable Recipe

Arby's Horsey Sauce
1 cup mayonnaise
3 tablespoons bottled horseradish cream sauce
1 tablespoon granulated sugar

Mix all well. Keep refrigerated, tightly covered. Will keep up to 2 weeks.

Arby's BBQ Sauce
1 cup ketchup
2 teaspoons water
1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
1/4 teaspoon onion powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1/2 teaspoon Tabasco (or other hot sauce)

Combine all the ingredients in a small saucepan and cook over medium heat,
stirring constantly, until the sauce begins to boil. About 5-8 minutes.

Remove the sauce from the heat. Cover and allow to cool.

Pour into a covered container for refrigerator storage (keeps 4-6 weeks).

To make the sandwich you need:
soft onion rolls
roast beef, sliced thin
Velveeta cheese product
Arby's sauces

Spread whichever sauces you like on the onion roll, top with some roast beef slice, add the cheese, I like mine with just BBQ sauce and a lot of cheese. Put some BBQ sauce on the other slice of the roll and nuke in the microwave for about a minute, until the cheese is all melted.


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Joining Mary at the Little Red House for Mosaic Monday. Stop by the Little Red House to see more mosaics!




Saturday, March 5, 2011

Pulled Pork Sandwiches

Sometimes even the most predictable people can fool you big time. You could have picked me up off the floor the day Miss Picky came home from a friend's house, and wanted pulled pork. They were having pulled pork for dinner and she insisted that I make pulled pork for her. WHAT? Did I hear right? Pulled pork? I love that stuff. But I've only had it at BBQ joints. Never homemade. I thought it might be difficult, but for my Miss Picky, I'd find a good recipe. I knew everyone else would like it, but Miss Picky is a definite challenge when it comes to food.

I looked through tons and tons of recipes. Some had too many steps, some involved smoking. I wanted easy. I needed easy, really easy! Martha Stewart had just what I wanted. I could do this. And so can anyone. Miss Picky loved it. We all did. Except for one little thing, next time she wants the all the sauce mixed in with the pork, not poured over it! Still, we're making progress!  If only she'll come home one day and insist on a piece of grilled salmon or something!




Pulled Pork with a side of Chipotle Sweet Potato Fries and Cole Slaw.
Someone couldn't wait to eat before the picture was taken. Snuck a bite! It was that good!

I used Head Country BBQ Sauce. Best sauce in the whole wide world. No kidding.



Pulled Pork
Source: Martha Stewart Living, January 2007
adapted by There's Always Thyme to Cook
Printable Recipe

3 tablespoons sweet paprika
2 tablespoons minced garlic
1 tablespoon packed dark-brown sugar
1 tablespoon ground mustard
salt and pepper, to taste
1 pork roast (shoulder or rump; about 5 pounds)
Barbecue sauce, any kind you like
6 brioche, challah, egg rolls or hamburger buns, split
   
Stir together paprika, garlic, sugar, ground mustard, salt and pepper in a small bowl. Rub spice mixture all over pork. You can refrigerate and marinate at least 3 hours (up to overnight). Or not, I put the rub on, but didn't have time to marinate, it still tasted fine!

Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Transfer pork to a roasting pan. Roast until an instant-read thermometer inserted into thickest part of the meat registers 170 degrees and pork pulls away easily with a fork, about 6 hours, or less for smaller roasts. Transfer pork to a cutting board; let rest 10 minutes.

Using two forks, shred warm pork into a large bowl. Add some of the barbecue sauce, and stir to coat. Spoon pork onto bottom halves of rolls; top with more sauce, and top with the roll. Serve.



Join Beth at Beth Fish Reads for her fun Weekend Cooking Party. Every weekend. So stop by Beth Fish Reads and join in on the fun! On weekend's she's reading about food and cooking, and so can you!

Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book (novel, nonfiction) reviews, cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, fabulous quotations, photographs. 

Monday, September 13, 2010

Beet it!

We had leftover brisket from the holiday, and couldn't think of what to make for dinner! It was one of those gray, rainy days. All day. So I got out my cookbooks, my magazines, some web sites and was looking for ideas for what to have with leftover brisket! I had raw beets in the frig that needed to be used, too. and used quickly!  Yellow and pink beets, very pretty!



BEET CHIPS!

Now don't say YUCK, Beets! Well, you can, but you just might end up liking these. They came out really good. Nice and crispy. The first batch came out really crispy. Really, really crispy. Beyond crispy! Twenty minutes in my oven is way too long.  I didn't stack the baking sheets, I will next time. Have to work on actually READING through a whole recipe and following directions, but even so I would definitely make these again! They go really nice with sandwiches!


So I left them in for a little less time and the second batch came out much better. I'll need some practice, but these are delicious. And they go nice with panini's. The brisket became a cheddar chipotle brisket panini.




and if you don't want your hands stained yellow or pink, wear surgical gloves. They come in cool colors!





2 medium beets
1 teaspoon extra-virgin olive oil

Preheat oven to 350 degrees, with racks in upper and lower thirds. Peel beets and slice 1/16 inch thick with a mandoline. In a large bowl, toss beets with extra-virgin olive oil.

On two rimmed baking sheets (or use one sheet and bake in two batches), arrange beets in a single layer. Stack another rimmed baking sheet on top of each. Bake until edges of beets begin to dry out, about 20 minutes. Uncover and rotate sheets. Bake 10 to 20 minutes, removing chips as they become lightened in color. Transfer to a wire rack; chips will crisp up as they cool.

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Joining Mary's Mosaic Monday. For more mosaic's stop by the Little Red House!

Monday, August 30, 2010

Grandma's Liquid Gold... Soup's on!

I cook a lot for the freezer. This way if I'm busy or don't feel like cooking, more often than not, I can just grab something and heat it up! So today I set out to make a huge pot of chicken soup just like my grandma used to make! It's easy to make and I always keep some in the freezer. I started cooking because my grandma had passed away and she never wrote down the recipes that were in her head. Not for the good stuff anyway. Except for two recipes. One for Mandel bread and one for Challah. An artist friend of mine helped me frame them in frosted and black stained glass. Took a few weeks, and when we finished I put it on display in my kitchen. I can just hear her telling my grandpa what to write down, they're written in his hand, on the worn, yellowed pages of an old notebook.




My mother never liked to cook and neither did I, but I loved to hang out in the kitchen watching my grandmother grab a pinch of this and a dash of that, although usually when it came to garlic and bay leaves, it was way more than a pinch! You could smell her cooking all the way up the elevator to the apartment. When she died, we would never have the ethnic foods I had grown up with and loved. Stuffed cabbages, chicken fricassee with those teeny, tiny meatballs, chicken soup, golden and glistening. Nope, all gone. My mother couldn't cook to save herself from starvation. But she did dial up a great meal from the takeout places! And that seemed to be the direction I was headed in when I got married. Any home cooked meal we had back then was hand delivered by Grandma and put in the freezer for when we needed it. Between that and dialing for takeout, I never had the need to make anything myself.

If it hadn't been for the internet, I never have found out how much I love to cook. I had wanted my children to know the foods I had growing up. When I called the local deli here, they had stuffed cabbages, they cost a fortune and were just ok. So I set out to figure out how my grandma did that! and I did. and along the way I figured out how to cook a lot of things. and met a lot of nice, imaginary people along the way! Not really imaginary, they are only an email away!

and through all the cooking forums and cooking email chit chats, and now blogging, I became a decent cook. My kids even request things, I still set off smoke alarms and still forget things and make a huge mess, some stuff even the puppies won't try, but we now eat home cooked more than ordering in sometimes.  This chicken soup was one of my first tries, and now I think I have it pretty close to Grandma's.

When I make wings, I always save the tips in the freezer for when I make soup. All those extra little bones and skin make a nice, thick, gelatinous broth. The kind that looks like jello when it's cold from the refrigerator. That's perfect. My friend, Renee, would say it's "liquid gold" and she's right!




Fresh dill, parsley, leeks, carrots, turnips, parsnips, celery, onions and peppercorns! There's a lot of flavor going on in this pot...



My liquid gold...



Chicken Soup
from the Grandma of There's Always Thyme to Cook
Printable Recipe

2 kosher chicken pullets (or whatever type chicken you use for soup! Also great if you can get some chicken necks from the butcher, and some wings to throw in as well)
8-10 carrots -- sliced thin, lengthwise or in rounds
2 leeks -- white part only
1 large onion, cut in quarters
2 turnips
2 parsnips
kosher salt and pepper -- to taste (I use peppercorns, about 10 or so)
3 celery ribs
2 shallots
bunch of fresh Italian parsley
bunch of fresh dill
water to cover

Peel and wash the vegetables. Rinse and clean the chickens. Put the chickens in a stock pot with the vegetables, and add enough cold water to cover it all. Bring to a boil. Skim the foam off the top.  Lower the heat to medium. Keep it on medium for about 30 - 40 minutes. Add salt and pepper. Not too much salt, you can always add more later. Simmer soup for three hours or more on low heat. Check the seasoning. The longer it simmers, the better the flavor.

Remove the chicken and vegetables from the soup. Keep the carrots and chicken meat. Discard the other vegetables. Pour the soup through a fine mesh strainer.  Put the carrots and chicken in a separate container. Skim the fat when it cools. To serve, heat the soup with the carrots and chicken and add egg noodles or matzo balls.

This makes a very big pot of soup,  and it freezes well.

and what do you do with the mushy boiled chicken left over from the soup? At our house, a little always went into the soup along with some very thin egg noodles, and some of the carrots, the rest we'd have on a Kaiser roll with grilled onions and ketchup. But now with that panini grill, we can get ambitious. This time we had Chicken, Onion and Cheddar with Spicy Tomato Aioli on brick oven bread from the bakery, grilled on that panini grill. Leftover mushy boiled chicken never tasted so good!


Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Lunch



We're officially addicted to panini's. Here's one we had for lunch the other day! Roast beef and smoked turkey with pepper jack cheese, fried onions and chipotle mayonnaise!  If you give the sandwich a half turn in the middle of grilling, after about 2-3 minutes, you get a cool grill pattern on the bread!  Still haven't figured out how to keep the cheese from oozing out but we're enjoying the experimenting! Served with potato chips and pickles. My mother always served us sandwiches with chips and pickles.


Sunday, May 2, 2010

Mosaic Monday: Not always pretty...

It was our anniversary this past weekend, and the Griller got me something he knew I wanted. Not pretty. Not romantic, but exactly what I wanted! Of course he knew I wanted it, nothing is a secret here any more, he got tired of the returns when he surprised me! Still remembers that one wool sweater from 20 years ago. You don't love the sweater I got you? Too itchy, I love it, honey, but we have to return it! So ever since then he gets a "wish list" and we're all happy! This time I went along for the ride, might as well see what else is on sale and there is a never ending supply of those Bed, Bath and Beyond Coupons! Expired or not. Love that place!




So now the possibilities are endless.  The Griddler from Cuisinart!  and we had a test run when we got home. Even using lite whole wheat bread, low fat American and a few slices of tomato, we have a winner! One little thing, when I got distracted slicing some fruit while it cooked, the cheese oozed out, all out. but that burnt cheese was the best part!


 GRILLED CHEESE PANINI WITH TOMATO


 AN OOZY GOOEY CHEESY PANINI. PERFECTION!
so it aint pretty, but it sure did taste really good!

Here's the pretty...

TULIPS! I love tulips!


Joining Mary from The Little Red House for another Mosaic Monday! Stop by the Little Red House to see lots of fantastic Mosaics every week!

Saturday, January 16, 2010

A little different kind of grilled cheese sandwich again!

The last time I had grilled cheese was way back in April. I'm just not a huge fan, but every once in a while I like it. The family likes your basic grilled cheese with gooey, melted American cheese. Sometimes with bacon, sometimes with tomato, sometimes both. Not one of them will even try my favorite grilled cheese, so today I was on my own for lunch!  And not like last time when I couldn't find a good pumpernickel, this time I lucked out. A fresh, pumpernickel, chewy inside, crunchy crusty outside!





Take the two slices of pumpernickel and add a slice or two of Jarlsberg on each side. Put it on the top rack of the oven, and put some foil on the bottom rack in case it melts off the bread. Bake it for a few minutes at 350º F until the cheese is melted and the bread is toasted. Take it out of the oven carefully, and then top it with alfalfa sprouts and slices of fresh white button mushrooms, close the sandwich, squish it together and there you have it! Makes one sandwich.

Printable recipe is here.

Monday, October 12, 2009

What a crock...

A crockpot, that is! French Dip Sandwiches in the crockpot.

This sandwich is a favorite with my family. Really hearty and really easy. If you don't have a crockpot, just use a heavy dutch oven and braise it in the oven at about 300 degrees F for more than a few hours! I still can't bring myself to trust the crockpot when I'm not home, so I usually make this on a really lazy Sunday when we'll be home. Yesterday was one of those days. The weather is finally cooling off. It's been Autumn on the calendar but the temps have been slow to catch up here on Long Island. This is a perfect recipe for a cool, lazy afternoon. Your house will smell so good! I served it with a salad and a side of braised Baby Yukon potatoes and there you have a great dinner that takes no time at all. Well actually it was 6 hours in the crockpot, but almost no effort.  No effort, my favorite kind of recipe.




Crockpot French Dip Sandwiches
Source: Ginger St. Thomas (Gardenweb Recipe Exchange)
Printable Recipe

2 cups water
1/2 cup soy sauce
4 whole peppercorns
1 teaspoon dried rosemary
1 teaspoons dried thyme
1 bay leaf
1 teaspoon garlic powder
3 lb boneless beef chuck roast, trimmed
8 French or sourdough rolls, split

Combine water, soy sauce, peppercorns, rosemary, thyme and garlic in a slow cooker, stirring until well blended. Place roast in the crock pot and cover.

Cook on high for 5-6 hours or until beef is tender. Remove meat from broth and shred with a fork. Serve beef on rolls. Pour broth in small bowls for dipping.

It's really good topped with cheese, sautéed onions, mushrooms, peppers or whatever you like. My new favorite is roasted red onions and Jarlsberg!

The potatoes...
I didn't have any fingerlings so I subbed a pound and a half of Baby Yukon Golds.  Used a little less water. These were great. and if you happen to leave them on the stove a little too long, you get a nice caramelized bottom layer that was really good. I also used a little less butter.




Braised Fingerling Potato Coins

Source: Gourmet, October 2008
recipe by Melissa Roberts
Printable Recipe

2 pounds fingerling potatoes, peeled if desired
2 cups water
3/4 stick unsalted butter, cut into bits
3 tablespoons finely chopped flat-leaf parsley

Equipment:
an adjustable-blade slicer

Cut a round of parchment paper to fit just inside a 12-inch heavy skillet and butter one side.

Slice potatoes 1/8 inch thick with slicer. Arrange in skillet. Add water, 3/4 teaspoon salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Dot top with butter. Cover potatoes with parchment, buttered side down, and briskly simmer until tender and most of liquid has evaporated, 30 to 35 minutes. Serve sprinkled with parsley.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Not your average Grilled Cheese Sandwich...

Another gorgeous day, so I went out this morning to run some errands, then come home, sit back and have my all time favorite grilled cheese sandwich! The kids were not interested one bit, they left with their friends. They saw the alfalfa and headed out the door.

There was a coffee house I used to go to with my friends, way back when. They had all kinds of board games, books, and really mellow music. Tchotchkes all over the place, corny signs. Best Mochachino's I ever had, but thinking back I'm sure it was really General Foods International Suisse Mocha coffee with a little Reddi Whip on top. Remember those powdered hot coffee drinks, in the small red tins? Same. A little whipped cream swirled on top. Same. Their best sandwich, at least the one that had the most recognizable ingredients for me at the time was their grilled Jarlsberg on pumpernickel with fresh sliced white mushrooms and alfalfa sprouts.



The place no longer exists except in my memories, but every once in a while I'll see the alfalfa sprouts at the grocery and just have to have one of these sandwiches. That would be today! I couldn't find the pumpernickel but it was just as good with a nice french bread. I should have bought the Suisse Mocha!



Grilled Jarlsberg on Pumpernickel with White Mushrooms and Alfalfa Sprouts
adapted from a sandwich from an old coffeehouse menu!
Printable Recipe

makes one sandwich.

2 slices pumpernickel or Rye or any kind of hearty, crusty bread you like
4 slices of thin-sliced Jarlsberg cheese
alfalfa sprouts
2-3 large white mushrooms, sliced thin

Take two slices of pumpernickel and add a slice or two of Jarlsberg on each side. Put it on the top rack of the oven, and put some foil on the bottom rack in case it melts off the bread. Bake it for a few minutes at 350º F until the cheese is melted. Then top it with alfalfa sprouts and slices of fresh white button mushrooms, close the sandwich, squish it together and there you have it!
Sometimes simple is the best!
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