Blue cheese, walnuts & bresaola roll-ups

By French Cooking for Dummies Posted in Appetizers, Finger-food / 4 Comments »

Blue cheese, walnuts & bresaola roll-ups recipe

You might have noticed I haven’t been posting for a while. My followers knew I had a business project, it’s actually going pretty well. And hardly leaves me much time to do anything else…

I’ll keep posting in the near future but maybe not as regularly as I would like to. But don’t worry, I keep cooking and shooting to share new recipes with you when I get a little more free time ;)

So here come my Blue cheese, walnuts & bresaola roll-ups! You know I have a thing for cheese… I’ts a perfect ingredient for tasty finger food. You can use any type of blue cheese for these ones. If you go for a creamy one, like a good Gorgonzola, you won’t even need to mix it with cream cheese. I made mine with roquefort, it definitely needed it to be easily spreadable on the crepe.

I’m not sure if you can find Bresaola easily wherever you live. Here is a list of equivalent products you could substitute breasaola with.

Preparation time: 15 minutes – Refrigeration time : at least 4 hours

Ingredients (for 16 to 20 rolls)

5.3 oz (150 g) of blue cheese
3.5 oz (100 g) of cream cheese
2.1 oz (60 g) of walnut halves
8 Bresaola slices
2 buckwheat galettes (recipe here)

Instructions


1/ Pour walnut halves into a mortar (or food processor) and grind with a pesel for a few minutes until you get a mix of a fine consistency and small pieces that will add crunchiness to your rolls.

2/ In a bowl, mash blue cheese, cheese spread and ground walnuts.

3/ Line a plastic wrap on your work surface and place a galette on top of it. Spread a thick layer of your cheese mixture on the galette. Be careful no to break it! Top with breasaola slices like you would do on a pizza.

4/ Wrap into a firm roll. To do so, you need to tuck the end of your galette to start the roll. Then carefully bring the bottom part of your plastic wrap up and over the ingredients and roll tightly pulling back the plastic wrap as necessary so it doesn’t get rolled into your roll-ups. Wrap the plastic wrap around your roll and roll a few times on your work surface so it gets perfectly circular.

5/ Repeat operation with the second buckwheat galette.

6/ Refrigerate your rolls for at least 4 hours. If you don’t have enough time left, you can also place them in the freezer for an hour.

7/ Cut both extremities so you only get nice little rolls and cut your rolls into 8 to 10 pieces each.

Serve as an appetizer.

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Lamb and pistachio kebabs

By French Cooking for Dummies Posted in Appetizers, Easy, Finger-food, Main dishes, Starters / 9 Comments »

Lamb and pistachio skewers recipe

My life is pretty crazy right now, I’m having a hard time finding moments to post :(
But don’t worry, I keep cooking and shooting so I’ll have a lot of dishes to share with you once I can escape more often from by business!

This lamb and pistachio skewers recipe was inspired by the French « Saveurs » magazine although it ended up a lot different from the original. These kebabs are a variation of the Mediterranean kofta. Like the original, they’re served with a mint and yogurt sauce and can be eaten with some salad in a flatbread.

Preparation time: 30 minutes – Cooking time: 10 minutes

Ingredients (for 4 servings)

Lamb and pistachio skewers

1.3 lbs (600 g) of  ground lamb meat
1 oz (30 g) of shelled pistachio nuts
6 sprigs of fresh parsley
1 egg
1 onion
2 tablespoons breadcrumbs
1 tablespoon of olive oil
1 teaspoon of ground cumin
1 teaspoon of ground cilantro
1 squeeze of lemon juice
Salt & pepper

Yogurt sauce

2 Greek yogurts
30 mint leaves
1 garlic clove
1 tablespoon of olive oil
Salt & pepper

Instructions

1/ Prepare mint yogurt sauce: Peel and chop garlic finely. Rinse, dry and chop mint leaves. Combine yogurt, garlic, mint, olive oil, salt and pepper. Keep in the fridge.

2/ Prepare skewers: Rinse, dry and chop parsley. Peel and chop onion. Chop pistachio nuts.

3/ Break egg in a small bowl and whisk it with a fork.

4/ Keep some chopped pistachios aside for sprinkling. In a large salad bowl, combine lamb meat, onion, pistachios, parsley, olive oil, breadcrumbs and whisked eggs.

5/ Add one squeeze of lemon juice. Season with salt and pepper and scrunch all together with your hands.

6/ Preheat oven over grill position. Line a baking sheet on a baking tray. Wash your hands with cold water. Don’t get them totally dry, meat will stick less on your hands.

7/ Mold lamb mixture around each skewer into a kind of flat sausage. Place kebabs on the baking tray as they’re made.

8/ Bake in oven for 10 minutes, turning them after 5 minutes.

9/ Sprinkle with chopped pistachios and serve with mint yogurt sauce.

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Baked scallops with Parma ham

By French Cooking for Dummies Posted in Appetizers, Basics, Easy, Starters / 13 Comments »

Seafood and fish have always been of my favorite dishes. I’ve grown up close to the sea and, as a result, my mom did cook it pretty often. It never came to my mind the whole eating fish habit could come to an end. Then widely consumed fishes species started collapsing like Canadian cod back in the 90s.

A very frightening documentary called « Global sushi : demain nos enfants mangeront des méduses »  (Global sushi: tomorrow our kids will be eating jellyfishes) was aired the other day on TV here. I can’t stop thinking about it since I saw it. Some scientists were explaining that we now know it’s impossible to reverse the effects of overfishing;  fishing prohibition usually comes when a species has reached a very critic level and these fishes populations never get to grow again, even after decades.

Fish farming doesn’t seem to be a solution either given that we still need to feed these fishes with smaller ones. Count something like 10 lbs of small wild fish to get 1 lb of salmon…

It got back to being a hot topic because of the actual concern for tuna, especially bigeye and yellowfin  which should be extincted over the next 3 to 5 years if we don’t do anything about it being overfished.

Think about it. We, occidental consumers, have been eating it all our lives. And, let’s face it, we’ve been eating most of the fish predators like swordfish, cod, skate and tuna. Now that huge populations in the world are in the process of accessing the western way of consumption, this will not get any better… Less and less predators in the sea, more and more smaller plankton-feeding fishes. If nothing changes, jellyfishes could replace the ones we eat in our seas during this century, Greenpeace says.

I had already stopped eating tuna sushis but I’m definitely going to cut down my fish consumption and get more information on the one I actually buy. As for scallops, you shouldn’t buy any from New Zealand as they’re endangered in that region. They’re now being farmed in most places and, as they eat plankton, it seems sustainable.

Here is a recipe I adapted from French magazine « Elle à Table » (last December issue). I used fresh scallops already opened and cleaned but if you buy them with shell, click here for explanation on how to clean them.

Preparation time: 5 minutes – Baking time: 8 minutes

Ingredients (for 6 servings)

12 big fresh scallops (18 if they’re small)
4 thin slices of Parma ham
1 garlic clove
3 tablespoons of dried breadcrumbs
2 tablespoons of parsley
2 tablespoons of olive oil
Pepper

Instructions

1/ Preheat oven to 410° F (210° C / T 7).

2/ Mix breadcrumbs, Parma ham, garlic, parsley and 1 teaspoon of olive oil in a food processor.

3/ Fold a piece of kitchen paper, pour 1 teaspoon of olive oil on it and use it to grease an oven rack.

4/ Place scallops on the greased rack and top them with Parma ham mix.

5/ Pour a dash of olive oil on top and bake in oven for 8 minutes.

Serve as a starter with a few leaves of lamb’s lettuce or rocket if you like.

Baked Scallops With Parma Ham on Foodista

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Grapefruit, avocado and crab appetizer spoons

By French Cooking for Dummies Posted in Appetizer spoons, Appetizers, Easy / 26 Comments »

Can’t get enough appetizer spoons recipes, I just can’t get enough ;-)
Their secret resides in mixing textures and getting the flavors not to override one another. In general, 2 to 3  different main ingredients are enough.

In this amuse-bouche recipe, we have a creamy texture thanks to the avocado and mascarpone cheese contrasting with the grapefruit pulp’s distinctive texture. My advice so the flavors are well balanced is to be very generous when topping with the crab flesh. Grapefruit’s bitterness tends to be too prominent otherwise. And don’t forget avocado oxidates pretty quick, so don’t prepare your appetizer spoons too much in advance.

Preparation time: 15 minutes

Ingredients (for 15 to 20 spoons)

2 crab claws
1 ripe avocado
1 grapefruit
2 tablespoons of mascarpone cheese
1/2 teaspoon of pimentón (smoked paprika)
Tabasco drops (optional – quantity according to your taste)
Salt & pepper

Instructions

1/ Cut avocado in half and remove pit. Scoop the flesh out with a spoon and leave in a food processor bowl.

2/ Open grapefruit and remove pulp carefully with a teaspoon. Keep juice in a small cup and pulp in a bowl.

3/ In the food processor bowl, add mascarpone cheese, grapefruit juice, pimentón and tabasco (optional). Mix until you get a smooth texture. Add salt and pepper. Mix again. Taste and adjust seasoning.

4/ Crack crab claw and carefully remove flesh. Set aside.

5/ Prepare the Chinese soup spoons by adding to each one a tablespoon of the avocado mixture, followed by a piece of grapefruit pulp. Top generously with crab flesh.

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Ginger and lime salmon tartare

By French Cooking for Dummies Posted in Appetizer spoons, Appetizers, Easy, Starters / 20 Comments »

Happy New Year fellow foodies :-D . May 2010 bring you and your loved ones everything you’ve been hoping for!

I’m usually not really good at realizing new year’s resolutions, that’s why I stopped making them a few years ago. This time is different, I do need to be more organized in 2010 in order to be able to keep posting at a regular pace. A whole load of work is ahead in a business project I’m part of, it should take most of my time this year. I’ll try to stick to more organization and see how it goes ;-)

Let’s get back to this salmon now. It’s been part of the appetizers I made  for New Year’s eve dinner and I must say we all enjoyed it. At first, I was planning on using salted soy sauce and pretty disappointed when I found out I didn’t have any. Well, now I can say I’ll do it again with sweet one. It tastes amazing with ginger!  I kept lime as a last ingredient to give this tartare a fresh taste. If you want to experiment you can also add the grated zest before marinating but don’t forget lime juice has to be added last if you don’t want your tartare to turn out being a ceviche!

This ginger and lime salmon tartare recipe is meant to be served in appetizer spoons or small verrines (glass cups) but if you wish to have it as a unique starter, count about 4.5 oz per serving and adapt the ingredients’ quantity accordingly.

Preparation time: 10 minutes – Marinating time: at least 30 minutes

Ingredients (for 6 servings as an appetizer)


15 oz (425 g) of salmon fillets (skinless, boneless)
2 spring onions
1-inch square of fresh ginger root (= 1 tablespoon grated)
1 non-treated lime
6 tablespoons of sweet soy sauce

Instructions

1/ Clean and chop spring onions.

2/ Peel and grate ginger.

3/ Rinse and dry salmon fillets. Cut them into small dices (around 1/2-inch square).

4/ Combine salmon, spring onions, ginger and sweet soy sauce. Cover and leave in the fridge for at least 30 minutes.

5/ Serve in Chinese soup spoons, small individual ramekins or glass cups leaving marinade in the plate.

6/ Rinse lime and grate zest over individual portions.

7/ Squeeze lime, add on top and serve tartare right away.

Ginger and Lime Salmon Tartare on Foodista

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