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Showing posts with label ingredient - lettuce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ingredient - lettuce. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Macaroni Dinner Salad



Light enough for a hot summer night, but more filling than plain salad. This is a cross between a garden salad and macaroni salad, pretty much the best of both worlds. If you're the kind of person who could make a meal of just macaroni salad -- and I know I can't be the only one -- this will make it more acceptable to your spouse.




Ingredients



1 pound macaroni
1/2 head iceberg lettuce
-- or --
1-2 bunches Romaine lettuce
1 pound bacon
2 hard boiled eggs
1/2 large onion
1 green bell pepper
tomatoes (number depends on size)
chick peas / garbanzo beans (optional)
2 cups mayonnaise

Mayo

1-1/2 cups olive pomace oil
3 egg yolks
2 tablespoons white vinegar
2 teaspoons mustard powder


Directions

All the cooking here can be done in advance, and one thing at a time, so you don't get the kitchen all heated up in the late afternoon. Or you can do like me and have two or three pans going on the stove at the same time. I haven't decided if that represents good organizational skills or bad.

Start by cooking the macaroni. No, I didn't take pictures of that, they've got directions printed right on the box. Follow them. And don't try this with fresh pasta. You want something kind of sturdy, and fresh pasta is usually much more tender. When it's al dente, drain and rinse it in cold water. Toss with a couple of tablespoons of olive oil to keep it from sticking. (See note below after the bacon.)

While the macaroni is going, dice up all the bacon into bite-sized pieces before cooking. This is easier to do if the bacon is frozen, or nearly frozen. And it's a lot easier and cleaner than crumbling it up after it's cooked. Best of all, it's way easier to cook everything to the same level of done-ness.

Frugal tip: Buy the bacon ends whenever you see them at the butcher. They'll usually be more than a dollar a pound cheaper, and they typically have more meat and less fat than the rest anyway.
Go with non-stick or cast iron when you dice the bacon like this, or you'll break everything up into tiny little crumbs trying to turn it over. And use a splatter guard. If you like to brag, you can spend $50 on one. Wow. I think mine was four or five bucks at the Drug Mart.



Remove the finished bacon to a plate covered with a couple of paper towels, then filter and store the rendered fat. You'll want it next week when you do the green beans.



If your bacon and macaroni are done at about the same time, add a couple of tablespoons of the bacon fat to the macaroni and stir it in. This will keep the noodles from sticking to each other.

Now dice the green pepper and ... hold on.



I said up above that this called for a whole green pepper, why am I only using a half? Because using up leftovers is more important than following a recipe exactly. Unless you're baking, that is. With baking you follow recipes exactly.

So anyway ... dice the pepper and onion.



And chop the lettuce.



If you've got a really sharp eye, you'll see a head of iceberg with the ingredients, but that's Romaine in that picture. I was in the middle of making this when I realized I still had some Romaine left from the night before. Anyone who has ever worked at a restaurant will tell you that you always use the oldest food first.

Add the macaroni and mayonnaise to the lettuce and toss it together.



Then add the bacon, onion and green pepper and toss.



Dice the hard-boiled eggs for a topping and serve.



I like to add more egg to each serving after I've plated it, and add the tomatoes last.



Optionally add some chick peas / garbanzo beans.



And that's it.




Make sure to check back tomorrow as I'll be showing the richest, most decadent pie in the world. Well, okay, it's not covered in gold leaf. Is dark, bittersweet chocolate close enough? It is for me.

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Thursday, May 15, 2008

How To Make Taco Salad



Unless you're really good friends with them, you probably wouldn't serve franks and beans to dinner guests.[1] And unless you're hosting a party for kids, your wife may not let you make tuna puffs or BP&J. But some things, no matter how much you love it, you have to admit to yourself that it just doesn't look good enough to serve to anyone else.

I'd like to believe this salad doesn't fall into that last category, but looking at the pictures I've got to say I'd be a little suspicious of it if someone else offered it to me. I could probably "fix" that by assembling it like a "normal" salad: lettuce on the bottom, then toppings, then dressing on top. But this is how I've eaten it ever since my aunt first served it to me out of a zip-top bag at a picnic when I was eight years old. So I'm not changing it.


Ingredients



Taco meat

1 pound ground beef
1 can (12 ounces) plain tomato sauce
1/4 cup chili powder (or taco seasoning)
3 cloves garlic (optional)

Salad

1 head iceberg lettuce
1/2 pound sharp cheddar cheese
1/4 large onion (about 1/2 cup diced)
4 Roma tomatoes (about 1/2 cup diced)
1-1/2 cups thousand island dressing
5 ounces (about half a medium bag) corn chips

Directions


Brown the ground beef in a frying pan with some salt, breaking the beef up as much as possible. (The same was as in the chili dog chili sauce recipe.) Add the garlic and chili powder (or taco seasoning) and the tomato sauce.





Cook until everything is heated through, then remove from heat and allow to cool while you prepare the salad.

Dice the onion.



Cut the tomatoes into quarters and remove the seeds. Slice the meaty part lengthwise into thin strips.



Then finish dicing the tomatoes.



(Hmm, I think I need to do a post on dicing tomatoes ... )

Core and chop the lettuce.




If I really wanted to be strict with my mise en place, I'd shred the cheese into a bowl, but I had left it out too long by this time. When you shred warm cheese, it tends to start sticking right back together if you put it all in one big pile. So I shredded it right onto the lettuce.



I didn't use that entire block of cheese. That's about three-quarters of a pound, and I used a bit more than half of it.

Add the tomato and onion.



Toss everything together a little, then add the thousand island dressing.



Look at your bowl and realize that yes, you should have used the biggest bowl for this. (Damn, I hate when I do this.) The bowl can't just be big enough to hold everything, it has to be big enough to mix it around easily. When you're mixing, you generally want a bowl at least twice as big as you'd need just to hold all the ingredients.

Once you've got it in a big enough bowl, toss the salad until it is well coated with the dressing. Then add the corn chips.



(This is not product placement. You can't see what brand that is. These are not the corn chips you are looking for ... )

Add the taco meat and stir to combine.



You want to do the corn chips and taco meat last. Otherwise the chips will get soggy, and the warm meat will melt the cheese. If you're not going to be serving this right away, let the meat cool all the way before adding it, and don't include the chips. Bring the salad in a zip-top bag or a bowl with a tight lid, and add the chips when you're ready to serve.



And that's it.




1 Why is that, anyway? Why do we try to impress strangers, we'll at least straigten up for friends, but if we're just serving family they're lucky if we're not still in pajamas? I can't remeber where I got this line, but we'll spend money we don't have buying stuff we don't need to impress people we don't like.

If you have any recipes that you love to eat, but won't serve to guests, tell me about it in the comments below. I want to do a whole roundup of "too good for guests" meals.


Monday, May 12, 2008

How To Core And Chop Lettuce



Some people swear by ceramic or plastic knives for cutting lettuce. The idea is that metal knives cause the leaves to turn brown at the edges faster. Actually, it's not the metal that does it. What happens is any cutting will cut cells, which then turn brown. If you want your lettuce to last longer don't cut it. Rip the leaves by hand.

I usually don't see the problem, though. When I buy lettuce, I have salad at every meal until it's gone.




Directions

First up, the core. You can cut this out if you really want to. But it's way easier this way:



Set the bottom -- the side you just pulled the core out of -- down and cut it in half.



Then in quarters.



You could stop now and serve what the trendy restaurants are calling a "wedge salad".



If you haven't seen it they literally take those wedges you see above and pour some dressing over it. Yeah, that's a salad. Okay.

But for normal people who aren't trying to impress anyone, it's better to do just a little more work and get the lettuce into bite-sized pieces. So put one half -- two quarters -- down flat, start at one end, and chop about an inch wide all the way across.



And that's it.