Showing posts with label cherry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cherry. Show all posts

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Didn't know I needed one

“It should be able to do more than one thing.” Miz Margaret claims that any kitchen gadget worth buying should be multi-functional.  And, I agree.


I love my kitchen gadgets.  In fact, my kitchen gadget drawer is loaded to overflowing (which just sends my husband over the edge when he’s putting things away after their trip through the dishwasher – we have a deal, I load and he unloads). I like gadgets that are really useful. You know, ‘necessary’. I’ll admit there may be a thing or two way at the back of the drawer that doesn’t see much action. But, for the most part, I use them all. And, I like to make sure my friends have all the gadgets they need, as well.

I have discovered, however, that there are some gadgets that are not up to Miz Margaret's standards. Here’s a perfect example: Is it really necessary to purchase a ‘banana keeper’? I mean, what else could you use it for? It’s yellow. It’s the size of half a banana. It’s curved like a banana. What else would fit in there? And, really, wouldn’t a piece of plastic wrap or a zip top baggie do the trick?

Another example: Will my life be complete if I don’t buy an avocado scooper/slicer? Let’s think this one through. You’re holding an avocado in your hand. You have a small knife in your other hand. You cut stem-to-stern around the avocado. You swivel the two halves apart. You whack the knife into the seed and twist to remove it. Now you have a choice. Should you put down the knife (which already has avocado on it) and dig around in your overflowing utensil drawer to find the ‘Super-duper thing-a-ma-bob scoop-n-slice-all-at-once’ gadget? Or, I don’t know…just use the knife that’s already in your hand to slice the avocado and then give an ever so gentle squeeze to the release the pieces? Hm…

Or, how about this one: Can I live without lobster-shaped butter melters? You’re going to love this… I was shopping at a well known kitchen gadget/supply store and ran across these red lobster-shaped ‘dish’ that sits atop a blue stand that holds a tealight. The idea being that you load up the lobster with butter. You light the tealight, which warms the lobster dish, which melts the butter. And now you can dredge your lobster bits through the liquid butter in your lobster-shaped butter melter. Oh! Did I mention that these were sold in sets? Each person at your table should have their very own lobster-shaped butter melter! I got to giggling a little too loud and the very nice clerk in the store thought something was wrong with me. This prompted a phone call to Miz Margaret. After I explained the set up and she hopped online to see them for herself, we were nearly in tears laughing. I haven’t been back to that store since then. I’m afraid they still remember me.

So, with that background information, you’ll be surprised to learn that I gave Miz Margaret a cherry pitter for her birthday. (I know…her birthday’s in February but I didn’t give this to her until July…what can I say?...I was horribly LATE!) The reason I gave her a cherry pitter was so that we could make this salad. We like cooking together and trying new recipes. And, this calls for fresh pitted cherries. Well! What an opportunity! Of course, any new recipe requires a trip to the store for produce. But, a recipe that requires a trip to the kitchen gadget store? Well, that’s one hum-dinger of a recipe! The only problem was this gadget pretty much only has one use. I was able to rationalize it by figuring that if she ever needed to pit olives, it might work for that as well.

When I gave her the cherry pitter I got this look.  You know...the stare with the raised eyebrow.  I quickly started extolling it's virtues and explaining how useful it would be.  In truth, I wasn't too sure that it would ever get used beyond the one recipe we were planning to make that day.  But, I need not have worried!

We got started working on the recipe.  I made the dressing and washed up the Butter lettuce while Miz Margaret went to work on the cherries.  Oh!  You should have seen it.  She put that first cherry into the pitter and gave a might squeeze.  Out popped the seed and a spray of cherry juice splattered into the sink.  Her eyes flew open and she starting giggling in delight.  By the time she was done (two cups of cherries), there was cherry juice everywhere in that sink.  It looked like she had butchered a small animal  and she was laughing and waving that cherry pitter around as though she had conquered the world.  If there had been anymore cherries in the house, she would have pitted them, too.

The recipe turned out to be a new favorite.  And I've made it several times for a take-along dish.  Each time, I'd borrow the cherry pitter from Miz Margaret.  But then, she up and moved!  I had to go out a buy myself a cherry pitter.  I didn't even know I needed one until she moved away!

Well, whether you know it or not, you need a cherry pitter, too.  Especially if you plan to try this wonderful salad.  I've made it with and without the chicken depending on where I was taking it.  The dressing is mild and creamy and the cherries really are the stars of this recipe.

By the way...the cherry pitter works great on Kalamata Olives, as well.  So, there you have it.  A gadget that does more than one thing!

 
Cherry-Chicken Salad
INGREDIENTS
Salad:
2
T vegetable oil
1
lb chicken breasts
1
head Butter lettuce, torn into bite-sized pieces
½
lb (2 cups) Bing cherries, pitted & halved
¼  
cup walnut pieces
Dressing:
½  
cup sour cream
½
cup crumbled fresh goat cheese (2 oz)
2
T snipped fresh chives
2
t white-wine vinegar

Salt

Freshly ground pepper
Directions
1.     In a small bowl, whisk together sour cream, goat cheese, chives, vinegar, and two tablespoons water; season with salt and pepper.  Set dressing aside.
2.      In a large skillet, heat oil at medium-high.  Season chicken breast with salt and pepper.  Cook until opaque clear through (about 2-3 minutes per side).  Slice chicken very thinly crosswise.
3.     Divide the letter onto four plates; top with chicken, cherries, & walnuts.  Serve with dressing on the side.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Some people's taste

There's just no accounting for some people's taste.  Take my husband, for instance.  I just don't understand his weird attraction to cooked pineapple.  Don't get me wrong.  I love pineapple.  I grew up eating fresh pineapple almost every day.  I thought the word 'Punch' was a synonym for pineapple juice.  But, we never NEVER cooked pineapple!  Eeeew!

My husband, on the other hand, loves cooked pineapple.  He likes it on a pizza.  Ick!  He likes it baked in desserts.  Double-ick!  And, worst ick of all icks, he loves Pineapple Upside Down Cake.  (Excuse me while I gag.)  Despite this MAJOR flaw in his character, I do love him dearly.  And since this is his very very VERY favorite cake, for his birthday, I lowered myself and my cooking reputation and made him a Pineapple Upside Down Cake for the occasion.

Pineapple Upside Down Cake has more than one offending ingredient.  If cooking pineapple in a cake isn't bad enough, it also has (more gagging on my part) maraschino cherries.  They're just not natural!  I know this for a fact because my dear husband used to work for a company that made, installed, and repaired automatic doors.  One of the businesses that he visited (to work on their automatic doors) was the local maraschino cherry 'factory'.  He got the royal tour and accompanying commentary on how maraschino cherries are made.


First, they bleach the cherries (any kind of cherry, doesn't matter).  Then they soak them in a sugar syrup that has to be exactly a certain percentage of sugar.  (You're going to love this part!)  If they get the sugar syrup too sweet or not sweet enough, the stems will fall out of the cherries.  (What would we do without that stem?!)  Then they add cherry flavoring and the red dye so that all those cherries will be exactly the same color.  Anyway, he said the whole place reeked of sugar syrup and cherry flavoring AND the floor was sticky everywhere he went the whole plant.  I wasn't a maraschino cherry fan before he went there to work on their doors.  And I haven't changed my mind since.

Now we have this recipe with two things that I don't think should be in ANY recipe.  But, I love him dearly.  So, I made it anyway.  Poor thing, he had to eat practically the whole thing by himself 'cause no one else likes it.  But, he did get help from my friend Linda.  She liked it.  She even said it was 'real good'.

Here's the recipe I used.  I confess...I cheated and used a boxed cake mix.  And, I guess I can admit that even though I still don't like cooked pineapple and I still don't/won't eat a maraschino cherry, it didn't turn out too bad.  Well, it looked pretty - whether it tasted good or not.

I still love him dearly.  So, if he mentions it again, I'll probably make him another one for his next birthday.  You know, because I love him dearly!


Pineapple Upside-Down Cake
INGREDIENTS

1/4
cup butter or margarine
1
cup packed brown sugar
1
can (20 oz) pineapple slices in juice, drained, juice reserved
1
jar (6 oz) maraschino cherries without stems, drained
1
box yellow cake mix
Vegetable oil and eggs called for on cake mix box

1.    Heat oven to 350°F (325°F for dark or nonstick pan). In 13x9-inch pan, melt butter in oven. Sprinkle brown sugar evenly over butter. Arrange pineapple slices on brown sugar. Place cherry in center of each pineapple slice, and arrange remaining cherries around slices; press gently into brown sugar.

2.    Add enough water to reserved pineapple juice to measure 1 1/4 cups. Make cake batter as directed on box, substituting pineapple juice mixture for the water. Pour batter over pineapple and cherries.
3.    Bake 40 to 45 minutes (42 to 48 minutes for dark or nonstick pan) or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Immediately run knife around side of pan to loosen cake. Place heatproof serving plate upside down onto pan; turn plate and pan over. Leave pan over cake 5 minutes so brown sugar topping can drizzle over cake; remove pan. Cool 30 minutes. Serve warm or cool. Store covered in refrigerator.