Archive for ◊ June, 2010 ◊

06 Jun 2010 Pasta with Asparagus
 |  Category: Main Dish, Meatless, Pasta, Veggies  | Tags: ,  | Leave a Comment

My daughter Abby has been a successful member of Weight Watchers, on-and-off, for about 2 years now. When I found a Weight Watcher’s foodie blog recently, I sent the link to her. She immediately sent back that she wanted to make this. I was underwhelmed with her choice. The ingredient list didn’t add up to much for me. I was wrong. This is a knock out pasta dish; easy, quick and quite delicious. What more could you want? Ohhh…, Weight Watcher’s points! 4 points per serving. Oooops. This only served the two of us…, make that 8 points per serving…, but still yummy, still incredibly easy and fast to pull together. To serve four I would throw in some cubes of cooked chicken or beef, or even a few shrimp.

Abby moves into her own apartment in August. I am pulling together a cookbook for her. This one is going in it. I hope it becomes of one of her staples. Thanks Skinny Taste!

Pasta with Asparagus

1 lb asparagus, cut into 2″ pieces (tough ends discarded)
6 oz uncooked pasta (less than half a box)
1 Tablespoon olive oil
3 cloves garlic, crushed
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1 egg yolk
1/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese

In a large pot boil 4 cups water with 1 T. salt. When boiling, add asparagus and cook 4 minutes, until tender crisp. Remove asparagus with slotted spoon to a dish and set aside. Remove 1/4 cup cooking water and set aside. Add more water to pan, return to a boil, and cook pasta in same water. Look on the box for the cooking time.

Meanwhile, in a small bowl combine egg yolk, cheese, salt, pepper, and 1/4 cup asparagus liquid. Set aside. In a large frying pan heat olive oil. Add garlic and cook until golden, add asparagus and sauté about 1-2 minutes, tossing with oil and garlic. Add in cooked pasta and egg mixture. Toss and stir well, cooing on medium-low for about 2 minutes, or until sauce thickens and sticks to pasta. Serve.

Optional-Stir in 1 cup cooked cubed chicken, beef, or shrimp when adding the cooked asparagus to the frying pan.

Servings: 4 • Serving Size: 1 1/4 cup • Points: 4 ww pts
Calories: 227.6 • Fat: 7.0 g • Protein: 5.4 g • Carb: 38.3 g • Fiber: 6.9 g

06 Jun 2010 Toasted Coconut Ice Cream

Winner number one in the Ice Cream challenge! Toasted Coconut. MMMM…, tropical paradise. I am going out today to get some mangoes to serve with it. Tonight I will be dining on toasted coconut ice-cream with fresh mango cubes, in a homemade waffle cone, heaven-on-earth, yes? There are MORE ice cream recipes to follow soon. ALL of them made by me, tested by my followers and all pronounced GREAT. So run out, right now, and buy that Cuisinart Ice Cream maker from Costco. It comes with TWO freezer bowls! It’s an incredible deal and offer. If you have one ice-cream maker and one freezer bowl, you have to wait 12 to 24 hours between batches for the bowl to refreeze before making the next batch. With the two freezer bowls you can make one batch right after the other. Every house needs two flavors of ice-cream to choose from, right? Being crazy, I have two ice-cream makers and four freezer bowls… Oh, wait…, not crazy…, I have all this stuff so I can test recipes and get the best ones to you quickly!!! That’s right, not crazy!

This recipe came from the link I posted last week to The Tasty Kitchen. This is a “Philadelphia Style” (I learn something new every day!) ice cream, not “French Style”. “Philadelphia Style” ice cream refers to ice cream made without an egg custard base, “French Style” refers to making a egg custard. I prefer this method. Not only is egg free ice cream easier to make, I think it tastes better. Who wants an eggy tasting ice cream? Look at how easy this is…

Toasted Coconut Ice Cream

1 can (13.5 Ounces) Coconut Milk
1 can (12 Ounces) Evaporated Milk
1 can (14 Ounces) Sweetened Condensed Milk
1 cup Toasted Coconut (divided use)

Mix coconut milk, evaporated milk, and sweetened condensed milk together and refrigerate until cool (maybe about 2-4 hours). Meanwhile, toast coconut in a dry frying pan over med-high heat, tossing constantly. Remove coconut to a cooling plate when coconut is toasty brown. Watch carefully! Coconut can go from perfect to burnt in about half a second! Pour cold milk mixture plus 1/2 cup of the toasted coconut into an ice cream freezer. Following factory instructions, churn until creamy and slushy. Transfer to an airtight container and freeze until desired consistency (about 4 hours). Can be kept frozen for a week or so. When ready to serve, scoop ice cream into serving dishes, sprinkle with extra toasted coconut (and maybe some fresh mango slices) and serve immediately. Makes approx. 4 cups of really yummy toasted coconut ice cream.

This recipe was adapted from one posted by ThreeManyCooks on the above website.

03 Jun 2010 Cinnamon Swirled Sweet Potato Bundt Cake
 |  Category: Cakes & Cupcakes, Sweets  | Tags: , ,  | Leave a Comment

One more post for tonight and no, it’s not the season…, but the cake sounded so yummy I had to make it. I pestered a stranger–Angie Holmes–for the recipe after I had seen her post on another foodie site…and she graciously gave it to me. After this post, I hope she becomes a fan, or to use the new terminology, a “like”-er of this site. The cake is delish, my son can’t stop eating it. He’s the one who said I HAVE to post this recipe (and here I thought he was barely aware that I had a life outside of doing his bidding…). The cake doesn’t have a strong sweet potato taste (darn it) but it’s moist and, like I said, DELISH!

In my research I found out the original recipe is attributed to Paula Deen so, you KNOW this recipe comes from a good place!

Cinnamon Swirled Sweet Potato Bundt Cake

1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar
1/2 cup chopped pecans
3 teaspoons ground cinnamon, divided use
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, softened
2 cups sugar
4 large eggs
1 1/2 cups sour cream
1 cup mashed cooked sweet potato (about 1 medium)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg

For Rum Glaze:

2 cups powdered sugar
1/2 cup heavy whipping cream
3/4 teaspoon rum extract

Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease and flour a 12-cup bundt pan. In a small bowl, combine brown sugar, pecans, and 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon; set aside. In a large bowl, combine butter and sugar. Beat at medium speed with an electric mixer until creamy. Beat in eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Stir in sour cream, sweet potatoes, and vanilla. In a medium bowl, combine flour, baking soda, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, salt, and nutmeg. Gradually add to butter mixture, stirring well. Pour half of sweet potato batter into prepared pan. Sprinkle evenly with brown sugar mixture. Spoon remaining batter evenly over streusel. Bake 1 hour, or until a tester inserted in center comes out clean. Remove cake to a wire rack to cool. Spoon Rum Glaze over cooled cake.

03 Jun 2010 Polly’s 3-2-1 Smoothies

I’m pretty sure I was one of the first people ever to taste a smoothie. There was a smoothie man on campus at San Diego State University in 1976. He had a blender, fresh pineapple, fresh bananas, and a bunch of fruit juices. Every smoothie consisted of a large slice of fresh pineapple, half a banana, ice, and juice. The juice determined the flavor of the smoothie. They smelled divine, tasted divine and the memories lasted…

I’ve been making smoothies at home for a long, long time. Probably since 1977. I have spent 33 years perfecting this recipe…, it’s GREAT, better than the smoothie man’s, and it’s simple. Even I have this one memorized: 3 cups of frozen fruit, 2 cups of juice, and 1 cup of yogurt with an optional squirt of honey or spoonful of jam. (I use honey or jam only if the yogurt is plain and the fruit tart–usually the sweetening is not needed.) The recipe makes 4 cups of smoothie goodness. Enough for a 2, 3, or 4 people for breakfast. Just making one for yourself? Get out the blender (you don’t even have to measure)… Pour in one to one-and-a-half cups of frozen fruit, 3/4 to 1 cup of juice, and a small container of yogurt. Whirl on high for about a minute. Done. What a way to start a summer day!!!

I like using the frozen fruit because then there’s no need to use ice–which dilutes the intensity and the goodness of the smoothie. Now don’t be using packaged frozen fruit this time of year. I know you want to buy all those fresh berries from the market. Go ahead! Freeze the leftovers. When the strawberries get a bit past their prime…, rinse, pull the stem off, freeze. Same with peaches nectarines, apricots, plums, and bananas. No need to peel them. Just wash, slice, and bag. Leftover fresh pineapple? mango? Slice, freeze, and bag along with some blueberries, raspberries and blackberries. (OK…,it’s best to ‘open freeze’ the fruit first. Place the sliced fruit on a tray, freeze as is, then remove to a Ziploc bag. If you freeze wet fruit it tends to freeze into a solid ball. Starting out the morning with a cleaver and a ball of frozen fruit can be frustrating…). By the end of the summer you will have a wide variety of frozen fresh fruit for your smoothies and think how great you’ll feel having had a few healthy servings of fruit each day for breakfast.

I made our first smoothies of the season yesterday. Frozen strawberries (all the frozen fruit we had, usually I have more of a variety), orange-mango juice, plain yogurt, and a squirt of honey.One for me, one for my nineteen year old son and his friend, and one for my eighteen month old grandson. My son, texting away, drank a third of his and said, “Can you make more of these?” I said, “Sure. Are you that hungry”. He said, “Yeah, I’ll have another one…, but my friends are driving by and they want to stop by and have one. I told them how good they were.”!

Tonight for dinner my grandson and I had smoothies made out of frozen strawberries and raspberries, orange juice, and blueberry yogurt. Delicious (even though the picture is one of the worst pictures I’ve ever posted). My son’s favorite is frozen peaches, peach yogurt, and any kind of juice. I like to jazz his up with some frozen raspberries or raspberry yogurt. My daughter likes a citrus smoothie–frozen pineapple, sometimes with some mango and banana, lemon or plain yogurt and grapefruit juice, orange juice, or lemonade. I like frozen raspberries and blueberries, plain or berry yogurt, and any kind of juice…, but orange-passion fruit is to die for…

Let me know your favorite flavor combination! Enjoy!

Polly’s 3-2-1 Smoothies

3 cups of frozen fruit
2 cups of fruit juice (start with orange…then experiment)
1 cup of yogurt (any kind)
optional squirt of honey or spoonful of jam

Put frozen fruit in blender. Cover with juice. Add in yogurt. Blend until thick and frosty. Add in a squirt of honey or jam, if desired. Whirl again to blend. Makes four cups of smoothie goodness. Pour into 2, 3, or 4 glasses. Add a straw…, and maybe a squirt of whipped cream. Serve. YUM!