Ah, the struggle perpetuates. The search for the convenient weeknight meal that all 4 of us will enjoy spans on some kind of infinite road to the skyline!
So, this was not a complete home run for all 4 of us. The 2 grown ups liked these meatballs, and the 2 little ones ate them without complaint...I think they gave them an 8.5 out of 10. These days, I consider that a victory.
I like this concept because it provides a template for numerous possibilities. You could do ground lamb with dried apricot. You could do ground turkey with dried apples. Basically, you are taking some kind of ground meat and pairing it with a dried fruit that's been chopped up. Feel free to add chopped fresh or dried herbs as well!
Marvelous Pork Meatballs with Dried Pineapple
1 lb ground pork
1/4 cup dried pinapple, chopped
handful of minced green onion or 2 shakes onion powder
splash soy sauce
1. Get the broiler ready. Prepare a broiler-safe baking tray with foil. Mix all ingredients in a bowl and make about 20 meatballs, placing them on the baking tray.
2. Broil the meatballs for about 8 minutes until done. Serve with fresh vegetables, pita or tortilla, yogurt, and fresh herbs.
Cast of Characters
Perficious Eats - Mommy on the lookout for the tasty bite no matter where we live
Mister Obvious - Mountain biking Daddy who makes ice cream, roasts his own coffee beans, and eats everything in sight
Sweet Pea - 12-year old girl who loves reading, math games, tennis and hiking
Little Man - 10-year old who can't get enough biking, running, and laughing
Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts
Tuesday, 16 September 2014
Sunday, 1 August 2010
Scottish Brunch and Tea
I just spent the past several days in Edinburgh, Scotland with the family. Perhaps our favorite activity was eating brunch or having tea there. This wonderful city has no shortage of places! We loved our butternut squash risotto at Always Sunday (served on top of a butternut squash half so that you just scoop out more squash while you're eating the creamy rice). Major Obvious and the kids enjoyed munching on bacon and Belgian waffles at Treacle while watching reruns of Streetfighter cartoons. I particularly loved the smoked salmon sandwiches and shopping at eteaket, where the kids were delighted to partake in their first "babyccinos" (steamed, foamy milk with swirls of cocoa on top). The hog roast sandwiches at oink are super tasty as well.
Sunday, 7 March 2010
Potstickers - The Perfect Oscar Party Starters!
Let's face it, the powers-that-be are not predicting too many surprises this year for the Academy Awards. For your Oscar pool, you are choosing between "Avatar" and "The Hurt Locker," and the accolades for actors supposedly will go to everyone who snagged the Golden Globes. So, how to make your Oscar Party exciting? Fabulous cocktails, obviously. And...fun appetizers!
Potstickers are one of those great little wonders that everyone loves. If your guests do not eat meat, fill the little gyoza wrappers with grated veggies instead. You are only limited by your imagination. If it sounds like it would taste good fried in a crunchy wrapper, then it probably will! Throw it in and see what happens.
Potstickers
Ingredients:
2 lb ground pork (ground turkey is fine)
3-4 cups shredded cabbage (I like to buy the pre-shredded cole-slaw cabbage to cut down prep time)
3-4 green onions, minced
2 Tablespoons freshly grated ginger
1 package of medium tofu (medium firm is fine)
1 egg
3 Tablespoons soy sauce
3 Tablespoons sesame oil
2-3 packages gyoza wrappers (won ton wrappers are too thin for these dumplings)
You will also need:
2 large cookie sheets/baking trays/platters lined with wax paper or parchment paper
1 small bowl filled with water
1 damp paper towel or kitchen towel
1 large, heavy frying pan with a tight cover (a glass cover makes frying the dumplings easier)
1 small bowl filled with water for frying
Place all ingredients except for the wrappers into a large bowl. Mix together with your hands or a large wooden spoon until everything is incorporated together.
Gather together your other materials at a table where you can spread everything out and sit comfortably. Take one wrapper and put a rounded tablespoon of filling onto one side. Dip a finger into the small bowl of water and brush your wet finger at the edge of half of the wrapper (Do not go all the way around the whole wrapper, just make a half-circle). Fold the wrapper into a half-moon shape, using the water you brushed on to act as an adhesive and close the dumpling into a half-moon shape. (A lot of people pleat the top skin to make a pretty fan, but I really can't be bothered with such nonsense when I'm making a bazillion little dumplings).
After you've made one dumpling, lay it on the lined tray and repeat until you're out of filling.
If you would like to eat the dumplings immediately, begin the frying process, or keep the dumplings in the refrigerator/freezer until ready. (Make sure your dumplings are in a single layer so that they don't stick together).
To fry, heat a few tablespoons of canola oil in the frying pan over medium high heat. Place the dumplings onto the pan in a single layer, arranging them in rows. Once the bottom of the dumplings are slightly cooked but before they turn golden, pour about 1/3 to ½ cup of cold water over the dumplings, making sure that all tops of the dumplings are moistened. Cover the pan and cook until the dumplings are transparent. Remove the dumplings from the pan onto a serving platter, fried side up. Serve with Potsticker Sauce.
Note: Major Obvious likes his potstickers fried and crunchy on both sides, so after the potstickers are transparent, I will lift the cover, flip the potstickers with wooden chopsticks, and let them crisp up on the other side. The traditional way to eat them, however, is crunchy on one side and soft on the other. The choice is yours!
Potsticker Sauce
1 bottle soy sauce
1 bottle sesame oil
1 bottle hot chili oil
Give your guests their own little sauce dishes and encourage them to make their own potsticker sauce to their own liking, by mixing the soy sauce, sesame oil and hot chili oil. (Some guests may choose to forgo the hot chili oil altogether).
I like to make a big, big batch of these and freeze them for convenience food at later times. To do so, place your tray of potstickers in the freezer. Once frozen, place the potstickers in a large, labelled freezer storage bag. Potstickers will keep for 6 weeks.
Potstickers are one of those great little wonders that everyone loves. If your guests do not eat meat, fill the little gyoza wrappers with grated veggies instead. You are only limited by your imagination. If it sounds like it would taste good fried in a crunchy wrapper, then it probably will! Throw it in and see what happens.
Potstickers
Ingredients:
2 lb ground pork (ground turkey is fine)
3-4 cups shredded cabbage (I like to buy the pre-shredded cole-slaw cabbage to cut down prep time)
3-4 green onions, minced
2 Tablespoons freshly grated ginger
1 package of medium tofu (medium firm is fine)
1 egg
3 Tablespoons soy sauce
3 Tablespoons sesame oil
2-3 packages gyoza wrappers (won ton wrappers are too thin for these dumplings)
You will also need:
2 large cookie sheets/baking trays/platters lined with wax paper or parchment paper
1 small bowl filled with water
1 damp paper towel or kitchen towel
1 large, heavy frying pan with a tight cover (a glass cover makes frying the dumplings easier)
1 small bowl filled with water for frying
Place all ingredients except for the wrappers into a large bowl. Mix together with your hands or a large wooden spoon until everything is incorporated together.
Gather together your other materials at a table where you can spread everything out and sit comfortably. Take one wrapper and put a rounded tablespoon of filling onto one side. Dip a finger into the small bowl of water and brush your wet finger at the edge of half of the wrapper (Do not go all the way around the whole wrapper, just make a half-circle). Fold the wrapper into a half-moon shape, using the water you brushed on to act as an adhesive and close the dumpling into a half-moon shape. (A lot of people pleat the top skin to make a pretty fan, but I really can't be bothered with such nonsense when I'm making a bazillion little dumplings).
After you've made one dumpling, lay it on the lined tray and repeat until you're out of filling.
If you would like to eat the dumplings immediately, begin the frying process, or keep the dumplings in the refrigerator/freezer until ready. (Make sure your dumplings are in a single layer so that they don't stick together).
To fry, heat a few tablespoons of canola oil in the frying pan over medium high heat. Place the dumplings onto the pan in a single layer, arranging them in rows. Once the bottom of the dumplings are slightly cooked but before they turn golden, pour about 1/3 to ½ cup of cold water over the dumplings, making sure that all tops of the dumplings are moistened. Cover the pan and cook until the dumplings are transparent. Remove the dumplings from the pan onto a serving platter, fried side up. Serve with Potsticker Sauce.
Note: Major Obvious likes his potstickers fried and crunchy on both sides, so after the potstickers are transparent, I will lift the cover, flip the potstickers with wooden chopsticks, and let them crisp up on the other side. The traditional way to eat them, however, is crunchy on one side and soft on the other. The choice is yours!
Potsticker Sauce
1 bottle soy sauce
1 bottle sesame oil
1 bottle hot chili oil
Give your guests their own little sauce dishes and encourage them to make their own potsticker sauce to their own liking, by mixing the soy sauce, sesame oil and hot chili oil. (Some guests may choose to forgo the hot chili oil altogether).
I like to make a big, big batch of these and freeze them for convenience food at later times. To do so, place your tray of potstickers in the freezer. Once frozen, place the potstickers in a large, labelled freezer storage bag. Potstickers will keep for 6 weeks.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)