T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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18.10 | Turkey Bones... | PNEUMA::MASON | | Mon Nov 26 1984 13:24 | 43 |
| I hope you all had a happy Thanksgiving. If you're still picking turkey
off the bird, don't throw those bones away!!! One of the best parts of
Thanksgiving for me is making (and eating, of course) Turkey Soup, made
from the carcass of the bird, and lots of veggies. Here's how:
* Break up the carcass into several pieces so that it
will fit into a large pot (but don't put it in the pot, yet).
* Chop up 2 med. onions and saute in a small amount of oil in
the bottom of the pot.
* As the onions are cooking, chop up vegetables. This can
include: celery, carrots, parsnips, cabbage, or anything else
you like. Add each of these to onions, and keep stirring
until they get a little limp. Do this on a low flame.
* Add the turkey bones and water. For a 16 lb turkey, I used
6 cups of water, and the recipe worked out fine.
* Add a "bouquet garni" of herbs. I make my own using a coffee
filter, and tie it with dental floss (the unwaxed kind). In
this spice packet, add: 3-4 cloves of garlic (or garlic powder),
1 tsp. celery seed, 1-2 tsp. basil, 1-2 tsp. dill. These spices
are just suggestions...use what you like.
* Cook the soup on a low heat for many hours. I usually do my
on about "2" on the electric stove, and simmer overnight.
* When the soup is done, remove the bones, and take all the turkey
meat off, and dump it back into the soup. NOW you can throw
away those bones! At this point you might want to adjust the
seasoning, add some pepper and just a small amount of salt.
* If you have a food processor, you might want to puree about
half of the veggies to make the soup thicker. (You can also
do this with a blender, it just takes longer).
* Let the soup stand for awhile in the fridge, and then skim off
the fat (there shouldn't be too much).
* Reheat and serve with rolls or crackers.
* ENJOY!
|
18.1 | | NWD002::BABCOCKTA | | Fri Feb 15 1985 17:43 | 14 |
| Another nice way to use up leftover turkey is to make croutons.
Chop up your turkey well.
Make a white sauce.
Whip up 1 or 2 eggs.
Chop up some onion.
Grind up bread crumbs.
Add whatever spices you like with turkey and onion.
Mix the turkey and white sauce together.
Take tablespoons full and roll them in the eggs andd then in the bread
crumbs. Shape into conical shapes. Then in a frying pan, fry the suckers
until they are brown all over. Serve them up they are crispy on the outside
and wet on the inside. YUM YUM.
|
18.48 | Lamb, Pasta, and Green Bean Salad | SAPHRE::GAHL | | Thu Apr 11 1985 10:08 | 32 |
| Try this:
Lamb, Pasta, and Green Bean Salad
1/4 lb. green beans, trimed & cut into julienne strips
1 cup orzo (rice-shaped pasta)
1/2 lb. cooked lamb, cut into slivers
3 tbs Dijon-style mustard
1-l/2 tbs boiling ater
1-1/2 tbs lemon juice
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 cup olive oil
1 tbs heavy cream
1 small red onion, chopped fine
1 small red pepper, sliced thin
1/4 cup minced fresh parsley leaves
Steam the green beans for 4 minutes or until tender. Refresh beans under
cold running water. Cook orzo for 6 to 8 minutes, or until tender, & drain
it. Cut lamb into slivers.
In a large salad boil combine mustard, boiling water
and lemon juice, and if desired, garlic clove, minced. Add olive
oil in a stream, whisking, whish the dressing until it is well combined,
and whisk in heavy cream. Add the lamb, the orzo, the beans,
red onion, red pepper and parsley, toss the salad, coating it thoroughly
with the dressing, and add salt and pepper to taste. Chill the salad for
at least 1 hour. Serves 4.
GOURMET April 1980
I have made and enjoyed this dish several times . . . Norma
|
18.49 | Casserole | MOTHER::FRAZIER | | Wed May 08 1985 13:43 | 24 |
| Well........... You could:
( All quantities depend on amount of lamb left over )
Make some brown rice, put in appropriate sized casserole.
Cut lamb in to bite sized hunks.
Brown lightly in some bacon fat, add a cup or so off sliced onions
and cook till just limp. Add 1/2 bottle beer. ( Drinking the rest
is optional but recommended ). Cover pot and simmer for 10-30 mins.
Then dump this whole mess on the rice , add sliced mushrooms 1-2 cups.
Now take canned cream of mushroom soup , heat with 1/2 can water and
pour over the casserole. Be sure to use enough soup so that the dish
will turn out moist.
Bake @350 F. till heated through.
Goes good with beer or Cotes du Rhone.
James
|
18.2 | FAST TURKEY LEFTOVERS | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Tue Nov 18 1986 19:33 | 26 |
|
Leftover Turkey Salad for the busy person:
INGREDIENTS:
Diced turkey (how much depends on how many to feed)
diced celery
diced tart red apple with skin
crisp steamed, leftover broccoli, cauliflower, green beans,
etc.
fresh parsley or chive (your taste)
cooked pasta (noodles, small shells, etc. - I DON'T
RECOMMEND FETTUCINI!)
Hidden Valley Ranch salad dressing
Lettuce
Mix turkey, vegetables, apple, pasta, and salad dressing, add diced
parsley or chive to taste, salt to taste ( I don't add any)
and moisten with salad dressing to desired consistency.
Serve in lettuce cups and accompany with warm french bread and
dry white wine...
P.S. Use the "make from buttermilk and mayonaise" salad
dressing...it tastes better than the bottled kind.
You can use lite mayonaise to remove calories.
|
18.3 | MORE LEFTOVER IDEAS | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Tue Nov 18 1986 20:15 | 16 |
|
Another leftover turkey crouquet recipe.
dice turkey meat
mix well with leftover stuffing
add enough turkey gravy to moisten (you should be able to make "balls"
of the stuff with your hands).
scramble an egg or two
Make "balls" or patties of the stuff, dip in egg and then coat with
bread crumbs. Place in fridge for 15 - 30 minutes to "set".
Fry in oil or butter until crisp and brown outside. Serve with
leftover cranberry sauce and a salad.
Good eats!
|
18.4 | AND STILL MORE LEFTOVER IDEAS | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Tue Nov 18 1986 20:16 | 35 |
|
LEFTOVER MASHED POTATO PANCAKES
I mash my thanksgiving potatoes with sour cream instead of cream and
butter, but any kind of leftover potatoes will do:
INGREDIENTS:
Leftover mashed potatoes (measure by cup so you know how much
you have)
for each cup of potatoes:
1 beaten egg
4 Tablespoons flour (sift for no lumps)
2 small green onions (scallion, spring onion) - just
the white part and some of the green
milk to moisten if necessary
salt, pepper, paprika to taste
oil or margarine or butter to cook in
mix the potatoes, egg, flour and seasonings well. If it
is too dry add milk by the drop until the thickness of
waffle batter (for you novices, it should mound on a
spoon). Add chopped scallions and stir well.
cook by scant 1/4 cup in a skillet that is well oiled or
buttered until dry around the edges, flip and cook
until brown and crisp on the outside.
These are a great side dish, or brunch dish served with apple sauce
and sour cream...or the leftover cranberry sauce.
|
18.27 | try chinese | CSCMA::PERRON | | Tue Nov 25 1986 14:14 | 11 |
|
I have used leftover baked ham in fried rice and egg rolls.
Cut the ham into chunks and toss into into the wok with left
over rice. For egg rolls I usually grate or shred the ham.
You can also cut the ham into slices to make ham steaks
and just warm it up on a gas or charcoal grill.
Linda
|
18.28 | ham loaf from leftovers | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Tue Nov 25 1986 16:25 | 30 |
|
First to the ham issue:
If you have a food processor or meat grinder:
chop up the ham and make a dinner loaf.
2 cups chopped ham
1 cup crumbled stale cornbread (other kind of bread will work)
1 -2 eggs, lightly beaten
1/4 cup chopped green pepper
1/4 cup chopped onion (I like spanish red onion)
1/4 - 3/4 cup chopped up leftover vegetables (broccoli, etc.)
Mix ingredients together. Moisten with milk, yogurt, sour cream,
or canned soup (undiluted) until you can form it in your hands.
Turn into a greased loaf pan and place in a large pan in oven.
Put some water in the large pan for moisture.
Bake approx. 45 minutes until crusty and brown. Serve hot,
freeze for later, or serve cold. Lots of latitude here.
Good soups to use:
cream of asparagus, cheddar cheese, cream of mushroom,
tomato..well, you get the idea.
This works real good with cornbread!
|
18.29 | A few ideas | SQM::AITEL | Helllllllp Mr. Wizard! | Tue Nov 25 1986 18:23 | 20 |
| Leftover ham is good a lot of ways, not the least of which is
ham sandwitches. Some of my favorites are:
-Chopped and added to scrambled eggs, or you can go all the
way to gourmet with a ham and swiss omelet.
-Cubed and simmered into split pea soup. Other soups are good
too, but the split pea is yummy.
-Cubed or sliced into strips and arranged on top of your very
own homemade chef salad - also include cheese and eggs - good
for lunch at work if you own some tupperware.
-Fried up with your eggs as an alternative to bacon.
-While I'm on breakfast, how about your own homemade Decmuffin?
If your site doesn't make them, that's an english muffin with a
fried egg (break the yolk while frying or it's too messy), some
breakfast meat (your ham) and some cheese melted on top.
By the way, if you have much too much of the ham, make up
a large pot of soup and freeze it. I don't think ham freezes
well by itself, but in soup it's ok.
--Louise
|
18.30 | make some fasta pasta | WELSWS::GRAHAM | | Fri Nov 28 1986 08:00 | 5 |
| Try frying some sliced mushrooms, mix the chopped hame in and add
some cream then pour over tagletelle, penne etc. Quick,easy & cheap!
Regards,
Dave
|
18.31 | it's good added to macaroni+cheese | KOALA::ROBINS | Scott A. Robins, ZKO2-2/R94 | Mon Dec 01 1986 12:29 | 0 |
18.32 | Scalloped Potatoes with Ham | ORION::BLACHEK | Chocolate is my destiny | Mon Dec 01 1986 14:55 | 4 |
| I like ham added to scalloped potatoes. If you make this with cheese
and ham, you can add a salad and have a great meal.
Judy
|
18.33 | pea soup the only way | BAXTA::TURCOTTE_PAU | | Tue Dec 02 1986 06:11 | 9 |
|
Hello, as far as i'm concerned the only way to eat leftover baked ham
is either eating it off of the bone or making a pea soup.
i'm a ham-addict can't get enough of it!!!
have a hoppy day
froggy
|
18.34 | Sandwich Spread | PARSEC::PESENTI | | Tue Dec 02 1986 06:59 | 6 |
| Try passing it through a meat grinder, with a few half sour pickles, then
mixing it with some dijon mustard for a great sandwich or cracker spread.
Add any other ingredients you like to make it spicy or sweet or whatever.
- JP
|
18.35 | Ham Chowder | FDCV03::PARENT | | Thu Dec 04 1986 08:52 | 23 |
| 4 Large Carrots - Diced
4 Stalks Celery - Diced
1 Small Onion - Chopped
4 Large Potatoes - Diced
5 Cups Water
2 or 3 Cups Diced Ham
2 Tablespoons Butter or Margarine
Salt & Pepper to taste
6 Tablespoons Flour
2-1/2 Cups Milk
Paprika & Parsley for Garnish
Cook vegetables in the water until tender - approx. 20 minutes
Add ham, butter, salt & pepper. Blend flour into milk until smooth
and stir into soup.
Heat, stirring constantly, until mixture boils. Turn heat to low
and allow to simmer, partially covered, 10-20 minutes.
Serve with hot garlic bread and tossed salad and ENJOY!
Evelyn
|
18.6 | White Sauces | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jul 13 1987 14:18 | 24 |
| White sauce is pretty easy to make, so long as you keep your eyes
on it so that you don't burn the btter (which gives a bitter taste).
Melt some butter in a saucepan. When it is melted but not browning,
add the same quantity of flour. Mix this in with a whisk (works
better than a spoon or fork, but use what have!) and cook for about
two minutes; don't let it get brown, but you do want the flour to
cook. Then add the milk/cream/broth, slowly, whisking all the time,
and cook over medium heat until it thickens. You can add whatever
seasonings you feel are appropriate (salt, pepper, thyme, etc.),
and you can melt cheese into the sauce at the end if you want a
cheese sauce (swiss is good on turkey). Now for the quantitites:
if you want a fairly thin suace, use one tablespoon of butter and
one tablespoon of flour per cup of liquid. If you want a thick
sauce, use 3. It is possible to use cornstarch instead of flour
(or potato starch, for that matter, if you can't eat wheat), andf
some people prefer to do so since you have to be less meticulous
in stirring the sauce to avoid lumps; if you do this, use half as
much starch as butter. You can also use an egg yolk instead of
the flour or starch; this will produce a thin sauce, though; if
you are going to do this, heat the liquid, add some to egg yolk,
and then beat the egg yolk into the sauce and cook it until it
thickens. You can use margarine instead of butter; in fact, you
can use any oil or fat, but be careful if you whipped or diet margarine
as it has a lot of water in it and is likely to splatter.
|
18.11 | TRY IT YOU'LL LIKE IT | PARITY::SCHIFF | | Wed Aug 05 1987 00:00 | 49 |
| The above recipie is a real winner! Don't get the wrong impression,
I haven't tried this particular TURKEY soup recipie, but I have
been doing about the same thing for years.
Below I will give my variations, not to take away from the above,
but to see if from a different angle; but here I would like to
emphasize and reemphasize how good and how easy and how good it
is. I am a real soup and stock afficianado so I tried boiling-up
my left over turkey bones as a hack - and boy was I impressed!
I actually do it for a basic stock rather than for a soup; but I
prefer my soups as plain stocks with nothing added except perhaps
a slight garnish.
The other thing that I would like to emphasize is that this is one
of those recipies where precision has no place; I have tried all
sorts of variations and never measure and they all come out excellent.
In fact I would venture that is as close to being fool-proof as
any cooking can be.
My variations:
I start off with the largest pot that I have and put in the carcass
which I chop up if necessary. I do not sautee the onions or any
of the vegtables; in fact I put them in whole skins and all; the
same with the carrots. Carrots, onions, and celery are musts; but
do not get carried away with them; for a 16 pound turkey I would
put in three medium onions (a clove stuck in each), eight carrots,
and about six celery stalks. If you are clever and efficient enough
to have saved and frozen your celery leaves, pop them in too.
Now here is my kicker. The following changes the turkey soup into
what I would call Jewish chicken/turkey soup; or more precisely
'how my mother made it': add one bunch of parsley, one bunch of
dill, and about as much PARSNIPS as you put in carrots.
When I am through cooking it, and here the secret is 'at least three
hours of simmer', and longer helps, I then strain it all. The
vegtables are useless by now; for they have given their goodness
to the soup, so I throw them all out.
Of course correct the seasoning by now.
I use this basic soup as the starting point of many other recipies;
but best of all I love it straight.
Try it you'll like it.
/marty
|
18.36 | bean soup PA dutch style | JAWS::LRP | | Mon Aug 10 1987 13:26 | 9 |
| I'm from Pa. dutch country and what we do with left over ham is
make bean soup.
All you need is navy beans and imagination.
Soak the navy beans overnight to soften them. Then place the navy
beans and about three cups of water and the ham bone and all in
a slow cooker slow cook the whole day. Come home wa la bean soup
|
18.37 | little late, party over? | SQUEKE::BIGGS | | Sun Nov 15 1987 04:57 | 12 |
| re. 432.12
love your recipe.....reminds me of home. Texas!
re .0
One of my favorites for leftover ham is to chopped up the ham.
Add mayo with about 1/3 as much dejon mustard, chopped onion,
white pepper to taste and throw in a table spoon or so capers.
serve on party bread, on a bed of lettece, stuff a tomatoe or
make a sandwich to take to work.
|
18.12 | HELP!!! Too much turkey | PARITY::DASILVA | | Mon Feb 22 1988 15:10 | 11 |
|
I need some help. I still have 2 huge turkeys in my freezer.
I need some ideas on different ways to prepare them. The recipies
must be able to be frozen. There's only 2 of us in the house; we
couldn't possibly eat a whole turkey at one time. I appreciate
any help.
Thanks,
Liz
|
18.13 | freezer turkey ideas | THE780::WILDE | Imagine all the people.. | Mon Feb 22 1988 17:54 | 30 |
| No, no, no....don't try to think up recipes ahead of time...roast the
birds, remove from bones, wrap really well in correct serving size
for you and then date and freeze. THEN, when you feel like making
something with Turkey in it, hit the freezer. Some suggestions:
Turkey with noodles - heat turkey in a "gravy" made of 1 can
cream of chicken soup, 1/2 can of
white wine. After turkey is warmed,
stir in sliced, sauted mushrooms,
fresh (if you can find them) green peas
just blanched for 4 minutes. Season
with parsley, thyme, etc. and serve
over noodles.
Turkey soups of various kinds - when you get the birds
off the bones, make a broth using the
bird carcass. Place in big pot,
add cut up onions, cut up carrots,
and small bag of cheese cloth with
herbs and whole black peppers in it.
simmer for several hours, strain and
pour into a large container and chill
overnight. Remove all fat, put in
smaller containers and date and freeze.
use as a base for turkey soups by adding
diced turkey meat, veggies of choice,
and noodles, or rice, etc.
Turkey makes great cassaroles too. Any recipe that uses chicken can
use the big bird as well.
|
18.14 | Pot pie! | PARSEC::PESENTI | JP | Tue Feb 23 1988 07:50 | 27 |
| Make a broth from the turkey carcass, seasoned with BELL'S (or the equivalent
seasonings), a large onion, a bunch of celery leaves, and a clove of garlic.
Sautee some 2 tbsp flour in 2 tbsp butter/oil, and add 2 cups of broth.
Take chunks of cooked turkey meat, and (under) cooked veggies like sliced
carrots, peas, corn, diced potatoes, etc., enough to fill a baking dish/pie
pan or whatever.
Pour gravy over it.
Mix a batch of BISQUIK biscuits with a heaping tablespoon each of sage and
thyme in the mix. Put it into a plastic bag and pat into the shape of a crust
for the selected dish. Should be about 1/2" thick. Trimmings can be formed
into biscuits.
Cover the pie with the crust, cover that with waxed paper and place any spare
biscuits on top. Wrap the whole thing in freezer wrap and freeze. Or cook 20
minutes. When frozen, let thaw first in the fridge before cooking.
By adjusting the seasonings to your taste, you can whip up a pot pie that
beats the heck out of Swanson!
- JP
|
18.15 | some of my recipes | MYVAX::LUBY | | Tue Feb 23 1988 09:39 | 161 |
|
My first Turkey, I was living by myself so I made soup, turkey
croquettes, turkey stir-fry, turkey chow-mein, and a few other
turkey dishes. Some of my recipes were actually chicken recipes
that I used. I then froze it all in meal sized containers.
What you should do is invite company to eat one, then no or few
leftovers which you can eat as sandwiches. The other, cook up
and make some different recipes and freeze them. Remember, if
you make soup, potato does not freeze well.
Here are some of my recipes. Just substitute the chicken for
the turkey. Oh, and the best of the bunch is the croquettes. We
used to fight over these as kids. The chow-mein is also excellent
and freezes well. When making the substitution, white meat is best
in the stir-frys, for croquettes and chow-mein, and turkey soup,
you can use about half white, half dark.
Good luck,
Karen
Chicken Croquettes
2 C chopoped cooked chicken 1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp celery salt dash cayenne
1 tsp lemon juice 2 T minced onion
1 tsp finely choppen parsley 4 T flour
4 T butter 1 C milk
2-3 C bread crumbs 1-2 eggs with 1-1/2 T water
Melt butter. Add flour then milk. Heat over medium high heat until
thickened. Combine chicken, salt, cayenne, lemnon juice, onion and
parsley. Add sauce slowly so that the mixture is soft but still firm
enough to hold its shape. Chill. Shape and coat thickly with bread
crumbs. Dip in egg mixture then crumbs again. If convenient, chill
1/2 hour then fry. Can use lamb, ham, pork instead of chicken.
Oyster Stuffing
3 C white bread crumbs 4-5 T butter melted
1 C saltine cracker crumbs 1 T lemon juice
1/2 tsp salt 3/4 to 1 pint oysters, chopped
Combine all ingredients.
Sausage Stuffing
3 C celery chopped 2 tsp salt
2 C onion chopped 1/4 tsp pepper
12 C fresh breadcrumbs 1 tsp sage
1 to 1-1/2 lbs italian sausage 1 C or less of hot water
Start ccooking celery and onions till almost cooked. Add sausage and
cook till done. Add bread crumbs, seasonings and enough water for
desired moistness.
Chicken Chow Mein
6 T cooking oil 2-1/2 C strong soup stock
2 C chopped onion 2 tsp salt
2 C thin sliced celery 1/2 tsp pepper
4 C cooked and slivered chicken 2 tsp sugar
8 oz can mushrooms, sliced 1/3 C soy sauce
2 cans water chestnuts, sliced 3 T molasses
5 T cornstarch 2 cans bean sprouts
1/2 C cold water
Saute onion, celery in oil about 10 minutes. Add chicken, mushrooms, water
chestnuts and soy sauce. Add soup stock salt, pepper, sugar. Add thickening
or cornstarch dissolvedj in cold water. Add molasses and cook. Add sprouts
and cook 10 minutes more before serving. Serve over chow mein noodles.
Walnut Chicken
4 T soy sauce 3 T veg oil
1 T dry sherry 1/3 C sliced onion
1/2 tsp group ginger 1 pepper, sliced thin
1 lb chicken in 1 inch pieces 1/2 C chopped walnuts
1 garlic clove, halved
Combine 3 T soy sauce, sherry, ginger. Add chicken pieces and let stand
15 minutes. Heat 2 T oil in wok or large skillet. Add onion, garlic and
walnuts. Cook 3 minutes, tossing mixture with slotted spoon. Remove garlic;
remove walnut-onion mixture to small bowl. Add remaining 1 T oil to wok.
Heat. Add chicken and sauce. Stir fry till cooked (5 minutes). Add walnut-
onion mixture. Toss and serve.
Stir Fried Chicken
1 lb chicken in 1 inch pieces 1 tsp cornstarch
3 T soy sauce 2 T cornstarch mixed with 2 T water
2 peppers, thinly sliced 1 onion thinly sliced
1 lb mushrooms, sliced 3 T veg oil
2 cloves minced garlic 1 tsp ginger
1/2 C chicken broth
Mix cornstarch and 1 T soy sauce. Marinate chicken in theis at least 20
minutes, refrigerated. Heat oil in skillet or wok over high heat till
hot. Add chicken and cook about 3 minutes. Remove from pan. Add onions,
peppers, garlic, ginger and cook and stir till garlic is brown. Add
mushrooms. Cook and stir 2 minutes. Add chicken, chicken broth, 2 T
soy sauce. Heat till boling then stir in cornstarch mixture. Boil and
stir 1 minute.
Stir Fried Beef with Zucchini
1 lb beef flank or sirloin 1 T cornstarch
1 T oil 1 T water
1 tsp cornstarch 3 T oil
1 tsp salt 1 tsp finely chopped garlic
1 tsp soy sauce 3 T oil
dash white pepper 1 T soy sauce
1 lb zuchinni 1 tsp salt
1 med onion 1/2 c chicken broth or water
Trim fat from beef; cut beef with grain into 2 inch strips. Cut strips
across grain into 1/8 inch slices. toss beef, 1 T oil, 1 tsp cornstarch,
1 tsp salt, 1 tsp soy sauce and white pepper in bowl. Cover and refrigerate
20 minutes. cut zuchinni lengthwise into halver; cut each half diagonally
into 1/4 inch slices. Cut onion into halves. Place each half cut side
down and cut into thin slices. Mix 1 T wornstarch and water. Heat wok
or large skillet till 2 drops of water bubble and skitter when sprinkled
in wok. Add 3 T oil and coat. Add beef and garlic; stir fry until beef
is brown, about 3 minutes. Remove beef from wok. Add 3 T oil to wok and
coat. Add onion; stir-fry till tender (2 minutes). Add zuchinni; stir-fry
1 minute. Stir in 1 T soy sauce, 1 tsp salt. Stir in chicken broth and
heat to boiling. Stir in beef, heat to boiling. Stir in cornstarch
mixture; cook and stir until thickened, about 20 seconds. Serves 5.
Chicken with Cashews (Szechwan Style)
2 lbs chicken breasts 2 T soy sauce
1 egg white 2 T oil
1 tsp cornstarch 1 C raw cashews
1 tsp soy sauce 1/4 tsp salt
dash white pepper 1 tsp ground ginger
1 large green pepper 2 T oil
1 medium onion 1 T Hoisin sauce
1-8/12 oz can sliced bamboo shoots 1 tsp chili pepper
1 T cornstarch 1/4 C chicken broth
1 T cold water 2 T chopped green onions with tops
Remove bones and skin from chicken and cut into 1/4 inch pieces. Mix
egg white, 1 tsp cornstarch, 1 tsp soy sauce and white pepper with
chicken in bowl. Cover and refrigerate 20 minutes. Cut green pepper
into3/4 inch pieces. Cut onion into 8 pieces. Drain then cut bamboo
shoots into 1/2 inch pieces. Mix 1 T cornstarch, the water and 2 T
soy sauce. Heat wok until 1 to drops of water bubble and skitter when
sprinkled in wok. Add 2 T oil and coat. Stir fry cashews intil light
brown, about 1 minute. Remove cashews, drain on paper towel. Sprinkle
with salt. Add chicken to wok; stir-fry till turns white. Remove from
wok. Add onion pieces and ginger and stir fry till light brown. Stir
in bamboo shoots. Add 2 T oil and coat sides of wok. Add chicken,
green pepper, Hoison sauce and chili pepper. Stir fry 1 minute. Stir
in chicken broth; heat to boiling. Stir in cornstarch mixture and cook
and stir till thickened, about 20 seconds. Stir in cashews and green
onions. Serves 5.
|
18.16 | TURKEY DIVAN | PLANET::SPENCER | | Tue Feb 23 1988 12:11 | 24 |
| Here's one of my all-time favorites:
TURKEY DIVAN
************
10 oz. pkg. frozen broccoli spears, partially cooked
sliced turkey
can of cream of celery soup mixed with milk (about 1/2 cup)
shredded Cheddar cheese
buttered bread crumbs (I usually melt butter, then add equal amounts
of dry breadcrumbs and Parmesan cheese)
Grease or spray square baking dish, then line with broccoli. Top
with turkey, then pour soup mixture over. Top with cheese and plenty
of buttered breadcrumbs. Bake @ 350 for about 30-40 minutes.
This is really delicious; in fact, I usually double the recipe and
bake in oblong dish.
Enjoy!
|
18.38 | Never too late for leftovers? | GEMVAX::ADAMS | | Mon Jun 13 1988 11:56 | 5 |
| My favorite thing to do with leftover ham is make ham, pea, and
cheese salad. Ingredients (you figure out the quantities on your
own) are macaroni, ham (cubed), cheese (cubed), peas (cooked), mayo,
and spices to taste.
|
18.7 | THE BEST TURKEY LEFTOVER | MUSKIE::FOULKROD | | Mon Nov 07 1988 14:13 | 32 |
| TURKEY TETRAZINNI
10 - 12 thin slices of turkey
1 pkg med. egg noodles
4 tbsp butter
1 small onion chopped extra fine
flour
whole milk
1 clove garlic minced
1/2 c. parmesan cheese
salt/pepper.
2 pkg frozen brocolli SPEARS (thawed & rinsed & patted dry)
Preheat oven at 325
Spray PAM on a 10 x 15 glass bake pan. While making white sauce,
boil water for noodles according to instructions on package, you'll
need 2/3 pkg.
For white sauce, in a large skillet melt butter, and brown onion
and garlic, add enough flour to make a bubbly paste, let bubble for 1
minute (careful not to burn). Slowly add whole milk (2% ok) while
using a wire whisk to prevent lumping. Keep adding a little at a time
until it is medium thick like gravy. Simmer while adding parmesan
cheese. Add salt and pepper to taste. Let simmer for about 7 minutes
adding more milk if necessary.
After noodles are done, drain well and pour into sprayed glass baking
pan. Take brocolli spears and pat dry.
Pour 1 cup sauce over noodles, arrange turkey neatly over noodles.
Line rim of pan with brocolli spears. Pour remaining sauce over.
Cover and bake for 20 minutes.
|
18.47 | Burritos | PRGMUM::FRIDAY | Patience averts the severe decree | Mon Sep 18 1989 11:45 | 12 |
| Here's a quick and easy way we sometimes use left over
chicken.
Break chicken into small pieces.
Mix with sour cream or mayonaise.
Season with some cumin.
Spread onto flour tortillas. Add
a generous amount of shredded Longhorn cheese.
Roll up the burritos and microwave until hot.
Definitely not elegant, but it's a real time
and leftover saver.
|
18.42 | More ideas for any type of leftovers would be useful. | STRATA::STOOKER | | Wed Oct 25 1989 16:18 | 16 |
| The idea about the enchiladas or burritos sound great. I will try
it. Even the pork salad for sandwiches sound good. The only other
recipe I could come up with is to shred and add BBQ sauce for BBQ
sandwiches.
And speaking of leftover roast beef, Ideas for that would be good
also. Maybe this topic could be used for ideas on what to do with
leftover beef, pork, chicken, fish etc.
Using leftovers in my house is not something that I have done much
of before, but I can no longer justify throwing out leftovers.
So any info on how to use leftovers would be great.
Thanks,
Sarah
|
18.43 | and for left over pot roast... | THE780::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Thu Oct 26 1989 17:40 | 28 |
| Leftover roast beef:
The previously mentioned cold-meat salad works great with ground up or
chopped cooked roast beef, mayonaise, a dollop of dijon mustard, diced
onion, diced dill pickle....sandwiches fit for a thundering herd.
Make a tomato beef macaroni casserole - chopped cooked roast beef,
peeled, chopped tomatoes (I use canned if I'm in a hurry), cooked
macaroni, chunks of cream cheese (lite cream cheese) or even cottage
cheese stirred together, seasoned with spices of choice (pepper, salt,
a sprinkle of paprika). Turn into a lightly oiled casserole dish
and bake until hot and smelling tasty. I add some salsa for extra
zip but then I add salsa to almost everything.
Make a Wilde family skillet supper- winter fare from my childhood:
Cook sliced onion and sliced new or red potatoes in oil until nicely
browned and partially cooked. Lay slices of roast beef on top, pour
a little "a jus" from the pot roast over the lot. cover and simmer
until the potatoes are done. Serve with salad and crusty bread.
Mom used to also add carrots (left over from the pot roast) and
even parsnips when Dad wasn't looking.
Shredded cooked roast beef can also make burritos, enchiladas, or
barbecued sandwiches depending on the sauce you use. It can be
tossed into rice pilaf for a low-meat (and low fat) main dish.
And can be added to any stir-fry vegetable dish or even fried rice.
Leftovers are the raw materials of creativity!
|
18.44 | Hot Pork Sandwich..... | CSSE32::SKABO | $$ Money talks - Mine say's GOODBYE! (sigh) | Fri Oct 27 1989 12:59 | 9 |
|
Another easy idea that is always used at our house with leftover
pork (beef roast, turkey, chicken, etc....) is to heat it up in
its own gravy (or make extra) and serve over bread (open face or
add another slice of bread on top) as a Hot Pork (Beef, Turkey,
Chicken, etc...) sandwich.
simple, easy and quick......
|
18.45 | other ideas | LEDS::BLODGETT | The fjords are calling me... | Tue Oct 31 1989 14:53 | 10 |
| My Mom always dipped pieces of leftover pork (or lamb) into an egg
wash, then bread crumbs and gently sauteed the pieces in margarine.
For beef, it was `hash'. Grind the beef, add instant mashed potato
flakes,(or leftover mashed potatoes) minced onion, & salt and pepper
and cook in between the 2 surfaces of an electric waffle iron with the
smooth plates on it. (you know what I mean, right?) or in a skillet. Be
sure you use some margarine or butter in the skillet or waffle iron.
I wish I had some leftovers for tonight!
|
18.46 | Quick Soup | HYDRA::R_CARROLL | | Wed Nov 22 1989 08:36 | 3 |
| Another idea is to dice the meat and add to raman noodle soup mix. I
also add any left over vegetables such as; corn, peas, carrots, or
green beans that may be in the refrigerator.
|
18.17 | Turkey a la King | KOBAL::DAVIS | | Fri Dec 22 1989 16:03 | 14 |
| Here's a great recipe for leftover turkey.
Ing:
Leftover turkey (I just put in as much as we feel like eating in one
night)
2 cans cream of mushroom
1 or 2 packages of frozen peas
That's it! Cook the peas as indicated on the package. Heat the turkey
and the cream of mushroom soup together in a pan, and add the peas when
they're done. Serve over noodles.
It's so easy, and yummy. We top with lots of black pepper.
|
18.18 | Turkey, eggs benedict(sp?) | MADMXX::GROVER | | Tue Dec 26 1989 09:45 | 15 |
| A variation to .6..... something I do with the same Turkey a la
King recipe... IS...
For an "after Christmas" brunch....
Toast wheat bread crisp (1 or 2 pieces)
fry two eggs, sunny side up..
Place toast on plate, egg over toast and Turkey mixture
over eggs. Sprinkle with fresh gound black pepper (to taste).
Makes a great variation to the "eggs benedict"(sp?).
EXCELLENT..!!! enjoy.!!!
|
18.19 | Turkey Marsella...quick and simple!! | BUFFER::LOMBARDI | Please take NOTE of this.......... | Tue Dec 26 1989 11:19 | 22 |
| Try this one!
Ingredients:
cold leftover turkey
1 finely chopped shallot
1/4 cup of marsella wine
4 oz of fresh mushrooms(sliced)
2 tbls of olive oil
salt and pepper to taste
In a large frying pan(supra preferrably), saute the shallots in the oil for
about 5 minutes or so. Then add the mushrooms and cook until browned. Add the
turkey and season. Cook for about another 5 minutes. Pour over white rice.
Serve with a crisp green salad, fresh sourdough bread and a bottle of good
chardonnay.
Tasty!!!
|
18.20 | Turkey Tetrazzini | FSHQA2::JFERGUSON | Always smilin' | Fri Dec 29 1989 10:19 | 24 |
| 1/2 lb. egg noodles--narrow
3 Tbsp. Butter
1/2 cup sliced mushrooms
3 Tbsp flour
1 cup broth
1/2 cup milk
3/4 cup white wine
1-1.5 cups diced meat
1/2 cups dry bread crumbs
1/4 cups Parmesan cheese
Cook noodles. Saute mushrooms in butter, blend in flour. Stir
in broth and wine. Cook, stirring until smooth. Add milk and
season to taste.
In a buttered baking dish, layer ingredients--noodles, meat, sauce,
noodles, meat, sauce and ending with noodles. Sprinkle with mixture
of crumbs and cheese.
Dot with butter and bake at 450* for 20-30 minutes OR Microwave
at high, covered, for 18 minutes then uncovered for 2 minutes.
Judy
|
18.21 | Turkey Enchiladas | FSHQA2::JFERGUSON | Always smilin' | Fri Dec 29 1989 10:25 | 20 |
| Combine:
2 cans cream of chicken soup
1/2 cup sour cream
1/2 cup diced green chilies
1/2 tsp salt
2 cups leftover turkey
Combine:
2 cups grated cheese--longhorn,jack,cheddar--your choice
1/2 cup chopped onions
corn tortillas
Fill tortillas with cheese/onion mixture. Roll each and place in
a baking dish. Pour soup mixture over tortillas. Bake at 350*
for 25 minutes.
Judy
|
18.22 | Turkey Curry Salad | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Fri Dec 29 1989 17:05 | 31 |
| I will often make a batch of turkey curry salad for sandwiches. I
don't measure because it depends on whether I'm making enough for one
sandwich or several. I just "wing it" if you'll pardon the pun.
Anyway, I'll take the following:
Cold leftover turkey
Onion
Butter/marg
Curry powder
Ground black pepper to taste
Salt to taste
Cayenne pepper (I like quite a bit)
Garlic powder to taste
Chopped nuts (optional - like walnuts, pecans)
Raisins
Diced apple (optional)
Experiment with quantities and additions/subtractions from this
list. I just use whatever I find in the house at the time, except for a
few key ingredients that need to be there. Then I do the following:
1. Saute the chopped onion in butter/marg until soft but not browned
2. Toss in the turkey, mixing well (add butter/marg if it seems too
dry)
3. Add the other spices, nuts and raisins
4. Cook for a minute until the turkey warms and flavors blend
5. Add the chopped apple
6. Toss a few times and take it off the heat.
This can be eaten while it's still warm or refrigerated and eaten cold.
Use a "hardy" bread like french, italian, etc.
|
18.23 | Leftovers = Turkey Salad | HYEND::JDYKSTRA | | Fri May 25 1990 13:45 | 45 |
|
What to do with leftovers...
Moroccan Turkey Salad
----------------------
Adapted from "The New Carry Out Cuisine".
Serves 8
2 pounds turkey meat, cut into bite size pieces
2 green peppers, sliced into 1/4-inch wide by 1-inch long pieces
2 small red onions, thinly sliced
1/4 cup parsley, chopped
1/4 cup fresh cilantro (coriander leaves), chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
Vinagrette:
2/3 cup extra virgin olive oil
juice of two fresh lemons
1 t paprika
1 t ground cumin
1/4 t cayenne (red pepper)
salt and pepper to taste
watercress for garnish
Whisk together the vinagrette ingredients. Combine the
turkey, peppers, onions, parsley, cilantro and garlic. Mix well
with the vinagrette. Arrange the salad in serving bowl lined or
otherwise garnished with watercress.
This salad works best with the dark meat from the smoked,
barbequed turkey above, but also try it with commercial smoked
turkey breast.
SERMON: Do NOT substitute bottled "Realemon" juice for
fresh lemons. There is absolutely no comparison. Get a hand
held reamer to squeeze the lemons, just at Jeff Smith says. It
makes life a lot easier.
SERMON TWO: Do use extra virgin olive oil. It has much
more flavor per dollar than the cheaper stuff.
|
18.8 | soup, crockettes, et al | DUGGAN::MAHONEY | | Tue Oct 23 1990 11:10 | 15 |
| The best to use left-over turkey is... turkey crockettes! all you need
is a good bechamel sauce and add the turkey meat, a bit of nutmeg, salt
and pepper and let it cool, then shape the crockettes, deep fry them
and ENJOY them!
With turkey carcass and neck, make a turkey soup! I use chick peas,
soaked overnight, some vegies and turkey bones and an extra hog bone,
smoked. Let it cook (I use pressure cooker, 40 minutes) and you get the
best concentrated turkey soup ever). Serve soup as first course, turkey
crockettes and some salad and you have a great meal, just from
left-overs that never look like left-overs. I always stretch my turkey
so much that we eat a whole week from a single bird... and never have a
hint of left-over food...
It is amazing what you can do in the kitchen when you dedicate the time
to it...
|
18.9 | Thai Turkey Salad | DSTEG1::HUGHES | | Tue Oct 23 1990 15:49 | 5 |
| There is a recipe in this notes file for Thai Chicken Salad. It's
absolutely fantastic and would be great with leftover turkey.
Linda
|
18.39 | Make into Ham Salad.... | CSSE32::SKABO | Money talks, mine say's GOODBYE! | Wed Jan 09 1991 11:59 | 6 |
|
What we do sometimes with the last of a ham is to make Ham Salad...
Very easy; place an amount of ham in the food processor, chopped
fine, add pickle relish (or chop pickles, red pepper, etc) to taste and
mayo - enjoy!
|
18.41 | Fried Rice, maybe? | CRUISE::CSTAREK | | Wed Jan 09 1991 17:16 | 3 |
| How about adding to some cold rice and making fried rice? Add
any vegetables that you have leftover too! Or, add to macaroni
and cheese to make a casserole.
|
18.40 | Shepherd's Pie with Ham | STEREO::KINSEY | Mrs. KINSEY REPORTing | Thu Jan 10 1991 14:44 | 9 |
| You could always cut the ham in steak portions and then dice
and use in shepherds pie as needed. Just add a portion of the
ham with canned (drained) or fresh vegetables and a cream soup
(like cream of mushroom or cream of broccoli). Then top with
mashed potatoes and bake in the oven (I usually do 25 minutes
at 400 degrees). My husband always received a huge ham at Xmas
from his company and that's how I used it!!
Helaine
|
18.24 | Leftover Mussels | CALVA::WOLINSKI | uCoder sans Frontieres | Mon Jul 29 1991 16:59 | 24 |
|
Rep .0
What to do with leftover mussels,
1. Marinate them with oil, vinegar, mushrooms, onions, red peppers.
and serve them as a cold salad.
2. Make mussel chowder.
3. Line the bottom of a casserole dish with steamed white rice,
cover with a layer of mussels. Then cover the mussels with a
cheese sauce. Sprinkle alittle grated swiss cheese on top and
bake until hot and bubbly.
4. Replace the rice in 3 with chopped fresh spinach.
I could probably think of more but those come quickly to mind.
-mike
|
18.25 | Stuffed, of course! | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Mon Jul 29 1991 17:40 | 10 |
| mince the mussels, make a bechamel sauce, very thick and well
condimented, add the mussels and fill the shells with this mixture, let
them cool and when fully cold freeze them in air-tight freezer bags to
be used when needed... these can be stored for months!
To serve, add oil to skillet. Holding the mussel face down dip it in
beaten egg and then in bread crumbs (dip only the bechamel side of the
mussel), then fry them till golden and... bonn apetit!
It is a delicious snack or apetizer for a dressy dinner...
|
18.26 | Stuffed and Baked | FSOA::LCHESTER | | Tue Jul 30 1991 10:18 | 7 |
| re .2 Like stuffed clams, stuffed mussels can also be frozen then
baked in a very hot oven after drizzling with a little
butter.
I have frozen shopped steamed mussels all by themselves
satisfactorily. The flavor fades a bit, but they are fine
in chowder or strongly seasoned, creamed dishes.
|
18.50 | Beef Round Leftover ideas needed! | CHORDZ::WALTER | | Wed May 10 1995 12:51 | 9 |
| Does anyone have any ideas for eye round roast leftovers (besides
pepper steaks)? My mother keeps handing me hers, along with her
gravy because my father won't eat any after the day its cooked but;
neither will my husband!
Thanks,
cj
|
18.51 | roastbeef hash | I18N::CHAPMAN | | Wed May 10 1995 13:15 | 3 |
| I don't remember where I saw it in this NOTE but grind up the roast
with potatoes -- making roastbeef/hash -- like cornbeef/hash. You
can form patties and fry it, or make a loaf of it. Excellent!
|
18.52 | | TAMDNO::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Wed May 10 1995 13:32 | 6 |
| re: .50
Make shepherd's pie. Put sliced meat, onions, maybe some carrots and
peas, and gravy into a pan. Cover with mashed potatoes and bake.
-Hal
|
18.53 | A few ideas... | DFSAXP::JP | Telling tales of Parrotheads and Parties | Wed May 10 1995 14:35 | 6 |
| mince and add to chili con carne or tomato sauce
dice and add it to a risotto
dice it and make beef & barley soup
mince it finely (pate like), spice it up and wrap in pastry (filo or puff)
dice and marinate in oil&vinegar with garlic, onion, celery, parsely (steak
salad)
|
18.54 | Thanks for the replies! | CHORDZ::WALTER | | Wed May 10 1995 17:05 | 3 |
| Hash sounds great but where do I find the recipe?
cj
|
18.55 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Tue May 16 1995 17:33 | 12 |
| cj,
I don't have a recipe per se, but I usually mix diced meat, potatoes
(also leftover, but you could boil up a couple) and whatever other
veggies are around and toss them into a pan that I have already sauteed
onions in. You can add gravy, or cream of whatever soup if it feels
like you need more "smush" to it.
thios works well for breakfast with a poached egg centered into a well
of hash also.
meg
|
18.56 | Boneless Pork leftover recipes needed. | YIELD::STOOKER | | Mon Oct 28 1996 11:03 | 6 |
18.57 | hash | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Mon Oct 28 1996 13:04 | 10 |
18.58 | | NEWVAX::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Mon Oct 28 1996 14:25 | 12 |
18.59 | put it in your tomato sauce/gravy | SEND::SEELEY | | Wed Oct 30 1996 11:27 | 10 |
18.60 | | SUBSYS::ARMSTRONG | sort of cast in concrete | Wed Oct 30 1996 11:31 | 7 |
18.61 | Good timing on this topic | KRSNA::DKOSKO | Dancin' on a bubble full of trouble... | Wed Oct 30 1996 13:08 | 10 |
18.62 | shred meat? | ADISSW::HAECK | Mea culpa, mea culpa, mea maxima culpa! | Thu Oct 31 1996 09:52 | 3 |
18.63 | Not So Dumb! | KRSNA::DKOSKO | Dancin' on a bubble full of trouble... | Thu Oct 31 1996 11:25 | 8 |
18.64 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | be the village | Sat Nov 02 1996 08:29 | 21 |
18.65 | Not to mention the kitchen smells great... | PHXSS1::ADKINS | | Fri Mar 07 1997 15:12 | 14 |
| Pork leftovers? No prob.
Slice it up, throw it in a pot, add some liquids and spices and simmer
the BeJeezes out of it until it falls apart.
There's a couple of really good barbeque recipes in Fanny Flagg's
"Whistlestop Cafe Cookbook".
The basic recipe is water, butter, Worchester (sp?), paprika, brown
sugar, cider vinegar, and lemon juice. Play with the balance of each
according to your taste.
Jim
|
18.66 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Mon Mar 10 1997 12:23 | 1 |
| worcestershire
|