T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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98.51 | ASPIC: Tomato Aspic Recipes | THE780::WILDE | Being clever is tiring.. | Thu Mar 24 1988 23:52 | 65 |
| As requested off-line, I am contributing the following tomato aspic
recipes from the FANNY FARMER COOKBOOK. A nice garnish for any of
these recipes is to drop a dollop of Ranch salad dressing on each
serving (serve on a bed of bright green lettuce leaves - of course).
TOMATO ASPIC
2 envelopes gelatin 1/2 teaspoon salt (optional)
4 cups (1 L) tomato juice 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
1 onion sliced thin 4 whole cloves
4 tablespoons chopped celery leaves 4 tablespoons lemon juice
2 and 1/2 teaspoons sugar
sprinkle gelatin in a small bowl, add 1/3 cup water, stir and let
stand. Combine the juice, onion, celery leaves, sugar, salt, pepper,
and cloves in a pot. Bring to a boil and lower the heat to simmer.
Simmer for 5 minutes. Remove from the heat, strain, stir in the
softened gelatin, and stir for 2 minutes until gelatin is dissolved.
Add the lemon juice, stir, pour into 1 quart mold, chill until set.
TOMATO ASPIC WITH VEGETABLES
1 pound, 12 ounce (800 g) can 1/3 cup (3/4 dL) beef bouillon
tomatoes 1 and 1/2 cups (3 and 1/2 dL)
1/2 teaspoon sugar diced raw veggies such as
1 onion sliced thin zucchini, celery, sweet
2 bay leaves red and green peppers, and
6 fresh leaves fresh basil seeded, cucumber
(or 1/4 teaspoon dried basil) parsley sprigs
1 envelopes gelatin 1/2 teaspoon salt (optional)
Black olives 1/2 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
simmer tomatoes, sugar, onion, bay leaves, basil, salt, pepper for
15 minutes. Soak the gelatin in cold bouillon plus 2 tablespoons of
water. Strain the tomatoes (save the pulp for a sauce or soup). Mix
the gelatin into the hot liquid until dissolved. Fill bottom 1/2 inch
of a 1 quart mold with liquid, chill until just set (a little tacky to
the touch). While the mold is chilling, place the rest of the liquid
in the refrigerator and chill until the texture of egg whites. Stir
in the vegetables, pour into the mold and chill until thoroughly set.
When unmolded, decorate with parsley and olives.
FRESH TOMATO ASPIC
2 pounds (900 g) or about Salt (to taste)
1 and 1/4 L (5 cups) Up to 1 teaspoon sugar (optional)
fresh diced tomatoes 1 tablespoon lemon juice (optional)
1 envelope gelatin
1 teaspoon grated onion
1/4 cup (1/2 dL) minced celery
and leaves
Boil the tomatoes with 3/4 cup water over medium heat, stirring often,
for 15 minutes. Dissolve gelatin in 1/4 cup cold water. Put the
tomatoes through a vegetable mill or strainer, then return the puree to
pan and add onion and celery. Add salt to taste (up to 1 teaspoon) and
sugar and lemon juice if needed. Cook 5 minutes, stirring briskly.
Remove from the fire and add gelatin, stirring until dissolved. Turn
into 1 quart ring mold and chill until firm.
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98.48 | well, the hard way is... | IOWAIT::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Tue Jul 24 1990 18:09 | 50 |
| if you want beef aspic, then making it from scratch is a long drawn-out
process. An overview is:
1) brown veal and beef soup bones in the oven under the broiler
until nice and dark brown. Cool a little.
2) place in large soup pot with 1 or 2 onions, 1 or 2 bay leaves,
some whole pepper corns, some chunks of carrot, celery, and
cold water to cover. Simmer for hours until a rich broth
is created.
3) strain through double thickness of cheesecloth into a smaller
pot. Immediately stir in an egg white...strain through
cheese cloth again. salt to taste.
4) chill well. if you had enough of the right kind of bones,
it may be jelled all by itself. if not, measure. Heat over
medium heat, adding 1 packet of knox unflavored gelatin for
each two cups of broth. stir over heat until completely
mixed and gelatin is dissolved. remove from heat and then
chill until the consistency of unbeaten egg white. check
often until it coats a spoon well. Now you have aspic
ready to use. or you can buy canned aspic which you heat
then chill to the desired texture and use.
use the aspic to "seal" food on a cold food platter.
looks very "jewel" like and tastes nice.
tomato aspic is made both from fresh tomatoes, and lots of work, or
from tomato juice and less work.
1) heat tomato juice with 2 tablespoons fresh celery leaves,
some peppercorns (to taste), a bay leaf, and other herbs
you may like...dried/fresh basil perhaps? Simmer for
approx. 20 minutes.
2) strain thru double layer of cheesecloth. For every two
cups juice, add 1 packet gelatin powder, stir well and
heat over medium heat until all is mixed and gelatin is
dissolved. chill to texture of unbeaten egg white.
3) stir in sliced, drained olives, or paper-thin celery slices.
pour into pretty mold and chill well until firm.
4) unmold and serve over lettuce and garnish with fresh,
homemade mayonaise.
or buy in the can, heat, chill to egg white consistency,
stir in the garnish, mold and chill until firm.
|
98.49 | Where can I buy the canned aspic? | SONATA::BERGERON | | Wed Jul 25 1990 09:57 | 11 |
| RE: 1
I have a good recipe for Shrimp in Tomatoe Aspic but I haven't made it
in years because I can no longer find tomatoe aspic in a can.
I live in Central Massachusetts - do you happen to know where I could
buy some?
Thanks
|
98.50 | Tomato Aspic | LEDS::TBROWN | | Fri Jul 27 1990 10:39 | 38 |
| I've never heard of being able to buy tomato aspic in a can, but this
is a recipe my Grandmother gave me and I think it's good. I'm going by
memory here..... I'll check my recipe this week-end to make sure it's
correct.
1 can tomato soup
3 oz cream cheese
1 envelope7 unflavored gelatin
1/4 cup cold water
1/2 cup Miracle Whip*
1 cup chopped onion
1 cup chopped celery
1 cup chopped red or green bell pepper
Heat soup and cream cheese over low heat until blended. I use a wire
whip to get it totally blended. Remove from heat. Add gelatin to cold
water and let it dissolve.... add to soup mixture. Let it cool down a
little bit then add the Miracle Whip, blend well. Let this mixture
start to set before adding the vegetables. At this point you can add a
dash of hot sauce or other seasonings if you like.
Rinse your mold in cold water before adding the aspic mixture. I like
to use individual molds. Refrigerate until set. To remove the aspic,
dip the mold in hot water for a few seconds and run a knife around
the edges.
* The recipe calls for Miracle Whip. It doesen't taste the same if you
substitute mayo, and I like mayo better on sandwiches, etc.
1 cup each of the onion, celery and pepper may be too much for some
people, and I tend to cut back because it overpowers the tomato
flavor.
I hope you like......
Tracey
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98.39 | Me too | OCTAVE::VIGNEAULT | Java-Man DGMNS | Wed Apr 01 1992 14:05 | 4 |
|
It's always congealed for me as well fwiw.
Lv
|
98.40 | it's good for ya | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Apr 01 1992 15:33 | 5 |
| this is an indication that you have cooked the bones long enough to get the
good stuff out of them. It is a healthy soup. If your soup doesn't congeal,
you simply cooked is less time, or used many fewer bone
|
98.41 | if you reduce it it will congeal. | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Apr 01 1992 16:34 | 6 |
| Mine usually congeal but it depends on the fluid density too. If I
reduce the fluid volume a bit, it will congeal but if I have nearly
the original volume of liquid, it often will not congeal. I then
reduce it because that is recommended.
ed
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98.42 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Life hand ya lemons? Make Lemonade! | Wed Apr 01 1992 16:36 | 3 |
| Now you know where Jello comes from! (:
L-
|
98.43 | | COMET::HAYESJ | Duck and cover! | Thu Apr 02 1992 06:16 | 7 |
| re: .42
I never knew Jell-o had bones in it.
;^)
Steve
|
98.44 | also agar-agar | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Thu Apr 02 1992 13:17 | 11 |
| I think most commercial gelatin is made starting from beef bones. But
there are also some seaweeds that are used (to make agar-agar). So
don't panic if you are a vegetarian. I've never actually used
agar-agar to make liquid gel (except in biology lab, years ago) but the
stuff is available in Chinese grocery stores. And it may be what is in
vegetarian gelatin. I have some non-Americanized Chinese cookbooks
that have recipes for agar-agar gelatins in them, but I have always
made the "updated" versions, which use unflavored gelatin instead (or
simply jell meat cooking liquid).
/Charlotte
|
98.46 | Seaweed! | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Thu May 14 1992 12:24 | 10 |
| CARAGEENAN is a product made from seaweed and used in products to keep
them jelled; e.g., gelatins, toothpaste... even the new lean hamburger
being touted by a large burger chain!
I've had aspic in the past-- a pork aspic with vinegar poured on top.
It was made by a great aunt who is Polish, so I think it might be
familiar to certain cultures.
Rgds,
marcia
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98.47 | | TLE::WINALSKI | Careful with that VAX, Eugene | Thu May 14 1992 16:50 | 16 |
| RE: .46
Carageenan is an emulsifier, not a jelling agent. There are three main
jelling agents:
gelatin - a class of gelatinous proteins present in animal connective tissues
(bones, ligaments, tendons, and the like). An aspic is a soup with
enough gelatin content to be solid.
pectin - a class of glycoproteins (I think) present in plant connective
tissues. This is what holds fruit jams and jellies together.
agar-agar - a jelling agent extracted from a particular species of seaweed.
I think that biochemically it's related to the pectins.
--PSW
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