T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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258.1 | Suggestions | VERDI::SLEWIS | | Mon May 12 1986 12:40 | 22 |
| I know there's a recipe for the spinach and cheese and phyllo dough
in Jeff Smith's 'Frugal Gourmet', but I tried it once and they didn't
make it overnight in the fridge very well.
Other things I've done ahead of time that have worked well:
Chicken Wings - can be frozen up to 3 weeks
Spinach Dip - recipe on Knorr's veg. soup box - serve with cocktail
rye bread or buy a loaf of dark round bread,
scoop out the middle and put the dip in there,
and use scooped out bread as dippers
Stuffed Shells- medium-sized pasta shells, cooked, and stuffed
with a mixture of shrimp,yogurt, chives and
cayenne
Spinach Squares-freeze well, mentioned a few (tens,hundreds)
notes back; I have a lower-calorie version if
you want it
Dips,Chips and Vegetables - I have good recipes for Chilied
Bean dip and Hummus if you'd like them.
Good Luck! We were only brave enough to have the rehearsal dinner
at home (Lasagne, made two weeks ahead of time and frozen)
Sue
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258.3 | Hummus is easy to make | CAD::RICHARDSON | | Tue May 13 1986 13:37 | 11 |
| I bet that was meant as two separate things - it would be a wierd
mixture! Hummus is easy to make; I can give you that recipe off
the top of my head. Buy a large can of garbanzos (chickpeas).
Drain them and purree them in a food processor with about half
a cup of tahini (sesame seed paste), some garlic or garlic powder,
a couple of tablespoons of lemon juice, some cumin, and enough water
to reach the consistency that you want. Some people add olive oil
and/or paprika, and some people like to mix in a few whole chickpeas.
This makes a reasonable-sized bowl of hummus. Serve it with wedges
of pita bread. Oh, some people will claim that the cumin should
be left out...there are a lot of variations.
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258.4 | Chilied Bean Dip | HOLST::SLEWIS | | Wed May 14 1986 10:00 | 29 |
| Re.3 - That's right - I meant it as 2 separate recipes. I've tried
4 variations; the latest has chopped onion and garlic sauteed in
olive oil for a little bit; then added to the chickpeas, lemon juice,
tahini, soy sauce and extra sesame seed.
Re.0 - Since you mentioned margaritas, I looked through a New Mexican
Cookbook I have and it suggested a taco bar - chop up all the toppings
ahead of time, make the seasoned meat ahead of time, then all you
have to do is re-warm the meat and set the toppings out.
Re.2- Recipe for Chilied BeanDip (from Jane Brody's Good FoodBook)
Chiled Bean Dip
1 16oz can kidney or pinto beans, drained and rinsed
2 or more tablespoons chopped green chilies or jalapeno
(fresh or canned, to taste)
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 teaspoon chili powder,or to taste
1/8 tsp cumin
2 tsp minced onion
2 tsp minced fresh parsley
In a blender, process beans,peppers,vinegar,chile powder and cumin
until smooth. Transfer to a bowl. Stir in onion and parsley and
serve.
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258.6 | yo, amigos! | ARNOLD::WIEGMANN | | Wed May 28 1986 12:35 | 33 |
| thanks for the suggestions! But I do have a question - does the
yogurt get too runny in the stuffed shells??
Also, yes, I'd appreciate a lo-cal version of the spinach squares,
if not for the wedding, for euchre parties! Does anyone play euchre
besides in Ohio and Michigan??
The taco party sounds like a fun theme party with minimal fuss!!
to reciprocate, I have a dynamite margarita recipe I'd like
to share:
A glass jar or container that has marks up the side makes it easy
- I have an old Ball jar with eight marks. If not, this can be
adapted to any container you have.
3 parts tequila (using white or gold will change the taste,
depending on whether you want to avoid the taste, or
savor it!)
1 part triple sec
1 part Rose's lime juice (this is 30% sugar, don't use
Reallime or straight lime juice without adding sugar)
2 parts sour mix (Daily's is best, if you can't get it,
sometimes your local neighborhood bar will sell it to
you - it is what bars use instead of Holland House,
etc)
fill your blender can two thirds full of ice, then pour in the 'rita
mix till it comes two thirds of the way up the ice, then blend.
We keep a jar of the mix in the freezer all the time - eliminates
having to make the mix up everytime you crave a cold one, just stir
well first.
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258.7 | Margaritas | HANDEL::SLEWIS | | Wed May 28 1986 16:37 | 8 |
| The shells don't get too runny - they're supposed to be refrigerated
first. I imagine that helps. I'll type in the recipes tomorrow.
Your recipe for margaritas sounds like my husband's recipe for 'near-
famous' margaritas. 'Famous' margaritas are made from frozen fresh
lime juice ice cubes made from limes from his parents' back yard.
(Those are only for the brave; they're VERY sour!)
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258.8 | Shrimp-stuffed shells | BRAHMS::SLEWIS | | Thu May 29 1986 13:01 | 20 |
|
Shrimp-Stuffed Shells
1/2 pound raw shrimp (frozen is acceptable)
1/3 cup plain low-fat yougurt
2 tsp minced fresh chives
Cayenne to taste
4 oz large macaroni shells, cooked al dente
Parsley and chopped red pepper for garnish
Cook the shrimp in boiling water for 1 minute or until they
are pink and firm. Drain and rinse twice. Remove shells and
devein if necessary.Finely chop shrimp.
Mix the shrimp,yogurt,chives and cayenne in a small bowl.
Cover and chill for 1 hour.
Using a small spoon, fill each shell with a small amount of
shrimp mixture.
About 10 calories each. The author suggests using garlic chives,
or adding a small clove of crushed garlic.
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258.9 | Spinach and Cheese Squares | BRAHMS::SLEWIS | | Thu May 29 1986 13:09 | 24 |
| 2 large eggs
6 tablespoons whole-wheat flour
10 oz frozen chopped spinach, thawed and drained well
(squeeze out excess liquid)
16 oz (2 cups) low-fat cottage cheese
6 oz (2 cups) grated Cheddar
1/4-1/2 tsp black pepper
1/8 tsp cayenne, optional
Pinch nutmeg, optional
3 tbs wheat germ
In a large bowl, beat eggs with flour until smooth.
Add spinach, cotage cheese, Cheddar,pepper, cayenne and nutmeg and
mix well. Pour into well-greased 13x9x2 baking pan.
Sprinkle top with wheat germ, and bake in 350 oven for
about 45 minutes. Let stand about 10 minutes then cut
into 1 1/2 inch squares for serving.
No calorie count on this one, but I've a similar recipe
which uses a full pound of cheddar, and each piece has
59 calories.
Both this recipe and the stuffed shell recipe from "Jane Brody's
Good Food Book"
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258.10 | MENU: Wedding Ideas | ARNOLD::WIEGMANN | | Mon Aug 04 1986 15:15 | 39 |
| Thanks to all of you for your suggestions/encouragement! The wedding
came off without any major disasters or horror stories. So, I thought
I'd share what we came up with, and if anyone wants the recipes,
let me know and I'll post them here!
Fresh fruit skewers in watermelon baskets - bamboo skewers
broken in half with a strawberry, seedless grape, chunk of
pineapple and chunk of watermelon on each. The watermelon
was carved so that they looked like baskets with handles.
We skewered the fruit ahead of time but didn't put it in
the watermelon till just beforehand so that it wouldn't get
mushy.
Phyllo triangles with fillings of spinach and feta, and chicken
and walnuts - these are really easy and can be done ahead.
Mini quiches - were thinking of using the mini-muffin pans,
but when frozen 3" tart shells priced out at 9 cents each,
we decided to have these be the main thing - mushroom/onion/
Swiss and bacon/onion/cheddar.
Prosciutto cups - these were an experiment, but easy, too.
Prosciutto is spicy ham and you line mini muffin pan cups
with it, then fill with spinach and ricotta, top with sour
cream. The ham holds it shape, and we just put them in mini-
sized paper liners when done to absorb grease after they're
baked.
Veggie pizza - on a crust of spread out baked crescent rolls,
spread with a cream cheese/ranch dressing layer, then minced
raw veggies and cheese, then chilled & cut in squares.
In addition there were the round loaves of bread with filling for
dipping pieces in, and misc. sweets and nuts, and frozen snowshoes
for making toasts when we cut the cake.
thanks again to all -
tw
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