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Home Cooks Guide

A professional chef's guide to the home kitchen

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The Best, Perfectly Tender Smoked Pork Ribs

August 31, 2022

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Fall-off-the-bone perfectly smoked ribs!

Few things are better than spending a summer day slow cooking meat on the smoker. These ribs are simple to make and fall-off-the-bone tender. I use a dry-rub recipe in this recipe. Truth be told though, the spices don’t really matter here. If you don’t have one of these spices in your pantry, there’s no need to rush off to the store. You can sub or omit it (except the salt). The most important ingredient in this recipe is time! No short cuts allowed.

The Easiest Way to Make Perfectly Smoked Ribs

Season your meat.

As a general rule, I like to season any large pieces of meat that I’m going to cook the day before. This allows the salt to penetrate to the interior of the meat. But sometimes I fail to plan ahead, and that’s ok too. I like a dry rub on my ribs and I add the sauce after it comes off the grill. Try it with this delicious homemade Southwest BBQ Sauce or your favorite store-bought one.

Smoke Your Ribs Low and Slow

I use a Traeger Smoker and Grill. I’ve used several different electric smokers over the years and this one is the best! Whatever smoker you are using, prepare, and preheat it to the “smoke setting” (about 180 F) based on the manufactures instructions.

Place the ribs directly on the grill racks, bone-side down, unwrapped, and smoke them for 4-5 hours, spraying (or mopping) every 2-3 hours with a vinegar-water mix (applied cider vinegar, white vinegar or red wine vinegar).

Wrap the Ribs in Foil and Increase the Heat

Wrap the ribs in tin foil and tightly seal the edges. Increase the heat of your smoker to 250 F, and continue to cook for another 3 hours. That’s about 8 hours of total cooking time!

Take a peek at the ribs, the meat should have pulled back revealing the clean ends of the bone and the meat should be soft to the touch. They should look like this:

Finished Smoked Ribs in Tin Foil
Finished Smoked Ribs

If you stabbed them with a fork, the fork would pull out easily. If the meat is still firm, it’s not done! Keep going! You can turn the heat up to speed things along and check it in another 30 minutes. Remember, keep the grill closed while cooking as much as possible. Resist the temptation to watch it cook.

Once you are confident that the meat is done, remove it from the grill. Keeping it wrapped, let it rest for about 10-20 minutes. Then it’s ready to serve with your favorite sauce.

If you don’t have a smoker…

If you don’t have a smoker, you can make delicious tender ribs in your oven! Start the oven at 180-200F and bake uncovered for 2 hours spraying midway through with the vinegar-water mix. Turn the oven up to 250 F, wrap in foil and bake for another 3 hours. If you want to add a smokey flavor, you can use smoked salt in place of salt or add some smoked paprika to the spice mix. I’m not a fan of liquid smoke because of the artificial color in it.

Pro Tip for Home Cooks

Whenever I’m going to run my smoker all day, I like to load it up. These recipes can be cooked at the same temperature as these ribs if you want to maximize your productivity. Cook both of these to an internal temp of 140-145F.

The Best Dry-Cured Bacon

Dry-Cured Ham

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Smoked Pork Ribs, sprinkled with green onion on a plate.

Smoked Pork Ribs

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 5 from 5 reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 10
  • Cook Time: 8 hours
  • Total Time: 8 hours 10 minutes
  • Yield: 1 rack of ribs 1x
  • Category: BBQ
  • Method: Smoker
  • Cuisine: American
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Description

These fall-off-the-bone tender ribs are seasoned with a dry rub and a robust smokey flavor.  This recipe features a basic dry-rub recipe.  You could certainly play around the spices or do a wet marinade if you like.  The most important ingredient here is time!


Ingredients

Scale

1 rack of ribs (about 3.5 lbs)

1 T (9 g) Ancho Chili Powder

1/2 T (5 g) Ground Cumin

1/2 T (3 g) Ground Mustard Powder

1 T (9 g) Salt

1 T (11 g) Brown Sugar

1/2 T (3 g) Coarse Ground Black Pepper

1/2 t (1 g) Ground Allspice

1 t (1 g) Dried Thyme Leaves

1/2 T (4 g) Onion Powder

Vinegar-Water 


Instructions

Make the Dry-Rub

In a small bowl, combine the salt, sugar, and spices.

Rub this all over the rack of ribs.  You should do this at least 2 hours before cooking or up to a day before.

Add a 50:50 mix Vinegar: Water to a spray bottle (my preferred method) or a bowl with a basting brush.

Smoke the Ribs

Preheat your smoker to 180 F. I use an electric Traeger Smoker and Grill which I love!

Once the smoker is up and running, add the ribs directly on the grate.  Do not wrap in foil at this time.  Smoke the ribs at this temperature setting for about 5 hours, spraying or basting every 2 hours or so with the vinegar-water mixture.

Turn the smoker up to 300 F, wrap the ribs in tin foil.  Return the wrapped ribs to the smoker.  Continue cooking for another 2 hours.

Remove the ribs from the smoker and let rest for 10-30 minutes before unwrapping them.

Serve with your favorite BBQ Sauce and enjoy!


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Originally published 6/26/2020

Filed Under: Appetizer, Camping Recipes, Dairy Free, Entertaining, Gluten Free, Kid Friendly, Meat, Smoker, Uncategorized Tagged With: 4th of July, bbq, dry-rub, Labor Day, Pork, Ribs, smoked, Summer, Traeger Smoker

Tasty Little Bites for Parties: Hor d’oeuvres and Canapés

July 28, 2022

Passable Appetizers for your next party.

It’s July. In my past, pre-pandemic life, I would be about halfway through a grueling wedding season. Wrapping and stacking dozens of hotel pans in plastic wrap, carefully loading vans full of fragile and spillable materials to haul on curvey Foothill roads, sometimes to remote locations, and working 14-hour days on my feet lifting thousands of pounds cumulatively over the course of the day. Now, retired from it all, I’m 1 week into eating burgers, playing board games, and reading books as I watch afternoon storms roll through the Bitterroot Valley. It is wild to think how much has changed in a couple of years.

I’m not going to lie, there is a lot I do not miss about catering and the restaurant industry. Being able to spend summer weekends and holidays and birthdays with my kids is something I would not give up again. That being said, there is something special and even meditative about working with your hands and using food as a medium to make little works of art that bring joy to an occasion and then disappear. An artform epitomized by hor d’oeuvres and canapes – the showiest, most playful, and most creative “bites” in the business.

Over the decade that I catered Weddings, Winemaker Dinners, and Showers I created dozens and dozens of different types canapés and hor d’oeuvres. Sometimes I made them up on the fly with slices of baguette, and whatever leftovers I had in the kitchen as a thank you (or I’m sorry) to one of the diners at the restaurant. Sometimes I created them special for a client with very specific criteria, usually gleaned off of Pinterest (caterers love Pinterest😆).

Whether you are in the business and looking for ideas for your next catering quote, planning party food DIY at your home, or feeding little eaters who love fun and colorful bites that fit perfectly in their little hands, having a repertoire of canapés up your sleeve will come in handy a hundred times over. I’ll be adding links to my favorite recipes for party appetizers to this post over time so you will have them all in one place.

Canapés, Hor d’oeuvres and “Bites”. What’s the difference.

Technically, canapés are little bites composed of a starchy base layer, usually bread, and toppings. Hor d’oeuvres (pronounced “or-dervs”), on the other hand, are any other small appetizers served either plated, stationary, or passed. I use these terms interchangeably, but I use canapés more because… it’s easier to spell. I also use the term “bites,” and when I do I am usually referring to a single unit/ portion. For instance, a 3-hour cocktail party with no meal served would require about 15-18 “bites” per person, made up of 1-2 each of 10-12 different canapés/appetizers. A 3-hour party with a meal served, 4-6 “bites” per person, 3-6 different canapés.

Passable Party Appetizers, Canapés and Hor d’oeuvres

Sweet and Savory Stuffed Figs. Perfect for summer and fall parties.
A beautiful “bite” that wont ruin the appetite.
There’s an art to crudite.
Country Pâté Canapé
Chicken-Bacon-Chestnut Pâté
Smoked Rillette Canape with shaved turnip, pickles, onion and mustard.
Gravlax Tartare on Sourdough Cracker with cream cheese and dill
Super Easy and Fast Gravlax Canapés
Deviled eggs with assorted garnishes: saucisson, miners lettuse, olives, herbs
These deviled eggs are easy, economical, beautiful and loved by all.

Filed Under: Appetizer, Entertaining, Kid Friendly, Uncategorized Tagged With: Catering, dinner party, easy, fall, party food, passed appetizers, Spring, Summer

So Many Ways to Stuff a Fig!

July 28, 2022

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

A delicious and versatile party appetizer for Summer and Fall. Shown above: Fig stuffed with blue cheese, honey, and walnut (left), with blue cheese and pistachio (right)

Stuffed Figs are one of my favorite and most versatile appetizer dishes during the late summer and early fall. There are so many ways to stuff a fig. Stuffed figs can be served warm, grilled, roasted, or at room temperature. They can be served whole, cut open like a flower (shown above), or halved with the “stuffing” on top.

Figs are very sweet. Various fig varieties produce different notes ranging from nutty, honey, and berry to floral. This fruit wants to be balanced out with salty, bitter, and acidic ingredients like cured meats, nuts, pungent and tart cheeses, vinegar reductions, gastriques, and honey. Figs also make excellent desserts paired with cream, honey, and nuts.

Types of Figs

Any ripe fig works for stuffing. Some of my favorite of the most common varieties common in the US are as follows:

Green Figs

Calimyrna Figs – Bright green figs with a bright pink interior. Sweet. Visually striking. Great with blue cheese and goat cheese. Nutty flavor.

Kadota – Large bright green figs with a bright pink to honey-colored interior. These figs are less sweet than some other varieties. Their large size and sometimes hollowed-out interior lend themselves to cutting them in half and then stuffing.

Purple Figs

Mission Figs – Dark purple exterior and bright pink interior. Mission figs are very sweet. When roasted or grilled, their exterior takes on a really nice char and earthly flavor that contrasts with the sweet interior.

Black Turkey Figs – These are larger, homelier, and less sweet than other figs. Great for roasting or grilling and drizzling with honey.

Violette de Bordeaux (Negronne)– One of the most cold-tolerant varieties of fig. Violette de Bourdeaux tends to be a small to medium-sized fig, perfect for stuffing whole, with very dark skin and a bright red, very rich, berry-like sweet interior.

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Stuffed Figs

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star No reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 10 minutes
  • Yield: 24 bites 1x
  • Category: Appetizer
  • Method: Cold Prep
  • Cuisine: French
  • Diet: Gluten Free
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Description

Stuffed figs can be prepared as an appetizer or dessert.  These tasty bites are easy, beautiful, and fun for parties in the late summer and fall.


Ingredients

Scale

For 2 dozen Stuffed Fig “Bites”

24 small-medium figs with an x cut on the stem end of the fig to create a cavity

(or 12 large figs cut in half lengthwise)

Select a Stuffing Variation Below (or make up your own)

Blue Cheese, Pistachio, and Honey (shown above)

1–1 1/2 cups of room temperature blue cheese

1/2 cup chopped shelled and blanched pistachio (or sub walnuts)

Drizzle of honey

Milk and Honey (dessert or sweet appetizer) – serve chilled/room temp

1–1 1/2 cups mascarpone

honey for drizzling

1/2 cup chopped macadamia nuts (or sub almond, walnut, pecan, or pistachio)

Bacon and Goat Cheese

1–1 1/2 cups softened goat cheese

1/2 cup bacon lardons*

balsamic reduction (either store-bought or home-made)**

Proscuitto and Summer Herbs

1–1 1/2 cups Ricotta Cheese

6–8 thin slices (4–6 ounces) of prosciutto torn into 3-4 pieces each for 24 strips in total

12 large leaves Basil and Mint (combined) and cut “chiffonade” ***

Honey to drizzle (and or balsamic reduction)


Instructions

prepare your figs

Select your fig variety.  Look for ripe but still firm figs with unbroken and unshrivelled skin.

If the figs are large, slice them half lengthwise.  If they are small to medium cut an x on the top where the stem is and open up to create a cavity for your stuffing.

Place 1/2-1 Tablespoon of soft cheese filling in the cavity of the fig or on top of the fig half.

If Heating (optional for most of these variations):  Place in the oven, under the broiler, or on a grill at 425-450 F for about 4-5 minutes.  Too long and the fig will become very soft and will need to be eaten with a fork and knife, maybe served over a bed of arugula😉.  If you would like to be able to eat the figs with your fingers as an appetizer or dessert, keep the cooking hot and short.

On top of the cheese filling add cured meat, chopped nuts, and/or herbs if using.

Drizzle or place a drop of sauce over the top of each fig.  Alternatively, you may drizzle sauce on the platter first before placing the stuffed figs on top – which looks nice…. at least until the first fig is removed.


Notes

* To Make Bacon Lardons:  Cut your thick bacon slices lengthwise down the middle and then cross-wise into strips about 1/4 inch thick.  Ideally, your using your own dry-cured slab bacon, and can cut the lardons a little thicker than sliced bacon.  Fry the bacon lardons until crispy, set aside on a paper towel to drain, and cool to room temperature.  Refrigerate if not using right away.  These are great for all sorts of dishes – salads, soup garnishes, loaded baked potatoes, etc.

** To Make Balsamic Reduction (or any Vinegar Reduction):  Place 2 cups into the smallest saucepan you have in your house (no bigger than 2 quarts).  Make a mental mark of where the balsamic comes up to in the pan.  Place over the burner and bring to a boil.  Turn the heat down to medium and simmer until the vinegar has reduced to 1/4 of its original volume.  You will need to watch this closely.  It will burn and taste like tart carbon if you are not careful.  You can check this by pouring it into a measuring cup (after it has cooled down a bit).  When it is down it should coat the back of the spoon and be about 1/2 a cup.  It will continue to thicken as it cools.

*** “Chiffonade” pronounced “SHif-a-nad” or “Shif-a-nād” is, according to the Oxford Language Dictionary, “a preparation of finely cut leaf vegetables used as a garnish for soup.”  It can actually be used as a garnish for a lot of things – including these stuffed figs.  To prepare “chiffonade”, stack the leaves neatly, roll them up into a tight log, and then slice the log cross-wise as thinly as humanly possible into little threads…or ribbons, depending on your knife skills.

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Filed Under: Appetizer, Entertaining, Gluten Free, Grill, Kid Friendly, Sweets, Uncategorized Tagged With: Autumn, Catering, charcuterie board, dinner party, fall, Gluten Free, Summer, vegetarian, wedding food

Street Corn Pinwheels for the Grill or Campfire

July 6, 2022

Flavorful bite sized street corn, perfect for a shared summer appetizer.

Nothing says summertime like sweet corn off the grill. This dish is inspired by Mexican Elote and seasoned with chili powder, lime, cilantro, and queso fresco. These Street Corn Pinwheels make the perfect party appetizers or a BBQ side dish, and they great for my kids’ tiny hands too!

The tinfoil pack cooking method outlined in the recipe makes for easy cooking on the smoker, grill, oven or campfire. If you are scaling the recipe up to cook for a large party, you can spread the corn out directly on the grill rack over medium heat and cook until slightly charred and tender. Adding all the delicious spices, cheese, and cilantro just before serving.

I served these Corn Pinwheels on the summer menu at the restaurant for years running. It was a super popular item and with corn costing less than $1 per ear, we couldn’t go wrong from an ingredients cost standpoint 😉. Whether you are serving your family at home or a dinner party of 30 people, this is an easy and fun appetizer or side dish that won’t break the bank.

Take it camping!

Tinfoil pack cooking is made for camping. You can prep this up at home before your trip and throw the tinfoil pack in the cooler with the chopped cilantro and crumbled queso fresco bagged up separately. After your day of sun and hiking and fishing, it is ready to simply throw on the grill or campfire. No mess and no hassle. For tips and tricks on Camp Cooking check out this post: 9 Pro Tips and Recipes for Camp Cooking.

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Sliced Street Corn on platter

Street Corn Pinwheels Recipe

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star No reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor – Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Cook Time: 20 minutes
  • Total Time: 25 minutes
  • Yield: 15 bite sized pieces 1x
  • Category: Side Dish
  • Method: Grill, Smoker or Campfire
  • Cuisine: BBQ
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Description

These Street Corn Pinwheels are seasoned with lime, cilantro, chili powder, cumin, and queso fresco and perfect for an appetizer or summer BBQ side dish.


Ingredients

Scale

3 ears of corn, de-husked and sliced into 5–6 slices each

1 1/4 teaspoons salt

1 T ancho chili powder

1/2 t ground pepper

1/2 t cumin

2 T lime juice

1/2 t lime zest

1/4 t cayenne (optional)

4 T butter

1/2 cup crumbled queso fresco or cotija 

1/4 cup cilantro leaves to garnish (optional)


Instructions

Mix all of the ingredients together except for the cilantro and queso fresco (or cotija) and place in a foil packet with the seams tightly sealed.

Cook on 350 for 10 minutes, flip the packet over and cook for another 10 minutes. 

Remove from the packet onto a serving dish, sprinkle with the crumbled cheese, and cilantro.

Enjoy!


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Filed Under: Appetizer, Budget Bites (under $2), Busy Weeknight, Camping Recipes, Entertaining, Gluten Free, Grill, Kid Friendly, Sides and Salads, Smoker, Uncategorized Tagged With: 4th of July, appetizer, bbq, chili, cilantro, corn, Gluten Free, grill, queso, smoker, Traeger Smoker

Beautiful Radish and Butter Bites

July 5, 2022

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Radish served with butter and salt is a classic french snack. It’s one of those things that is so simple that a recipe is hardly needed. The most important thing is the quality of the ingredients. Use the best quality sweet (unsalted butter), the best salt (I love Maldon Flake Sea Salt for this), and the freshest radishes (Multi-colored “Easter Egg Radishes” are my favorite followed by “French Breakfast Radish”, no bigger than a golf ball). Avoid split or pithy radishes.

If you were going casual, you would serve the radishes on a plate with a slab of room temperature butter and a small pile of salt. But we’re entertaining with this recipe so we’re going to fancy them up. The ingredient cost per “bite” for this dish is about $0.20 or less.

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Radish and Butter Bites

5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star No reviews
  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Total Time: 20 minutes
  • Yield: 24 1x
  • Category: Appetizer
  • Method: Cold Prep
  • Cuisine: French
  • Diet: Gluten Free
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Description

These “Radish and Butter Bites” are a variation of crudité that is perfect for formal events and impressing your guests without filling them up too much before the main course.


Ingredients

Scale

12 radishes

1/2 lb room temperature sweet butter (you will have some leftover)

Maldon Salt for Sprinkling

Microgreens or chive, parsley, or tarragon sprigs (optional)


Instructions

Prep

Several hours before you plan to assemble and serve these Radish and Butter Bites, set the butter out to warm and soften.

Trim the radishes, snipping the root end and cutting off the greens.  Cut the radishes in half lengthwise.  Slide the round, uncut, side of the radish over a mandolin or the slicer blade of your food processor (about 1/16th” or 1 mm thick).  This will help them stand without rolling around.  Reserve the colorful circles that are left for garnishing.

Fit a pastry/piping bag with a small star tip.  Load the butter into the pastry bag.  You will only need about 4 tablespoons of butter for 2 dozen “bites” but you need to fill the bag enough to squeeze through the nozzle, expect to have some left over.

At this point, you can wrap and refrigerate the radishes and little round slices until ready to assemble and serve.  Keep butter at room temperature.

To Assemble

Pipe approx 1/2 t of butter per radish half.

Sprinkle each half-radish with a couple flakes of Maldon Salt.

Stand the radish round up in the butter.

Sprinkle with microgreens and fresh herbs if using.

Serve.

Variations

Some variations to try:

1) Whip the butter so it is nice and airy.

2) Mix into the butter a little bit of anchovy paste or roasted garlic paste.

3) Substitute salted butter for the unsalted butter and reduce/omit the salt.

4) Use the small white tokyo turnips in place of radish or mixed in with the radish.


Equipment

Image of | Disposable Piping Bags |

| Disposable Piping Bags |

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Notes

You cannot refrigerate these once they have been piped with butter because the butter will become hard.  The soft creaminess of the butter is an important part of the dish.

If you assemble and salt these ahead of time, the salt will cause the radish to weep water and the butter may slide right off.  Salt can also wilt the microgreens.

These should be assembled right before you plan to serve them.  Without microgreens, in a shady place, these radishes will look and taste great for about 1-2 hours.  With microgreens, that time is reduced to about 30 minutes – less if it’s hot out.

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Filed Under: Appetizer, Budget Bites (under $2), Entertaining, Gluten Free, Uncategorized Tagged With: canapés, Catering, party food, passed appetizers, Spring, Winter

Simple, “Healthy-ish” Peach-Pecan Tart Recipe

June 1, 2022

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Peach Pecan Tart

Peaches are one of those things, like tomatoes, that are simply not worth eating out of season. A ripe peach is a thing of beauty and I wait all year for early-mid summer when local peaches are sweet and juicy. Enjoy this tart for dessert, perhaps with some late harvest Reisling. This tart is lightly sweetened and a great choice for breakfast or a midday snack.

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Simple, Healthy-ish Peach-Pecan Tart Recipe

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 15
  • Cook Time: 30
  • Total Time: 45 minutes
  • Yield: 4 servings 1x
  • Category: Dessert
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: French
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Ingredients

Scale

5 small-medium peaches

10 inch square of puff pastry (or pie dough)

1 cup pecans

1 egg, separated

1 teaspoon sugar (see note below)

1 Tablespoon Honey

1 Tablespoon Butter

Demerara sugar for sprinkling (or sub regular sugar)


Instructions

Line a sheet pan with parchment paper.  Preheat the oven to 400 F.

In a food processor, add the pecans, egg whites, and sugar and pulse until paste-like.  Set aside.

Slice the peaches.  Cut the peaches in half around the seed, twist the halves to separate from the seed.  If the peach pits are not cooperating, slice the halves away from the pit. Place flat side down on the cutting board and slice.  Keep the sliced halves together on the cutting – this will make it easier to arrange the slices nicely.

Lay the puff pastry out on the prepared sheet pan.  Spread the pecan paste, leaving a 1 inch boarder around the perimeter.  Fan out the peach slices and lay them on top of the pecan paste.  Completely cover the paste layer.  It’s ok to overlap the peaches somewhat.

Fold the edges up and over to contain the tart filling.

In a microwave-safe cup, melt the butter and honey together.  Stir.  Drizzle this mixture over the peaches.  You may want to use a pastry brush to evenly distribute.

Add about 1 tablespoon of water to the egg yolk and whisk with a fork.  Use a pastry brush to apply the yolk mixture to the visible puff pastry.  Sprinkle the puff pastry and tart all over with demerara sugar.

Bake the tart for 20-30 minutes or until the bottom of the pastry is golden brown.  The filling will look wet when it first comes out of the oven.  Allow the tart to cool for 10-15 minutes.  The filling will thicken so that it is sliceable.  Enjoy warm or at room temperature with whip cream or sweetened creme fraiche (optional).


Notes

This recipe makes a slightly sweetened pastry.  If you prefer sweeter, add 1-2 teaspoons additional sugar to the pecan paste.

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Filed Under: Breakfast, Entertaining, Kid Friendly, Sweets, Uncategorized Tagged With: breakfast, Gallette, Pastry, Peaches, Summer, tart

Simple Smoked Asparagus with the Easiest Hollandaise Sauce

May 16, 2022

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

I love smoking vegetables on my Traeger alongside a big piece of meat that’s been going all day. Tender, smoked asparagus is a Spring-time treat. The tips of the asparagus really absorb the smoke flavor and the stems become creamy and sweet with slow cooking. Served with lemony hollandaise sauce and smoked chicken or pork loin, this is a simple and delicious meal and perfect for special occasions when you do want to fuss too much.

Hollandaise sauce is one of my favorite sauces. It reminds me of being a kid in the 90’s and having artichokes at home, served with a side of Knorr Hollandaise from the powder packets. This was a special meal as artichokes were pretty foreign in New England at that time. Not surprisingly, home-made hollandaise made with just a few simple ingredients – butter, egg yolks, lemon juice, and spices, tastes better than the processed powdered variety. This sauce is perfect for eggs benedicts, artichokes, chicken, fish, pork, broccoli, and asparagus.

Making hollandaise the traditional way is a somewhat nerve-racking and difficult process, even for experienced cooks. Hollandaise, and its cousin aioli, were two things I would always delegate out to the cook who could focus on that one singular task until it was finished. Whisking egg yolks and lemon juice in a double boiler with one hand while very, very (painfully) slowly adding hot butter, a couple of drops at a time with the other hand can be a challenge, especially when you have a lot of other projects going on simultaneously. In a busy kitchen, it is the equivalent of rubbing your belly while patting your head and balancing a tray full of dishes on one raised knee while standing. It takes total concentration. If the butter is added too quickly the sauce will break and then the best you can do is to try to beat it into submission while adding water which thins it out, beyond what is ideal. Luckily for us, there is an easier and more forgiving method: using an emersion blender (or standard blender or food processor). This is one of those recipes and techniques that you’ll want to memorize and keep up your sleeve.

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Smoked Asparagus with the “Easiest Hollandaise Sauce” recipe

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 1 hour
  • Total Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
  • Yield: 4 servings 1x
  • Category: Side Dish
  • Method: smoker
  • Cuisine: French
  • Diet: Gluten Free
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Ingredients

Scale

For the Asparagus

1 lb fresh asaparagus

Olive oil to coat

Salt and Pepper to taste

Hollandaise Sauce Recipe

3 egg yolks

10 Tablespoons salted butter, melted in the microwave and still hot

pinch of sugar

pinch of fresh ground pepper

1 Tablespoon lemon juice

1 teaspoon dijon mustard

1 dash Tobasco


Instructions

Preheat smoker to 225 F.

Rinse and dry the asparagus and trim off woody ends.

Toss the asparagus with oil, salt, and pepper, and place in a grill basket or on a sheet of tin foil with holes poked through it on the grate of the smoker.

Smoke the asparagus for about 1 hour or until tender, stirring once halfway through the cooking process.

10 minutes before the asparagus is slated to come off the smoker, measure out 10 Tablespoons of butter into a microwave safe liquid measuring cup.  Cook 1 minute at a time in the microwave until melted and very hot, careful though, not to boil away all the water content of the butter.

Meanwhile, separate the egg yolks from the whites.  Discard or reserve the whites for another use.  Place the yolks in the blender cup for an emersion blender.  Add the lemon juice, dijon, Tobasco, sugar, and pepper.  Blend this mixture for 30-60 seconds.  While the emersion/hand blender is going, add a couple of drops of butter.  Move the blender head up and down to incorporate the butter.  Add a couple more drops and repeat.  Then add the rest of the butter in a slow and steady stream, moving the blender up and down as needed.  You can also use a small food processor or a standard blender for this as well.

Keep the sauce in a warm place until ready to use it.

Remove the asparagus from the grill.  Drizzle the hollandaise over it and serve.  You could also serve the hollandaise from a gravy boat at the table.

Hollandaise is best enjoyed right after it is made.  You can keep it warm on the stove in a double boiler for 30 minutes or so.  In theory you can reheat it (very very gently), maybe whisking in a little hot water if needed, but it is just never the same the next day.


Equipment

Image of | Traeger Smoker and Grill |

| Traeger Smoker and Grill |

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Kitchen Aid Emersion Blender

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Notes

TROUBLE SHOOTING

You shouldn’t need these tips with this method but they are good to know and also work for aioli:

If the sauce is too thick- add water, a little bit at a at a time while blending/whisking

If the sauce is too thin- keep blending for 30-60 seconds.  This will heat up the egg yolks and help with thickening.  If this doesn’t thicken it up, you can transfer hollandaise to a heavy bottom pan over low heat and gently warm while stirring constantly.  As soon as it begins to thicken, remove it from the burner and continue stirring/whisking.

If the sauce breaks – add water a little water at a time while whisking/blending.  This will also thin it. But a thin sauce is better than a broken sauce.

Did you make this recipe?

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Filed Under: Appetizer, Breakfast, Entertaining, Gluten Free, Sides and Salads, Smoker, Uncategorized Tagged With: Gluten Free, sauce, side dish, smoked vegetables, Traeger Smoker, Vegetable

Country Pâté with Pistachio and Duck Confit (Terrine de Campagne) Recipe

April 28, 2022

The links in these recipes are for products that I use and recommend.  

Passed Canapes – Country Pâté with Pistachio and Duck Confit, microgreens, whole grain mustard, sliced cornichon.

This recipe is way overdue. I have received tons of requests over the years for this recipe, especially after I left the Charcuterie during the pandemic and it was no longer available for sale. This is a minimally livery rustic country-style pâté. It is delicious on warm crusty bread with mustard and cornichons. A sandwich with this pâté, mayo, dijon, sliced tomato, raw onions, hard-boiled eggs, and salad greens is one of my all-time favorite sandwiches. This can be dressed up for special occasions, little canapes served on slices of baguette and passed around at a party, or treated as an everyday staple. In my house, this pâté is as common as sliced deli meat.

Yes, it’s a bit of a project to make. But for many of us Home Cooks, big kitchen projects are a therapeutic activity. It’s definitely worth making a large batch of this and freezing it for later. You use the “x2, x3” function on the recipe card to scale this recipe to 2 or 3 loaf pans.

I have also posted by Master Recipe for Terrine De Campagne. This recipe is meant to be customized and scaled to large or random quantities (for example 6.5 lbs of various trim from the freezer). For the home kitchen, I highly recommend sticking to pâté batches that use 3lbs of meat or less. Larger batches can be difficult to manage in most home kitchens unless you have already invested in meat processing equipment and have a spare project refrigerator that would provide sufficient space for cooling this product down in a timely manner.

About the Ingredients

Some of the ingredients are hard to find but don’t worry, they can be omitted or substituted.

Caul fat is the lacey fat membrane that surrounds the internal organs of cows, sheep, pigs, deer and elk. It can be omitted and the pâté can be wrapped with bacon slices or professional grade plastic wrap.

Duck confit can be made ahead of time, or, depending on where you live, you may be able to buy 1-2 legs at a gourmet grocery store. If you cannot find or make it, you can simply use diced ham or omit it altogether. You’ll still have a great product.

Shelled Pistachios are now pretty easy to find at the grocery store but they are usually roasted. Raw or blanched pistachios are the best if you can find them. The bright green color adds a visual accent to the pâté. However, roasted pistachios add a nice toasty flavor and will definitely work.

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Country Pâté with Pistachio and Duck Confit (Terrine de Campagne) Recipe

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  • Author: Kara Taylor- Home Cooks Guide
  • Prep Time: 2 hours
  • Cook Time: 1 hour (appox)
  • Total Time: 48 hours
  • Yield: 1 loaf pan 1x
  • Category: Charcuterie
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: French
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Ingredients

Scale

1 1/2 lbs pork

2 1/2 ounces (.15 lbs) bacon

4 ounces (.25 lbs) liver

milk to cover livers

25 grams onion

1/2 cup chopped herbs (parsley, chives, sage, thyme and/or tarragon)

18 grams garlic

15 grams salt (2 1/2 Tablespoons)

1.4 grams (scant 1/4 teaspoon) curing salt #1

3 grams (1 1/2 teaspoons) ground black pepper

2 grams (1 teaspoon) pâté spice (see note)

1 egg

1 1/2 T flour

1 1/2 T brandy

.4 (scant 1/2 cup) cups cream

65 grams (1/2 cup) shelled pistachio (preferably raw or blanched)

1/2–1 cup duck confit pieces chopped (1 duck leg or less)


Instructions

Pâté Prep

Organize your materials and make sure you have a clean sanitized surface and equipment.  You will need:

  • 4-5 mixing bowls (1-2 large, 3 medium)
  • Cutting board
  • knife
  • measuring cups and spoons
  • Spatulas/ wooden spoons
  • Terrine dishes (8 quart capacity/1 hotel pan for every 10lbs of meat)
  • Parchment
  • Plastic Wrap
  • Tin Foil
  • Probe thermometer
  • Whisk
  • Meat Grinder (optional)
  • Meat Mixer (optional)
  • Gloves (optional but nice)
  • Kitchen Scale 
  • Weights for terrine (see instructions)
  • Clean prep space
  • Enough refrigerator space to fit terrines and allow for air circulation

The night before making this terrine, soak the liver in milk to cover them.

The next morning, drain, rinse and dry the livers.  Trim them of any unsightly spots.

In a bowl, combine all the dry spices.  Mix well.  Add the meat, bacon, liver, onions, garlic, and fresh herbs.  Let this mixture sit in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour or overnight.  NOTE: If you are using ground meat, everything else should be minced.  If you are grinding your own mixture, you can leave these things coarsely chopped and grind everything up together.  

In another bowl, combine the eggs, cream, b,randy and flour.  Whisk until all lumps are gone.  Refrigerate until ready to mix with the meat mixture.  This is your “Panade”

In another bowl, combine your garnishes.

In another bowl, place your caul.  You may find it helpful to soak this in water to make it easier to pull apart without ripping.

Grind the meat mixture (optional step)

If you are using ground meat, you can skip this step and save yourselves some time and dishes.  However, grinding your own mixture gives you more control over the final texture of the product and is ideal if you are using your own game or farm-raised meat.  I like to grind my own because I like some of the mixture to be ground fine and some to be coarser.  I run everything through the medium or large die once and then I put about half the mixture back through for a second time.  You could also switch between the coarse and medium die or the medium and fine die to achieve the same effect (but then you’d lose some time and end up with more dishes).

If grinding your own meat, put the auger, the die, and the tray of the grinder into the freezer or refrigerator at least 30 minutes before you plan to start grinding.

Assemble the cold grinder pieces with a mixing bowl set up to catch the ground meat.

Grind the meat mixture into the mixing bowl.

Mix the forcemeat

Add the panade to the meat mixture.  Mix the meat and panade together until it is completely incorporated and the meat mixture begins to look tacky.  This takes about 5 minutes.  You can do this by hand for amounts less than 5 lbs, or use your stand mixer with a paddle attachment on low-medium (up to about 2lbs).

Fold in the garnishes

Once the forcemeat is mixed, fold in the chopped pistachio and duck confit.

Spray the loaf pan with cooking spray.  Line the dish with caul so that it overhangs the loaf pan enough to fold over and cover the top of the terrine when filled.  

Fill the terrine with the forcemeat.  Try to avoid air bubbles.  I do this by spooning in a little bit at a time and pushing it down in the dish.  Then add more and layer it up to the top.  Fold over the overhanging caul.  Cover with a layer of parchment paper followed by a layer of tin foil.

Bake at 300 F until a probe thermometer inserted into the middle of the pâté reads 140 F (if no poultry or poultry liver) or 155 F if using poultry (it will continue to cook after it comes out of the oven).

When the thermometer goes off, slowly pull the probe out, pausing to read the temp on its way up.  Usually, the probe settles to the bottom of the loaf which is the hottest part.  The middle will be less done and the top even less.  Make sure the coolest part of the loaf (the top half) is reading 140 or 155 F.

Remove the loaf(s) from the oven.  Keep covered for another 10 minutes.  Remove the cover and let it cool to room temp over a period of 1-2 hours (if you have a cold and clean garage, you can move it there to speed the cooling process).

Wrap the terrine completely with plastic wrap, all the way around the terrine dish (aka “hotel wrap”).  Weight the terrine down.  You can do this by cutting out a piece of cardboard to fit on top of the terrine and then add full cans from the pantry on top, or you can take another similar-sized loaf pan and fill it halfway with ice water and place that on top.  Refrigerate the weighted terrine for 12-24 hours. See note below for important food safety info.

Portion and Serve Terrine

Invert the terrine onto a cutting board and slice it into portions.  At this point, you can serve it or vacuum seal/wrap in several layers of plastic wrap and freeze it.  Vacuum sealed, this product will last 6 months or more in the freezer.  Wrapped in plastic wrap, 2-4 months.

Country Pâté with Pistachio and Duck Confit, portioned and ready to vacuum seal.


Equipment

Image of | Kitchen Aid 6 Qt Stand Mixer |

| Kitchen Aid 6 Qt Stand Mixer |

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Image of | Pyrex Mixing Bowl Set |

| Pyrex Mixing Bowl Set |

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Image of | Kitchener Heavy Duty Electric Meat Grinder |

| Kitchener Heavy Duty Electric Meat Grinder |

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Notes

1) IMPORTANT FOOD SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS:

If you are using the curing salt, you have 15 hours to get your terrine cooled down from 140 F – 41 F or below.  If you are NOT using the Curing Salt, you have only 4 hours to get your terrine from 140-41 F.  After that amount of time, botulism may become a risk.  If you are making a 2-quart loaf pan of pâté, this is pretty easy to achieve without much effort. However, if you are making a larger batch using half or full-size hotel pans and placing it in a tightly packed refrigerator, you would be surprised how long food can stay above 41 F and in the “danger zone”.  Do not attempt to make large batches without first having plenty of fridge space (like an extra empty fridge for projects like I have) and plenty of ice.  You will want to weigh the terrines down with ice water to accelerate the cooling process.

2) Kara’s Pâté Spice

  • 25 grams (1 2/3 T) ground white or black pepper
  • 12 grams (2 1/2 t) ground nutmeg
  • 12 grams (2 1/2 t) ground ginger
  • 2 grams (1/2 t)ground cloves
  • 10 grams (2 t) of ground coriander

If you want to use a pre-made spice blend instead, look for “Savory Quatre Épices”

Did you make this recipe?

Tag @homecooksguide on Instagram and hashtag it #homecooksguide

Filed Under: Appetizer, Sausage and Charcuterie, Uncategorized Tagged With: Canapes, charcuterie, Country Pate, DIY, duck confit, French, pistachio, wedding food

Soups for Spring eBook Available Now

April 18, 2022

Image of eBook cover with bright green soup on black background.
A beautiful 54 page eBook with over a dozen seasonal recipes plus tips and tricks for building flavors and taking shortcuts.

Hi Readers,

I have been working on putting together this little book for a while and am excited to announce that it is now available here. This book includes over a dozen recipes and all my spring favorites along with tips and tricks for building flavors. Many of the soups in this book were popular recipes served at The Farm Table during my years there as Executive Chef/owner. Some are just favorites of mine, like “Avgolemono”, or my go-to get-well recipe “French Garlic Soup.” I hope you enjoy them.

Buy Book

Filed Under: Books, One Pot, Soup, Uncategorized Tagged With: easy, ebook, one pot, Soup, Spring

Crunchy Toppings Make Everything Better

March 24, 2022

We pay a lot of attention to flavors when cooking. We create, we balance, and we pair flavors. But we tend to put less thought into the texture of a dish. We take texture for granted. As if we have no agency over it. It’s like texture is just what happens when you cook or the texture of an ingredient is its inherent and unalterable quality. Not true. Texture is incredibly important to the enjoyment of food and the way we cookm, compose a dish, and handle ingredients all have impacts on its final texture.

Texture is how we judge the quality and freshness of an ingredient. When fresh crispy ingredients become soft, it is considered a deterioration in quality. Think of that limp celery and rubbery carrot in the fridge – they have lost their turgor pressure. Soft crackers are stale. We know ingredients are spoiled when they become slimy. Bread dough has gone too far in fermentation when it no longer springs back when touched.

There are a lot of textures that we seek out in our diet: soft, chewy, crisp, hard, spreadable, gooey, liquid, gelled, to name a few. Soft and liquid foods are “comforting”, a bowl of chicken soup when you’re sick. Crisp foods are “healthy”. But only one texture is directly associated with “fun”. One texture wants to be paired with fizzy, bubbly drinks like soda and champagne and that one texture is “crunchy”.

Adding creative crunchy elements to my dishes was one of the cheap tricks I used as an executive chef to delight diners, and elevate a menu item. At home, I use “crunchies” to get my kids to eat their dinner. I call this a cheap trick because a lot of the “crunchy toppings” are made from scraps that another cook might just through away: day-old bread, the crumbs at the bottom of the cracker bag. Whether you are hosting a dinner party or feeding the family – here is your go-to guide on creative crunchy toppings you can use at home on almost anything.

Crunchy Toppings

Butter toasted bread crumbs on Mac and Cheese.

Buttery Toasted Bread Crumbs

Mac and Cheese is good. Mac and Cheese topped with perfectly golden, buttery, seasoned, crunchy bread crumbs is a thing of perfection. If you sprinkle breadcrumbs on your Mac and Cheese (or any other casserole dish for that matter), it’s somewhat of a crapshoot whether they will toast up perfectly. It depends on the humidity in your oven, the moisture in the casserole, how thick of a layer of breadcrumbs you have, and the temperature and time in the oven. That’s a lot of variables standing between you and perfection.

The trick: Season and toast the breadcrumbs ahead of time, by themselves, in a skillet. Add them at the last minute. Store what you don’t use for later in an air-tight container.

Here’s how to do it: In a 12-inch skillet, over medium heat, heat about 2 tablespoons butter, oil, lard, or duck fat. Once melted and hot, add about 2 cups of unseasoned breadcrumbs. Panko breadcrumbs are the best for this! Or dried leftover homemade sourdough bread. Season the breadcrumbs generously with salt and any other seasonings you would like. Stir nearly constantly until the breadcrumbs are uniformly golden brown. When they are perfectly toasted, pour them out onto a sheet pan to stop the cooking. They can go from perfect to burned in a matter of seconds and will continue to brown for a couple of seconds after they have been removed from the heat. Once completely cooled, these can be stored in a ziplock bag at room temperature for weeks.

Fried Onions and Garlic

French’s Crispy Fried Onions (AKA Durkee French Onions)

Green Bean Casserole is one of my favorite Thanksgiving dishes. Green beans are not in season at the end of November. I consider eating seasonally the foundation of my personal food philosophy, but I make an exception here because I love French’s Crispy Fried Onions so much. I actually buy these onions all year round and in my household, we eat them by the handful as a snack. If I want my oldest daughter (who is now 8 and to my horror has become a really picky eater) to eat something, I sprinkle some of these onions on it.

These onions are battered and fried in palm oil. There are other companies that make a decent product but there is just something about the palm oil used in French’s. Crispy Fried Onions toast up in the oven in about 5 minutes when added to the top of an almost-done casserole. They are perfect on hamburgers, pulled pork sandwiches, on salads, with egg salad or chicken salad sandwiches, on top of rice pilaf or mac and cheese.

French’s bought Durkee Famous Foods back in the 1980’s, so if you stumble upon an old handwritten recipe calling for Durkee Onions, you can use French’s Crispy Fried Onions. They are the same thing.

Fried Leeks or Shallots

At the restaurant, we frequently used fried leeks and shallots as a garnish for pureed soups, steaks, and other entrees. These fried leek “threads” are light and dainty with a pleasant savory leek flavor. Their long and thin structure lends itself to making piles of crunch 2 inches high. These are quick and easy to make with just a little bit of oil and a small saucepan.

Fried Leek Garnish:

Cut a piece of leek crosswise 2-4 inches long. Reserve the rest of the leek for other uses. Then cut this chunk in half lengthwise. Lay the 2 halves cut flat side down on the cutting board. Using a sharp chef knife and your best knife skills, slice the leek halves into slices lengthwise as thin as you can. You will end up with a bunch of leek “threads” 2-4 inches long.

Using a colander, run the leek strips under running water to rinse off any dirt. Let them drip dry a bit. They should be damp but not dripping wet for this next step.

Heat about 2 inches of canola or safflower oil (or another high smoke point, neutral vegetable oil) in a small saucepan.

In a mixing bowl, toss the leek strips with a little flour until evenly coated. Put the leeks in a sieve and shake off any excess flour.

When the oil is hot, carefully drop the leeks in (you may need to do this in several batches) for just a few seconds. They will quickly bubble up and then the bubbles will slow down. When they have slowed down quite a bit and the leek strips are a light golden color, remove them with a slotted spoon and transfer them to a paper towel-lined plate or drying rack. Season immediately with salt.

Fried Shallot Garnish:

Follow the same process above except slicing the shallots crosswise into thin rounds.

Crispy Fried Garlic

Crispy fried garlic is often served as a topping on Thai dishes. But there is nothing inherently Thai about garlic. Garlic is used all over the world and in nearly every cuisine so why not use fried garlic on top of all your stir-fries, curries, fish fillets, pasta, roasted potatoes, loaded baked potatoes, pulled pork sandwiches, and tacos.

Fried garlic is toasty and sweet. If chopped small, it is nice and crunchy. If left in larger pieces, it produces a nice crunchy outside and pleasing sweet creamy interior.

To Make Fried Garlic:

Line a plate with paper towels and set it aside.

Chop or slice a bunch of garlic, 1/2-1 cup.

Heat a couple of tablespoons of canola or safflower oil in a skillet over medium heat. When it is hot, add the garlic. Remove from the pan with a slotted spoon when it turns golden brown and transfer it to the lined plate. This will go from perfect to burned very quickly, especially if the garlic is minced or sliced thinly.

Birista (aka Beresta) – Indian Fried Onions

Birista are onions fried until golden brown and crispy and served on top of Indian rice dishes, like Biryani. They are also used with kormas, curries and kebabs. Unlike the other fried onions listed here, birista contains no flour or batter. The only ingredients are onions and oil (and salt). Making these onions takes a while. They are typically fried in a large batch which brings the oil temperature down. The onions then go through the stages of caramelization as the oil comes back up to temp. First becoming soft and transparent, then lightly golden, then finally uniformly golden-brown. Once cooled and drained, the birista can be used right away or stored for up to a year in the freezer in a ziplock bag. Ready to be used anytime and for anything.

Aside from being a delightful crunchy topping for all sorts of savory dishes, birista can also be ground into a paste and added to soups and stews as a flavoring agent.

Oven-Baked Cheese “Crispies”, whole or broken into crumbs make an excellent salad topping.

Cheese Crispies

Crispy cheese “crackers” are the simplest thing to make. The possibilities are almost endless. Kids love them and so do grown-ups. You can make flat crackers, you can break up these “crackers” for a crispy crunchy cheese crumb to sprinkle on top of salads, pasta dishes, poached eggs, you-name-it, or you can drape the cooked cheese (while still hot) over an inverted cup and create cute little crispy cheese bowls for salads or fancy appetizers.

How to make cheese crispies:

Choose cheeses that are on the dry-hard side. Anything between parmesan and cheddar cheese works well. Brie or chevre will not do the trick here. Grate the cheese. Heat a non-stick skillet over medium heat. Put a little pile of cheese in the skillet, spread it out into a thin layer, and cook until it browns and crisps up. Transfer the cheese crispy onto a paper towel-lined plate or inverted bowl or cup. Alternatively, if you want to make a bunch of these at once (and why wouldn’t you?), heat the oven to 400 F. Line a baking sheet with parchment or a silicone baking mat, make several cheese piles spread out into a thin layer in a circular shape, and bake for about 10 minutes or until the cheese looks melted, a little browned and crispy. Remove from the oven. Once cooled, transfer to an airtight container and store for several days.

Chicken Crackling

Fried chicken skin. Yes! Fried duck skin is amazing too. Especially in tacos or over grits or just as a snack by themselves, maybe with some dipping sauce. Pull the skin off of your chicken or duck breast or thighs. Cut it into strips. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Place in a skillet in the oven at 400-450F and roast, stirring occasionally to baste it in the fat that renders out, until crispy and golden brown. Transfer to a paper towel-lined plate and serve, or cool completely and store in an airtight container in the fridge.

Chopped Toasted Nuts

Toasted chopped nuts complement a wide range of flavors and cuisines. Unlike the fried assortment of ideas offered here so far, nuts are inherently healthy. High in fiber, protein, and healthy fats. They can be chopped coarsely or ground into a nut meal for a finer crumb topping. You can use chopped candied nuts for sweet applications. The possibilities for using nuts as a textural accent in your dishes is really endless, ranging from savory to sweet applications. Here’s a partial list to get ideas flowing:

  • Peanuts (Thai, African, Carribean, Southern)
  • Almonds (African, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, European, American)
  • Hazelnuts (European, American)
  • Walnuts (European, Mediterranean, American)
  • Pine nuts (Italian, Spanish)
  • Cashews (Carribean, Latin American)
  • Pistachio (Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, American)
  • Pumpkin Seeds (American, Latin American, South American)
  • Sunflower Seeds (European, American)

Farofa – Brazilian Toasted Cassava Flour

Brazilian Black Bean Stew over Rice with Collard Greens.

In the Americas and throughout the world, a large portion of the people eat rice and beans every day, sometimes multiple times a day. In my younger days, my budget travel days, I spent many months at a time in Central America eating rice and beans every day. How does one get excited about rice and beans? In Brazil they came up with an ingenious solution – farofa. This is a toasty, smokey, salty, fried crumb topping made from Cassava flour that is served alongside their national black bean stew “Feijoada“. This crunchy topping could be served as a side dish in its own right or used as a stuffing for chicken and small game birds.

How to Make Farofa

In a skillet, saute minced linguica or bacon until it renders out the fat and begins to crisp up. Add cassava flour and minced garlic and olives (optional) and stir while cooking over medium heat until toasted. Season with salt. Immediately transfer to a bowl for serving it.

Cracker Crumbs

Ritz crackers are my go-to cracker crumb.

Where I’m from in New England, Baked Haddock is a popular dish for wedding dinners. It’s not an expensive dish, it’s easy to make in large quantities, and really, what goes better with a bubbly champagne toast than buttery crunchy Ritz Cracker topped fish and a celebration? Ritz cracker crumbs are like pre-prepared Buttery Toasted Bread Crumbs. The work is already done. They brown up perfectly in the oven and are already seasoned. A little sweet and a little salty. Ritz Cracker crumbs make a great topping for mac and cheese, baked haddock, baked clams, baked lobster, stuffed shrimp, stuffed mushrooms, baked chicken…. I could on and on. And why stop at Ritz?

Bacon Bits

Dry-cured bacon lardons.

I make my own dry-cured bacon in slabs because it’s fun and easy and turns out better than store-bought bacon, but also because slab bacon (unlike thin slices) can be cut into little cubes or batons, also called “lardons”. Fried warm lardons are crispy on the outside and soft on the inside. These salty, smokey little morsels of porky goodness can also be served cold or at room temperature. Bacon Bits and lardons make excellent toppings for creamy pasta dishes, soups, baked potatoes, baked beans, salads, and a variety of appetizer bites like Grilled Figs with goat cheese and honey.

Buttery Toasted Ramen Noodles

This is one I got from my mother-in-law. Dry ramen noodles, broken into chunks and fried in plenty of butter in the skillet. This makes the best crunchy topping to an Asian chicken and cabbage salad, fried rice, or stir-fries.

Sweet Crunchy Toppings

Crunchies Fruit (and freeze-dried fruit generally)

Most of the crunchy toppings I use the most add rich toasty flavors to the dish but freeze dried fruit adds a bright sweet and acidic flavor with a nice crunch. The Crunchies brand dominates this space in the grocery store aisles and makes a great product but there are plenty of smaller brands out there and really, freeze dried fruit is freeze dried fruit. The North Bay Trading Company has a huge selection of freeze dried fruit. My favorites are raspberries, blackberries and strawberries which I will add to rich chocolatey desserts, but there are so many options to play around with. Freeze dried bananas on vanilla

Toffee bits

Toffee bits are one of my favorite things. Sprinkled on ice cream, stirred into cookie dough before baking, or sprinkled on a plated dessert as a garnish, you just can’t go wrong with toffee bits.

You can sometimes find these in the store in the baking section next to the chocolate chips and chopped nuts, or you can make your own. Making toffee is a fun DIY kitchen project, especially for kids (very closely supervised by an adult because it is molten hot) and cooking science nerds. You get to watch it turn from a clear liquid yellow to an opaque semi-solid caramel-colored substance right before your eyes.

How to make your own toffee:

Combine equal parts butter and sugar (with a touch of salt and vanilla if you want) in a fairly large pot. The butter-sugar mixture should be half the capacity of the pot or less. Heat over medium heat, whisking constantly until it has turned an opaque almond-brown color.

Carefully pour this incredibly hot sticky mixture out into a sheet pan and let it cool for 2 hours or until room temperature. The mixture is so hot it will immediately make the sheet pan too hot to handle so use oven mits or a kitchen towel to handle it. Once cooled, break it up with the back of a ladle or chop it with a knife on a cutting board to make “bits”. Or leave it in big chunks and just eat it!

Chopped up wafers

Chopped-up wafers make a great crunchy topping for desserts. I am especially fond of Pirouline – those round wafer sticks filled with chocolate hazelnut cream, because when cut cross-wise it adds a nice curved shape to the dish. Wafers come in a lot of different flavors and shapes and can complement a wide range of desserts.

Granola

Granola is a great crunchy topping. Easily accessible at the grocery store and easy to DIY. It stays crunchy in milk for much longer than the average cereal and also makes a nice crunchy topping for fruity or creamy desserts.

How to make granola at home

In a large mixing bowl, combine 1/2 cup of neutral oil (or melted coconut oil) with 1/2 cup of honey or maple syrup or another liquid sweetener, about 1/2 teaspoon of salt, and the spices of your choice. Add 4 cups of rolled oats and nuts. I do about 3 cups oats and 1 cup nuts/seeds but there’s lots of room for variation here. Toss until evenly coated with the oil and sweetener.

Lay the oat mix out on a baking sheet, pressing it down into a thin layer. Bake at 325 F for about 20 minutes or until golden brown, stirring once halfway through. Let cool to room temperature and then store in an air-tight container. If you want to, add dried or freeze dried fruit after it has cooled.

Artsy hard caramelized sugar garnishes – way easier than it looks.

Hard Caramel Thingies (aka Spun Sugar)

Forgive me, I have been making these for years and I don’t actually know their proper name. Caramel ribbons? But sometimes it is more like threads or a bird’s nest. Caramel Brittle? No, that’s more of a thick sheet often filled with nuts and topped with chocolate. Spun Sugar? Yes, but sometimes I make it into monolithic discs of glass-like caramel, and then there’s nothing spun about it….. whatever you call them, this is a garnish that is sure to impress. You will actually impress yourself while you are making it. It is fun and easy to make and requires only a couple of minutes of active time and one ingredient- sugar.

How To Make Hard Caramel Thingies:

Put a cup of sugar in a skillet (or any amount of sugar), spread it out so it is in an even layer instead of a pile, and melt it over medium heat until there are no clumps. Try not to stir it if possible but if it looks like some of the sugar is melted and about to burn while some of the sugar is still white granules – then use a wooden spatula to break up the clumps and stir it around. Once melted, remove the pan from the heat.

Lay out a piece of oiled parchment or wax paper on a baking sheet. Move the pan with the sugar right next to the baking sheet. Using a spoon or a whisk drizzle sugar onto the baking sheet into your desired shapes or use a spatula to make flat disks or tapered rectangles. Allow these to cool and then serve on a plated dessert, especially chocolate torts, custards, or cheese cakes. Store these in an air-tight container for 1-2 days. After that, even a small amount of ambient humidity will cause these to become sticky.

TIP: The hot caramel will be a watery liquid with high surface tension when it first comes off the burner, and then, as it cools it will thicken. If you spoon it out onto the sheet pan at its hottest point, it will make an irregular-shaped puddle with unattached droplets – not the prettiest. Let it cool a bit so it drips off the spoon/whisk in long threads. If it cools too much it will become gloppy and impossible to make dainty threads of spun sugar. You can gently warm the caramel back up to the ideal state over the burner and continue your project.

ANOTHER TIP: After you are done and your caramel is cooled and you are starting to clean up, you will look at your pan and your spoon and your whisk with rock-hard caramel on it and you will think to yourself “Oh no, what have I done!” Have no fear, you can simply soak these things in hot water for a while and it will wash right off.

AND A WARNING: Melted sugar is really hot! It reaches temperatures 100 F hotter than boiling water and will stick to the skin. The gnarliest burns I have seen in the kitchen have come from molten sugar (and I have seen too many bad burns to count). Jelly, jams, caramel, toffee, and candy should all be done with a lot of care, especially with kids around. Make sure you set up your workstation ahead of time so that you have ample stovetop and counter space needed for this project to reduce the risk of anything getting knocked over or falling off the counter.

Filed Under: Appetizer, Breakfast, Budget Bites (under $2), Condiments, Accoutrements, Pickled Things, Dairy Free, Entertaining, Kid Friendly, Kitchen Basics, Sweets, Uncategorized Tagged With: Dairy Free, easy, Gluten Free

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