We were relaxing up at my Auntie Nancy's lakeside estate.
In this scenario, it certainly helped that we were able to pluck the green tomatoes fresh just steps outside of the door. In the meantime, I layed the bacon strips, 2 per person, on a baking sheet and placed them in the oven at 350. I turned them over once, about half way through. This is really the cleanest way to cook nice crispy bacon. We sliced the green tomatoes thin. Note: green tomatoes are much firmer than a red tomato. You may not think they are ready to eat; but they are. Next, we utilized the standard breading procedure. The standard breading procedure should be used when breading anything: fish, chicken, eggplant, zucchini, and so on.
You will need three vessels; a shallow, bowl, pie tin, or something comparable works best. In the first dish, place flour seasoned with salt and pepper. In the second dish, whisk up eggs with a dash of water. In the third dish, you place your breading. This can be the usual breadcrumbs, or panko, or something wild like corflakes or crushed crackers. Carfeully coat your item to be breaded in each dish. Shake off excess flour, then cover with egg, then coat evenly with breading. Try your best to designate a wet hand and a dry hand so you don't ened up with stubby club fingers.
We then browned our tomatoes in a saute pan with olive oil. I toasted some english muffins brushed with butter in the oven, then topped them with the bacon, an overeasy egg, crisp romaine, and the hot fried green tomatoes. Bon appetite! What a yummy brunch item. I highly reccomend giving it a whirl and sneaking these extra veggies into your morning meal.
The day we returned, my cousin blew into town on business so I wanted to cook a tasty lunch before his flight home. After I racked my brain, I developed the idea to make tuna potato cakes. Kinda like a crab cake, kinda like potato pancake; call it what you will; I call it easy and delicious! In addition, you may just already have all of these items at home.
I shredded up three potatoes on the box grater, and squeezed out all the excess water. I mixed them up with three cans of tuna, diced celery, diced red onion, , 2 eggs, salt and pepper, and 1/2 cup flour. I formed them into cakes and browned them in olive oil. In a seperate bowl, I whisked up sour cream, mayonnaise, lemon zest, lemon juice, thyme, and salt and pepper to make a creamy lemon herb drizzle.
I layed the cakes out on a platter and drizzled them with the sauce. It looked lovely and they dissapeared quickly. This is a perfect way to jazz up cheap ingredients. Crab is expensive; tuna is cheap. It can still be awesome! Just elevate it with presentation, some fresh tasting citrus, and herbs, and voila! Of course, you could add or remove things from these cakes. Bell peppers, green onions, and parsley would be nice. You could use celery root, or parsnip in place of the potato, or, no potato at all.
These are two examples of old recipes or classics revamped to make something fabulous and new. You probably have something in your repetoire that you could add one or two ingredients to and surprise everyone. What are some classic recipes that you would like to see reworked? Any ideas but don't know where to start?
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