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    Entries in little miss messy (15)

    Tuesday
    Sep132011

    Meat Ball Mezza

    I know spaghetti is what most people think of when someone says meat balls, but not me.

    Me, I think mezze. (what did you think I was going to say??) It's basically just a bunch of finger foods eaten as a meal. I love finger foods and small plates. Mezze is along the lines of tapas, which seems to be the trendy Spanish version. This is a more Mediterranean thing, like with hummus and pita... and hey! We already know how to make those!

    Mediterranean Meaty Balls in Tomato Sauce

     

    What you need:

    • ½ lb lean ground beef
    • 1 c rice
    • 1 egg
    • ¼ c parsley
    • 1 tbsp mint
    • 2 tbsp dill
    • ½ onion
    • 2 cloves garlic
    • ½ tsp cumin
    • ½ tsp coriander
    • ¼ tsp cayenne
    • ½ c grated parmesan or romano cheese
    • 1 tin of diced tomatoes
    • ¼ c flour
    • 1 tbsp butter

    Yeah, yeah, I know, I missed a few things in the pic. I hope you know what butter looks like.

    What you gotta do:

    Chop the mint, onion, garlic, and dill.

    Put half of the mint, onion, garlic, and dill, along with half of the cayenne, cumin and coriander in a bowl with the meat, egg and rice.

    Grate the cheese and add it to the meaty bowl too. Okay, that's a pretty picture but a much too small bowl. Make sure your bowl is big enough or you're going to have to wash two.

    Mix and mash this all together by hand.

    In a shallow pan, heat a bit of olive oil.

    Add the other half of the mint, onion, garlic, and dill, along with half of the cayenne, cumin and coriander to the pan and sautee for a minute.

    Um, okay, yes, those ingredients are already in meaty balls. The space time continuum does not apply to this blog.

    Add the tomatoes. I really recommend using the diced, rather than crushed. You get a bit of texture in the chunks, and a thinner, lighter “sauce” in which to poach the meaty balls. I imagine you’re looking at the volume and thinking there’s no way that’s enough sauce for your spaghetti. It’s not. This isn’t sauce for spaghetti. It’s sauce for meaty balls.

    Put the flour into a shallow bowl or plate. Roll the meat/rice mixture into balls about 1 inch in diameter. You should get between 20 and 24 of them. Not bad for only half a pound of meat. This is a very budget friendly dish.

    Drop them into the flour

    and roll them around to coat them with the flour. You’re going to get sticky and messy here. I recommend having one hand as your flour hand, and one as your meaty ball hand.

    Once they’re fully coated, gently shake off any excess, then drop them into the simmering tomatoes. Don’t worry if a bit of flour gets into the sauce, it’s supposed to. It’s there to thicken things up.

    Add a tbsp or two of butter to the sauce around the same time as you're adding the meaty balls.

    Once they’re all in and cozy, cover them and let them cook for about 10 minutes.

    Gently roll them over and then cover and cook for another 10-15 minutes. Shaking the pan back and forth a bit may be enough to roll them over, but if it's not, be careful. These are tender meaty balls. Ticklish even.

    If you don't feel up to doing a mezze meal, these are great with a side of rice (season it Greek style with olive oil, lemon juice, and mint in the water!) or roasted potatoes, and a salad.

    If you do feel like mezza, serve them on a shallow plate nestled in their sauce.

    Besides the hummus and pita, I think pickled things are an absolute requirement. And not just olives! Go for the pickled beans, aparagus, carrots, onions, cucumbers even! A bit of tiropita (like spanikopita but without the spinach, cheese only!) is handy. But don't forget the tzaziki to dip!

    What's your favourite pickled vegetable??

    Tuesday
    Aug092011

    Cookin it, old skool

    It's still freaking hot, and I wanted cheesecake. Fortunately I have friends with recipes. Old Skool Recipes.

    And zombie movies.

    And what better to eat during a zombie movie than cherry cheesecake! Screw popcorn, chips, and nachos. If you're really going to get into things, you need to match the food to the flick. And we needed braaaaaiiinss.

    Cherry brains!

    On top of gooey, golden, lemony cheesecake.

    No Bake Cheese Cake

    What you need:


    Crust:

    • ~3 c graham cracker crumbs
    • ~1/2 c butter

    Filling:

    • 1 8 oz block of cream cheese
    • 1 tsp vanilla
    • 2 tbsp lemon juice
    • 1 tin of evaporated milk
    • 1 pkg of lemon jello (no, really!)

    Topping:

    • 1 c water
    • 1 c sugar
    • 1 c dried cherries

    What you gotta do:

    We started with the topping. Combine the water and sugar in a medium pot over medium heat.

     

    Once the sugar has dissolved and the syrup has started to bubble, add the cherries.

     

    The plan here is to rehydrate these fabulous little things (omg they are the tastiest most luxurious dried fruit ever) and let their deliciousness infuse the basic sryup. The plan. That's it.

    While the cherries are simmering, dump the crumbs into a 9 x 11 pan and spread them out. Drizzle the melted butter over them and start mixing.

     

    A spoon is fine, but you'll probably end up getting your hands in there eventually to press it down into the pan. You want no more than 1/2 inch thick.

    So, these next steps get a little dishes intensive, but hey, we're not at my house so I'm okay with that. :P

    Start with the medium bowl and pour in the evaporated milk.

    With a hand mixer, beat the milk for a few minutes. I'm thinking that you could also use whipping cream here, but you wouldn't want to whip it too much. Just enough to fluff it up, but not enough that you get peaks.

    Take that off to the fridge to chill while you dirty more bowls. 

    Next is the cream cheese. Dump it in the big bowl with vanilla and lemon juice.

    Works best at room temp, but an electric mixer will bring it into line pretty quickly. Beat it up with the vanilla and the lemon juice. We didn't have lemons on hand, but the bottle will suffice in a pinch.

    And in the third bowl, combine the lemon jello with one cup of boiling water. I'm thinking that you could get a sharper, brighter lemon flavour in this step if you went with plain gelatin and some lemon zest, but as I mentioned, no lemon, so we jello'd it. 

    And if you mix it with the spoon that you used to scrap the sides of the cream cheese bowl, you get all kinds of fun cheesey floaties in the jello.

    Don't worry, it's all going to end up in the same place. Let it cool for a bit so that you're not adding boiling hot stuff to your cold things. Hm. This step maybe should have come a little sooner. Oh well, it all worked out in the end. The cheesecake did.

    And in it goes.

    Cooled lemon gelatine mixture, chilled beaten evaporated milk (or whipped cream, if that's what you opted for) into the big bowl of lemony, vanillay cream cheese.

    And beat it some more! Power tools are fun.

    Once you've got it all combined and whipped up into a frothy gooey mess, pour it onto the crust.

    Oh crap, the cherries.

    Remove them from the heat and let them cool while the cheesecake chills in the fridge for a couple hours. It will be just barely jiggly when it's ready.

    The cheesecake layer ended up a little shallower than we were hoping,

    so you could do this in a smaller pan to get a ratio weighted more to the cheesecake, just make sure that you decrease the crumb amout so you're still below the half inch mark.

    Now, the plan for the cherries (you remember the plan, right?) was to have a nice gooey syrupy pile of brains to pour on top of our cheesecake. Um.

    Yes, that is the spoon stuck to the pot.

    I highly recommend not boiling the cherries for as long as we did. And I have no idea how long we boiled them. Don't do that.

    We ended up with something more like toffee than syrup. Very stringy toffee.

    But, a little more heat was enough to get it moving again and we were able to blob some onto the cheesecake. The rest, we poured into a gratuitously buttered pan.

    Cherry. Toffee. Okay, some things are good ideas after all. Chewy, stick your teeth together good.

    Of course, the warm toffee melted the cold cheesecake, but it sure tasted good and it really did look like... BRAAAAAAAIIIIIINS!!!!

     

    Now that you've got your braaaaiins, thick and chewy braaaaaiiiiins, all you need is a copy of Dead Snow.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3-KQh87_V2Q

    Watch for the cherry topping. It's there.

    I once knew a guy who would eat baked beans out of a pot with a wooden spoon while waching westerns so he could get right into the characters. Me, I'm happy with cherry brains for my zombie cheesecake.

    What's your favourite food and movie combo?