Showing posts with label corned beef recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corned beef recipe. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Anna Sultana's Roasted Cornish Game Hens / Chicken and Meat Recipes for 2 Links


I know… it’s tempting to go to the store to get just the thing to make this holiday dinner special.
Fight that urge.
Make do with what you have.
Catching the COVID-19 virus and infecting your family with it is not the best of ideas.
Good health is the best gift you could give yourself and your loved ones.
It’s almost guaranteed that you have more on your shelves that the stores do.
Shop your shelves. Please.


This easy recipe will give you moist  and tender hens with a nice spicy flavour.

Happy Holidays!


Hints:

This is a recipe for two. 
If you're a family of four, or more, just increase as needed.

If you want to make a complete meal in a pan you can do this:
Chop
2 peeled carrots
1 celery stalk 
Slice
1 yellow onion
Spread out the vegetables in the bottom of the greased pan and season with
1 1/2 teaspoons rosemary 
1 teaspoon garlic powder
Place the hens on top of the vegetables and continue following the recipe.

If you found a chicken instead of cornish hens in your freezer you can make the same recipe, but roast for 1 1/2 to 2 hours.


                        Roasted Cornish Hens

Thaw overnight
2 cornish hens

Combine in a smal bowl 
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
1 1/2 teaspoons garlic powder
3/4 teaspoon black pepper
1 teaspoon paprika
2 Tablespoons dried parsley

About 4 hours before you wish to to roast the thawed hens, pat them completely dry, both inside and out.
Place the two cornish hens in a greased pan.
Rub olive oil lightly over them. 
Sprinkle the spice mixture generously over the hens and inside them as well.
Cover, refrigerate and let marinate for at least 3 hours for maximum flavour.

Preheat oven to 450º F

Have on hand
1 Tablespoon butter, divided into 2 pieces 

Run your fingers under the skin of the hens' breasts to loosen them.
Place a piece of butter under the skin of each hen.
Sprinkle on more parsley.
Bake for 50 - 60 minutes, depending on the size of hens.
Let the hens rest for 15 minutes before serving.

Since we won't be socializing in crowds for a while here are a few menu planning ideas:



Chicken Recipes for 2























Meat Recipes for 2












Sunday, March 19, 2017

Anna Sultana’s Corned Beef Hash


What a fun weekend: first we celebrated St. Patrick, then St. Joseph!
And how else to celebrate a holiday or two than with lots of great food!!
Corned beef and cabbage for St. Patrick and Żeppoli for St. Joseph are a nice break from Lent type food.
Especially if you’re also raising a glass or two of ale or wine.

But, just like every other holiday, this weekend presents us with the eternal problem: what to do with the leftovers?
What else? Make Corned Beef Hash.

Hash is a recipe dear to any frugal cook’s heart.
Some leftover roasted meat - yes, you can make hash using beef, pork or lamb - and leftover potatoes, and, if you have them, a bit of leftover vegetables.
What’s not to love? 

An English variation of hash is bubble and squeak, made with leftover vegetables from a roast dinner. The vegetables are usually potato and cabbage, but carrots, peas, Brussels sprouts can also be added. They used to add chopped leftover roast, but now a vegetarian version is more popular.

Hash can be served for breakfast, as a nice change from bacon or sausages.
It’s delicious with eggs, and fried potatoes, toast or biscuits.
If you want to keep the Celtic flavour, serve Corned Beef Hash with Irish Soda Bread, or Irish Cakes, or Welsh Cakes.

In the southern United States, hash can be two other dishes:
Leftover barbecue pork mixed with barbecue sauce and served over rice. 
A thick stew made from leftover pork, chicken and beef and served with cornbread.


Do not use leftover corned beef in Maltese Corned Beef Pie.
If you do, well, don’t invite a Maltese person to eat it.
Trust me, it’s not the same as canned.


Trivia:

The name hash comes from the French verb hacher which means ‘to chop’. A hash recipe first appeared in Mrs Rundell's A New System of Domestic Cookery in 1806.

Bubble and squeak got its name from the bubbling and squeaking sounds that the cabbage makes while it’s being cooked. It is usually served with leftover cold meat, with pickles or brown sauce, and can also be served as part of a full English breakfast.

National Corned Beef Hash Day is September 27.


Hints:

Canned corned beef can be used in hash if you really have to substitute.
But NEVER use leftover fresh corned beef in Maltese Corned Beef Pie.
You’ve been warned.

Hash is a way to use leftovers, but try to keep the ratio to 2 parts meat to 1 part potatoes, with just a bit of vegetables.
You want your hash to be on the dry side so that it will brown well and have a bit of crunch. An excess of vegetables can make the hash mushy.
If you have a lot of leftover vegetables they might be better in a pot of bubble and squeak, and served on the side.

Back to the crunch… don’t crowd the meat and potatoes in your pan.
It’s like frying doughnuts.
They need space to get browned. Without the space they’ll get stewed.
If you’re serving a crowd, it would be better to cook in batches.

When you flip the hash cake it will break apart. That’s fine.
The bits will get more browned and add to the texture.


                        Corned Beef Hash

Serves 2

Chop leftover corned beef, enough to make 2 Cups

Finely chop
1 small onion
1/4 Cup leftover cabbage (optional)

Dice
1 Cup leftover boiled potatoes
1/4 Cup leftover rutabaga (optional)
1/4 Cup leftover carrot (optional)

Place in a large bowl 
the potatoes and corned beef 
Toss together lightly with a fork.

Place in a large skillet
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil or butter
Over medium high heat melt the butter or heat the oil.
Add
the onions and optional vegetables
Stirring often, cook until lightly browned.
Add 
2 Tablespoons vegetable oil or butter
the meat and potatoes
Season with 
salt and pepper

Gently shape the mixture into a flat cake.
Let the mixture brown on one side, about 10 - 15 minutes.
Flip the mixture and let it brown on the other side, about another 10 - 15 minutes.

WHILE THE HASH IS COOKING:
Cook 2 to 4 large eggs (poach, fry, scramble, boil - your choice)

When the cake is nice and crispy, scoop half and place it in a plate.
Top with half of the eggs.
Repeat for the second serving.
Serve warm.


About the sky this week and next, thanks to the folks at The Farmers' Almanac…

March 20 – The Spring Equinox at 6:29 a.m. The last quarter Moon at 11:58 a.m. In this phase, the Moon appears as a half Moon in the sky. 

March 27 – New Moon at 10:57 p.m. In this phase, the Moon is not illuminated by direct sunlight and is completely invisible to the naked eye.

March 30 – Look to the western sky as darkness falls to see the the tiny waxing crescent Moon just eight degrees from Mars. Look low to the horizon and you might be able to spot Mercury with binoculars an hour after sunset. The Moon is at perigee, which means that it is at the closest point to Earth in its cycle.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Anna Sultana’s Corned Beef Pie, Maltese Style


The recipe for Tourtiere Pie reminded me of another of Ma’s meat pie recipes.
Ma served Corned Beef Pie a few times year, usually at the end of the month.
Ma said it was created when fresh food was hard to get during WW II.
That’s why the recipe uses canned corned beef.
When Ma made it we knew it was time to get a History lesson along with dinner.

If you’re thinking of using fresh corned beef… don’t.
At least not if you’re about to serve it to someone Maltese whose Ma made it.
For someone who grew up with the original recipe, using fresh corned beef instead of canned makes a really huge difference.

Don’t believe substituting fresh ingredients can make that big a difference?
Let me give you an example.
Are you familiar with the old TV program The King of Queens?
On one episode Doug’s Mom, who had retired and moved out of Queens, brought her homemade lemon bars when she visited Doug and Carrie.
At first Doug was really happy to have an old favourite dessert.
But Mrs. Heffernan used lemon juice from her own lemons instead of the bottled stuff Doug had had all his life.
Mrs. H thought Doug would be thrilled at having the fresh juice.
He wasn’t.
Learn from that.

This pie is great hot.
But you can also chill it and pack it for a picnic.
Ma did that, too, so I know it’s okay.
She also chilled and packed timpana for picnics.
They're way better than sandwiches.


Hints:

You can also add 2 slices bacon, diced, when you fry the onion.
Some people prefer a can of peas and carrots, drained, instead of just peas.
Ma used plain peas, and so do I.
It just doesn’t seem right to see carrots in it.


                        Corned Beef Pie

In a dutch oven place
2 Tablespoons olive oil
1 onion, diced
Fry the onion over medium heat for about 2 minutes, until soft.
Add
1 can corned beef, chopped
1 can sweet peas, drained
1 potato, diced
1 teaspoon curry
1/4 teaspoon pepper
Continue cooking, stirring to combine the ingredients, about 5 minutes. 

When the meat is almost done cooking, preheat oven to 400º F

Roll out
400 g flaky or puff pastry
Line the bottom and sides of a baking dish with 3/4 of the pastry.
Pour in the meat mixture.
Cover the top with the remaining pastry.
Brush the top of the pastry with
1 beaten egg (or milk)
Prick the top pastry with a fork so steam can escape. 
Bake for 40 minutes.
Let cool for about 10 minutes before slicing.