Tag: Appetizer

No Kidding! Hummus With Chipotle Chile, Black Beans and Tomato Salsa

No Kidding! Hummus With Chipotle Chile, Black Beans and Tomato Salsa

Stop me if you’ve heard this one:  Hummus With Chipotle Chile, Black Beans and Tomato Salsa. Pretty funny. Right?  As it turns out, this international mix-up makes for a pretty wonderful appetizer. The smooth and flat-flavored hummus contrasts beautifully against the fiery black bean spread.…

Party Like It’s 1999! Cheddar and Scallion Dip

Party Like It’s 1999! Cheddar and Scallion Dip

Time to party—in a socially distanced kind of way. Whether you are Zoom partying, front yard partying or just partying with the faithful family dog (as I am with Sweet Juliet), this Cheddar and Scallion Dip is very very good party food. It also works…

Bits and Pieces Party Cheese Ball

Apparently, it’s a Wisconsin thing.

The Wisconsin cheese industry claims that club, crock or pub cheese originated there in the early 1900s as a snack served to touring guests at the Pabst Brewery Hospitality Center in Milwaukee. Smeared on a cracker and washed down by a cold beer, the cheese blend was a hit and, in 1933, Hubert Fassbender (of Kaukauna, Wisconsin) became the first commercial manufacturer of the cheese sensation when he put his Kaukauna Klub  cheese on the market.

I remember buying big crocks of Fassbender’s cheese back in the 1970s. It became a staple on our holiday table and we were partial to the crock of cheese with port wine swirled throughout the mixture. Today, the cheese, also called cold pack cheese because the cheeses are not heated during production, continues to be a popular Wisconsin product and sales of the cheese peak during the holidays. According to one of the producers, tastes are changing, though, with Jalapeno or habanero-flavored cheese being particularly popular as America’s palate has become more adventurous.

Over the years, cooks have, of course, tried their hands at various homemade versions of  pub cheese and somewhere, in some kitchen, the cheese ball was born.

Sadly, in some circles, the cheese ball gets no respect–a Rodney Dangerfield of the world of party appetizers. Too boring. Too bland. Too much of a “boomer” thing.

My recommendation is that you don’t shy away from the modern cheese ball (or the crock of Wisconsin pub cheese at your market).

At least, don’t run away from this recipe from The New York Times. For those of you who are cheese addicts (you know who you are), this cheese ball is a wonderful thing. It has a bit of a bite. It has the complex flavor that comes from combining several quality cheeses. It has roasted pecans. It works.

If it’s too “boomer” for you,  just tell yourself that it’s fashionably retro and go with it.

Yields 9 servomgs

Serves 8 to 10 servings

Cheese Ball
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Ingredients

  • 4 T. good-quality salted butter
  • 1 C. shredded sharp, flavorful cheese in any combination that might include Gruyere, cheddar or blue cheese
  • 3 oz. fresh goat cheese
  • 4 oz. cream cheese
  • 1 T. finely chopped scallions
  • 1/4 t. cayenne
  • 1/4 t. fish sauce (or Worstershire or omit)
  • 1 T. lemon juice
  • 1/3 C. chopped, salted and roasted pecans
  • 1 T. chopped flat leaf parsley

Instructions

  1. Set cheeses and butter out on your counter and allow them to come to room temperature.
  2. Combine all ingredients except pecans and parsley in the bowl of a stand up mixer with a paddle attachment. Beat until smooth, scraping down the sides of the bowl once or twice. (This should take about 4 minutes.)
  3. Using a spatula, scrap the cheese mixture onto a piece of waxed paper and gently form into a ball. Place in the refrigerator for at least 15 minutes or until firm enough to work with.
  4. Mix the chopped salted pecans and chopped parsley together in a large plate. Roll the cheese ball through the mixture. Cover any surfaces with a sprinkling of the mixture and pat into the sides until you have an evenly-coated ball.
  5. Wrap well in plastic wrap and refrigerate. When ready to serve, let the ball sit out for a half hour or so to soften a bit. Serve with good plain crackers or small toasts.

Nutrition

7.8.1.2
27
https://bluecayenne.com/bits-and-pieces-party-cheese-ball

The original recipe for this cheese ball comes from the New York Times. Here is the link:

 

http://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1018455-bits-and-pieces-party-cheese-ball

 

 

Glazed Spiced Nuts

  This is one of the appetizers people were eating around the holidays in 1984, thirty-one years ago. The recipe was featured in Bon Appetit as part of an elegant Thanksgiving menu. I haven’t made these in a very long time but decided to make…

Best Date Appetizer in the Parade

  When my husband and I used to enjoy the Naples boat parade at the invitation of our friends Jim and Al, we used to unashamedly stand upon the Naples bridge and shout “best boat in the parade”  as each boat passed under the bridge.…

Hummus for the new year

Hummus722233

 

Here is a recipe I like a lot. Actually, it is an adaptation of recipes from two sources, the food site AllRecipes and one of my favorite Indian-inspired cookbooks, Yamuna’s Table by the late rockstar chef, Yamuna Devi. She literally was a rockstar. She was a backup singer with the Beatles, cooked for Indira Gandhi,  and authored the much acclaimed Lord Krishna’s Cuisine: The Art of Indian Vegetarian Cooking, a dog-eared copy of which I keep easily accessible on my cookbook shelf.

Why not consider this colorful dish for your New Year’s table?

Recipe: Hummus
5 unpeeled garlic cloves
1 T. extra-virgin olive oil
2 15-ounce cans garbanzo beans (drained and rinsed)
1/2 cup tahini
1/3 C. fresh lemon juice
1 t. ground cumin
1 t. salt
1 T. extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 to 1 seeded fresh jalapeno chile
2 T. chopped cilantro
8-10 fresh mint leaves

Directions: Preheat oven to 450 degrees F and place 5 unpeeled garlic cloves on a sheet of foil. Drizzle garlic cloves with olive oil and fold foil to enclose the garlic cloves and oil. Bake packet for 15 minutes. Remove packet from oven and let the garlic cloves cool. Then squeeze garlic cloves out of peels.

In a food processor, combine roasted garlic cloves, drained and rinsed garbanzo beans, tahini, lemon juice, cumin, and salt. Blend until smooth. Add olive oil, jalapeno chile, cilantro and mint leaves and continue to process until the jalapeno, cilantro and mint leaves are throughly blended into the chickpea mixture.

Chill for a few hours to let the flavors blend together then spread hummus onto a decorative bowl or dish, using a spatula to make deep swirling designs in the hummus. Let hummus sit at room temperature for at least 30 minutes before serving. Then, drizzle a bit more good olive oil onto the dish and garnish.

Serve garnished with a few whole garbanzo beans, lightly-toasted  pine nuts, chopped parsley, pitted kalamata olives, pomegranate arils,  a pinch of paprika and a decorative ribbon of lemon peel. Serve with toasted pita bread wedges , a platter of crudites or simple crackers.