Popular Posts

Sunday, 10 February 2013

Creamy Frankfurters and Corn


           
          Creamy Frankfurters and Corn
            Mushroom soup makes a quick sauce for this dish
Ingredients:
          2 lbs.            frankfurters
          3 Tbsps.        margarine
          1 can          (17 ozs.) whole-kernel corn
          1can           cream-of-mushroom soup
          1/2 cup       milk
                             Pepper
Method:
            Cut the frankfurters in 1/2"chunks. Melt margarine; add frankfurters and corn. Cover and cook about 10 minutes stirring often. Add mushroom soup and milk and stir constantly until soup is thoroughly heated. Season with pepper.
            Serves 6.

Frankfurter Hash,With a Topping of Cheddar Cheese.



Hash
Frankfurter hash with a Topping of Cheddar Cheese.
Ingredients
          4 cups          finely diced cold boiled potato
          1medium    onion, diced
          3 Tbsps.        flour
                             Salt and pepper
          1/4 cup       milk
          1/2 lb.         Frankfurters, thinly sliced
          3 Tbsps.        margarine
          1/2 cup       sharp cheddar cheese, shredded
Method:
            Combine potato and onion. Sprinkle with flour and season. Add milk and franks put in shallow baking dish or pie pan. Dot with butter. Bake in hot oven, 425 F., 30 minutes. Top with cheese. Bake 5 minutes longer, or until cheese is melted. Serves 4    

Franks And Onions


          Franks And Onions
            Sliced, cooked, and seasoned onions are served over the frankfurters
          4 cups          onion, sliced
          1 clove        garlic, crushed
          2 Tbsps.        fat
                             Salt and pepper
          2 Tbsps.        Worcestershire
          1 Tbsp.        prepared mustard
          1 lb.            frankfurters split

            Cook onion and garlic in fat until golden brown. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Cover, and simmer 10 minutes. Add Worcestershire and mustard. Steam franks in colander over boiling water. Put on hot platter and top with onion mixture. Serves 4.

Franks and Noodles




            Franks and Noodles
            They're cooked with tomatoes, brown sugar and Canadian cheese.
Ingredients:
          1                 onion, diced
          1/4 cup       butter
          1 can         (19 oz.) tomatoes
          4 ozs.           wide noodles
          2 tsps.           brown sugar
          4                 frankfurters cut in 1" pieces
          1/2 cup       Canadian cheese
                             Salt and pepper
Method:
            Cook onion in butter until lightly browned. Add next 4 ingredients. Bring to boil. Add potato; simmer until almost dry.  Serves 4.

Franks and Beans, Canadian Style




Franks and Beans, Canadian Style
A classic Canadian dish; cooked with brown sugar and molasses.
Ingredients;
3 cups         navy beans
9 cups         water
                   Salt and pepper, usual mix
1 tsp.           prepared mustard
1/2 cup       molasses
1/4 cup       brown sugar, packed
1/4 cup       margarine, melted
1 can          pearl onions (16 oz.), drained
1 lb.            frankfurters cut in 1/2" chunks
Method:
            Wash beans and put in large kettle. Add water; bring to boil and boil 2 minutes. Remove from heat, and let stand 1 hour. Cook beans until tender, adding water, if necessary. Add remaining ingredients, except onions and frankfurters; mix lightly. Put in large casserole or bean pot; cover, and bake in moderate oven, 350 F.  3 hours. Add onions and frankfurters during last 30 minutes of baking. Add water during baking if necessary. Serves 8.

Sunday, 3 February 2013

BarbecueStyle or just , Broiled, Planked, Hamburger Steak


If you wish to plank a hamburger or steak, please, please, do so this way. Many of the planks people are now placing their meat on, and allowing to char during the broiling process, can release deadly carcinogens which then penetrate into the meat being cooked. If you are one of those people that just "has to" char or burn something, in order to get that "authentic" out door smoked cooking experience; follow the recipe below to the point of planking the steak; then take that hardware store bought plank, of your choice--place it on your broiler, and let it char-- to your choice of doneness--then continue to follow the recipe and use the type of plank I suggest. You sill still have your smoked taste and smell; but the food will be a lot healthier to eat and you will get a lot more compliments on your presentation and "chef style".

Ingredients:
1 1/2 pounds Canadian Russet potatoes
2 Tbsps butter
2 beaten eggs
1 1/2 pounds ground chuck
1/2 tsp salt
1/8 tsp pepper
8 small carrots, cooked and buttered
2 cups peas, cooked and buttered
      Minced parsley

Instructions:
Peel and quarter the potatoes. Cook, covered, in boiling salted water till tender, about 25 minutes. Drain well. Add the butter and eggs to potatoes (Duchess); beat till fluffy. Add salt and pepper to taste; set aside.
Shape ground chuck(usually, the ground meat of choice, flavour-wise) into 4 oval steaks about 1 inch thick. In skillet cook steaks till rare, about 5 minutes per side. Place each on a well-oiled seasoned steak plank (they are usually oval shaped, with a groove around the outer edge, and 3/4 to 1 inch thick--some are designed to hold a cast iron steak sizzler); sprinkle with salt and pepper. Brush with butter to "finish". Place Potatoes in pastry bag; pipe onto plank to form border 1 inch larger than steak.
Place 2 planks under broiler or salamander, 4 inches from heat; broil till potatoes brown sightly, about 4 minutes. Repeat with remaining planks. Arrange "baby" carrots and peas (other vegetables may be added, if desired) within potato border; sprinkle with parsley. Makes 4 servings
©Al (Alex-Alexander) D. Girvan. All rights reserved.

Saturday, 5 January 2013

HOME MADE FRANKFURTERS-THEY DON'T PLUMP, NEITHER DO YOU



 Home made Frankfurters- Courtesy of Clark's Meat Market.

Notice-these frankfurters contain, no starches, no potentially contaminated, carcinogenic, or poisonous animal by-products, and no other fillers. Compare this to the label on the ones you buy from the supermarket. Because they contain no starch, these frankfurters will not “plump” like the commercial versions do, when you cook them; but then neither will you when you eat them.
Ingredients
3 feet sheet or small (1/2 inch diameter) hog casings
1 lb lean pork, cubed
3/4 lb. beef, cubed
1/4 pound pork fat (not lard), cubed
1/4 cup very finely minced onion
1 small clove crushed, finely diced
1 tsp. finely ground coriander
1/4 tsp. dried marjoram
1/4 tsp. ground mace
1/4 tsp. dry mustard
1 tsp. sweet paprika
1 tsp. freshly ground, fine white pepper
1 egg white
1-1/2 tsps. sugar
1 tsp. salt or to taste
1/4 cup milk
Instructions
          Prepare the casings (instructions below). In blender or food processor, make a purée of the onion, garlic, coriander, marjoram, mace, mustard, and paprika. Add the pepper, egg white, sugar, salt, and milk and mix thoroughly. Grind the pork, beef, and fat cubes through the fine blade, separately. Mix together and grind again. Mix the seasoning into the meat mixture with your hands
            Chill the mixture for half an hour then put the mixture through the fine blade of the grinder once more. Stuff the casings and twist them off into 6-inch links. Parboil the links (with out separating them) in gently simmering water for 20 minutes. Place the franks in a pot of ice water and chill thoroughly. Remove, pat dry, and refrigerate. Because they are precooked, they can be refrigerated for up to a week or they can be frozen. The frankfurter meat can also be left uncooked and used as any other fresh sausage meat but it will not keep in the refrigerator for more than two days.
Preparing the Casing
          Strip off about four feet of casing (better too much than too little because any extra can be repacked in salt and used later) Rinse the casing under cold running water to remove salt clinging to it. Place in a bowl of cold water and let soak for about half an hour after soaking, rinse the casing under cold running water. Slip one end of casing over the nozzle of facet  Hold the casing firmly on the nozzle, and then turn on the cold water, gently at first and then more forcefully. This procedure will flush out any salt in the casing and pin point any breaks. Should, you find a break, simply cut out a small portion of the casing. Place the casing into a bowl of water and add white vinegar. A Tbsp of vinegar per cup of water is sufficient. The vinegar softens the casing a bit more and makes it more transparent, which in turn makes your sausage more pleasing to the eye. Leave the casing in the water/vinegar solution until you are ready to use it. Rinse well and drain before stuffing. Of course you need a sausage stuffier.