Thursday, July 7, 2016

JULY; HOPE YOURS IS FULL OF BEACH, COOKOUTS, AND ICE CREAM



 The pleasures of summer; a cool swim, a good book while sitting under a shade tree, that welcome breeze, and…..

FROZEN CREAM PIES; a “COOL” DESSERT

  • Frozen pies, akin to “ice cream”, are an easy way to make a tasty dessert for a family meal or to bring to that next cookout. My favorites are chocolate cream frozen pie, peanut butter chocolate cream, and this frozen strawberry pie, recipe below. I have to say that this is one instance when  pre-made pie crusts in the supermarket come in very handy, and I do take advantage of them.

            If you are a cook that likes to experiment and come up with your own recipes, using the basic recipe below; cream cheese, sugar, vanilla, whipped topping, and nuts, you can substitute blueberries, peaches, or nectarines for the strawberries. The fresher and riper the fruit, the more flavorful the filling will be; match the crust flavor to the filling; such as a shortbread cookie crust or the ever-popular graham cracker.


This recipe is great for summer get-togethers especially as it makes 2 pies. They will keep in the freezer till you are ready to serve them.  For added convenience use store-bought pre-made crusts. The filling is delicious as well as making an attractive presentation. 

Frozen Strawberry Pie

Ingredients:

            Two (2) 9 inch chocolate crumb pie crusts

             1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese, softened

            1 cup sugar

            1 teaspoon vanilla extract

            4 cups chopped fresh strawberries

            1 carton (12 ounces) frozen whipped topping, thawed

            1/2 cup chopped pecans, toasted

In large mixing bowl, beat  cream cheese, sugar and vanilla until smooth. Beat in the strawberries. Fold in whipped topping and pecans. Pour into crusts. Cover and freeze for 3 to 4 hours or until firm. Remove from the freezer 20 minutes before serving.
Optional garnishes; fresh strawberries or chocolate curls.    Makes 2 pies, 6 servings each.


 
  • For your next “kids-on-the-block” party, serve your most popular cookie with a root-beer float. I’ve included the recipe below so that you can introduce this wonderful soda-fountain treat of the past to our youngest generation.

 Root-Beer Floats; easy to make and will make you think of a corner soda shop.

Pour 6 ounces cold root beer into a tall glass.
Add 2 scoops of softened vanilla ice cream.
Drizzle 1 tablespoon chocolate syrup over ice cream.
Serve with a long spoon and a straw.


Hi Pat, 
My kids and I really enjoyed the Root-Beer Floats. I haven’t seen them around since I was a kid. It was a hot day so I went to the store to get the vanilla ice cream and the root beer. I didn’t bake cookies (too hot) but bought some.
We had the best time, made a huge mess, and loved them!!!!.
I haven’t written you before, but I had to let you know.
 Thanks a lot, Dawn, Chelsea & Jason


HOW TO GRILL PORK
Pork is fantastic for grilling as long as you choose tender cuts, such as chops, boneless loin, or the most low-fat alternative-tenderloin. But don’t overcook it. Since today’s pork is leaner, it gets tough if it is cooked as long as the fattier pork of a decade ago. Conversely, already tough cuts like spareribs or shoulder need long cooking to tenderize the meat.
Grilling pork tenderloin
There’s an amazingly simple and ingenious way to manage the heat of the grill.
It’s called indirect grilling.
Using a charcoal grill, you push the HOT coals to either side of the grill leaving the center to cook the meat on.
 If using a gas grill with 2 burners, you heat one burner to hot and leave the other burner off, cooking the meat over the off burner. I have a 3 burner grill in which you leave the center burner off and heat the outside burners to medium.
 (Most grills come with directions for indirect grilling).

Cumin-Crusted Pork Tenderloin with Orange Glaze
Glaze Ingredients:
 1 teaspoon canola oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup fresh orange juice
 1/2 cup cider vinegar
1/2 cup molasses
 salt & fresh ground black pepper to taste
In a small saucepan, heat oil over medium heat. Add garlic and cook while stirring for about 1 minute. Add orange juice and vinegar and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer, uncovered, until reduced to one-half cup, 30 t0 40 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in molasses. Season with salt and pepper. Set aside.
Pork:
 1/4 cup cumin seeds
 2 tablespoons crushed black pepper
 1 tablespoon kosher salt
Two, 12 ounce pork tenderloins
Heat grill to medium hot. Lightly oil cooking area.
In a small dry skillet, heat cumin seeds over low heat, stirring constantly about 2 minutes. Place in a small bowl and stir in pepper and salt. Press cumin mixture into pork, coating all sides.
When grill is medium-hot, sear pork over hot side of grill until browned on all sides, about 12 minutes.
Move to cooler side of grill, tent with aluminum foil and cook, turning occasionally, until pork is only slightly pink in the center, 8-10 minutes. During last few minutes of cooking, brush with one-third cup of orange glaze.
Transfer to cutting board, tent with foil, and let rest 6-8 minutes. Cut into 1 inch slices. Arrange on platter and brush with additional glaze.
Great served with corn bread.


This is good to keep in a shaker near your grill
Basic Seasoning Salt
                                                                  1 cup coarse salt
                                                                  1 tablespoon garlic powder
                                                                  1 tablespoon and 1 teaspoon ground black pepper



 





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