Archive for Appetizers

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Snowpocalypse, snowmaggedon, and now snoverkill

While the greater part of the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area is under a monstrous 54 inches of snow, I’m not even attempting to dig out. Instead, I’m going to chronicle my newest appetizer recipe thanks to my handy-dandy Crock Pot!

Now, let me preface this by telling the tale of last year’s Superbowl. My roommate Julia and I, in our utter foodie-ness, decided to make the atypical football food for our annual gathering of pigskin debauchery. What, you may ask, did Julia and I come up with?

Crab-filled wontons, and chicken nubbins wrapped in bacon and covered in cinnamon. (modified Paula Deen recipe). Oh and it was all tantalizing and mouth-watering. If there was a competition, we would’ve won best house food for Superbowl.

This year, due to snowmaggedon we were limited in our grocery choices thanks to the epic clean-out of any and all essential ingredients at the grocery store.

So, peeking into our freezer what did I find but a copious amount of frozen chopped spinach?

In leaps and bounds I trekked in a snow suit and backpack to the grocery store in horrendous unplowed road conditions…which, in reality, only took me about 15 minutes.

There, I found the few things needed for a scrumptious treat.

  • cream cheese (3-6 oz. depending on serving size)
  • sour cream (16 oz.)

Back at the house, we had the rest of the necessary ingredients:

  • olive oil (approx. 3 tbsp)
  • shallots
  • garlic (add to taste, the more garlic the better)
  • chopped spinach (1/2 lb. to 1 lb.)
  • large onion (I find Spanish onions to be the best, they’re sweeter.)
  • salt
  • pepper
  • mozzarella, parmesan, asiago, or ANY two or three kinds of soft melty cheese you have

From there, you can do this one of two ways: pan cooked all the way (served cold or hot), OR Crock Pot it.

Either way, it all begins the same:

  1. In a 12-inch frying pan, heat the olive oil on medium-high heat
  2. Add thawed spinach to pan once smoking hot (if you don’t thaw the spinach, it’ll be horrible. hot oiled pan + frozen crystals = disaster and burns)
  3. Put heat on low, add sour cream, cream cheese, shallots, garlic, salt, and pepper. Mix until combined.
  4. From here, I transfer the mixture to a pre-heated Crock Pot on medium.
  5. Add cheese, stir, and serve.

**For an extra kick, warm up pita or tortilla chips in the oven at 200° F.

Photo to come soon!

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Fish, its what’s for dinner.

Today, an odd craving overcame me. Fish.

photo: compfight.com


It being Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent season, and all… it seems fitting. But seeing as I have no religious affiliation, it was an odd craving.

I call them college-student-hunger-pains. Very similar to pregnant-woman-hunger-pains. Maybe subconsciously I know midterms are coming up so I should eat some “brain food” like my Dad always has called it.

That, or it is a devilishly clever marketing plan.

I was downloading grocery coupons (I know what you’re thinking, and yes I am one of those people) I was accosted by tons of ads for “DOUBLE COUPONS: FISH FOR LENT!”

Well, I caved and bought two fillets of some gorgeous pink salmon for me and my roommate to delight in this evening.

I was raised on salmon and brie, a weird combination but a bite of heaven nonetheless. My grandpa cooks the salmon in a small hickory smoker on the back deck in a metal homemade smoker.

He then piles the crumbled, salty white fish on top of a healthy slice of gooey, buttery, all together perfectly creamy brie and club cracker.

The combination is the perfect amuse-bouche.

Now, my salmon dinner won’t be any thing of this caliber…but there’s still something to be said for a good piece of fish broiled to perfection with a bit of lemon zest.

I’m drooling

Photo: Papa J, in the flesh.

photo credit: terri_tu