THE SHAWNEE MARINA REUBEN SANDWICH
The ultimate Reuben. When I developed this sandwich, the idea was to draw in hungry boaters off the Ohio River and to make them regulars at my deli-restaurant. It worked.
Provided by Bone Man
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 35m
Yield 1 sandwich, 1 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Brush the melted butter on all four sides of the bread. In a large pan or skillet, brown two sides of the bread over medium heat and set aside.
- Add 1/2 of the celery salt to the thousand island dressing and taste. If you like more, add the rest. Set aside.
- In the same pan over medium heat, add the olive oil and sautee the pastrami, the corned beef and, the sauerkraut without mixing them with each other. At the end of 3 minutes, put the meat and kraut on a plate and set aside.
- Over low heat, put an unbrowned (buttered) bread side down in the pan. Layer on the corned beef, pastrami, kraut, Alpine Lace cheese (Alpine Lace is a very mild, wide Swiss Cheese -- substitute Baby Swiss if you can't find it at the grocery), and jalapeno cheese. (Since the jalapeno cheese usually comes in small square slices, that's why you need 1 1/2 slices. The Alpine Lace should be roughly the same width of the bread).
- On the remaining slice of bread, on the browned side, spread the horseradish sauce. Drizzle the thousand island dressing directly on the sandwich and place the horseradish side of the bread DOWN as to mix with the dressing.
- As soon as the bottom of the sandwich browns, carefully flip it over and brown the final side.
- When the bottom of the sandwich is browned, plate it up and cut it in half, on the diagonal. Garnish the plate with the gherkins and the orange slices.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 1451, Fat 111.8, SaturatedFat 39.1, Cholesterol 256.7, Sodium 3705.6, Carbohydrate 53.8, Fiber 7.7, Sugar 19.4, Protein 58.8
APPALACHIAN CHILI
I specialize in preparing Appalachian dishes, which, simply put, utilize common ingredients and produces a lot of flavor and feeds many people on a small budget. This chili tastes great, is easy to prepare and can also be served over spaghetti if desired. This is what you would call "Grandma's chili."
Provided by Bone Man
Categories Beans
Time 2h20m
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- In a large cooking pot, pour in the beef and chicken broth and crumble in the burger.
- Bring to a boil over medium heat.
- Add all other ingedients, except for the beans and the spaghetti, stirring after adding each one.
- Once the chili begins to boil, reduce the heat so that it will boil slowly with the lid on.
- Allow the chili to slowly boil for 90 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- Add the beans after 90 minutes and allow the chili to continue the slow boil for another 30 minutes.
- If desired, Prepare the spaghetti separately, boiling in water per package directions, and set aside, covered.
- Serve either in medium-sized bowls with saltines or oyster crackers available at the table or, portion out the chili over the spaghetti on large plates.
DELECTABLE BAKED ORANGE ROUGHY
I love buttery, lemony white fish so I devised this simple recipe. For this dish, you can use roughy, tilapia, whitefish, halibut.... any nice white fish fillet. And this is a great way for NEWBIES to seafood to break in. The technique is pretty forgiving of mistakes and the fish WILL be done, but not overcooked. Enjoy!
Provided by Bone Man
Categories Orange Roughy
Time 30m
Yield 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Pull off four sheets of good quality aluminum foil, each about 24 inches long. Double each one over so it's a foot long and spray with the cooking spray.
- Pre-heat the oven to 375-degrees F.
- Lay out a fillet on each sheet of foil and pull the sides up a bit so that it will hold liquid.
- Squeeze a half lemon over each fillet. Cut up the spent lemons into wedges and put the pieces around the fish.
- Pour the melted butter equally over each fillet. Lightly dust the top of each fillet with the paprika. Instead of paprika, you could substitute Old Bay Seasoning, which yields an excellent flavor. In any case, you may not need all the spice, depending on the size of your fillets.
- Close the foil and make a seal. Place the closed foil bowls into the oven, middle rack, and bake for 15 minutes.
- Revove the foil bowls from the oven, carefully open them to expose the filets and place them all on a sheet pan. Re-set the oven to "broil" (on "high" if there is a setting), and return the fish to the oven just above the middle rack. Broil for just a few minutes until you see very slight browning, no more than 5 minutes.
- Garnish with the parsley sprigs and serve hot with basmati rice on the side. (See: Recipe #217802 ). You can just leave the fish on the foil and place it on serving plates if you wish.
DORSEL'S GOETTA VARIATION NO. 2 (CROCK POT)
Goetta is something like "Scrapple" that's not so greasy. It may be a German dish but in the U.S., it is very popular around Cincinnati, Ohio. Most folks I know eat it as an all-in-one breakfast dish with either syrup, gravy, or melted butter on it. The Dottie Dorsel Pinhead Oatmeal Company sort of set the standard for the recipe and this is a slightly modifide entry of their "alternative version" (non-onion version) of Goetta.
Provided by Bone Man
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 5h10m
Yield 2 loaves
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Blend the ground meat. Set aside.
- In a crock pot, combine water, salt and pepper. Cook on high (covered) for 20 minutes then stir in oatmeal. Cover and cook on high for 90 more minutes.
- Add meat and savory seasoning at the end of the 90 minutes -- blend well. Cover and cook on low for 3 more hours.
- At the end of the 3 hours, if the goetta is not thick enough, cook it a little longer, stirring often.
- Pour into bread pans, cover with cling wrap, and place in refrigerator. It will keep for days.
- When you're ready to eat it, slice the loaf of goetta and put it into a skillet with the bacon fat. Fry over medium heat until it is well browned, turning once.
- Serve.
- NOTE: A good friend of mine who makes this all the time use 16 cups of water for this recipe, which is double the recommendation, so don't be afraid to use more than 8 cups if it seems to need it before the cooking time is up. Also, good sausage can be substituted for the ground pork, if you wish.
MAMAW'S CREAMED TURKEY OVER TOAST
The day after Thanksgiving you can achieve the very pinnacle of comfort food! My mom ended up having to bake several turkeys a year just so we could get this stuff. Some very knowledgeable 'Zaarites helped me to ressurect it as the recipe had been lost.
Provided by Bone Man
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 40m
Yield 8 cups
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- In a large no-stick skillet, begin heating the milk, margarine and chicken stock over medium heat.
- Whisk in the flour right away, eliminating all lumps, and as it comes to a boil, it should thicken.
- Add the salt and pepper. (Black pepper is okay as a substitute).
- As it thickens, toss in the chopped turkey and stir carefully as to not break up the chunks too much.
- If it gets too thick, just add some milk and stir.
- As soon as the mix is thick enough to your liking, it is done. Turn off the heat and cover until serving.
- Serve over slices of toast or, make up some of your favorite biscuits instead.
- If you have some left-over turkey broth from the day before when the turkey was baked, use that instead of chicken stock.
- Note: the more dark meat, the better. It really adds to the flavor of this dish.
COUNTY FAIR ITALIAN SAUSAGE SANDWICHES
The only difference between mine and the ones you get at the county fair is that mine are much better -- more TLC! This has become my favorite sandwich over the years and when I serve them at cookouts along with other items (brats, burgers, dogs, etc.) these are ALWAYS the first to go. The recipe is primarily set up as an outdoor cooking technique but they are easy enough to do on the stovetop, except you don't get that great smoke flavor. I prefer to do mine over a campfire of hot coals in an all-steel wok but a charcoal or gas grill and pan will do just as well. If you're using a gas grill, toss a few wet wood chips on the lava rock to make some good smoke. Bon Appétit!
Provided by Bone Man
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 35m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Parboil the sausages in 24 ounces of the beer for 10 minutes, then drain and discard the beer. Place the sausages aside in tinfoil or in a covered bowl where they'll stay warm.
- Place a wok or pan over high heat and after it has heated, pour in the olive oil. Before the olive oil smokes, dump in all the peppers and onions. Toss and stir them with some frequency and when you see the first indication of any browning, add in the sausages.
- When the sausages have browned a bit, pour in the reserved 8 ounces of beer and stir.
- When the beer has pretty much evaporated, serve the sausages, peppers and onions on pre-warmed (or steamed) buns. The buns are easily steamed at home by placing them in a gallon-sized zip-lock bag, flipping in about a tablespoon of water with your fingers and microwave the nearly-closed bag for about 15-20 seconds on the defrost mode -- don't do them on HIGH or they'll get rubbery!
Nutrition Facts : Calories 579.1, Fat 33.7, SaturatedFat 9.7, Cholesterol 47.3, Sodium 1216.4, Carbohydrate 36.5, Fiber 2.4, Sugar 6.4, Protein 21.4
APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN SEASONING
You won't find this one anyplace else on the planet except right here on Recipe*zaar. Why? Because I invented it! It's for bumping up either chicken or pork and can be used as a "dredge", a seasoning, or, as a rub for smoking. I'm sort of a food anthropologist and I put a lot of research and testing into this one. The ingredients are traditional Appalachian fare, except that the smoked red chilis are more of a western invention. Still, we smoke the chilis around here nowadays so I didn't feel bad about using them and the smoke really adds to the overall quality of the spice. You can order these smoked red chilis online from various Albuquerque outlets. Also, the filé is nothing more than dried and ground sassafras tree leaves. We use sassafras a lot here in Appalachia and using the Cajun filé is a lot more convenient than drying and grinding your own leaves. See directions below for how to use it. Great flavor!
Provided by Bone Man
Categories Savory
Time 20m
Yield 3 tablespoons
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Grind the ingredients until it becomes a greyish-white powder.
- Store in a closed container.
- When used as a "dredge" add 1 teaspoonful to each cup of flour. As a spice, just sprinkle it on to the raw chicken or pork before cooking/baking/frying. For smoking, just rub it on the meat.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 38.7, Fat 0.1, Sodium 4, Carbohydrate 9.8, Fiber 0.5, Sugar 8.9, Protein 0.2
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