Showing posts sorted by relevance for query sandwich. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query sandwich. Sort by date Show all posts
We were on the shopping Estate near us the other morning and I was sitting in the car waiting for Todd. We were parked right in front of one of those Sub shops and they had an ad in the window for their new chicken caesar melt sandwiches. I looked at it and thought to myself, that looks tasty, supposedly using fresh rotisserie chicken, etc. but experience has taught me that looks are oftimes very deceiving and that I could probably do much better at home myself. And so I did.
I picked up a Rotisserie chicken at the grocery store afterwards, and some hoagie buns and then went home and created this.
It wasn't very hard to do at all. I split the hoagie buns and spread them with a homemade garlic butter. Garlic is a large component of a Caesar salad . . . as is Parmesan cheese. My garlic butter has both. I toasted the buttered hoagies under the grill, then I set them aside to keep them warm while I prepared the rest of the sandwich ingredients.
I tore the chicken off the bones of the rotisserie chicken and broke it into bite sized pieces, which I tossed together with an amount of caesar salad dressing. You can just use your favourite kind, and low fat if you wish.
I mounded the dresssed chicken into bun sized mounds on a baking sheet I had lined with lightly greased aluminium foil. Then I topped each mound with some melty cheese I had sliced in half diagonally. Back under the grill it went . . . to heat the chicken through and melt the cheese.
I had also grilled some bacon earlier until it was crisp. Smoked streaky bacon, two slices for each sandwich.
I also shredded some coz (romaine) lettuce and slices some fresh tomatoes thinly along with a bit of red onion, also thinly sliced.
The bottom halves of the toasted buns got layered up with shredded lettuce and onion slices and then drizzled with a bit more salad dressing and topped with the chicken and melted cheese . . . and then topped with the bacon and tomato slices, with the top half of the bun folded over top. I will just say one word about this. DELICIOUS! And at a fraction of the cost of buying one ready made.
*Chicken & Bacon Caesar Melt*
Makes 4 servings
4 hoagie buns
1 cooked rotisserie chicken
8 slices cooked streaky smoked bacon
225g creamy caesar salad dressing (1 cup)
(can use low fat)
4 slices of melty cheese, cut in half diagonally (I used Dutch Gouda)
For the garlic butter:
4 TBS softened butter
1/2 tsp garlic powder
2 TBS grated parmesan cheese
1/2 red onion, peeled and thinly sliced
finely shredded lettuceServed with some crisp oven chips these went down a real treat for our tea. We both fell in love. Its surprisingly tasty what you can do when you are inspired to do so! Plus I had some meat leftover (because there are only two of us) for a casserole and some bones for soup. Win, win, win!!! Bon Appetit!
As a Latter Day Saint, I ascribe to a health law called the Word of Wisdom. This means that I do not drink tea or coffee, or alcohol. This is not a problem for me and never has been. I do enjoy a nice cup of herbal tea once in a while, but generally speaking I have never been a lover of hot drinks. Regardless to what other people may think or believe, if this is what my God wants me to do, then I do it, no questions asked. I spose it is one of the things that makes us a peculiar and a wonderful people!
I do enjoy the coffee flavour in other things though . . . back in Canada there is a really tasty candy bar called Coffee Crisp, and it is quite . . . quite good. I kinda miss them over here and a bag of the bite sized ones is on my list of must buy's when I go home this next summer.
I love coffee flavoured cakes and biscuits as well.
Especially if it is combined with the flavour and crunch of toasted walnuts.
This is quite a common and a popular teatime treat over here in the UK. A deliciously moist cake covered in a tasty buttercream icing and flavoured with coffee essence and walnuts.
I have gone one step further though, as I am wont to do . . . and added a deliciously creamy topping of a French Creme au Beurre. Moreishly good.
Scrummy even. Do be sure to give this a try. You can use Camp Chickory flavouring if you like.
*Coffee and Walnut Cake*
Serves 8
Printable Recipe
A deliciously moist sandwich cake filled with a lucious buttercream icing and topped with a coffee Creme Au Beurre
3 ounces softened butter
3 ounces soft margarine
6 ounces soft light brown sugar
6 ounces self raising flour
1/2 tsp baking powder
3 eggs
1 tsp coffee essence
For the buttercream filling:
1 1/2 ounces softened butter
3 ounces sifted icing sugar
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 TBS milk
For the Coffee Creme Au Beurre:
3 ounces caster sugar
4 TBS water
2 egg yolks
6 ounces unsalted butter, softened
1/4 tsp coffee essence
To decorate:
chopped toasted walnuts
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F. Butter and base line two 7 inch sandwich tins. Set aside.
Place the butter, margarine and sugar in a bowl. Sift the flour and baking powder together and add to the bowl along with the eggs. Whisk the ingredients together, beating them for about 2 minutes with an electric whisk, stopping halfway through to scrap down the sides, ensuring that all the ingredients are combined thoroughly. Quickly whisk in the coffee essense.
Divide the batter between the two baking tins. Smooth the surface and then bake for about 25 minutes, or until the sponges are well risen and the top spring back when lightly touched.
Remove from the oven and allow to cool for five minutes in the tins before turning them out onto wire racks to finish cooling.
For the buttercream, beat the butter until smooth. Gradually beat in the icing sugar, vanilla and milk until the mixture is smooth and fluffy. Sandwich the two cake layers together with this.
Make theCreme au Beurre as follows. Dissolve the sugar in the water a small saucepan without boiling. Once the sugar is dissolved bring the syrup to the boil and cook steadily until it reaches the soft ball stage (120C/240*F) on a candy thermometer.
Whisk the egg yolks until foamy with an electric whisk and then gradually pour the syrup over them in a thin and steady stream, whisking the whole time. Continue to whisk for about 5 minutes, until the mixure cools and forms a thick mousse. In another bowl, beat the butter until smooth. Gradually beat in the egg yolk mixture along with the coffee essence, beating to give a light, glossy icing. spread this thickly over top of the cake. Sprinkle with the chopped toasted walnuts immediately.
Allow to set before cutting into wedges to serve. Delicious!
I was recently contacted and asked to do the Clover Block Challenge. Clover is part of the Dairy Crest family, which is one of the UK's premier dairy food companies. I've always loved the Clover Commercials on the telly and so I thought why not, I'll give it a go.
Cover Block is a spread which has been specifically designed for baking with.With only 30% of the saturated fat that butter has. On their page I read that it has a buttery taste, which comes from the buttermilk that they churn to make it. Hmmm . . . all the flavour of butter with only 30% of the saturated fat? I'm in!
I decided to use it to bake my Victorian Sandwich Cake. It's one of our favourite cakes and a cake that really highlights the flavour of butter. Could the Clover Block compete? We would see.
I recently got a special tin that you can bake individual sponges in and so I was really keen to do mini Victorian Sponge Cakes. I used the same recipe, but divided the batter equally amongst the spaces in the tin and cut the baking time down by 5 minutes.
The Clover whipped up nicely, just like butter would. And I admit I tasted it (I am a naughty puppy. I lick beaters too!) and it tasted just like butter. But would it bake like butter?
Well . . . you be the judge. I could in all honesty see no discernible difference between using the Clover Block and using butter. My cakes had a lovely texture, and if anything, )and I'll put myself way out on a limb here) . . . I actually preferred the Clover as there wasn't that oily greasy feel that you can sometimes get when you use butter. But maybe that's just me.
In any case, I was well pleased with my results and if I can bake things using clover block, which contain only 30% of the saturated fat, well then, I am quite simply going to use Clover. Seriously. The recipe calls for half butter and half margarine. I used ALL Clover block. Nom! Nom!
*Traditional Victorian Sandwich Cake*
Makes one 7 inch cake
Printable Recipe
Popular during the reign of Queen Victoria, this cake remains popular to this day, which is a huge testament to it's taste and ease of baking! Don't be tempted to use all butter. This is one recipe that is better for the use of a mixture of butter and margarine.
12 TBS of clover block spread
6 ounces caster sugar (1 cup)
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
3 large eggs, beaten
6 ounces self raising flour (a scant 1 1/2 cups)
To finish:
3 TBS raspberry jam
buttercream to fill (optional)
icing sugar or caster sugar to dust the top
Butter and base line two 7 inch sandwich tins. Set aside. Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark 4.
Cream the butter, margarine, sugar and vanilla together until light in colour and fluffy. Gradually beat in the eggs, a little at a time, beating well after each addition. If the mixture begins to curdle, add a spoonful of the flour.
Fold in the flour with a metal spoon, taking care to use a cutting motion so as not to knock out too much of the air that you have beaten into the batter. Divide the batter evenly between the two cake tins, leveling off the surface. Make a slight dip in the centre of each.
Bake on a centre rack of the oven for about 25 minutes, or until the sponges have risen well, are golden brown, and spring back when lightly touched. Allow to cool in the pan for five minutes before running a knife carefully around the edges and turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
Once cooled, place one layer on a cake plate. Spread with raspberry jam and buttercream (if using). Place the other cake on top, pressing down lightly. Dust with icing or caster sugar and serve.
Today,s cakes were filled with vanilla butter cream icing and Turkish Vanilla Cherry Jam, which I buy at M&S.
Be sure to check out the Clover UK page on FACEBOOK, where you can win prizes and share recipes with other Clover followers!Clover Block spread is available at most grocery shops and through your Dairy Crest Milkman.
It's not butter, it's a spread, that cuts, measures and tastes like butter with 30% of the saturated fat. That works for me!
Many thanks to Kayleigh and Clover for allowing me to participate in this challenge.
HANDY TIP ALERT!
For an easy way to cut small cakes, or large cakes for that matter, perfectly in half horizontally . . . cut yourself a nice long piece of dental floss (preferably not flavoured) that fits around the cake with enough over hang to grip decently. Place it around the centre of the cake, crossing the floss ends over each other in front.
Gently pull the ends of the floss and it will slide through the cake, giving you perfectly cut layers.
Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
Strong Cotton sewing thread also works a charm!
I just love a meal that you can fit easily between two slices of bread. That's the lazy person in me I suppose. I guess I just love sandwiches full stop . . . any kind, any place . . . You put it between bread and I am there.
When the Toddster and I used to work at the Service Station together (when I first moved over here) we used to sell tons of Bacon, Sausage, as well as Bacon and Sausage Baguettes every morning . . . just dripping with grease and fat . . . The bacon and sausage were baked in ovens, and then kept warm in a heat cabinet. I would have to clean the heat cabinet at the end of the day and the amount of fat that I had to scrape off and discard was nobody's business. Lots of it ended up in the baguettes too . . . crazy, crazy. Heart attack waiting to happen.
Breakfast sandwiches are always very popular . . .they are big business with fast food companies . . . all loaded with fat and calories. It's not impossible though to have a breakfast sandwich which is relatively low in fat, and yet still satisfyingly scrummy tasty! It's not really all that hard to do actually . . . and when you make it yourself in your own kitchen, you know exactly what's gone into it. No mystery there!
I always use whole wheat toast . . . it's better for you and you get lots of nice extra flavour . . . if it's whole grain as well . . . well that's just the ultimate in taste. (I love the Vogel Sunflower and Barley Bread, or the Vogel's Honey and Oat Bran Brown Bread!!) Now that's mighty good bread.
There is no butter used . . . not in the cooking of the egg, nor is there any butter going on that toast. You spread it with grainy mustard and a drizzle of honey . . . oh so good. I use weight watchers or another brand of low fat thin sliced baked ham . . . Low fat baked ham is not all that difficult to find anyways . . . Low fat cheese is also easy to find these days and I really like the low fat Leerdammer Light, which has great oozing melting qualities. It's a swiss type of cheese and also has a nutty sweetness.
The egg gets it's scrumminess from chopped peppers, onions and a pinch of salt and black pepper.
Put them all together and that's one heck of a sandwich . . . if I don't say so myself!! Oooooh baby, come to mama! The perfect weekend breakfast treat for sure!
*Big Breakfast Sarnie*
Serves 1
Beautifully tasty breakfast sandwich. Surprisingly low in fat too, so not all that bad for you actually!
1 large free range egg
1 TBS chopped spring onion, green and white bits
1 TBS chopped mixed peppers (whatever you happen to have on hand, red, green, orange, yellow)
pinch of salt and black pepper
4 thin slices of shaved ham (bundle them up so they look like more!
1 slice of Leerdammer light cheese
2 slices of whole wheat bread, toasted
1 TBS grainy mustard
drizzle of runny honey
Beat your egg together in a beaker along with the spring onion and peppers. Heat a small nonstick frying pan over medium heat. I spray mine with low fat cooking spray. Pour in the egg mixture. Season lightly with salt and pepper. Allow to cook until lightly browned and set on the bottom. Carefully flip over and then turn off the burner. The other side will cook in the residual heat. Immediately lay the slice of leerdammer cheese on top. The heat from the egg will melt it.
Take your two slices of toast. Divide the grainy mustard betwixt the two, spreading it to cover. Drizzle with a bit of honey. Lay the ham slices, bundling them up a bit, onto one slice of bread, honey and mustard side up. Top with the cooked egg, cheese slice up, then cover with the other slice of toast, honey and mustard side down. Cut in quarters and serve immediately.
Over in The Cottage today, a delicious Upside Down Pizza.
*Crock Pot Barbeque Chicken*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Tender, sticky delicious chicken. You can use only breasts or a combination of breasts and thighs. Delicious.
4 to 6 pieces of boneless, skinless chicken
1 bottle barbeque sauce (I used the Jack Daniels one)
1 ounces white vinegar (1/4 cup)
1 tsp red pepper flakes
2 ounces soft light brown sugar (about 1/4 cup)
1/2 tp 1 tsp garlic powder
Place your chicken pieces into the slow cooker. Stir together the barbeque sauce, vinegar, pepper flakes, brown sugar and garlic powder. Pour this over top of the chicken and give it a stir. Cover and cook on low for 4 to 6 hours.
The next recipe I tested on it was for a Crock Pot Beef Dip Sandwich. I love Beef Dip Sandwiches. It was always one of my favourite things to order when I lived in Canada and we would go out for supper. I remember having a particularly delicious one in Winnipeg Manitoba back in 1977 whilst we were waiting to board a train for Calgary. (You know something is good when 30+ years later you are still thinking about it!)
This recipe is one I found online (forgive me as I can't remember where right now). The meat turned out deliciously tender and we both enjoyed this very much. I will make again. It was almost as good as that one back in 1977, and I loved that I could brown the roast a bit first by using that function in the Flavour Savour.
*French Dip Sandwiches in the Slow Cooker*
Serves 6 to 8
Printable Recipe
Easy to make and oh so delicious with meltingly tender beef tucked into a soft roll, topped with cheese and then served with a beef broth for dipping.
1 medium brown skinned onion, peeled and thinly sliced
6 fluid ounces beef broth/stock (3/4 cup)
2 fluid ounces dark soy sauce (1/4 cup)
4 fluid ounces water (1/2 cup)
1 TBS Worcestershire sauce
1 TBS grainy mustard
2 cloves garlic, roughly chopped
3 pounds beef roast for braising (I used a rolled brisket)
Salt and pepper to taste
To serve:
6 to 8 soft sandwich rolls
6 to 8 slices of provolone cheese, or an equivalent
amount of grated emmenthal cheese
one pint of beef broth (about 2 1/4 cups)
Rub the beef all over with some salt and pepper. Place the onion slices in the bottom of the crock pot. Stir together the beef broth, soy sauce, Worcestershire Sauce, mustard, garlic and water. Put the beef into the crock pot on top of the onions. Pour the broth mixture over top. Cook on low for 6 to 8 hours until meltingly tender.
To serve, warm the rolls and cut open. Shred the cooked beef and pile onto the warmed rolls, top with some of the onion and a bit of the juice from the pan, along with a slice of cheese. Close over, cut in half diagonally and serve along with a small bowl of beef broth for each person to dip their sandwich in.
I then decided to test out it's normal cookery function and did a tasty stew in it. I was able to brown my meat and vegetables perfectly and then proceed as per the recipe. At the end we were rewarded with a deliciously tasty Irish Lamb and Barley Stew.
As you can see the lamb was beautifully browned. Stews gain a lot of their flavour from the browning step. All those rich caramelized meat juices really add a lot of taste and colour to the gravy.
*Irish Lamb and Barley Stew*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
A delicious stew that cooks either on top of the stove or in the slow cooker.
2 TBS olive oil
1 kg (2 pounds) diced lamb shoulder
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
2 medium carrots, peeled and chopped coarsely
2 sticks of celery, trimmed and chopped coarsely
1 large parsnip, peeled and chopped coarsely
1/2 small swede, peeled and chopped coarsely
2 cloves of garlic, peeled and crushed
1 litre of chicken stock (4 cups)
1/2 litre of boiling water (2 cups)
200g of pearl barley (1 cup)
4 sprigs of fresh thyme
3 medium potatoes, peeled and chopped coarsely
1/2 of a small savoy cabbage, finely shredded
a handful of flat leaf parsely, coarsely chopped
Heat half of the oil in a large saucepan; cook the lamb, in batches until browned. Remove from the pan. Add the remaining oil and heat. Add the vegetables and cook, stirring occasionally until they begin to soften. Return the lamb to the pan, along with the stock, water, barley and thyme. Bring to the boil, then reduce to a simmer and cook, for 1 hour, covered. Add the potato and simmer for 20 minutes, uncovered, until tender. Add the cabbage and simmer for about 10 minutes longer, uncovered, or just until the cabbage is tender. Discard the thyme. Serve the stew ladled out into heated bowls and sprinkled with the parsley.
Note: if using the slow cooker, brown the meat and vegetables and then put them into the cooker along with the barley, hot stock and water and the herbs. Cover and cook on low for 4 to 5 hours. Add the potatoes and recover. Cook on high for 35 to 40 minutes. Add the cabbage and cook, uncovered on high for 10 to 15 minutes.
*Crock Pot Butter Roasted Pecans*
Makes 6 cups
Printable Recipe
Moreishly buttery and scrummy.
4 ounces butter, cut into pieces
1 1/2 pounds pecan halves
1 tsp sea salt
1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
Optional ingredients:
garlic powder
onion powder
dried herbs (savoury, basil, oregano)
Place the butter into a 4.5 litre slowcooker. Heat on high for about half an hour to melt the butter. Add the pecans and toss to coat with the butter. Cover and cook on high for 1/2 hour. Uncover and cook on high for another 2 1/2 hours, giving them a stir every 1/2 hour. (You want to keep an eye on them and stir them often so that they don't catch as you are cooking them on a high temperature.) At the end of that time they should be nicely roasted. Spread out onto a baking sheet and sprinkle with the sale and pepper, and any optional ingredients you wish to use. Give them a good stir together and allow to cool. Store in an airtight container.
All in all I am very pleased with this machine. It has a lovely round shape which fits well into my kitchen. The cord is of a nice length and also stores very easily in the base when you want to put it away. I love that the cooking pot and lid wash up beautifully in the dish washer. I love that I can brown and stew with it, as well as slow cookin on a low, medium or high temperature . . . and I just adored the keep warm function, which means that it will hold your food for a further 2 hours at a warm temperature without over cooking it.
So yesterday I was invited out for a girlie day crafting with two fab friends. I was asked to bring cake for our picnic lunch, and so I was quite happy to comply!
Crafting, girlie friends, cake . . . sounds like a fabulous combination don't you think???
I wanted a portable cake though, because I knew I was going to be travelling first by train and then by car and I didn't want anything that was going to get squashed or ruined in the process, in other words . . . something that would hold up.
Loaf cakes are the perfect thing for such occasions. You can cut them into slices and then sandwich the slices together with the icing in the middle. Easy to handle, and easy to eat, with little or no mess! The perfect picnic portable!
This is one of my favourite loafs to make, next to banana or carrot . . . oh and lemon, let's not forget that. Cougettes make a lovely loaf cake, which always turns out moist and delicious.
I added cardamom and lime to this one to give it just that little bit extra zip and tang. The frosting in the middle? A delicious cream cheese, also flavoured with lime.
Altogether scrummy and the perfect treat for three crafting gals I think!
Cake sandwiches! I love them!
*Courgette, Cardamom and Lime Loaf*
Makes one 9 inch loaf, serving 8 to 10
Printable Recipe
Moist and nicely spiced. I like to sandwich slices together with cream cheese icing to wrap up and take along to picnics!
250g of grated courgettes (2 medium zucchini, grated)
100g caster sugar (1/2 cup)
100g butter (scant 1/2 cup)
100g runny honey (1/3 cup)
3 large free range eggs, beaten
3/4 tsp ground cardamom
the zest and juice of one unwaxed lime
325g of self raising flour (generous 2 1/2 cup)
75g of ground almonds (3/4 cup)
3 TBS thick Greek Yoghurt
Icing:
100g of icing sugar, sifted (generous 3/4 cup)
75g of butter, softened (1/3 cup)
75g of low fat cream cheese, softened (1/3 cup)
juice and zest of one unwaxed lime
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/ gas mark4. Butter a 9 inch loaf tin and line with parchment paper. Butter the paper. Set aside.
Cream the butter and sugar together until light and creamy. Beat in the honey and the eggs. Fold in the cardamom, lime zest and lime juice. Squeeze as much liquid as you can from the courgettes and fold them into the creamed mixture along with the flour and ground almonds. Stir in the yoghurt. Spread the batter in the prepared tin, smoothing the top off.
Bake for one hour until baked all the way through and well risen. A toothpick inserted in the centre should come out clean. Place (still in the tin) on a wire rack to cool completely.
To make the Icing, beat all the ingredients together until smooth. Cut the cold cake into slices and sandwich them together with some of the icing to serve. Alternately you can just spread the icing on top of the loaf and cut into slices to serve.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Social Icons