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Cook the Book: 'Into the Vietnamese Kitchen'

To try new International recipes that my wife and I might enjoy and are healthy for us.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Holiday Giveaway: D'Artagnan Boneless Heritage Ham

Ham and cheese subs

sub rolls, split and buttered
prepared mustard
sliced ham
American cheese
sweet onion slices

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From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Into the Vietnamese Kitchen'

To try new International recipes that my wife and I might enjoy and are healthy for us.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Holiday Giveaway: D'Artagnan Boneless Heritage Ham

Ham and cheese subs

sub rolls, split and buttered
prepared mustard
sliced ham
American cheese
sweet onion slices

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: Jamie at Home

This past Christmas dinner for my new in-laws and extended family of fifty.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: Martha Stewart's Hors d'Oeuvres Handbook

Intimate gourmet dinner party for six guests which turned out to be the social event of the month.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Holiday Giveaway: D'Artagnan Boneless Heritage Ham

Ham and cheese subs are open faced sandwiches, broiled to melt cheese.
Ingredients:

* 4 large sub rolls, split and buttered
* prepared mustard
* 1 to 1 1/2 pounds sliced ham
* 8 ounces sliced process American cheese
* sweet onion slices

Preparation:
Spread buttered split rolls with mustard; top with folded ham slices, cheese, and sweet onion slices. Place subs under the broiler, about 4 inches from the heat source, and broil for 3 minutes, until cheese is melted.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Holiday Giveaway: Zingerman's Praise the Lard Gift Box

My fondest pork recipe is of Fried Chitlins & Hog Maws

In my part of the country, chitlins come in 10 pound buckets. Hog maws come in smaller packages found in the freezer case. If you can find the larger containers and like the recipe, simply use several times the ingredients to end up with the same percentages. Local supermarkets also carry smaller packages. After cleaning the chitterlings of the fat you will only end up with about half as much volume.

Ingredients:

2 pounds hog maws (pig stomach)

2 pounds chitterlings (pig intestines)

3 quarts water

1 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon red pepper (flakes)

1 medium peeled onion (white or yellow)

The hog maws are the thickest and will therefore take the longest to cook. Rinse them thoroughly as you trim off the excess fat. Put them in a 6 quart pot along with your 3 quarts water, onion, pepper, and salt. Bring them to a boil, then reduce heat to medium and cook for 1 hour 15 minutes.

While maws are cooking, rinse chitterlings thoroughly and trim the extra fat off them. Like most organ meats, they have a lot of fat. Add chitterlings to pot after maws have cooked for 1 hour 15 minutes. Cook another 1 hour 30 minutes or until tender. Add a little extra water if necessary.

Prepare a large cast iron skillet with 1/4 stick of butter. Remove maws and chitterlings from pot and slice. I use to slice them right in the preheated skillet although you can use a cutting board. Then stir with a large metal spoon as you lightly brown them. You can pour out the water from the pot, including the onion. The onion added a little flavor and made them smell nicer while simmering.

A variation on this recipe is to slice the chitterlings and hog maws into pieces as above, but them put them back in the pot with the stock. Again, you can get rid of the onion. Cover the pot and simmer the cut up mixture for another 50 minutes.

If you don't like onion or don't have onion, you can add four or five bay leaves to the mixture instead.. Again, you throw the bay leaves away before frying or cooking down the chitterlings.

By now the hog maws and chitterlings should be thoroughly done and almost falling apart. You can serve them with your favorite side dishes such as greens, maccaroni and cheese, or rice. I actually prefer to eat them by themselves, with several splashes of hot sauce. However, they are fattening and it's tough not to eat too much. So you probably should have a side dish.

Store the leftovers in the refrigerator. Like so many other great soul food dishes, chitlins taste even better after the flavor has soaked in for a few hours. The leftovers won't last long.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'How to Cook Everything, Revised Tenth Anniversary Edition'

When making a pot roast take a bottle of cheap and cheery red, and boil it down to a half its original volume. If you have a good mirepoix happening, and a deeply browned beast, toss the reduced wine in the pan and work from there. Pop it in the oven (in whatever vessel you own) at 300, add a little water every hour or so if it seems to be cooking too fast. Make sure you have your bouquet garnie nestling somewhere. As dinnertime approaches, toss in your veggies. If the sauce seems thin (which is less likely if you've floured the meat before browning) mix up your liason and toss it in, remembering that your finger is the best tool for combinng flour and water or cornstarch and water. A beurre manie is even better if you have soft butter lolling about.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Simple Italian Snacks'

Chex are the perfect snack for watching Game Day Sunday football.

From Serious Eats

Weekend Book Giveaway: 'The Wine Snob's Dictionary'

The French are always so pretentious when speaking of wine so I would have to say Pee Pee du Chat

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Baked, New Frontiers in Baking'

My grandmother's deep dish apple pie. Never out grew it, only wish my grandmother was still around to make it.

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey Here!

The cranberries with champagne and currants look scrumptious.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Martha Stewart's Cooking School'

Just used her All-American meatloaf recipe on Monday and it was scrumptious

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