July 4, 2010

  • Cooking with the Godfather

    Today I was supposed to hang out with family but my dad's health took a spill and I didn't get to do too much.  Oh well, I guess family is always there.  I was looking for a way to get out of it so I could do something that would be more enjoyable...wink wink nudge nudge say no more.  What inspired this post was watching a couple episodes of Food Network's Top Chef Next Food Network Star.  Seriously, that show looks just like Top Chef although there are people on that show that if I saw on the street I would inflict serious harm to their bodies.  vanity, thy name is Susie Fogelson.  That woman...when you look up the word "bitch" in the dictionary, you get her picture.  I can't stand her.  Then there's the biggest idiot on TV, Bob Tuschman.  "I don't know.  I don't get it."  What's not to get you freakin' mongoloid?!?!?!?  One week the guy says, "You need to be more personable" and then the next week to the same contestant "We don't want to know about your personal life."  MAKE UP YOUR MINDS!  End rant...I am not watching that show any more because it's a copycat of Top Chef and none of the contestants offer anything special.  The winner will get their guaranteed 6 episodes and go gently into that great night.  Oh and speaking of the copycat nature of Food Network...they are starting a show which is based from a Top Chef challenge.  Every season Top Chef rolls out the restaurant wars.  Well Food Network saw how popular that is so they are rolling out a show called 24 Hour Restaurant Battle.  I need to get that station off my cable otherwise I'm going to have an aneurysm.

    So in lieu of my brain exploding, I thought I would share some recipes with you.

    Fugazy Cutlets
    Cutlets:
    1 ½ pounds pork cutlets
    1 cup season bread crumbs
    ½ cup flour
    2 teaspoons salt
    1 teaspoon black pepper
    3 eggs
    ½ cup olive oil (approx.)
    1 pound fusilli or pasta of you choice, cooked and drained

    Sauce:
    3 tablespoons olive oil
    4 cloves of garlic, minced
    1 small brown or white onion, diced
    One 28-ounce can of plum tomatoes with basil
    ½ cup dry red wine
    ¼ cup chopped fresh parsley
    2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil
    ½ tablespoon each salt and pepper

    To Make Sauce:
    Heat olive oil in pan over low heat, add garlic and cook, stirring 1-2 minutes.  Do not brown.  Add the onions and cook, stirring 3-4 minutes or until softened.  Add juice from canned tomatoes and the wine and scrape up any bits that are stuck to the pan.  Crush tomatoes with your hands or chop well on a cutting board and add to sauce.  Bring mixture to a simmer.  Add parsley, basil, and ¼ tablespoon black pepper.  Simmer 45 minutes, skimming off foam every 8-10 minutes.  Season with salt and remaining pepper to taste. 

    To Make Cutlets:
    To prepare cutlets, first lay them either straight on a cutting board or between sheets of wax paper or plastic wrap on the board and pound until approximately ¼ to 1/8 inch thick.  If you don’t have a meat-pounder, use the back of a heavy pan or a meat cleaver.  Mix bread crumbs, flour, and a dash of salt and pepper in a bowl or shallow dish.  Dip the cutlets in mixture on both sides and lay out on a plate.  Beat eggs in a separate bowl, season with salt and pepper, and set aside.
    Heat ½ cup olive oil in large skillet over medium-high heat.  Dip each cutlet in eggs on both sides, and slip into pan.  Sauté for 1-2 minutes per side, or until golden brown, turning once (don’t overcook them).  Add more olive oil and reheat if necessary before adding more cutlets.  Remove cutlets as they cook to paper towels to drain. Place the cutlets on plates and top with sauce.  If you wish, serve with fusilli tossed with some of the tomato sauce on the side.

    I love this recipe.  It's like a version of veal parmigiana without the guilt of eating baby cow.  Even though "fugazy" means "fake", I like to call them "Truth Serum Cutlets" because one time I made them for a girl, she started crying and told me that she was married.

    Beer Cheese Soup
    1 T. margarine or butter
    1/2 onion (chopped)
    1/4 C. celery (chopped)
    1/4 C. carrots (finely chopped)
    1/2 tsp. minced garlic
    1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
    1 (12oz) can or bottle light beer
    1 (14.5oz) can chicken broth
    3 T. cornstarch
    2 C. half and half
    2 C. shredded sharp cheddar cheese

    Melt the butter or margarine in a 4 1/2 quart soup pot over medium heat.  Add onion, celery, carrots, garlic, and Worcestershire sauce and stir well.  Cook until vegetables are tender.  Add the beer and raise the heat to high and boil for 3 minutes to evaporate the alcohol.  Add the chicken broth and bring the soup back to a boil.  Lower the heat to medium-low and simmer for 10 minutes.  Combine cornstarch with 3 T. water and stir until smooth.  Set aside.  Add the half and half and shredded cheese to the soup.  Stir constantly until the cheese melts.  Then stir in the cornstarch mixture.  Stir constantly until the soup is thick (about 2 minutes).  Serve garnished with croutons and bacon bits.

    I love this soup.  It's a game day staple around these parts and by these parts I mean my house.  I think it taste great re-heated so I will cook a double batch on Friday night so I have plenty for the Badgers on Saturday and the Packers on Sunday.  Since I am the greatest bratwurst cook of all time, I usually have a few of those to go with the soup. 

    Wisconsin Sushi
    Dill Pickles
    1 package of cream cheese
    1 package of sliced ham

    Microwave cream cheese to make it loose.  Take a slice of ham and spread cream cheese on ham.  Place whole dill pickle on edge of the ham and roll it in the ham and cheese.  Slice roll into sections.

    I actually had these at a Badgers game or at least on the way to a Badgers game.  I didn't have tickets but I wanted to go.  I didn't make it past frat houses.  That was the day I witnessed a 70+ year old lady doing a 2 story beer bong.  It's a wonder anyone graduates the UW.


    I hope you enjoyed these recipes.


    Take it from me, it does.

Comments (35)

  • nom nom nom!!! They sound absolutely delicious.

  • @crazy2love - 

    Thanks...oh and I changed the opening paragraph a bit so...

  • I don't watch the Food Network too much. I don't really hate cooking, I just hate that sometimes it takes so long, lol!

  • They're also starting up another cooking show hosted by Chef Ramsay - but I have no complaints - I can't enough of him!!

  • I want to eat Wisconsin sushi, now, but we are out of pickles.

  • @crazy2love - 

    I remember when I living back in MN how I decided to make myself a nice Sunday lunch but I had to go to the store to get stuff. I get back and start cooking but by the time everything is finished, it's like 2 in the afternoon so I figured I'd save it for supper.

  • @m_kabs - 

    I love how he just browbeats people yet they keep coming back for more. Of course the FOX versions of his show are sensationalized and I think they censor unnecessary words just to make him appear more stern. I've seen his BBC shows and they are nowhere near as crude.

  • @I_Create - 

    I made a batch tonight because I didn't want to heat up the house.

  • Thx. I'll have to give those a try. I love cooking new stuff

  • @poosywhistle - 

    When you do, you'll have to let me know how it turns out.

  • Recipes from you?

    Man!  Life is full of surprises, and you're one of them.

  • @RestlessButterfly - 

    Well I like to cook and I could be sexist and say I have to cook because I have no wife.

  • @godfatherofgreenbay - I have to cook because I have to eat, but I hate every minutes of it.

  • Aw, man. I want that beer cheese soup. Can I use a stronger beer?

  • I love the name - fugazy cutlets! that's how I make mine. Another really good thing you can do with the cutlets after you've fried them up is line them up on a foil-lined cookie sheet, top with a couple of slices of prosciutto, then some gorgonzola and broil to get them all melty and brown. Yums!

  • i watch food network's next food network star like religiously. i love it. and i don't know. i think padma can be more of a bitch than susie. the other day a goose crapped on one contestant's table and later while tasting that person's food, padma goes, i think that bird knew something we didn't. how bitchy is that?! i think that bob tuschman guy is alright too. their evaluations have always made sense, i.e. coincide with mine. :) i understand the look they're going for. it's like in the modeling world, you have the commercial models who appear in ads, then there are the high fashion couture models who do runways in paris and milan or whatever. food network is commercial whereas top chef is couture.

    bobby flay though, i cannot stand. he should change his name to bobby false advertising. i went to his restaurant mesa grill in new york. i wasn't impressed. my husband cooks better than that.

  • ps: wisconsin sushi sounds delish and easy. i'm putting this recipe on a notecard right now and stashing it.

  • @POETIC_ISIS - 

    I have found that heavier beers take away from the cheese flavor. OK...I use Miller Lite and you get a beer taste and a cheese taste but I've used stronger craft beers and all you can taste is beer.

  • @jacksoncroons - 

    I am going to have to try that. You made me hungry this morning.

  • @royal_diadem - 

    Padma's there to look pretty and try to sound smart. I don't know but all those Food Network people seem so catty especially when they get the established stars to judge. Giada is horrible as is Bobby Flay. The guy has no charisma or at least not any more. Watching the few episodes I've seen this season it seems like the judges are just there to collect another paycheck.

    I hope you enjoy the recipe.

  • I agree. Eating out encourages binging it also encourages being mad at food because it's not that greasy yummy googy kind you get from eating out....
    I watch the food network occationally when I'm bored. They have some good shows but I usually don't like the ones with competitions. I like Rachel ray though. And the cake contest...

  • @NightlyDreams - 

    Hmmm your comment made me chuckle because I guess when I looked at that photo, I was looking at it with a dirty mind.

    I can't believe I spent July 4th watching shows on the Food Network but it was rainy here so I couldn't do anything else.

  • @godfatherofgreenbay - 

    lol i wasn't thinking like that at all

  • Oh man, sounds really good! Do you have any pictures of those meals?

  • hmm beer cheese soup... what's not to like about that?  i mean the name says it all ;) ...and that Wisconsin sushi?  i think i've had that before, just didn't know that's what it was called lol ...actually, i thought it was an old family recipe, but i guess it's a Wisconsin slash midwest thing... :)

  • @kachino - 

    Unfortunately...no. I am usually too hungry to take photos before I eat.

  • @Peridot21 - 

    My mom made that "sushi" all the time during the summer when I was growing up. It was a nice meal that you didn't have to heat up the house to prepare. It probably is an old recipe but I just wanted to give it a hip name.

  • @godfatherofgreenbay - hahaha the swedish chef!  i 'HEART' him! ;) ...yeah, maybe it is an old recipe, idk ...either way, it's prolly/maybe German, don'cha think? lol :)

  • Nothing says Wisconsin like a 70 year old lady doing a 2 story beer bong at a frat.

  • @Peridot21 - 

    I figured if I am going to do a post on cooking I had to use the greatest chef on the planet for a profile pic. It definitely sounds European because they like to wrap a lot of food.

  • @Dust_to_Dust84 - 

    Sometimes it's more fun just walking around Camp Randall rather than going to the games.

  • You seem to have a thing about pickles.  Not that there's anything wrong with that...I'm just sayin'...you know pickle soup is weird but pickle sushi is simply brilliant.

  • @judyrutrider - 

    I love dill pickles. I don't know what it is but I just love them and could eat them with most every meal. I hate sweet pickles but love dills. My mom has always made them and this year I did but I added jalapenos to them so we'll see how they turn out.

  • Love the recipes and the fun stories... but how to prepare the cutlets?  You just listed the ingredients.  I could guess, of course, but maybe there's a proper technique?  I want to try them maybe this weekend if I have pork cutlets as I think I do. 

  • @Ampbreia - 

    Oh man I can't believe I forgot that. It takes that much time for someone to point that out.

    To Make Cutlets:

    To prepare cutlets, first lay them either straight on a cutting board or between sheets of wax paper or plastic wrap on the board and pound until approximately ¼ to 1/8 inch thick. If you don’t have a meat-pounder, use the back of a heavy pan or a meat cleaver. Mix bread crumbs, flour, and a dash of salt and pepper in a bowl or shallow dish. Dip the cutlets in mixture on both sides and lay out on a plate. Beat eggs in a separate bowl, season with salt and pepper, and set aside.

    Heat ½ cup olive oil in large skillet over medium-high heat. Dip each cutlet in eggs on both sides, and slip into pan. Sauté for 1-2 minutes per side, or until golden brown, turning once (don’t overcook them). Add more olive oil and reheat if necessary before adding more cutlets. Remove cutlets as they cook to paper towels to drain.

    Place the cutlets on plates and top with sauce. If you wish, serve with fusilli tossed with some of the tomato sauce on the side.

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