Showing posts with label iron chef. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iron chef. Show all posts

Date and Bacon Scones

I apologize for being so late in posting today. It turns out a little event, already monickered Sprinklegate, held me up today. I have been busy trying to get a response from ANYONE who can verify that they received a Sprinkles cupcake today in Dupont Circle. Crickets have been my only response. 

Date and Bacon Scones recipe from cherryteacakes.comI am not a huge fan of dates. Based on your own level of love life produced bitterness, you may think I meant going out on a date. Partially I did. I've been on 71 first dates and though most have been good, dates are just so awkward, not unlike the food, which I also have no love for. 

When I went to Dubai I actually about a bag of candy for my sisters knowing they wouldn't be able to read the contents. I received a few text messages informing me I'm a horrible sister, and it was so mean to give them gross candy. :) Ah, sisterly pranks. I'm a grown adult with job, a small business, a master's degree, but somehow I've managed to avoid maturing enough to skip the pranks. Though I did rethink this after I was ganged up on, locked in a bathroom (who puts the light switch OUTSIDE the room?), and then attacked with pillows. Either way, dates are less than ideal, be it food, friend, or fiend.

We had two dishes that really stood out. One was called Angel Kisses and from what I could tell if you add enough sugar to anything it will taste good. Chocolate, coconut, and somewhere in the mix was a date, rolled up and quite tasty. I voted for the Morroccan Braised Lamb with added golden raisins, the winner, and an amazing dish. As for my dish, I made Date and Bacon Scones, they were good, despite having dates in them, because really bacon can save anything.

And for next month? Pineapple! I'm SO excited!
Bacon and Date Scones 
as found on Epicurious

10 ounces thick-cut bacon slices
2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
3/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon coarse kosher salt
3/4 cup coarsely chopped pitted Medjool dates
1/2 cup (1 stick) chilled unsalted butter
2/3 cup buttermilk

Preheat oven to 400°f. Line baking sheet with parchment paper. Cook bacon in heavy large skillet over medium heat until cooked through but still tender and not crisp, turning occasionally. Transfer bacon to paper towels to drain; cool. Pour bacon drippings from skillet into small heatproof bowl and reserve.

Whisk flour, 1/2 cup sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in large bowl. Coarsely chop cooled bacon. Add bacon and dates to flour mixture; toss to coat. Coarsely grate butter into flour mixture. Using fork, stir in butter. Add buttermilk; stir until large moist clumps form. Using hands, knead mixture briefly in bowl until dough forms.

Transfer dough to floured work surface. Pat into 8-inch round. Cut into 8 wedges. Transfer scones to sheet. Cover and chill scones 2 hours. Brush with reserved bacon drippings. Sprinkle with raw sugar.

Bake scones until golden brown and tester inserted into center of scones comes out clean, 16 to 18 minutes. Serve warm or at room temperature. 

Pork Pot Stickers

Iron Chef Carrot was a major success! My pork pot stickers were gone within minutes! 

Iron Chef Carrot was one of the largest crowds we've had. I was amazed at the number of people (who sadly did not all bring dishes), and amazed at the food. I was somewhat bemused by the amount of people who clearly came for the freebies. I am starting to get concerned that no matter how many times I tell people "It's a Cook Off. NOT a 'Mooch Off'" they are never going to get that point. Yes, it's a party, and a fun party, but......it's a party for people who like to cook! So cook!

We did have plenty of great dishes, and thankfully many of them could feed the hoard. I made 50 pot stickers that lasted all of five minutes. That should have been about one pot sticker a person...but, we all know how people react to free food. Nom. Nom. Nom.

Our winner, Erika, made easily the largest plate of stacked enchiladas I have EVER seen. Ever. I'm used to rolled enchiladas, senoran style, like my papi (pappap or grandpapa) used to make. We also had a slew of carrot cakes, tempura, Middle Eastern rice, lentils....chocolate chip cookies....with small shards of carrot in them. In general, I think some people missed the point, but  deserve points for the sheer cheek to put carrot into a chocolate chip cookie. To be fair, the recipe does exist but man, it's not making my priority list for baking! I'm perfectly fine not mixing vegetables into my sweets! Yep, I am willing to put bacon in ice cream, but I am not willing to put a carrot into a chocolate chip cookie. (oh like you don't have double standards too!)

It was a great night. Erike our winner picked what I consider to be our most challenging ingredient yet: Dates. If you have any great suggestions for me (sure that's cheating but, c'mon, what can you expect from a girl with double standards about chocolate chip cookies) email them to me at jana [@] cherryteacakes.com. I could use the help. I've spent time in the Middle East, but cooking with dates is new for me....and I'm betting a lot of participants! Yikes! This'll be a fun one!

I'm still trying to track down Erika's winning recipe! Hope to have it soon to share! In the meantime try the pot stickers! Let me know if they last longer than five minutes if you make them!


Pork Pot Stickers

1/3 pound ground pork
1 tablespoon candied ginger, minced
1/2 small carrot, coarsely shredded
2 green onions, thinly sliced
2 cloves roasted garlic, minced
1 tablespoon soy sauce
2 teaspoons sesame oil
1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
50 pot sticker wrappers
1/4 cup canola oil

Mix first eight ingredients in a bowl. Cover and let marinate for one hour.

On dry surface, lay out one wrapper. Spoon 1 1/2 teaspoons filling into center, then moisten halfway around edge with wet finger. Fold to form open half-moon shape and form tiny pleats along the edge to enclose filling. Cover with a moistened tea cloth. Repeat with remaining filling and wrappers.

Heat a 10 inch skillet over medium heat.  Add oil and arrance pot stickers in tight circles standing up in the pan. Fry the bottorms  for 2 to 3 minutes then add 1/2 cup water around the outer edges of the pan. Place  a lid or large plate over the top and cook until golden, about 7 to 10 minutes. Shake skillet to loosen pot stickers and remove to a serving dish.


Dipping Sauce

3 to 4 tbsp. olive oil
2 tablespoons candied ginger
2 cloves roasted garlic, minced
1/2 cup white wine
3 tablespoons soy sauce

Heat oil in a small pan. Add ginger and garlic and sauté until lightly brown. Add wine and soy sauce. Boil for about 3 minutes until reduced. Remove from heat. 

Mojito Snowball Cookies

A take on a classic snowball cookie, these cookies have a hint of lime, mint, and rum flavoring to give them a hint of the refreshing taste of a mojito. 
Sunday's Iron Chef Lime dinner was INSANE! We have never had such a large turnout! I could hardly breathe! The votes were in and everyone LOVED the lime challenge! We had dishes in every shape and size! Fiesta Chicken Fettuccine, turkey, lime bars, three cheesecakes, lime sherbet with blueberry coulis, pad thai, pulled pork salad with lime cilantro dressing, nachos, four different drinks, yogurt, lime coconut cake, and the list goes on and on!

It took THREE of us to gather the votes and its was close! One vote either way and we were looking at a three way tie between the lime sherbet with blueberry coulis, the pulled pork salad with lime cilantro dressing, and a lime and white chocolate no bake cheesecake. Personally I voted for the pulled pork....because I left the dressing off and was happily oblivious to the taste of lime! After five minutes of calling out votes we had a winner! The no bake cheesecake! Congratulations to Eve and Dave on their winning dish! The recipe is posted below!

If your new to my blog, you may not know that I am not a huge fan of lemons and limes. I love oranges, tangerines and clementines....but....lime? lemon? Not my favorite. I'm sure you know the feeling where, if you don't like a certain flavor it's ALL you taste in the dish. So while I can taste the lime easily in my cookies, it turns out that others couldn't! I HATE that. Everyone agreed the cookies were delicious, just not as "limey" as a mojito cookie should be. Booooo. So, take my recipe and consider it to be a "to taste" guideline. If it were up to me, the cookies would just be mint. No lime. But that's not the challenge!

Cheers!

Mojito Snowball Cookies

1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
1/2 cup cornstarch
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 cup powdered sugar
2 tablespoons lime cocktail syrup (to taste. I prefer a very light lime flavor)
2 tablespoons rum or 1 tsp. rum extract
2 teaspoons peppermint sugar (made from a handful of peppermint candies)
1 cup powdered sugar

Using a food processor, grind a handful of peppermint candies into a fine powder.

Whisk flour and cornstarch in medium bowl to blend. Using electric mixer, beat butter and 1/2 cup powdered sugar in large bowl until light and fluffy. Mix in lime juice, rum or rum extract, and peppermint sugar. Beat in flour mixture until smooth. Refrigerate dough until just firm, about 45 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Using scant 1 tablespoon for each, form dough into balls and place on prepared sheets, spacing 1 inch apart.

Bake cookies until pale golden on top and browned on bottom, about 23 minutes. Transfer baking sheets to racks; immediately sift generous amount of powdered sugar over cookies. Cool cookies completely on baking sheets.



Key Lime Mousse Pie
as adapted from Paula Deen

2 cups crushed graham crackers
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter, melted
6 tablespoons fresh key lime juice
1 1/4 ounces (1 envelope) package unflavored gelatin
2 1/2 cups heavy cream, divided
10 ounces finest quality white chocolate, chopped
24 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons lime zest
1 1/2 ounces white chocolate, grated or shaved into curls, for garnish

Mix together the cracker crumbs, sugar, and butter. Press the mixture into the bottom and 1-inch up the sides of a 10-inch springform pan. Set aside.

In a medium saucepan over medium heat, add the lime juice. Whisk in the gelatin and 1/2 cup of the heavy cream and bring to a simmer. Remove the pan from the heat. Add 10 ounces of white chocolate and stir until smooth. Allow to cool.

Using an electric mixer, blend together the cream cheese, sugar and lime zest in a medium bowl, until smooth. Slowly beat in the cooled white chocolate mixture into cream cheese mixture.

Using clean, dry beaters, beat the remaining 2-cups heavy cream in a small bowl, until it forms soft peaks. Fold it into the white chocolate mixture and pour into the pie crust. Cover and freeze overnight.

Remove from freezer and run a sharp knife around inside of springform pan to help loosen the pie. Release springform ring from the bottom of the pan and transfer the pie to a serving plate. Grate or curl the white chocolate over the top. Cut into wedges with a knife that has been dipped into hot water and serve.

Mango Orange Ice Cream Floats

Lately I've been craving bright and tropical flavors. I made mango orange ice cream and paired with ginger ale to create a vibrant drink for Iron Chef Mango!
One line reminder to vote for my entry in the California Raisin Let's re-Do Lunch Competition! Vote Daily!

I think everyone in DC is feeling about the same way I am. The clouds, the rain, the cold....we're done. We survived Snowmaggedon last year, and we're just not ready for anything resembling cold weather yet. I didn't really realize it until I sat down and thought about how nobody really wants to eat pumpkin, or cranberries. I feel like if we give in too much to these holiday flavors then we will be starting that slow death march to the bitter cold of February. I'm not ready. 

In a state of denial, our monthly Iron Chef potluck was themed for mango! And thank heaven next month will be lime! We're keeping the food tropical and maybe if we crank up the heater enough we might forget for an hour of two that a bitter cold winter is right around the corner. 

Wow. That was a bit of a downer. Let's get back to yummy food. 

My friends Tristan and Rachel, from the amazing weekend of pumpkin fun and a New England road trip, brought some fierce competition. Tristan told me about a year ago his only goal is to beat me. Just once. Congratulations! You succeeded! It will never happen again... just kidding! I love you! And since we both brought mango drinks it was a fair fight. Ra-stan...no, maybe, Trichel? Hmmm....either way, their team made a fabulous mango lassi, based off of a few different recipes they'd found online! 

The evening was a great success with mango drinks all around! 

Mango Orange Ice Cream Floats

2 cups Mango/Orange Juice
2 eggs
3/4 cups sugar
1 tsp. lemon flavoring
2 cups cream
1 cup milk 

In a small saucepan, boil the mango/orange juice until reduced to about 1/3 of a cup. Allow to cool slightly.

In a stand mixer combine the eggs and sugar. Beat for one minute until light and fluffy. 

Gently mix in the cream, milk, lemon flavoring and mango orange syrup. 

Transfer the mixture to an ice cream maker. Allow the ice cream to churn until finished and freeze according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

White Truffle Ice Cream

Yes, my monthly Iron Chef Competition rolled around and I did not shy away from making a "mushroom" ice cream! White truffle oil gives you a decadent take on the familiar staple!


Iron Chef posed a great challenge to me this month. How on EARTH was I supposed to be able to get a MUSHROOM into a dessert. Are you kidding me? Mushrooms were not meant to meet sugar. Also, simply the idea of saying "Oh yes, my dessert is just filled with fungus" was a rather great turn off.

I have no great qualms with mushrooms. I like them well enough. I eat them, but do not seek them out...that's not true. I am more than willing to seek out perfectly snobby mushrooms such as a truffle or a morel or matsutake, which are all absurdly out of my price range. In fact, it would take ten times what I spend on food in a month to buy a pound of matsutake mushrooms. I am willing to seek out this mushroom....I just can't afford it when I find it!

All in all my planning for Iron Chef was a little patchy. In the end I figured I would end up just throwing some black truffle salt into a dessert and calling it a cop out of a day...but then I googled "white truffle ice cream." Out of sheer cheek and snobbery I decided that if white truffle ice cream existed on the internet, then making some myself would be a great idea.....it was an idea.

To be fair this ice cream did actually get votes. I believe it even tied for third. I ate two helpings as it were. Was I craving more later? No. Will I make this again? No. But to be fair, most things I crave and want to make again usually involve chocolate or cake, and especially chocolate cake....which now that I'm thinking about chocolate cake I'm half tempted to abandon this post and make some!

In any event the ice cream was no match whatsoever for this amazing stuffed chicken dish that Yandary and Justin brought. It had a lovely glaze on top and won over my vote for sure. I wish I'd been able to keep my wits about me and grab the camera to take a photo instead of sitting there and gobbling down a few more pieces! I'm making full attempts to find the winning recipe! It was delicious! but the notes read something like this: white mushrooms sauted in butter then mixed into cream cheese, pound the chicken breast,stuff it with the cream cheese, roll and bake it in a honey dijon mustard glaze with almonds. For the actual recipe check out this link

In the event that you feel so brave as I did and want to try out some white truffle ice cream, may I recommend pouring strawberry sauce over it with a few slivered almonds? Makes a world of difference!

White Truffle Ice Cream


2 eggs
3/4 cups sugar
2 cups cream
1 cup milk
2 teaspoons white truffle oil

In a stand mixer combine the eggs and sugar.  Beat for one minute until light and fluffy. 

Gently mix in the cream, milk and white truffle oil. 

Transfer the mixture to an ice cream maker. Allow the ice cream to churn until finished and freeze according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

Iron Chef: Fennel

Fennel in ice cream? Oh yeah, I went there! Turns out it's tasty! 
Yes. Yes I did. I made fennel ice cream. It's ice cream year, and odds are, with the weather getting cold incredibly suddenly. I have not hit my 52 ice creams for the year.....more like....27....and that's if I include the the ice cream accessories, cheating and rounding up. Fail! I'll keep trying but it's so much harder to want ice cream when I'm freezing cold.


Iron Chef Fennel was a smashing success (a week ago!). My roommate Sunni won, making a fantastic pear and fennel salad (a week ago!). It was a smashing success (I'm feeling ashamed about not getting this posted faster!).....and if I had posted this sooner I would remember a lot of what happened or have some witty anecdote (but I don't). 


Happy Monday! I'm happy to be back to an almost normal posting schedule and almost not behind on posting recipes! 
clockwise: tortellini, falafel balls, Sunni's winning Pear and Fennel Salad, gratin, bruschetta, and fennel salad
Fennel Lemon Ice Cream 


2 eggs
3/4 cups sugar
1 tsp. lemon extract
1 tsp. ground fennel
2 cups cream
1 cup milk 


In a stand mixer combine the eggs and sugar.  Beat for one minute until light and fluffy. 
Gently mix in the cream, milk, lemon extract and fennel. 

Transfer the mixture to an ice cream maker. Allow the ice cream to churn until finished and freeze according to the manufacturer’s instructions.

Caramel Apple Toffee Pastries

This was the winner of Iron Chef Apple and is one of my favorite fall desserts! How could you ever go wrong with caramel, apples, and especially toffee? The phyllo that wraps it all up adds the perfect bit of crunch!
One line reminder to vote for Cherry Tea Cakes in the Express Night Out Best of DC Food Blogger Vote through September 30th! See instructions here! 


Sorry for being late with this post. I came off of a long day at work after a night full of red eye flights, airports, and next to no food or sleep..,oh, and did I mention food poisoning? As it is, I am taking a detox day. Fruit juices and salad only to get my body back to normal...and to make it worse with the sleep deprivation, from what I read online...you shouldn't have caffeine when you are getting over food poisoning. Worst. Monday. Ever.

Butchie had to put up with me without sleep, without food, and trying to recover on our weekly baking night. And MAN was I on one! I have next to no filter when I'm that tired and hungry. [It's fabulous--she was smiley and punchy and rude and maybe now I will never let her sleep again. --B.] Never ask me what I really think in that state. I answer as honestly as I usually do, but with less tact and diplomacy.

So I asked Butchie what she wanted to make and she answered just as bluntly honest: apples! If you want to hear some gushing on how great fall boots, fall sweaters, fall scarfs, and all flavors are--note the trend--then you should talk to Butch. She has an endless supply of enthusiasm for fall. [How could you not? Gorgeous yellow leaves, pears everywhere, perfect snuggling temperature, fireplaces with ACTUAL FIRE IN THEM. Plus, Halloween! This year I was thinking I'd go as a sexy autumn leaf. Now that Halloween is just an excuse for ladies to be as close to publicly naked as possible. --B.] Anyway, this is a good recipe for us: I have an infinite amount of enthusiasm for toffee, and even though I do not care about autumn or its apples, basically at all, Butchie makes up for it. [Maybe I'll go as an apple. --B.]

There are two ways you can make this dessert: make it all, or buy it all. We made toffee and caramel from scratch, but you can buy it too, and these pastries are still very good. I am all about lessening the chemicals I can't pronounce in my diet, so I go the scratch route...plus, c'mon, homemade caramel? Way better!
Caramel Toffee Apple Pastries

3 large baking apples, peeled, cored, and finely chopped
1/2 cup caramel, store bought or see the recipe below
1/2 cup toffee bits, store bought or see the recipe below
16 sheets phyllo dough

Preheat oven to 375. Spray two muffin tins with cooking spray. In a medium mixing bowl combine the chopped apples, caramel and toffee bits. Set aside.

Lay phyllo pastry sheets flat on a work surface and cover with sheet of plastic wrap. Place a slightly damp kitchen towel over the plastic wrap. Removing one sheet of pastry at a time spray completely with cooking spray top with another sheet of phyllo pastry and spray with cooking spray. Repeat until four sheets of phyllo are stacked. Cut the stacked pastry into 6 equal squares. Press each stack into a muffin tin.

Place 1/4 cup of apple mixture inside each phyllo lined muffin tin, pour a little of the caramel over the top, and pinch the corners together to form a pouch. A ring of aluminum foil can be placed around the pinched dough to hold them together if desired.

Repeat with remaining sheets and apple filling. Wrap and refrigerate any remaining phyllo.

Spray tops with cooking spray. Bake 12-15 minutes or until pastries are golden brown.

Let stand 5 minutes before serving. Eat immediately, as they will not remain crisp for more than an hour.

Toffee Bits

1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup butter
1 1/2 tablespoons water

Place all ingredients in a pan and bring to a hard boil, cook until a candy thermometer reads hard crack. Poor onto a greased sheet of aluminum foil. Allow to set, chop.

Caramel Sauce

3/8 cup sugar
1/4 cup water
1/8 cup light corn syrup
3/8 cup whipping cream

Combine sugar, water, and corn syrup in heavy medium saucepan. Stir over medium heat until sugar dissolves. Increase heat and bring to a boil without stirring until mixture turns a deep amber color, occasionally brushing down sides of pan with wet pastry brush and swirling pan, about 10 minutes, until caramel has reached a dark amber color. Remove from heat, carefully and immediately add cream--it will bubble and clot. Stir sauce over low heat until sauce is smooth.

Cream Soda Battered Corn Dogs

Iron Chef Soda was a great success! A little heavy on the sugary treats for a dinner party but I’m not complaining! We had a few standout dishes to be sure! Congratulations to David on his win with Pomegranate Sorbet! Next Month’s ingredient is Saffron! photos as seen on photograzing and food beast.
cream soda battered corn dogs
I found this Iron Chef to be challenging. And I picked it! What’s up with that??? Next time I win I’m picking……….um………..bacon. Now that would be a tasty night.

I’ll admit, I didn’t figure out at all what I was going to make until the day before. It’s been a busy month and I kinda forgot! Oops! It happens! Between bake sales, long distance relationships, trivia, writing, blogging,  planning trips to Kansas and NYC, my daring baker challenge….I forgot.

My thought process went a little something like this:

“OH MAN! Okay I need some I can just like, pour a can of something into, like, a beer battered onion ring. Only, not beer. Not beer. Not beer. Not beer…..crud. There is no soda replacement for beer. Square one. Replace the water in a recipe with sparkling water…..that’s kinda lame. Okay, replace the milk in something with soda……CREAM SODA! PERFECT!”

Yes, I really did consider doing the lamest recipe of all and just replacing water with carbonated water. It’s one of the lower points in this cooking competition.
clockwise: dr. pepper pancakes and syrup, curry, cheetos (seriously), apple dumplings, stawberry soda cake, raspberry blackberry cobbler, dr. pepper cake, soda bbq chicken, david pomegranate sorbet
We had some great entrees. My friend Katelyn made the dutch oven classic raspberry blackberry cobbler with soda added to the cake mix, and Gina pulled off the apple dumplings from the Pioneer Woman. Both of which were excellent. The real killer of the night was David’s Pomegranate Sorbet. The recipe is below!!!!

A successful evening! (Another success was our attempt at a bacon wrapped corn dog. A little more greasy but I like it). David will be hosting us for Iron Chef Saffron next month! I’m very sad I’ll be missing it but I’m not skipping my weekend with the long distance boyfriend for it. Shocking right?

Enjoy!

Cream Soda Battered Hot Dogs

oil for deep frying
1 cup all-purpose flour
2/3 cup yellow cornmeal
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons bacon drippings
1 egg, beaten
1 1/4 cups cream soda
2 tablespoons powdered buttermilk
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
2 pounds hot dogs
wooden sticks

Heat oil in a deep fryer to 365 degrees F (185 degrees C).

Put hot dogs on a cookie sheet lined with paper towels in the oven on warm while working.

In a stand mixer, stir together the flour, cornmeal, baking powder and salt. Stir in melted bacon drippings. Pour in the egg, buttermilk, and baking soda. Mix until everything is smooth and well blended.

Insert wooden sticks into the ends into the end of each hot dog as you. Dip the hot dogs in the batter one at a time, shaking off the excess. Deep fry a few at a time in the hot oil until they are as brown as you like them. Place finished corn dogs back onto the cookie sheet in the oven to drain, and to keep warm.

David's Pomegranate Sorbet

1 pint blueberries (the better they are, the better the result!)
1 bottle Izze Pomegranate Soda
1 c. sugar  (If you don't want it quite as sweet, you can remove a couple of Tbsp.)
1 pinch salt
1/2 Tbsp. vanilla

Blend and strain the blueberries.  It'll probably be a bit goopy due to the pectin in them.  Combine everything but the vanilla into a sauce pan and heat to dissolve the sugar and pectin from the blueberries.  Take off the heat and add the vanilla.  Chill over night, and freeze.


Caramelized Pear and Gorgonzola Pizza

Iron Chef time again! This month’s challenge was to use caramel! It was a challenge to come up with main dishes but these caramelized pears were perfect for it! So perfect, in fact, that they won!


I was a little worried about this month’s Iron Chef Challenge. Caramel is so easy for desserts that I was completely worried I’d end the evening in such a sugar coma I just wouldn’t be able to move for three days! I was amazed at the great array of dishes that we had! It turned out to be a pretty well rounded meal between the salads with caramelized nuts, sliders with caramelized onions and of course a few desserts.
clockwise: salted caramel cookies, caramelize squash, salted chocolate caramels, caramel cheesecake, caremlized nut salad,  caramel crepes, caramelized nuts  center: sliders with caramelized onions

The big question I had for the evening was if Jonathan, my usual Iron Chef teammate who decided he was ready to go out on his own, would rise to the challenge and show me up. Conveniently his parents were in town and he showed up empty handed! Too busy with the family….but oh wait! My mother was in town too! Sorry excuse if you ask me. Next time, he’d better bring it.  I mean, c'mon! I made a pizza that inspired one voter to write a haiku: 


The pleasant pizza
of pears and delicious cheese
makes my whole mouth sing

To be fair though, my mother, Stephen and I joined forces to make our pizza. It's not like I had to ignore my house guests to cook. Mama and I made the pizza dough the day before, in between a visit to the National Zoo and dinner at Zaytinya, home of Chef Mike Isabella who was on Top Chef. The dough has to rest for 18-24 hours, but it’s totally worth it! Stephen gave us his rousing moral support by softly snoring as he napped on the couch.

Iron Chef itself went very well. The food was excellent and we had a fun playing lawn games after we ate; Team Steve Irwin vs. the Stingrays. We even got some Bocce ball in. If you thought that having the grill as an obstacle in a game of Bocce is a good idea, you’re right! I haven’t laughed that hard in a long time. The Bocce ball shaped dent in the grill is amazing. My favorite is a picture of Stephen and Jimmy staring at the destruction. The caption will read: I bet duct tape could fix that.

Caramelized Pear and Gorgonzola Pizza
Makes two 10-inch pizzas

1 recipe pizza dough (see below, make the day before)
8 oz provolone cheese slices
5 oz gorgonzola
1 bosc pear thinly sliced
sugar

Place the pizza stone or tile onto the bottom of a cold oven and turn the oven to its highest temperature, about 500 degrees F. If the oven has coils on the oven floor, place the tile onto the lowest rack of the oven. Split the pizza dough into 2 equal parts using a knife or a dough scraper.

Wet hands barely with water and rub them onto the countertop to dampen the surface. Knead the dough gently a few times. Then cover one ball with a tea towel and rest for 30 minutes.

Repeat the steps with the other piece of dough.

While the dough is resting, dip the thin slices of pears into sugar and place on a large skillet. Cook on a medium heat. Syrup will form with the fruit juices. Cook until the syrup becomes a light brown. Remove from heat.

Sprinkle the cornmeal onto the peel and place the dough onto the pizza peel or flat baking sheet. Using your hands, form a lip around the edges of the pizza. Stretch the dough into a round disc, rotating after each stretch. Toss the dough in the air if you dare. Shake the pizza on the peel to be sure that it will slide onto the pizza stone or tile.

Dress and bake the pizza immediately for a crisp crust or rest the dough for 30 minutes if you want a chewy texture.

Brush the rim of the pizza with olive oil. Place half the provolone slices on the pizza, then sprinkle with half the gorgonzola. Spoon caramelized pears onto the pizza.

Slide the pizza onto the tile and bake for 7 minutes, or until bubbly and golden brown. Rest for 3 minutes before slicing. Repeat with the second pizza.


Pizza Dough
Adapted from Alton Brown

2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon kosher salt
1 tablespoon pure olive oil
3/4 cup warm water
2 cups bread flour (for bread machines)
1 teaspoon instant yeast
2 teaspoons olive oil
Olive oil, for the pizza crust
cornmeal

Place the sugar, salt, olive oil, water, 1 cup of flour, yeast, and remaining cup of flour into a standing mixer's work bowl. Using the paddle attachment, start the mixer on low and mix until the dough just comes together, forming a ball. Lube the hook attachment with cooking spray. Attach the hook to the mixer and knead for 15 minutes on medium speed.

Tear off a small piece of dough and flatten into a disc. Stretch the dough until thin. Hold it up to the light and look to see if the baker's windowpane, or taut membrane, has formed. If the dough tears before it forms, knead the dough for an additional 5 to 10 minutes.

Roll the pizza dough into a smooth ball on the countertop. Place into a stainless steel or glass bowl. Add 2 teaspoons of olive oil to the bowl and toss to coat. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 18 to 24 hours. (If making the caramelized pear pizza see above for the remainder of the instructions).

Place the pizza stone or tile onto the bottom of a cold oven and turn the oven to its highest temperature, about 500 degrees F. If the oven has coils on the oven floor, place the tile onto the lowest rack of the oven. Split the pizza dough into 2 equal parts using a knife or a dough scraper. Flatten into a disk onto the countertop and then fold the dough into a ball.

Wet hands barely with water and rub them onto the countertop to dampen the surface. Roll the dough on the surface until it tightens. Cover one ball with a tea towel and rest for 30 minutes.

Repeat the steps with the other piece of dough. If not baking the remaining pizza immediately, spray the inside of a ziptop bag with cooking spray and place the dough ball into the bag. Refrigerate for up to 6 days.

Sprinkle the cornmeal onto the peel and place the dough onto the peel. Using your hands, form a lip around the edges of the pizza. Stretch the dough into a round disc, rotating after each stretch. Toss the dough in the air if you dare. Shake the pizza on the peel to be sure that it will slide onto the pizza stone or tile. (Dress and bake the pizza immediately for a crisp crust or rest the dough for 30 minutes if you want a chewy texture.)

Brush the rim of the pizza with olive oil. Dress the pizza.

Slide the pizza onto the tile and bake for 7 minutes, or until bubbly and golden brown. Rest for 3 minutes before slicing.