Posts Tagged ‘cream cheese

28
Jan
10

Cream cheese stuffed French Toast ~ with warm Maple syrup & blueberries

:)

Someone on Twitter recently asked me for my favorite French Toast recipe.  This is it, but I don’t usually make French Toast stuffed with Cream cheese.  I make this for special occasions or when I have sleepover guests.

I think the trick to a rich French Toast is starting with a good egg bread or brioche.  For a healthier version, I sometimes use Ezekiel Bread.

We have a wonderful bakery here in LA on Fairfax, Diamond Bakery, where they sell a delicious egg bread (and the best rugelach, but that’s for another post).

:)

:)

Cream Cheese stuffed French Toast with warm Maple syrup and blueberries

(for 2)


4 thick slices egg bread or brioche
4 ounces Philly Cream Cheese, softened
1 teaspoon freshly grated orange peel
1 tablespoon fresh orange juice
1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
1 1/2 tablespoon granulated sugar

2 large eggs
2 tablespoons whole milk
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon Vanilla extract

2 tablespoons butter

Maple syrup
fresh blueberries

Beat the cream cheese, orange peel, orange juice, Vanilla extract and sugar until smooth.

In a separate, shallow bowl, beat the eggs, milk, cinnamon and Vanilla extract together.  Dip two bread slices in the egg mixture and allow each side to soak for 15-20 seconds.

Heat a skillet over medium heat until the pan is hot.  Melt the butter. Place the two battered bread slices in the pan and cook on one side for 1 minute, or until it’s golden brown. Flip the bread over and cook on the other side for 1 minute.

Spread the cream cheese mixture over one of the cooked slices.  Top with the second slice and serve immediately with warmed Maple syrup and fresh blueberries.

:)

01
Oct
09

“a bit of paté?”……. “i drink it all day” ~ “funny girl”

:P

Many, many moons ago, I learned that our local community college was offering a night course called “Gourmet Cooking 101.”  I wondered, “could there be a better place to learn how to become a Gourmet Chef, than a community college night course?  I don’t think so.”  So I enrolled!

Hubby agreed to watch the kids on school nights and off I went!  Our first night of class, the teacher handed out our syllabus/cookbooks and explained that we’d be cooking most of the recipes contained inside, throughout the semester.  I still have the cookbook today, tattered, the cover missing, stained with spilled food on pages, barely hanging by the brads that hold it together!

I was so excited when I got home that first night!  I sat on the couch with my husband,  flipping through the pages of my new cookbook, pointing out all the “fancy” dishes I was going to learn to make for him (sigh).  It’s funny to look through the book now – it’s filled with “old school” recipes for things like “Crepes Suzette,” “Baked Alaska,” “Welsh Rarebit,” etc.  Classics – but not the kind of dishes that appear on modern day menus anymore.

While we were perusing the book, my husband saw a recipe under the “Appetizer” section for Paté, made with Farmer John Braunschweiger and cream cheese frosting.  He pointed to it and said “I want that, I LOVE braunschweiger! I had never tried liverwurst/braunschweiger before, never wanted to – the thought of it grossed me out!  But he urged me to make it for him, so I did!

I remember making the paté for the first time – combining the ingredients in a bowl, trying not to look at it and gagging occasionally.  I frosted it with the cream cheese and set it out for my family.  Hubby dove right in, the kids were a little leery at first, but they eventually ate it too – and loved it!  I, on the other hand wanted nothing to do with it!

After they devoured it, they requested I make one again, immediately!

I think  it was maybe the fourth or fifth time I made the paté, that I was persuaded to try a bite.  I only had the nerve to dip a cracker into the cream cheese frosting. Then one day, I dipped too far into the cream cheese and accidentally scooped some of the braunschweiger onto the cracker and ate it.  I didn’t gag.  It was really good. That was the day I learned to like braunschweiger paté.

I’ve made hundreds of these patés over the years.  They’re a staple at Holiday dinners.  If the kids arrived on Thanksgiving day and there wasn’t a paté on the table, with a basket of Wheat Thins, they’d probably bolt to the nearest Sizzler!  The dogs have even weighed in – they request them for all their birthdays!

So, if you like braunschweiger and/or paté, you might want to try this.  If you don’t like braunschweiger and/or paté, you still might want to try ityou never know.

:P

Braunschweiger Paté

1 package Braunschweiger

1 pack Laura Scudder’s Green Onion Dip Mix

Allow the braunschweiger to sit at room temperature for 30 minutes and place in a food processor with the onion dip mix.  Mix until well blended.  Prepare mold by lining them with plastic wrap.  Fill the mold with the paté and fold the extra plastic wrap over to cover.  Place the mold in the freezer for 20 minutes, until firm.  Prepare the “frosting”

Garlic and Cream Cheese Frosting

1 package Philly Cream Cheese

1 Tablespoon garlic butter – strained

2-3 drops Tabasco sauce

Let the cream cheese soften to room temperature and place in mixing bowl.  Add the melted garlic butter and beat for 1 minute.

Remove the paté from the freezer, unwrap and frost it with the cream cheese.  Refrigerate.  When you’re ready to serve, let it rest at room temperature until softened, about 20 minutes.    Serve with crackers or toasted baguette slices.  Cheers!


25
Sep
09

my cousin, Susan’s, amazing salmon and cream cheese appetizer!

Several years ago, my cousin/best friend, Susan was hosting Easter Dinner.  Truthfully, I don’t remember ANYTHING she made after the appetizer portion of the afternoon. She brought out this beautifully presented platter of salmon with cream cheese – I think I commented on how beautiful it was, when her brother-in-law, Grant (who had had it before)  said to me, “you have nooooo idea, once you taste this, you won’t be able to stop.”  All I remember after that, was sitting at Susan’s bar, stuffing my face…until it was gone.

Since then, I’ve made this appetizer hundreds of times – it’s become famous at my dinner parties, book groups and gatherings.  Friends frequently request that I bring it to their parties.  I keep a stack of photocopies of the recipe in my kitchen drawer, because no one who tries it, leaves my house without wanting the recipe.  I keep a template handy in my computer, for everyone who e-mails me and asks for it.  When I serve this at Open Houses, I bring copies of this recipe, because inevitably, Agents and guests alike, ALWAYS ask me for it.  Last Sunday, my friend Dawn, texted me and asked me to send it to her for an Emmy party she was hosting.  A couple hours later, there it was on my Facebook News Feed – beautifully presented on her table, from her Mobile Upload!

So when I tell you that this is the BEST appetizer you’ll ever make, I’m not exaggerating!  Seriously, you must make this — you’ll thank me when you do – and I’ll pass it along to Susan!    Cheers!

Preheat oven to 400 degrees,

Ingredients:

1 10-12 ounce salmon filet – always opt for wild-caught, when possible
1/2 stick butter
1/2 cup soy sauce
3 Tbs  fresh lemon juice
1/4 cup white wine
1/2 cup brown sugar

For garnish/serving:

1 Cup thinly sliced red onions
1 pkg softened cream cheese,
capers (optional) – I don’t like them so I never use them

Melt all the ingredients in a saucepan, allow to cool completely, then pour over salmon filet in a casserole dish. Cover and Marinate for 3-6 hours.  Place in the oven and bake – uncovered for about 15-20 minutes.  Baste a couple times when you can.  Place on a serving platter with the softened cream cheese and onions and pour the sauce over  – this will somewhat cook the onions – so they won’t be so “oniony”.  Serve with crackers




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© Sandy Carlson and À la Sandy, 2009. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sandy Carlson and À la Sandy with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

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