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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Combine in blender:
Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup 1/4 cup olive oil 2 Tablespoons cream cheese 2 cloves garlic 2 Tablespoons brown mustard several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping carrot sticks in. --Lia |
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler
> magnanimously proffered: >Combine in blender: > > >Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup >1/4 cup olive oil >2 Tablespoons cream cheese >2 cloves garlic >2 Tablespoons brown mustard >several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. > > >It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping >carrot sticks in. Sounds great. But I don't have any brown mustard and can't remember how it tasts. How would French Dejon do instead? -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Julia Altshuler > wrote in
: > Combine in blender: > > > Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup > 1/4 cup olive oil > 2 Tablespoons cream cheese > 2 cloves garlic > 2 Tablespoons brown mustard > several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. > > > It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping > carrot sticks in. > > > --Lia > I'd add a pinch of sugar just to add a dimension to the flavours not enough to truly sweeten it...say 1/4 tsp. But that's my personal preference...Sounds very tasty. -- The house of the burning beet-Alan It'll be a sunny day in August, when the Moon will shine that night- Elbonian Folklore |
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bob wrote:
> On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler > > magnanimously proffered: > > >>Combine in blender: >> >> >>Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup >>1/4 cup olive oil >>2 Tablespoons cream cheese >>2 cloves garlic >>2 Tablespoons brown mustard >>several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. >> >> >>It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping >>carrot sticks in. > > > Sounds great. But I don't have any brown mustard and can't remember > how it tastes. How would French Dijon do instead? I imagine it would be fine. The surprising thing about the recipe for me was that cream cheese worked so well as a thickener. It doesn't end up tasting creamy. I don't normally think of cream cheese in a dressing, but this worked. --Lia |
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 21:19:38 -0400, Julia Altshuler
> magnanimously proffered: >bob wrote: >> On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler >> > magnanimously proffered: >> >> >>>Combine in blender: >>> >>> >>>Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup >>>1/4 cup olive oil >>>2 Tablespoons cream cheese >>>2 cloves garlic >>>2 Tablespoons brown mustard >>>several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. >>> >>> >>>It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping >>>carrot sticks in. >> >> >> Sounds great. But I don't have any brown mustard and can't remember >> how it tastes. How would French Dijon do instead? > > >I imagine it would be fine. The surprising thing about the recipe for >me was that cream cheese worked so well as a thickener. It doesn't end >up tasting creamy. I don't normally think of cream cheese in a >dressing, but this worked. That's one of the reasons I'm going to try it. By accident, we doubled up on cream cheese when we last went shopping, one of our daughter's has given us a few dozen limes from their tree, we have a ton of parsley growing outside the kitchen and all the rest of the ingredients (except the brown mustard) at hand. So it couldn't be a better time to give your recipe a go. Today! -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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bob wrote:
> > > That's one of the reasons I'm going to try it. By accident, we doubled > up on cream cheese when we last went shopping, one of our daughters > has given us a few dozen limes from their tree, we have a ton of > parsley growing outside the kitchen and all the rest of the > ingredients (except the brown mustard) at hand. So it couldn't be a > better time to give your recipe a go. Today! Then I should warn you that I like that much raw garlic, but not many other people do. You might cut back on it unless you're a garlic fiend as I am. --Lia |
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> I imagine it would be fine. The surprising thing about the recipe for
> me was that cream cheese worked so well as a thickener. It doesn't end > up tasting creamy. I don't normally think of cream cheese in a > dressing, but this worked. > > > --Lia > I would never think of putting cream cheese in a dressing. I'll have to try it next time I have that little bit left. Thanks for the idea. -- Queenie *** Be the change you wish to see in the world *** |
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 21:50:38 -0400, Julia Altshuler
> magnanimously proffered: >bob wrote: >> >> >> That's one of the reasons I'm going to try it. By accident, we doubled >> up on cream cheese when we last went shopping, one of our daughters >> has given us a few dozen limes from their tree, we have a ton of >> parsley growing outside the kitchen and all the rest of the >> ingredients (except the brown mustard) at hand. So it couldn't be a >> better time to give your recipe a go. Today! > > >Then I should warn you that I like that much raw garlic, but not many >other people do. You might cut back on it unless you're a garlic fiend >as I am. Thanks for the warning ... and for the recipe!. Funny thing is, it never occurred to me that there was too much garlic in the recipe when I first read it. I usually add more garlic than a recipe calls for! Anyway ... it's nice to know there's another garlic fiend around. Pass the parsley ... -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
> Must have been one big honking lime. Unless it's a Meyer lemon, > I rarely get more than 2T (if that) out of a single lime. Our > "regular" limes have been really crap lately. The things we'll do for rfc. I still had 2 limes in the fridge. I'm looking at one as we speak. I also got a tape measure out. It is 7.5" around the narrow way and 2.5" across. It doesn't seem that big to me, about the size of a normal lemon. It is a lime, not a lemon. The sticker says the variety is "Susie." The label isn't exactly the same as the last one on this page: http://www.nationalfinder.com/fruitlabels/S/index-S.htm , but I'm sure it is the same variety. I was hoping for a picture of the lime but didn't find it, but it is normal looking, mostly green with a yellow blush. Trick for getting more juice out of a lemon or lime. Pierce it, then warm it in the microwave for a few seconds. Slice it in half, then use a fork to help squeeze. I like a regular juicer if I'm juicing a lot but prefer the fork for a single one. --Lia |
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler
> magnanimously proffered: >Combine in blender: > > >Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup >1/4 cup olive oil >2 Tablespoons cream cheese >2 cloves garlic >2 Tablespoons brown mustard >several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. > > >It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping >carrot sticks in. I've got all the ingredients sorted out, but it would help to know in what order you put them into the blender and if you crushed the garlic first. Also - would a Magimix do the job just as well. My blender is great for smoothies and making soup, but I'm wondering if it might whip up the dressing too much. -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 02:20:52 GMT, Steve Wertz
> magnanimously proffered: >On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler wrote: > >> Combine in blender: >> >> Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup > >Must have been one big honking lime. Unless it's a Meyer lemon, >I rarely get more than 2T (if that) out of a single lime. Our >"regular" limes have been really crap lately. > >-sw We have a Meyer lemon tree in the back garden that is a prolific producer and seems to thrive were no other tree could grow. The only problem is, I can't stand the taste. We give them away by the sack full and buy our Lisbons and Eurekas at our local fruit & vege shop. Just as soon as we get our windbreak trees established (we live on a hill by the sea and get very strong, salty winds) one of the first trees we plan to plant in the orchard area is a Lisbon lemon. -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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bob wrote:
> I've got all the ingredients sorted out, but it would help to know in > what order you put them into the blender and if you crushed the garlic > first. > > Also - would a Magimix do the job just as well. My blender is great > for smoothies and making soup, but I'm wondering if it might whip up > the dressing too much. > -- Other methods might work just as well, but here's the way I did it. I squeezed the lime into a glass measuring cup so I could notice how much juice I got. I poured the oil into the same cup so I could see that I was putting in the same amount of oil as I had lime juice. Then I tossed in the mustard. Until that moment, I thought I'd be stirring it together with a fork, but I remembered that it doesn't always emulsify that well, and I wanted something thicker. I had cream cheese on my mind and decided to use that. (The dog had an infection that caused her to need to be taken outside a lot which meant I'd been up all night with her and spent the morning at the veterinarian getting pills which turned out to be bigger than the dog likes to swallow. I looked in the fridge for something that would make the pill go down easier, knew that she doesn't like peanut butter and landed on cream cheese. I had cream cheese on my mind because I was already thinking of it as a problem solver. See how recipes are created?) I got lazy or something and decided to use a blender. As long as I was using the blender, I figured I could toss in some garlic so I did. I didn't crush it first. After it was blended, I tasted it, liked it, and remembered that I had herbs in the garden and that cilantro goes particularly well with lime. I considered chopping the herbs and putting them directly on the lettuce leaves but must have gotten lazy or experimental again. I ran outside, picked the herbs which turned out to be mostly curly parsley, gave them a quick rinse and tossed them in the blender. It came out thick and a tad chunky. --Lia |
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler
> magnanimously proffered: >Combine in blender: > > >Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup >1/4 cup olive oil >2 Tablespoons cream cheese >2 cloves garlic >2 Tablespoons brown mustard >several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. > > >It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping >carrot sticks in. Well ... I gave the recipe a try and the texture is, as you say, good for dipping carrot (and celery) sticks into. Unfortunately, I used Dijon mustard and the taste has overwhelmed everything else - even the garlic. I'm still going to serve it tonight (along with some other dips I made for tonight's pre-dinner party drinks). The garlic is what saves it IMO. Then I'm prejudiced. I also added a few pinches of sugar and another tablespoon of cream cheese (because ours in New Zealand is not as thick as what I remember products like Philadelphia Cream Cheese being). I also ended up using the blender because it's far easier to clean than the Magimix. Worked perfectly (although I ended up crushing the garlic first). Before I try making it again, I'll try finding brown mustard. If I'm not mistaking it for something else, I seem to remember that brown mustard has a sort of smoky taste and isn't nearly as tart as Dijon. I might also try a little Hot English mustard (made up from powder) or some good, hot horseradish sauce instead of mustard. To me, the joy of new recipes and experimenting is that I get to sample, sample, sample and taste. It's one of the best excuses I know to eat more than I should and not feel guilty about it. Thanks for the recipe. -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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On Mon, 30 Jul 2007 20:14:49 -0400, Julia Altshuler
> magnanimously proffered: >Combine in blender: > > >Juice of 1 lime, about a 1/4 cup >1/4 cup olive oil >2 Tablespoons cream cheese >2 cloves garlic >2 Tablespoons brown mustard >several sprigs parsley and cilantro freshly picked from garden. > > >It came out nicely thick, good for either tossing on salad or dipping >carrot sticks in. > > >--Lia The dressing was a complete success. My mistake was judging it on how it tasted on its own. Used as a dip for carrot and celery sticks it was a huge success. Guests would go "yummm" and asked "where did you find this?" And when I told them I'd made it, I got asked for the recipe! There was none left! Once again, thank you Lia. I told our guests I got the recipe "off the internet" since none of them has the slightest idea what Usenet is. But one of our friends wanted to know "where" on the internet, so I told him about Usenet and will be going over to their house later this week to show him how it works - and subscribe him and his wife to rfc. I will certainly be making this dressing again - our daughter and son-in-law brought over even more limes from their trees! If I can't find brown mustard, then I'll try halving the Dijon and see what it tastes like (with a piece of carrot or celery this time!). On the other hand, using what I thought was too much Dijon didn't seem to phase anyone else and it did taste great used as a dip. In fact, the friend who wanted to know about newsgroups said, "I bet this would be wonderful used as a salad dressing." My only mistake was leaving out the parsley (because I got rushed and forgot it). Next time I'll try it on its own and then try a little bit with chopped coriander leaves (or parsley). -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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