Tag Archives: bacon

Celebration Food Recipe Contest Winner!

You all continue to amaze me with your creativity, your interpretations of my contests, your stories and your delicious recipes! The winning recipe from last month’s Celebration Food contest was chosen not just for the recipe, but for the reminder to get outside and walk, look for the buds in my gardens, and smell the change in the air. After a long winter, I am feverishly celebrating Spring every day here on Mount Desert Island. Mindee Curtis, thanks for this month’s winning recipe!

asparagusCelebration…what comes to mind for me is the changing of seasons, especially the transition from winter to spring.  The chance to once again go out for walks, see the first spring flowers, and eat those delicious spring vegetables like leeks and asparagus, are reasons for me to celebrate.  I feel that this recipe is a reflection of that type of happiness.

Bacon Wrapped Asparagus Benedict
Submitted by Mindee Curtis
18 asparagus spears
6 slices bacon
Salt and pepper
3 egg yolks
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup (1/2 pound) melted sweet butter
1 tablespoon lemon juice
2 tablespoons vinegar
6 large eggs
3 English muffins, halved and lightly toasted.
Fresh dill sprigs for garnish (optional)

Directions

1. Preheat oven to 450 degrees. Separate asparagus into bundles of 3 stalks each. Carefully wrap a piece of bacon around each bundle, starting about 1/2 inch from the bottom of the tip.  Transfer bundles to a rimmed baking sheet. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roast, flipping halfway through, until asparagus begin to wilt and bacon is brown, 20 to 22 minutes.

2. Make hollandaise sauce.  Place egg yolks and salt in blender, blend for a few seconds at high speed until you have a smooth frothy mixture. Still at high speed, start adding hot butter in a thin, steady stream, not too slowly. As you add butter, the sauce should thicken. When half the butter has been added, add lemon juice. Continue blending until all butter is used.

3. Poach eggs.  Bring large saucepan of water to boil; add vinegar. Reduce heat to medium-low. Working with 3 whole eggs at a time, crack eggs open and add to simmering water. Cook until whites are set, about 3 minutes. Using slotted spoon, transfer 1 egg at a time to a plate, repeat with remaining eggs.

4. Place a toasted English muffin half on each of 6 plates. Top with a bacon wrapped asparagus bundle, then poached a egg, and hollandaise sauce.  Garnish with dill sprigs, if desired.

Delicious, Mindee! (Any food with “benedict” in the name is enough to keep me at the table!)

Happy Spring!

~Gal Foodie

Meatloaf. Feel The Love.

This is one of my more favorite childhood memories of my Dad, and funny enough, it involves meatloaf. I think I was around 7 or 8, and my brother was probably 4. Dad was left to his own devices when it came time to cook the 3 of us dinner one night. He decided on meatloaf, which seemed an easy crowd pleaser.

My Dad, with his beloved grandson, Drew.

My Dad, with his beloved grandson, Drew.

How hard could it be to throw some ground beef in a bread pan and bake it? But with 2 distracting, rambunctious kids in feety pajamas bouncing off the walls of our tiny kitchen, the meatloaf became more of a “work in progress” than he had bargained for.

Into the pan went the lump of meat and other ingredients he had combined and shaped into a loaf. Satisfied that he had accomplished the feat of dinner, the meatloaf went into the oven. I don’t exactly know what kick-started his memory of the meatloaf recipe after the fact, but I DO remember him suddenly exclaiming “The eggs!” as he leaped off the couch, and out came the meatloaf. It went on like this for several more attempts. “The ketchup!” “The cheese!” And each time the exclamation was followed by the meatloaf coming out of the oven, being remixed and put BACK into the oven. It was fun. And funny. And the meatloaf was pretty good, Dad. The memory, that much better.

I can probably count on one hand the number of times I’ve made meatloaf in my adult life. Ben made a request for it this weekend, and with winter well underway here on Mount Desert Island, it sounded like the perfect comfort food for a snowy evening. When I say this is the best meatloaf I have ever had…Heck, when BEN says it, we know we’re on to something. Juicy, savory, bacony, speechless.

Meatloaf Love.

Meatloaf Love.

Little did we know how amazing and versatile my meatloaf recipe was going to be. We squeezed a meat and potatoes dinner, 2 sandwiches, and a pasta dinner out of one loaf.

The Meatloaf of Love
Serves 8
1lb of Ground Turkey
1 lb of Ground Beef (90% lean)
1 cup finely chopped onion
1 cup Panko bread crumbs
2/3 cup Ketchup
1 tbsp Italian herb mix*
3 large eggs, lightly beaten
1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper
4 strips of bacon, cut in half
* I got this herb mix from Rossi Pasta, in one of their gift baskets. it’s basically a smidgen of all of the following – enough to make a tablespoon: Basil, oregano, rosemary, marjoram, and thyme. Dried or fresh – it’s up to you.

Directions
1. Mix the wet ingredients with the dry until combined.
2. Knead in the meats until blended. Over kneading, however will produce a chewy result.
3. Shape into a prepared loaf pan and put strips of bacon over the top
4. Bake at 350 for 1 hour, or until a meat thermometer reads 170 (remember you are cooking turkey which needs a higher temp to be safe.)
5. Remove from the oven and drain off excess fat. Serve with mashed potatoes and smothered in gravy.
6. Fall in love. Eat too much.

Other Fab meals from this recipe:
1. Grill a slab of meatloaf in a dab of olive oil, on both sides. Place between two slices of bread slathered with ketchup and mayo, and grill on both sides. Fall in love.

2. Grill a slab of meatloaf in a dab of olive oil, on both sides. Place atop a pile of linguine and cover with red sauce and Parmesan cheese.
Fall in love.

Feel the Love,
Gal Foodie


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