Saturday, October 9, 2010

Sweet Tooth Chicken Breast

Every fall I look forward to pork cooked with apples. Recently, I decided to try chicken breasts with apples. When I was a kid, a family friend used to cook apple slices in a skillet with brown sugar. It's a popular southern dish that I adored. It can be a bit too sweet, so even though I had it in mind when I made this, I went easy on the sugar. You may wish to reduce the sugar further, depending on your personal taste.

Like everyone else, I have a lot going on, so I didn't want a complicated or time-consuming dish, nor one that would require a special trip to the grocery store. Consequently, this is a quick weeknight dinner. Peeling and slicing the apples is the hardest part!


olive oil
3 or 4 skinless chicken breasts
4 apples (one apple per serving, plus one extra apple)
1 cup pecans
1/2 cup brown sugar (I used light brown, but dark brown would work, too)
paprika
salt
2 tablespoons butter, cut into little pieces

Preheat the oven to 400. Peel and slice the apples. Chop the pecans.

Using mere drops of olive oil, grease the bottom of your baking pan. Lay the chicken breasts on the greased pan. Sprinkle with paprika. Scatter the apple slices around and on top of the apples. Sprinkle with the pecans, and then the sugar. Dot with butter.

Put a lid on the pan or cover with aluminum foil. Bake 25-30 minutes, or until the apples are soft and the chicken breast isn't pink inside.

Enjoy!

Friday, October 8, 2010

A DINNER TO DIE FOR (Literally) and My Answer to the $40 Lamb Chop by Cleo Coyle



Mention "lamb" to any crime writer and you will likely hear about one of the most memorable culinary mystery plotlines in popular culture: "Lamb to the Slaughter," an episode of the old Alfred Hitchcock Presents TV show, one that's been mentioned on this blog a time or two.

Cleo Coyle, who never murdered
anyone
(with a leg of lamb), is author
of The Coffeehouse Mysteries.

The murderess of the story is Mary Maloney, a (seemingly) docile housewife completely in love with her police officer husband. As the story opens, he comes home from work with a grim disposition and very bad news: He's leaving her.

Mary is devastated. In a zombie-like homemaker haze, she continues about her business, going to the deep freezer to fetch a frozen leg of lamb for dinner. Mary then carries the club-shaped meat to the kitchen, walks up behind her husband, and introduces the back of his head to nine pounds of uncooked meat.

By the time detectives show, Mary has hidden the murder weapon (in her pre-heated oven). Hours later, the policemen at the scene appear tired and hungry. Ever the gracious homemaker, Mary offers them dinner and voila the evidence disappears--into the stomachs of the investigating officers.




Literary roots:
"Lamb to the Slaughter" was based
on a short story by the acclaimed
author of children's books Roald Dahl.
To learn more, including
where to read it, click here.




And now for this week's recipe...


French Pressed:
A Coffeehouse Mystery
Click here or on book cover
to learn more.
A few years ago, while researching the culinary elements in French Pressed, I attended a public event at New York's 92nd Street Y.

An esteemed panel had gathered to discuss New York City's restaurant scene. Among the members were Chef Jacques Pepin and legendary food writer Gael Greene.

One of the evening's discussion topics was "the forty dollar lamb chop," a half-joking example of the very high cost of operating a restaurant in NYC. How high?

According to the panel, it takes roughly $6 million to get a 200-seat restaurant off the ground in midtown Manhattan; and to maintain it, $500 to $800 per square foot, per month, just for rent.

Such high costs are, of course, passed on to the customer, which is why you see menus with a $40.00 lamb chop.

My husband and I write for a living, which is to say, there's no way in hell we can afford said chop on a regular basis, unless...we cook it ourselves!

And, so, today I am delighted to share with you...our amazing $3.00 Lamb Chop, just as good (if not better) than a midtown Manhattan chop, but with a savings of $37.00. (Unfortunately, you have to mix your own martini.)

Bottom line: We purchased the succulent rack of Australian lamb (you see in these photos) at Costco for about $20.00.

If you're a Costco member, keep your eyes open for these beauties because they are truly delicious and very easy to prepare. They're also quite nutritious. Australian lamb provides 2 times more iron than chicken or pork and 6 times more than fish. It's packed with B12 yet lower in cholesterol than other animal proteins. More info at this site.

If you're not a member of Costco, visit your local butcher or check out these other US retailers, listed state by state. Click here for the list.



Cleo Coyle’s
Absolute Favorite $3.00 lamb chop...


Rack of Lamb
with Lemon
and Rosemary







To save this recipe in an easy PDF form that you can print or share, click here. 


Ingredients:

1-1/2 to 2 pound rack of lamb (We buy ours at Costco for about $20.00)
3 tablespoons olive oil
3 fresh lemons
6 cloves garlic, chopped
2 tablespoons fresh rosemary, chopped

1 tablespoon fresh thyme, chopped
1 tablespoon sea salt
1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper


Directions:

For a state-by-state list of US retailers who sell Australian lamb, click here.

Step 1: Prep meat and lemons - First allow the meat to reach room temperature, about 15-30 minutes outside of the refrigerator before cooking. (Placing cold meat into a hot oven will shock the tissue and make the meat tough instead of tender.) If your lemons were in the refrigerator, take them out and warm them to room temperature, as well.

Step 2: Prep pan - Preheat oven to 350º F. Lightly coat the top rack of a broiler pan (or grill of a roasting pan) with one tablespoon of the olive oil. Unwrap the rack of lamb, gently rinse, pat dry, and place the meat fat side up on the greased rack.

Step 3: Mix flavor paste - Juice 1 and 1/2 of the room temperature lemons. (Again, you don’t want the juice to be cold or you’ll risk shocking the meat). Make a paste by mixing it with the remaining 2 tablespoons of olive oil, and all the garlic, rosemary, thyme, salt, and pepper.




Step 4: Treat meat to an aromatic massage - Rub the paste all over the meat (both sides) and place on top rack of broiler pan, fat side up. Roast lamb in the center of oven for 70 to 90 minutes, depending on the size of the roast. You want the thickest part of the meat to reach an internal temperature of at least 160 degrees F.





Step 5: Allow juices to re-collect - If you cut the meat right away, the juices will run right out and your meat will taste dry instead of succulent. So allow the lamb to stand for 10 to 15 minutes and the juices to re-collect.

Step 6: Finish with fresh lemon - Meanwhile, juice the remaining 1 and 1/2 lemons. When meat has finished resting, spoon the fresh lemon juice over the meat; then slice, plate, and...


 


Eat with joy!


~ Cleo Coyle, author of
The Coffeehouse Mysteries






To get more recipes, enter to win
free coffee, or 
learn about my books, including
my bestselling 
Haunted Bookshop series, visit my online coffeehouse: CoffeehouseMystery.com



The Coffeehouse Mysteries are national bestselling
culinary mysteries set in a landmark Greenwich Village 
coffeehouse, and each of the ten titles includes the 
added bonus of recipes. 
 


The Ghost and
Mrs. McClure


Book #1 of 

The Haunted Bookshop
Mysteries
, which Cleo writes
under the name Alice Kimberly
To learn more, click here.




Thursday, October 7, 2010

Something Warm and Toasty—Easy Veggie Soup…in the Slow Cooker

RileyAdamsFoodBlogPostpic_thumb_thumb[3]

It doesn’t take a whole lot for me to get in the mood for soup.

And when we suddenly experienced a 20 degree temperature difference in just a couple of days time (from the mid-90s to the mid-70s), I decided it was time to bring out soup ingredients!

Lest you think I’m a cold-weather wimp, it is going down into the 40s at night. We think that’s pretty chilly for October here.

But I’m still experiencing the fall-time-crunch. So I brought out my handy-dandyrival_crockpot Crockpot so I could cook my soup slowly and really get the flavors mixing—and have the soup ready at the end of the day when it was time to feed hungry kids.

This recipe is a no-brainer. In fact…there really isn’t a recipe at all for me. I just put things in the pot until I’ve got the consistency where I want it. And the ingredients change, too—they’re just whatever I have on hand at the time.

The one special ingredient that this recipe has that I think helps out a lot with the taste is vegetable juice as the base. I use a low-sodium V-8 juice because, if you use canned vegetables at all then you’ll definitely get enough sodium. And the V-8 juice gives a nice spicy taste to the soup without the need to add spices.

This recipe makes a lot. I usually freeze about half of it. So you’ll want to adjust it down if you’d rather not freeze any.

IMG_20101005_171343 Easy Veggie Soup

1 bottle vegetable juice (I used the 46-oz. size. It makes a lot.)
1 cup lima beans
1 small onion
3/4 can of beef broth
1 can black beans, rinsed and drained
1 cup cubed, peeled potatoes
1 1/2 cups corn
2 peeled and sliced carrots
1 package frozen soup vegetables/mixed veggies
1/4 cup red wine

Put all the ingredients in the slow cooker and cook on low for 6-8 hours.

And enjoy the warmth! :)

Riley/Elizabeth
Delicious and Suspicious (July 6 2010) Riley Adams
Finger Licking Dead (June 2011)… Riley Adams
Pretty is as Pretty Dies –Elizabeth Spann Craig

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Road trips rock!

The Fatal Four Tour of Texas was a blast! We loved Round Rock, Houston, San Antonio and Fort Worth and all the places we stopped in between. Pictured above at our signing in Houston are: Maggie Sefton, Me, Wendy Lyn Watson and Hannah Reed (aka Deb Baker). We ate kolaches at the Czech Stop, rocked out to the Stones and met a slew of wonderful fans and booksellers. The picture below is us on our way to yet another signing.



One of the best parts for me was
getting the chance to catch up to
author friends who I don't get to
see on a regular basis. This is me
with Lori Wilde, who was kind
enough to come see us!

I learned so much and shared so many laughs with my writer friends and the delightful readers that I met that I know this trip to Texas will be one that I remember forever.

Thanks, y'all!

Next week I'll be posting a new cupcake recipe! Yay! Sadly, AZ has been hit with thunderstorms today and my power has been sporadic at best, giving me just a few minutes to blog. Eeep, now we're getting hail!

Gotta go!

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

NEW RELEASE!


I'm thrilled to announce the debut of my new series, the Museum Mysteries.

In Fundraising the Dead, Eleanor "Nell" Pratt, an administrator at a Philadelphia museum, enjoys her job, but it keeps getting complicated when she stumbles over crimes. Who knew the city's cultural community could be so deadly?

Publishers Weekly wrote: Old families, old papers, and the old demons of sex and money shape Connolly's cozy series launch, which will appeal to fans of her Orchard and (as Sarah Atwell) Glassblowing mysteries. ...the archival milieu and the foibles of the characters are intriguing, and it's refreshing to encounter an FBI man who is human, competent, and essential to the plot.
I hope you'll enjoy reading about Nell Pratt as much as I enjoy writing about her. And have fun trying to figure out which parts of the story are real (and appear in my FBI file...)
Available at both major and independent bookstores and on Amazon.
Thanks for taking a look!
Sheila Connolly

PHILADELPHIA FOOD

by Sheila Connolly

Drum roll, please: Today marks the debut of my new Museum Mystery series, which opens with Fundraising the Dead. The series will take you behind the scenes in some interesting Philadelphia museums (and you’ll probably learn more than you want to know about what really goes on there). I’ll bet you never realized that fundraisers make great sleuths—they know everybody, and nobody notices them. Did I mention I used to be a fundraiser? We had files on everybody who was anybody. Anyway, in honor of Nell Pratt’s first public appearance, I’m going to talk about Philadelphia food.

What’s the first thing you think about when you hear “Philadelphia” and “food” in the same sentence? If you know Philadelphia at all, the Reading Terminal market has been providing wonderful fresh meats, fish and vegetables for a century or so. But you won’t get to explore that until the next book!

This time around I'll just give you the basics:

Cheese Steaks: If you haven’t been living in a cave most of your life, you know what these are: a long roll sliced in half, with a layer of shredded beef cooked on a grill (the flat kind, not the barbecue kind), with a thick layer of gooey orange cheese on top. Onions optional. Okay, there are variations, but this is the essential sandwich.

There are two major competitors who claim to be the best and/or most authentic cheese steak vendors in Philadelphia (and probably the world), Pat’s and Geno’s. If you’re in Philadelphia and you want to compare, it’s easy, because they’re across the street from each other, at the intersection of Ninth Street and Passyunk Avenue in South Philadelphia.

Scrapple: This local product has always mystified me. Wikipedia defines this as “a mush of scraps and trimmings combined with cornmeal, flour and spices. The mush is formed into a semi-solid congealed loaf, and slices of the scrapple are then pan-fried before serving. Scraps of meat left over from butchering, not used or sold elsewhere, were made into scrapple to avoid waste.” Doesn’t that sound yummy? Once on sleep-over when I was in elementary school, a friend’s mother served it to me without identifying it, and I politely ate it. When I went home and told my mother, her horrified response was, “you ate WHAT?” Needless to say, it wasn’t on our menu at home. Maybe it’s an acquired taste, like Irish black sausage.

Soft pretzels: I really don’t understand these. They’re most often sold by street vendors, sprinkled with coarse salt and squirted with yellow mustard. If you read the Philadelphia papers, you see a lot of health code violations slapped on these vendors. You do NOT want to know what they find in those pretzels.

Hoagies: Now the story gets interesting. Most regions have some variation of this sandwich heaped with meat, cheese, and any number of other items. They call them grinders, subs, and a lot of other things. But the Philadelphia legend holds that the “hoagie” originated with Hog Island, an area on the southwest side of Philadelphia, near where the Delaware River and the Schuylkill River meet (if you’ve ever been to the Philadelphia Airport, that’s the place, thanks to a lot of landfill.) It was home to a major shipyard during WWI and WW2, and a professor at the University of Pennsylvania claims that the Italians working on Hog Island created the sandwich.

Philadelphians are very committed to “their” version of the sandwich: You take an Italian roll, sprinkle it with oil (not mayo!), add shredded lettuce, onions, sandwich meats and sliced tomato, then sprinkle with herbs and salt and pepper. Most also include cheese, usually provolone. No pickles!

These are the biggies. There are other food products associated with Philadelphia: Campbell’s Soup (well, it’s across the river in Camden, NJ); TastyKake, founded in 1914 and still going strong; the Fleer Corporation, which was the first company to successfully manufacture bubble gum (I grew up chewing its Dubble-Bubble, invented in 1928), which sadly went bankrupt after selling off a lot of its products. As for Dubble-Bubble, it went to Tootsie Roll, and they changed the recipe. It’s just not the same.

Aren’t you glad that Nell Pratt likes to eat (but she doesn't really care about cooking, so no recipes)? I plan to send her to a lot of restaurants, where she can hang out with her colleagues to try to solve a few Philadelphia crimes.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Veal Delicious


For years, one of my favorite comfort foods was pasta with cheese. That was it. Pasta, cheese, melt-in-my-mouth, let me die a happy woman.

And then I found out I needed to eat gluten-free, and
I thought, oh, no, what will I do? No more pasta. No more comfort.

Oh, poor me.

Well, for pity sake, that's not the case. I have found some fabulous gluten-free pastas over the last ten years that taste great. And with cheese and other goodies on top, you can't tell the difference. Really! {I've fooled many a guest.}

Recently, I discovered another yummy food. A cheese that I'd never tasted.

Havarti.

I have to admit, the name had always put me off. I thought of sour cheeses that I'd had in Greek food and my mouth puckered. I don't know what it was that I'd tasted way back when (maybe Haloume, sort of a ricotta-style cheese that is actually deliciously tart!), but I risked having Havarti cheese (big risk), and am I ever happy I did.

First rumor dispelled -- it's not from Greece. It's from Denmark.

Second -- oh, yum! It has a buttery texture and aroma, and it can be sliced, grilled, or melted. Perfect for cooking.

I made a Veal Parmesan substituting Havarti for half of the Parmesan and, wow, if I do say so myself. This is a meal that even my celiac friends can enjoy.


VEAL PARMESAN & HAVARTI


Ingredients:


1 pound veal cutlets

1 egg

¾ cup crushed rice chex cereal

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon ground pepper

1 teaspoon crushed garlic

2 tablespoons oil

½ lemon, squeezed juice

¼ cup chicken broth (gluten-free)

2 mushrooms, sliced

2 cups cooked spaghetti (gluten-free)

1 ½ cups mixed cheese, half Parmesan and half Havarti

1 teaspoon dried parsley flakes


Directions:


Cook the spaghetti according to the package. While the water comes to a boil, do the following:


Meanwhile, whip egg in a pie tin. Drench the veal cutlets in the egg.


Crush the rice chex cereal. Add salt and pepper, and set in another pie tin. Dredge the veal cutlets in the rice cereal.


Heat the garlic in the oil on medium high. When the garlic is brown, set the veal into the oil and turn the heat down to medium. While the veal browns, squeeze in the lemon juice. Cook two minutes. Turn the veal, cook two more minutes and add the chicken broth. Cover and cook ten more minutes on medium low.


Now add the sliced mushrooms and cook two more minutes. When that is done, remove the veal cutlets from the pan and set into a broiler pan.


Mound the grated cheese on each of the slices. Set the pan under the broiler and broil four minutes.


To serve: set drained spaghetti onto a plate. Set one to two cutlets on each portion of spaghetti. Decorate with mushrooms and cereal “roux” from the saute pan. Sprinkle with parlsey flakes.



* * *

If you'd like to know more about The Long Quiche Goodbye and want to download a few other recipes from me (on recipe cards), click on this link to my website: Avery Aames. I've posted recipes in the "morsels" section. There's lots of other fun stuff, as well. And sign up for the fan club to get in on the next contest...coming soon. October's newsletter just came out! You'll find it at this link: NEWSLETTER


Sunday, October 3, 2010

What's Your Favorite Cookbook?

Over the years, I have noticed that I reach for the same worn cookbooks when I’m looking for a recipe. It’s not that I don’t have new cookbooks, but sometimes the prettiest, shiniest, most trendy cookbooks don’t fit the bill. Don’t get me wrong, some of them rapidly make it into my tried and trusty category. Which is actually my point. Some cookbooks just seem to have recipes that taste right to me, and others -- not so much. Fortunately, we all have different taste, and I’ve wondered sometimes if I prefer certain cookbooks because the author likes the same flavors and foods as me.



Flashy doesn’t count here. A friend gave me CHEZ PANISSE DESSERTS, a cookbook that’s about as plain vanilla as a cookbook can be. It has a soft cover and NO PICTURES! In our visually oriented society, that’s hard to imagine. The recipes, however, are worthy of a five star restaurant. Not surprising perhaps, since the author, Lindsey Shere, was the pastry chef at Chez Panisse. The recipes are extremely clear and well written and make it easy to navigate through a complicated dish. CHEZ PANISSE DESSERTS contains my favorite recipe for Dobos Torte, sometimes called Dobosh Torte. Of Hungarian origin, this is the cake you want to serve to a snooty domestic diva mother-in-law. Formal and regal, it’s a once-a-year knockout indulgence. Fabulous. Seven thin layers of cake with chocolate hazelnut buttercream in between, and a thin glossy burnt sugar top. There is nothing more elegant, and Lindsey Shere’s recipe is classic.



I am not, however, a recipe snob, as evidenced by the very worn cover of my copy of the original JOY OF COOKING. The book is so thorough that I use it as a reference. Anyone who is a newcomer to cooking will find it invaluable. I think it makes a really nice bridal shower gift for a young couple because it’s so comprehensive.




One of the newer cookbooks in my kitchen is the Better Homes and Gardens OUR BEST RECIPES. It has a fun feature showing how some recipes have changed over the years. Our mothers’ version of classic dishes has lightened up quite a bit. Do you write in your cookbooks? I do. I make notes after I prepare the dish, like -- substituted dark corn syrup for molasses. I note who liked recipes and who didn’t. It’s fun later on to see that I made the Walnut Mocha Torte for New Year’s in 2007, who was there, and who liked it. Of course, some recipes get the dreaded “don’t bother” or “yecch” note, but those are few and far between in the cookbooks I’m mentioning today!



Possibly my favorite cookbook is Susan G. Purdy’s HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT, TOO. Another picture-less cookbook (note to editors -- use pictures, you’ll sell more cookbooks!), it hits the spot every single time. Susan Purdy and I must have exactly the same taste palate, because these recipes are always just right. Happily, she has reduced the fat and calories in all her desserts and explains how she did it -- but you’ll never notice. This woman is a baking wizard of the highest order, and I would buy any other cookbooks she puts out without giving it a second thought. In fact, I would be first in line!

So, what’s your favorite cookbook?


Saturday, October 2, 2010

Rainy Day Split Pea Soup

After all my complaining about hot and humid weather, Mother Nature flipped a switch and shot us straight into temperatures cold enough to turn on the furnace and want to snuggle by the fireplace.


Is it just me or does anyone else hear evil cackling?


Consequently, I went for a bracing soup this week. Based on a recipe in The Best of Gourmet 1988, it's been a favorite of mine for a long time. I've monkeyed with it, of course, but it turns out delicious every time. The good news is that it's an easy recipe in that everything basically goes into a big pot and simmers for three hours. The bad news is that after ignoring the soup for three hours, it needs to be pureed, which is messy but worth doing because it results in a lovely velvety texture.

The original recipe called for 10 cups of water, but I prefer the denser consistency achieved by using less water. If you don't have kielbasa handy, the recipe also works with pork chops or ham. I think it's best if you have leftover pork bones to toss into it (be sure to take them out before pureeing!). It's a nice way to use the leftover bone from a ham. Kielbasa probably adds more flavor since it's already laden with spices, but I've made it many times with ham and it's always great. On one notable occasion, since I didn't have an onion, I substituted an entire bulb of garlic, chopped. It was still delicious.

One other big bonus is that this can be made ahead of time. It keeps nicely in the fridge for a couple of days. Serve by the fire with a loaf of crusty bread and a creamy cheese.


Rainy Day Split Pea Soup


2 tablespoons butter
1 onion (or, should you be avoiding vampires, 1 entire garlic bulb)
1 pound dried split peas
2 cups carrot slices (about 5 average carrots)
3/4 cup sliced celery
1 kielbasa
1 ham bone (or several pieces of leftover bone from pork)
8 to 10 cups of water
1 large bay leaf
salt (to taste -- depends on how salty the kielbasa is)

Over medium low heat, melt the butter and saute the onions until soft. Add the peas, carrots, celery, kielbasa, pork bones, water and bay leaf. Bring to a gentle boil, cover and simmer for three hours. Hint: for a thicker soup use 8 cups water, 10 cups for a thinner soup.

Puree in a blender or food processor. Hint: no matter how large your food processor or blender, do this in batches and pour them into a large container so you can stir them all together when done. Serve hot.

If you want to dress it up, toss some croutons on top. No croutons? Use mini cookie cutters to cut pieces of soft bread and toast them at 400 degrees for 8 to 10 minutes. Add to soup at last minute as a garnish.




Enjoy!

Friday, October 1, 2010

Easy Chicken Parmesan Casserole from Cleo Coyle


I'm kickin' it old school today with a red-sauce favorite: Chicken Parm. This version is an easier (and more healthful) one than your classic breaded and fried version. But first...

Crime-writing cook, Cleo Coyle,
is author of the bestselling

Coffeehouse Mysteries and
Haunted Bookshop Mysteries
Guess what the big culinary news was in New York last week? I'll give you a hint: Four Stars.

An Italian restaurant received four stars from The New York Times. Why big news? Because The Times hasn't given an Italian restaurant four stars since the 1970s.

"Great restaurants may start out that way," wrote the Times' chief restaurant critic (Sam Sifton). "But an extraordinary restaurant generally develops only over time, the product of prolonged artistic risk and managerial attention. An extraordinary restaurant uses the threat of failure first as a spur to improvement, then as a vision of unimaginable calamity. An extraordinary restaurant can transcend the identity of its owners or chef or concept..."

Yes, the man actually used the word "extraordinary" five times in the first two paragraphs. And the restaurant that earned this honor was...Del Posto.

Never been, you say? Well, how 'bout you and I go there right now for a *virtual* dinner? Just click the arrow in the window below. (FYI - I'm ordering the 100-layer lasagna; and, for dessert, the chocolate tree, of course...)




Now you may not have eaten at Del Posto, but odds are you've heard of two of it's three owners: Lidia Bastianich (of the PBS cooking show, Lidia's Italy) and Mario of Food Network fame, who started out in NYC as the chef-owner of a little, bitty restaurant named Po in Greenwich Village, one that I was lucky enough to experience before Mario sold it and moved on to bigger culinary pastures.

The truth is I've never been to Del Posto, and after this review...well, as they say in Italian restaurants located in other parts of NYC: fugettaboutit! (At least right away.) Manhattan's obscenely rich and obnoxiously famous will now be lined up in an endless queue that won't have room for little old me. Do I care? Not in the least. And you shouldn't, either.

The next time you come to NYC, as a tourist or commuter, I have a different restaurant suggestion for you, a less formal but quite good Greenwich Village restaurant Otto.

No dress code at Otto's. Orgasmic Italian food (salumi to die for, artisan pizza, and homemade gelato). Inventive decor. (It's designed to look like an Italian railway station.) The prices are quite reasonable for a night out in New York, and...it's fun. Elegance and pomp are a trip, I grant you, but you just can't beat fun.

So you see, there are always alternatives. Like the recipe I have for you today...

Now Chicken Parmesan is the kind of red-sauce dish a typical New York restaurant snob would call an Italian cliché. But I'll tell you what: People LOVE their clichés, including New Yorkers: egg creams, black-and-whites, Nathan's hot dogs...just three of the dozens I could list for you. And despite all the shiny new, California-style burger joints and up-market shake shacks sprining up all over Manhattan Island, you'd have to nuke the town before most of the population would let you take away their "slices to go."

Of course, Chicken Parmesan is delicious made the old-style way: breading and frying the cutlets, covering them in cheese and sauce and baking. But today I'll give you an alternative to consider--a healthier one because there's no frying involved and instead of all that breading there's just a light layering of crushed garlic croutons.

Many of you may have seen some version of this casserole before (it's really nothing new) but for those who have not, I hope you'll enjoy the way I make it. The tricks to getting it absolutely right (in my opinion) are three:

(1) Use chicken tenders or slice your chicken breasts into strips so that the chicken will cook through (and become so tender as it poaches in the sauce that you can cut it with a spoon).


Start with Caesar salad style
garlic croutons and roughly crush them.
(2) Do not use breadcrumbs (too small). Instead, start with the kind of garlic croutons you would use in a Caesar salad then roughly crush them up (by putting them in a ziplock platic bag and lightly hammering them with a rolling pin or back of a large spoon).

(3) Pre-bake the chicken before adding the cheese. This gives the very best results--beautifully cooked chicken and cheese that's melted to perfection. Otherwise, you'll either have undercooked chicken or cheese that's freakin' burned.

And now...the actual recipe!



Cleo Coyle's 
Easy Chicken Parmesan 
Casserole



🍴

To download this recipe in a free
PDF document that you can print, 





Cleo Coyle's Easy
Chicken Parmesan Casserole

INGREDIENTS:

5-ounce package of garlic croutons

2 tablespoons olive oil

2 cloves garlic (minced)

½ teaspoon dried oregano

Salt and pepper (a light sprinking)

2 pounds chicken tenders (or breasts cut into strips)

5-6 fresh basil leaves (chiffonade)

2 cups of tomato sauce (jarred or your favorite recipe)

2 cups shredded mozzarella

1 cup grated Parmesan cheese


DIRECTIONS:

Step 1 – Prep oven and croutons: Preheat your oven to 350° F. Place garlic croutons in a plastic bag and beat with a meat hammer or heavy object until they’ve been crushed into smaller pieces. Do not beat these babies into breadcrumbs. But do break down any large, chunky pieces into smaller bits. Set aside.

Step 2 – Toss chicken with oil and spices: In a 9 x 13-inch glass baking dish, drizzle the olive oil. Add the chicken tenders, garlic, oregano, salt, and pepper, and stir well to coat the chicken pieces with the oil and spices. Spread the fresh basil on top of the chicken.



Step 3 – Add sauce and pre-bake: Pour the tomato sauce on top of the chicken, distributing evenly. Slide into a pre-heated 350º F. oven for 30 minutes. Remove. Do not turn off oven!



Step 4 – Add layers of cheese, croutons & cheese: Spread half of the mozzarella and Parmesan evenly over the sauce. Next sprinkle all of the crushed croutons onto the sauce. Finish with a sprinkling of the remainder of the two cheeses.


After pre-baking, layer on half of the cheese...




Now add the crushed croutons....



Finally, add the rest of the cheese...


Step 5 – Final bake: Return the pan to your 350 degree F. oven for another 25 to 30 minutes. Casserole is done when all of the cheese is well melted. Remove pan from oven and allow to cool for a few minutes before cutting into squares or spooning onto plates.



Re-heating: This dish makes amazingly tasty leftovers. For the very best result, before reheating, add a bit more sauce and cheese on top. Place in a small casserole dish, cover with a lid or aluminum foil, and reheat in a 350º F. oven for 20 minutes. Or simply place in a microwave-safe dish and zap uncovered until warmed through.






Click here for the
free Recipe PDF, and...




Buon appetitoeveryone!

Click the photo for this recipe!

See more of my recipes in
my Coffeehouse Mysteries
and at my recipe blog...





Eat (and read) with joy!

~ Cleo Coyle


New York Times bestselling author of
The Coffeehouse Mysteries

Yes, this is me, Cleo (aka Alice). 
Friend me on facebook here.
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Visit my online coffeehouse here.







Eat (and read) with joy!


New York Times bestselling author
of The Coffeehouse Mysteries and
Haunted Bookshop Mysteries



Cleo (Alice) with her husband Marc

Visit Cleo's online coffeehouse here.
And follow her at these links...




Our 20th 

Coffeehouse Mystery!

Bulletproof Barista

To Buy:


KIRKUS REVIEWS

"Scads of red herrings, peeks behind the show-biz curtain, and bountiful appended recipes will leave fans smiling contentedly."


BOOKLIST

"This twentieth Coffeehouse mystery (after Honey Roasted) brings together the history of the shop, ripped-from-the-headlines plot elements, [and] the drama of on-site filming."








New 
Paperback Edition!



Includes a mini guide
to honey varieties
and a wonderful menu
of delicious recipes...



Click here or on the image above
for Cleo Coyle's Free Illustrated
Recipe Guide to Honey Roasted




The Coffeehouse Mysteries are bestselling works
of amateur sleuth fiction set in a landmark 
Greenwich Village coffeehouse, and each of the 
20 titles includes the added bonus of recipes.  


Get a free Title Checklist of
Cleo Coyle's Books in Order
Click here 
or on the image below.






Don't Miss Our New
Haunted Bookshop
Mystery...

  

Jack & Pen 
Together Again!


"AMAZING AND UNIQUE" 

~ Fresh Fiction



"DELIGHTFUL" ~ Kirkus Reviews


To Buy:

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Bookshop.org

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