dinner

Shrimp, Egg & Vegetable Salad In Yogurt/Honey Dressing With Grilled Jalapeno/Garlic bread

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Today’s  early lunch was a dish I could eat on a daily basis – fresh, tasty, colorful and light.
Although it contained mayonnaise, it seemed to be healthy enough to leave me feeling as if I ate something that is actually beneficiary to my well-being 🙂
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Bon Appétit !   Life is Good !
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Shrimp, Egg & Vegetable Salad In Yogurt/Honey Dressing With Grilled Jalapeno/Garlic Bread

Shrimp, Egg & Vegetable Salad In Yogurt/Honey Dressing With Grilled Jalapeno/Garlic Bread

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Shrimp, Egg & Vegetable Salad In Yogurt/Honey Dressing With Grilled Jalapeno/Garlic Bread

Shrimp, Egg & Vegetable Salad In Yogurt/Honey Dressing With Grilled Jalapeno/Garlic Bread

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
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Sauteed Pork Chops & Penne In Mustard Cream

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Today  I got up early (7.00 am) and was determined to do exactly as I had planed last night – sort-out long overdue paperwork, do some spring cleaning, walk for hours with Bella on the beach and eat nothing but salad and fruits.
Well, I guess all of this will have to wait at least another day 😦
I did neither of the housecleaning chores I had planed for today and the walks were a few half-hour walks around the neighborhood instead of hours on the beach. Most significant, I naughtily ignored all my good intentions to eat sensible. Rather, I had blueberry waffles for breakfast, naan pizza for lunch and pork chops with penne and mustard sauce for dinner. While the food was spectacular, so was the rise in my blood sugar level. Tomorrow – salad and fruits only……….
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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More  Pork Chops  on  ChefsOpinion
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More  Mustard  Cream on  ChefsOpinion
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Sauteed Pork Chop & Penne In Mustard Cream

Sauteed Pork Chops & Penne In Mustard Cream

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Sauteed Pork Chop & Penne In Mustard Cream

Sauteed Pork Chops & Penne In Mustard Cream

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Chili-Shrimp Waffles

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Chili-Shrimp Waffles might just have become both my favorite waffle- and my favorite shrimp-recipe.
It is the best thing I have eaten for some time and as you know, I usually eat good 🙂
The key to the success of this dish  is the balance between sweet and spicy.
The chili must not overpower the slight sweetness of the waffles, but it should deliver a kick of heat and flavor (the kick of a lady – not the kick of a mule), to support the shrimp in providing a balance of flavor and texture to the waffles.
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Bon Appétit !   Life is Good !
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Waffle Batter :
Ingredients :
1. 1/3   cup flour, 4 tsp baking powder, 1/2 tsp sugar, salt to taste, 1/2 cup melted butter, 1. 3/4 cup buttermilk, two egg yolks (whisk the two egg whites to stiff peaks)
Method :
Mix dry ingredients well, add buttermilk, egg yolks and melted butter, fold-in whisked egg whites
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Chili-Shrimp Waffles

Chili-Shrimp Waffles

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Chili-Shrimp Waffles

Chili-Shrimp Waffles

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
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Shrimp & Glass Noodle – Salad

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Glass noodles are the ideal canvas for pasta salad. They keep their texture even when kept as leftovers for a few days, which is perfect when you live alone and usually cook way too much for one meal, (as I do), even with a dog who will eat it’s fair share of whatever I cook 🙂
I like to prepare glass noodle salad with a dressing of kosher salt, cayenne pepper or sriracha, rice-vinegar, peanut oil, sesame oil, garlic paste, grated ginger, a tiny amount of sugar, cilantro and/or scallions. As for other ingredients, I sometimes add chicken, seafood, beef or duck, as well as any vegetables hanging-out in my fridge.
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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All about  Glass Noodles
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Shrimp & Glass Noodle - Salad

Shrimp & Glass Noodle – Salad

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Shrimp & Glass Noodle - Salad

Shrimp & Glass Noodle – Salad

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
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Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

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Gnocchi  with corn, peas, ham, mushrooms, cream and Camoscio d’Oro.
(Camoscio d’Oro is an Italian cheese similar to camembert or brie, sometimes available in Italian markets around here ).
So, can you guess where I ate this dish the first time?  Yep, at  Via Candia 17, Torino, Italy.
I was about 20 years of age at the time and to this day, when I close my eyes, I can see the dish and the people I shared it with in front of me as if it was just a little while ago.
Happy memories, may they never fade…….. 🙂
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Bon Appetit !   Live is Good !
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Gnocchi Recipe
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More Gnocchi on ChefsOpinion
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Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

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Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

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Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

Gnocchi Alla Via Candia

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Preparation :
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Strawberry And Chocolate Pizza

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Strawberry and Chocolate Pizza

Strawberry And Chocolate Pizza

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Some  years back I run a few hotels as Executive Chef in Mexico. One of our hotels had three beach restaurants, one of them a sandwich shop which I converted into  a pizza restaurant. Pizzas right on the beach were of course a great hit, especially at night. Two of the menu-options consisted of “Fruit Pizza”, which turned out to be bestsellers, despite their novelty. (See the pic’s below). When you think about it, many simple pies originally used a yeast dough similar to pizza dough, so why not. The texture is of course totally different from the crumbly shells we are now used to, but I always have been a fan of the less sweet, more sturdy yeast dough shells or bottoms. Besides, if you have a frozen pizza shell as a standby in your freezer, the whole affair takes only a few minutes to prepare which makes it a great solution for the munchies that sometimes attack late at night 🙂
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Bon Appetit !    Life is Good !
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Many years ago in Mexico……..
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A few days ago at my house……….
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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
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Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Hungarische Gulaschsuppe)

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As  I get older, I sadly realize that many of the dishes I took for granted and did not appreciate in my younger years only continue to exist in my memory and are forever gone in my daily life. Many dishes I remember from my years growing-up in Germany have vanished from my surroundings. Especially here in the USA, where food tradition is not something widely honored, especially when it comes to labor-intensive food. Too many cooks have never been introduced to the classics, and if they have, they have not been able nor interested to master them.
When was the last time you have seen a menu featuring “Potage Tortue Lady Curzon”,  “Escargot Bourguignonne”, “Filet Café de Paris”, “Truite Au Bleu”, “Quenelles De Poisson Nantua”, “Consomme Royal”, etc, etc. Or Hungarian Goulash Soup, for that matter.
This is a dish which at one point in time was omnipresent in Germany and Austria, being featured in any type of restaurant. Usually it was served as an “in-between meal”, or during a break while hiking or skiing, or as a snack late mornings or late nights. Usually you could choose between regular or spicy. The spicy version usually differed from the regular one only by the addition of a few dashes of Tabasco, although some cooks took pride in preparing a spicy version from scratch by adding hot paprika powder to the sweet paprika powder which gives Hungarian Goulash Soup its signature reddish color. Like many other “original” dishes, ingredients such as vegetables, the type of meat as well as the seasoning can vary significantly, yet the final product should always be full of flavor, chuck-full of meat and vegetables and pleasantly red hued from a generous amount of good quality paprika.
If you want to make your Hungarian Goulash Soup into a more substantial meal, it is perfectly acceptable (and yummy) to add some hearty pasta to the soup.
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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All about  Goulash
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Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Gulaschsuppe)

Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Ungarische Gulaschsuppe)

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Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Gulaschsuppe)

Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Ungarische Gulaschsuppe)

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Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Gulaschsuppe)

Gulyásleves (Hungarian Goulash Soup) (Ungarische Gulaschsuppe)

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Pork Medallions Teriyaki With Rainbow-Carrots In Honeybutter

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This  is a typical meal as I prepare it at least twice a week lately – lot’s of veggies and fruits, some protein and as little starch and refined sugar as possible. It is all in the balance, so some days a small amount of sugar and starch versus some days with none of it……
It  took me a bit to get used to it, but trying to live a healthier (and hopefully longer) life takes some effort 🙂
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Pork Medaillons Teriyaki With Rainbow-Carrots In Honeybutter

Pork Medallions Teriyaki With Rainbow-Carrots In Honeybutter

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Pork Medaillons Teriyaki With Rainbow-Carrots In Honeybutter

Pork Medallions Teriyaki With Rainbow-Carrots In Honeybutter

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
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Spinach, Potato & Garlic Cream Soup

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Here  now is a top-candidate for easiest to prepare comfort food of the month 🙂
– Actual prep time – less than 5 minutes.
– Total time from start to finish – 25 minutes max.
– Gratification – immense 🙂
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good !
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Spinach, Potato & Garlic Cream Soup

Spinach, Potato & Garlic Cream Soup

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Spinach, Potato & Garlic Cream Soup

Spinach, Potato & Garlic Cream Soup

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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
To enlarge pictures and read instructions, click on pictures
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Lahmacun

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Lahmacun,  (Armenian: լահմաջու lahmaǰu or լահմաջո lahmaǰo; Turkish: Lahmacun, Arabic: لحم عجين‎, laḥm ʿajīnلحم بعجين‎, laḥm biʿajīn,  “meat with dough”
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Pizza …………
Is there anybody who does not like pizza ? I am sure there are a few people who don’t, but then, you can’t please everybody . 😦
I love pizza a lot, but I love pizza the way I remember having it when I was very young and I ate a slice or two almost daily. You see, when I was working in Munich for the first time, during the 1972 Olympic Games, money was tight, so cheap street food at night was the usual dinner. The new and very “IN” thing at the time and place was the new craze of pizza by the slice, sold for 1.00 DM through reach-through windows at pizzerias in  Schwabing, which was the “It” place in Munich and probably the hippest place in all of Germany during the 70’s. One slice was big enough to satisfy the hunger of a normal person, two slices if you had the munchies, which was a normal thing to have at 2.00 am after a night of dancing, drinking and a few puffs of the good stuff 🙂
Anyway, what was so great about this pizza was its absolute simplicity. Great, thin and crispy crust, a bit of cheese and a bit of tomato sauce, and if you wanted to splurge, a few slices of salami. Heaven, right there !
Not at all like the over-sauced, cheese-laden, multi-topping loaded “pies” you get served in most places nowadays.
To this day, if I order a pizza in a restaurant, I always ask for “easy on the cheese and sauce”.
When I make pizza at home, I usually prepare the “pizza” which hails from middle eastern countries as well as some countries which are situated in the area that used to be the Soviet Union. I was first introduced to these meat pies while travelling in Russia, Turkey and Israel, back in the 70’s when traveling meant an introduction to local, ethnic food on an almost daily basis, because at that time the McDonald’s and the KFC’s and such had not yet permeated every street corner around the globe and if you wanted to have reasonable priced nourishment, you had to eat what the locals ate. Good stuff, good times !
Most of these pies were made with a variation of a simple yeast dough, usually very thin, spread with meat paste, baked until crisp, topped with some kind of salad leaves and raw onions, cut into wedges and drizzled with lemon juice. The meat was usually lamb, but sometimes beef (and some mystery meats we don’t want to get into here). The only major variation I encountered was in Turkey, where sometimes the dough was much thicker and not crispy and the pie was rolled into a döner kebap-like concoction, (Döner kebap / Gyro / Shawarma) when it is served as street food and therefore rolled into a tight roll so it can be eaten without utensils.
When I prepare these “pies”, I usually don’t go to the length of making my own dough. I either buy ready made fresh pizza dough and roll it myself, or I buy pre-baked thin crust pizza. Sometimes I also use lavash, flour tortillas or naan. In my experience, all of these work fine and I love them all. Remember, the main ingredient is the meat paste, not the dough. Below, you can see three different dough’s I used. All of them are great and non of them are inferior to the others, just different.
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Bon Appetit !   Life is Good ! 
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Lahmacun (sun dried tomato wrap-base)

Lahmacun (sun-dried tomato tortilla-base)

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Lahmacun (naan base)

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Lahmacun (pre-baked thin pizza dough-base)

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For the meat paste, use either ground lamb or ground beef. Add diced peppers, onions, tomatoes with its pulp, and chopped parsley or cilantro.
Then season with garlic paste, oregano, freshly ground black pepper, cumin, kosher salt, paprika powder and a dash of olive oil.
The paste should be fairly moist – if too dry, add more chopped tomatoes. Mix all ingredients without overworking the paste.
Spread meat paste thinly on the dough, bake at 400F until meat is cooked and dough is crisp.

To serve, top with salad and onions, drizzle with lemon juice, cut into wedges or roll into sandwich

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Brush the pie base with a good extra virgin olive oil
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For the salad topping, drizzle fresh leaves and onions with extra virgin olive oil, sprinkle with chili pepper flakes and kosher salt
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Pre-baked pizza dough – Base
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Naan – Base  (cut into wedges or roll tight after baking for a one-handed sandwich)
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Sun-dried tomato tortilla – Base
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