Posts Tagged ‘ideal cheese’

Hot Squash With Stilton On A Cool Night

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

It’s still winter although the snow hasn’t come, but the weather is still chilly, your hands and feet get frozen if you expose them even for such a short while. So it comes to no surprise that a hot meal is always what we crave for.

After the holidays, it’s always comforting to just prepare a simple meal of soup and salad, or just soup, bread and a glass of wine. If I’m lucky, I’d end it up with lots of fruit and still more wine. Then I would say I had a complete day.

This is what I did a couple of days ago. It is not only a recipe but also a run through of my thoughts when I came home that night. And therefore I shall call my article:

Hot Squash with Stilton on a Cool Night

  • 1 butternut squash
  • half of an onion
  • about 2 oz. Blue Stilton Cheese
  • salt and pepper
  • olive oil
  • 1 8 oz can chicken broth
  • 1 french baguette
  • 1 bottle of your favorite wine

Turn oven on ‘roast’ temperature. Take out the butternut from pantry and peel the butternut squash. Get a pan and place cut up squash. Half an onion and place with squash. Sprinkle olive oil, and dash with a little bit of salt and pepper. If you like, spread some of your favorite herbs. I didn’t have any so I didn’t include it here. But normally I do.

Place the pan in the oven and set for 20 minutes roasting. Go to facebook and check for any news. Nothing much, except that your best friend is having a ball in the tropical islands while you’re slaving away in this cosmopolitan city of New York, freezing. Feel depress.

Move away from the computer and switch on the television for some news. While listening check on your roasted butternut squash and see if it is soft enough to handle. Remove from pan. Mash the squash along with the onions. Transfer to a pot, and add the can of chicken broth. If your broth is too thick, and you want a thinner consistency, add water and a bouillon cube. Now that will add more flavor. Turn on heat, and let boil until bubbly enough.

Meanwhile get your bottle of wine, and pour yourself a glass. Go back to the television and see what’s on. As you watch the news, there are too many killings around the world, too many politicians promising stuff they can’t keep (it’s political season once again), and the stock market is going down which means too many jobs will be lost. Feel more depressed.

Go back to the pot, by then it’s boiling and is calling for you as if to say, “sssslurp me!” For better texture you get your immersion blender to smoothen the soup, but decided, “I like it chunky”. You turn off the heat, and scoop some soup in a bowl. You top the soup with the tasty, yummy, delectable mouth watering Blue Stilton Cheese on top. The aroma of your cooking is just so memorable. It can’t get any better than this, you say.

Then you remember that a few hours ago you passed by your favorite cheese shop, the Ideal Cheese Shop. And you said to yourself, you need some cheese loving and you got the blue stilton because they always have it the best. This is a sure cure for depression. And now it has come to pass. You are happy.

Start the New Year Right With A Gruyere Pizza

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

How did you embrace the New Year this time? With a lot of cheers and noises I am sure. But however you started it, you probably also had a lot of goal settings and projects up your sleeves because that’s what I did days before the eve of New Year.

Every year, I try to set a goal for myself and more often than not, when I try to line up the activities for the year, it would turn out to newer projects which would not be part of the original plan. And before I know it, all my goals for the year would have been replaced by new ones as they unfold. Such has been the case from many many years past. And to be open to these directions will often lead to a more adventurous life.

It has always been my practice to be adventurous in experimenting about food. And the key to most of the adventures initially comes into the presentation of the dish. You can always have someone taste a new dish, when it is well presented because as the saying goes, “you eat with your eyes first.” And after much partying and eating during the holidays, your body will reply to those intakes.

At the onset, I am changing my diet to lighter meals which would contain less meat and more on vegetables and on my favorite Gruyere Cheese. Pizza, which is considered by some as the number one take out fast food, serves as a killer but if you make your own and not using flour as base, then you are in the right track for this year. Check this out and you’ll know what I mean.

Potato Base Pizza with Zucchini, Olives and Gruyere

  • 2 tbsp. Olive oil
  • 1 large baking potato
  • 1 large zucchini

2 oz. Tapanade or 12 large black pitted olives

  • 1 tbsp. Chopped basil or thyme
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 2/3 cup grated Gruyere cheese

Directions:

Place a large baking sheet in the oven and preheat to 400 degrees F.

Cut a sheet of aluminum foil about 14 x 16 inches and spray with a little oil, leaving an unoiled border of about 2 inches around the edge (if you don’t have spray oil, you can just wipe the aluminum with oil).

Peel and thinly slice the potato and arrange on the foil in a rectangular shape’ overlappping slightly. Season with salt and pepper and drizzle 1 tablespoon of the oil on top.

Thinly slice the zucchini and scatter over, leaving a little gap around the edges as you would on a pizza base. Scatter the tapanade (or the olives if you don’t have the tapanade) , and the gruyere. If you have thyme, sprinle it now (basil should be added after cooking as it will burn and dry up). Finally, drizzle over the oil and season with salt and pepper.

Remove the heated baking dish from the oven and carefully place the foil holding the pizza on top. Cook in the oven for about 15-20 minutes until the edges are golden brown and the center is soft and cooked.

Remove from the oven and if using basil, scatter over the pizza now. Allow to rest for 5 minutes. Cut into quarters and serve with your favorite green salad.

This recipe is not only delish, it is also as healthy as can be, and so easy to make. And don’t forget to get all your cheeses this year at the only gourmet cheese shop online, the Ideal Cheese Shop. And if you haven’t listed down your projects, resolutions and goals for this year, it’s still not too late. Happy New Year Everyone!

Bufala Mozzarella with Leeks For Dinner, or Supper?

Thursday, November 10th, 2011

I have often wondered while growing up what the difference was between supper and dinner. I knew they were evening meals, but why use one over the other. During one of my aunt’s visits, I asked what the difference was and she said that in our Filipino culture, we often eat supper, which was our main evening meal because we ate early. Dinner in many countries refer to it as late nights. Therefore, if you eat late, then you would consider that a dinner meal.

Not wanting to rely on hearsay, I tried to google search and found some interesting notes about it. Dinner is considered the main meal of the evening and it varies from different countries. While France, Germany and the rest of Europe are of the same latitude or higher dinner is enjoyed with in the hours between 8:30 to 9:00 p.m. during the mid-spring through summer and mid fall, the hours of daylight are far longer than Americans.

In Bilbao Spain, since most of the people have many snacks in between, therefore their main dinner usually starts after 9pm just when the French have finished dining.

During the early years, when laborers were toiling in the fields and would come home famished, they immediately wanted their heavy meal for their depleted bodies thus dinner was much earlier. Example of which is China where dinner usually starts within the hours of 6 or 7, and for fancier banquets would normally end at 9 p.m.

But as far as I am concerned, the older I get, the lighter and earlier I prefer to eat my dinner. I no longer crave for a heavy meal as I was accustomed to many years ago, but would opt for something lighter yet at the same time nutritious. I could have a soup or a salad with all the fibers and nutrients needed for my body. Or sometimes, I would just have a glass of wine, assorted olives and for that protein kick I would have this recipe below: And always, I order my Bufala Mozzarella from my favorite cheese store: The Ideal Cheese Shop.


Buffala Mozarella with Leeks

  • 2 pounds leeks white parts only
  • 1 cup fresh basil leaves
  • 8 oz Bufala Mozzarella
  • 2 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 tsp. Sherry wine vinegar
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • french bread
  1. Preheat the boiler.
  2. Clean the leeks thoroughly and boil in salted water for 6 to 10 minutes, until cooked but still firm.
  3. Put the leeks in a baking dish and cover with layers of basil leaves.
  4. Cut the Bufala Mozzarella into ¼ inch slices and play on top of the the basil layer.
  5. Put the dish under the preheated broiler and watch carefully. In 3 to 5 minutes the cheese should start to melt and brown. Remove the dish at this point.
  6. Mix the oil and vinegar and drizzle over the Bufala Mozzarella. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
  7. Serve immediately with a slice of country bread.

At the end of the day, whatever your evening meal might be, whether it be supper (light) or dinner (heavy), always ‘know thyself’ by listening to what your body is telling you. Evening meal comes in all sizes and times, and as a function of your lifestyle, always find that balance between quality and nutrition. So learn to eat with your head—the right way, all the way, all the time. And of course, for the healthiest cheesy treats for your entire family, order cheese at the only gourmet cheese shop in town, the Ideal Cheese Shop.