Grub Lyfe: Sweet And Sour Chicken Recipe

 

Restaurant-Style Meals to Make at Home : Recipes and Cooking : Food Network

Notes
Cooking the chicken over high heat quickly gives it a nicely browned look and taste without needing to deep fry. Fresh orange juice in the sauce and lots of vegetables keep the dish and the nutrition balanced.

Ingredients
2 tablespoons honey
1 teaspoon chili-garlic sauce
2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
1 tablespoon reduced-sodium soy sauce
1 teaspoon finely grated fresh ginger
1/4 cup fresh orange juice
2 teaspoons cornstarch
4 teaspoons peanut oil
12 ounces boneless, skinless chicken breast halves, cut into 1-inch pieces
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 pint small, sweet mixed peppers, quartered, or 2 mixed bell peppers, cut into 1-inch strips
6 scallions, whites cut into 1 1/2-inch pieces, greens cut into 1-inch pieces and thinly sliced vertically into thin strips
8 ounces snow peas, trimmed
Serving suggestion, cooked brown rice
Chopped peanuts for sprinkling, optional
In a small bowl, whisk together the honey, chili-garlic sauce, vinegar, soy sauce, orange juice and cornstarch; set aside.

Meanwhile, coat the chicken with 2 teaspoons oil and heat large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Season the chicken to taste with salt and pepper and cook, turning occasionally with a wooden spoon, 2 minutes. Transfer the partially-cooked chicken to a plate. Reserve the pan.

Heat the remaining 2 teaspoons oil in the pan; add the peppers, scallion whites, and snow peas. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables are crisp-tender, about 3 minutes. Stir in the reserved chicken; whisk the sauce again and add it to the pan. Simmer, stirring occasionally, until the sauce is thickened and the chicken is tender, 1 to 2 minutes. Serve over rice and sprinkle with the scallion greens and peanuts, if using.

Nutritional analysis per serving (does not include brown rice and chopped peanuts) Calories 238; Total Fat 6g (Sat Fat 1 g, Mono Fat 2g, Poly Fat 2g) ; Protein 23g; Carb 23g; Fiber 4g; Cholesterol 49mg; Sodium 329mg

Source: Food Network Magazine

Your Daily Delicious: PB Caramel Ice Cream Sammies

Mini Salted Caramel Peanut Butter Brownie Ice Cream Sandwiches

There’s a fine line between me being lazy and me chasing down the ice cream truck for an ice cream sandwich.

That and the fact that my tastes have changed as I have gotten older, inspired me to make these super yummy Mini Salted Caramel Peanut Butter Brownie Ice Cream Sandwiches. The title is a mouthful… but then again, so are the ice cream sandwiches.

These sandwiches take a few steps, but are actually quite easy to make.

Mini Salted Caramel Peanut Butter Brownie Ice Cream Sandwiches

First, make things easier by using a brownie mix. I used Betty Crocker Ultimate Fudge Brownie Mix.

Spread out the batter between two 8-x-8-inch pans.

Bake them up and let them cool a bit.

Mini Salted Caramel Peanut Butter Brownie Ice Cream Sandwiches

Then spread the peanut butter. Mmmm, peanut butter.

Mini Salted Caramel Peanut Butter Brownie Ice Cream Sandwiches

Top with a scoop of salted caramel ice cream. If you can’t find salted caramel ice cream, you can use vanilla ice cream and stir in store-bought salted caramel, which many places now stock.

Top with another brownie piece. Pop into the freezer and try your best to be patient. I’m not very good at that part. Hopefully, you are better.

There are many flavor combinations you can make with these. If you aren’t a peanut butter fan, why not substitute hazelnut chocolate spread and chocolate ice cream instead? Or how about instead of peanut butter, try a little chocolate ganache and mint chocolate chip ice cream? Okay, I need to stop. I am making myself hungry! But as you can see… the possibilities are a plenty!

 

Vintage Hollywood: Dorothy Dandridge

image

Dorothy Dandridge rehearsing with composer, arranger and vocal coach extraordinaire Phil Moore in March 1951. Mr. Moore also coached, arranged and/or wrote songs for Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, Lena Horne, Judy Garland, Pearl Bailey, Ava Gardner, Diahann Carroll, Johnny Mathis and The Supremes.  Photo by Ed Clark/Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images.

 

Your Daily Delicious: Crescent Party Pockets

Turn plain ole Crescent Rolls into WOW by filling them with a few savory items.

Simply fill the dough with ham, cream cheese, and a lil’  cranberry sauce. If you prefer white meat substitute the ham for turkey. You can even go meatless and they will still be just as delicious. Have fun with mixing up your fillings.

turkey cranberry crescent pockets filling

Fold it over. I like to mark it using a knife with a letter to indicate what kind they are (like the one below, which is the (Ham and Cheese Crescent recipe). That way if you make more than one kind you know what you are biting into.

folded and marked crescent

turkey cranberry crescent pockets

 

10 Best Pop-Up Restaurants in the Bay Area

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-From Menuism.com

Bay Area locals have a burgeoning foodie revolution in the form of underground supperclubs, pop-up restaurants and an ever-growing gaggle of gourmet food trucks.

Regular Joes can now sample prix-fixe five-course meals from internationally recognized chefs, previously available only to an exclusive upper-class clique. On top of that, gourmet meals are no longer reserved for stuffy, ritzy locales; they can be enjoyed on farms, in wine caves or even in basements.

Here is your guide to the top 10 pop-up restaurants in and around the Bay Area.

1. Back to Roots: Outstanding in the Field | Location Varies
Get back to roots — of your food that is — with this outdoor pop-up dedicated to reconnecting eaters to the origins of their food. (outstandinginthefield.com)
Directions
Visit the website for dinner locations and details.

2. Spice It Up: Kingston 11 | 1620 Shattuck Avenue | Berkeley
This lively happening brings Caribbean festivities (and tasty food to match) to Berkeley’s Guerilla Café each week. (kingstoneleven.com, 510-214-2311)
Directions
Take BART to the Downtown Berkeley station. Walk to Shattuck Avenue.

3. Get Hyperlocal: Canvas Underground | Location Varies
Commune with local hosts, chefs and artists at this quirky rotating supperclub that takes its themed parties to places like homes and gardens. (canvasunderground.wordpress.com)
Directions
Venues change frequently. Check the website for locations.

4. Bring Home the (Artisan) Bacon: Pop Up General Store | 4629 Martin Luther King, Jr. Way | Oakland
This regular Oakland pop-up food shop allows you to skip the long reservation waits and snobby clientele trendy restaurants in favor of taking food from those same chefs home with you. (popupgrocerystore.com)
Directions
Take BART to the McArthur Station. Walk to Martin Luther King Jr. Way and 40th Street, and take bus number 18 toward Albany. Get off at Martin Luther King Jr. Way and 47th Street.

5. The Floating Speakeasy: Paladar Temescal | Location Varies
This exclusive underground Oakland supperclub brings the glamour of the speakeasy to the Internet age. Follow the blog for new events, RSVP and receive an email with your super-secret password (okay, it’s the location, but still cool).(paladartemescal.blogspot.com)
Directions
Location is emailed to attendees upon RSVP.

6. Go Afro-Urban: Selam | 1620 Shattuck Avenue | Berkeley
Dig in to a hearty meal of Ethiopian food at this monthly Berkeley pop-up hosted by the Afro Urbanites cultural project. (afrourbanites.com)
Directions
Take BART to the Downtown Berkeley station. Walk to Shattuck Avenue.

7. Street Food Goes Gourmet: Tendejon de la Calle | Location Varies
Chef Mateo Granados serves up “tastes of the street,” Yucatán-inspired dinners in beautiful locations around Sonoma county. (mateogranados.com)
Directions
Dinner locations change frequently. Check the website for location details.

8. Food-Truck Fever: The Mobile Gourmet | 131 Lytton Avenue (Palo Alto) | 601 Skyway (San Carlos)
The best of the Bay Area’s food trucks gather weekly in Palo Alto (Friday evenings) and San Carlos (Wednesday afternoons). (the-mobile-gourmet.com)
Directions
Fridays: Take the Caltrain (Train 158) to Palo Alto Caltrain stop. Walk to Lytton Avenue. Wednesdays: Take the Caltrain to San Carlos.

9. Chef Sampler: Guest Chef | 5337 College Avenue | Oakland
Hot chefs take turns with two-week stints cooking up innovative meals for the lucky few who can get into this Rockridge kitchen. (theguestchef.net)
Directions
Take BART to the Rockridge station. Walk to College Avenue.

10. In-N-Out What?: Fivetenburger | Location Varies
Chow down on a wonderfully juicy burger made from the best ingredients at this popular Oakland food truck. (fivetenburger.com)
Directions
Visit Fivetenburger’s website or Twitter for current locations.

Photo: Courtesy of Outstanding in the Field

 

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