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Hello all!

Well, this week I have spent a lot of time trying to get caught up on so many things: posting, sorting through photos, catching up at the day job, and getting some sleep (that 8hr time difference really kicked my butt). On top of that, I have spent several hours attempting to restore my blog to it's previous look - unsuccessfully. No idea what happened there, or how, so instead of
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Funky Monkey Macarons

This month's MacTweets Challenge comes hot on the heels of my trip to Food Blogger Connect, in London. It was an incredible trip, one of the best things being tha I finally got to meet a few of my fellow MacTweeters like Cecilia with her One Vanilla Bean, Bethany and all of her Dirty Kitchen Secrets, Pam a.k.a. the Cooking Ninja, Sarah, who lives at the fabulous Maison Cupcake, the fabulous Mowie
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Publisher's Comments

**BLOG PRESENTATION DISCLAIMER**

Hello Everyone,
This is just a very short note to everyone visiting my blog (thank you!), that I have just returned from a fantastic trip to Food Blogger Connect 2010 in London. I had an amazing time, details of which I will be sharing very soon.
However, I have returned home to see that the templates, headers, titles and colours are all missing from my blog.
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Popular Kentucky Derby Recipes: Bourbon Ball French Toast, Kentucky Hot Brown

*** Check out 2 popular Kentucky dishes all year long.



Calvin Borel of Louisiana won at Churchill Downs in May 2010 on Super Saver


From Denny: This post was in draft since the end of April when the BP oil spill happened. Since I live in Louisiana I've been trying to keep up on the oil spill news as it happens minute to minute. To say I'm a bit late getting out these recipes is a huge understatement. :) But my relatives in Kentucky tell me these recipes are enjoyed year round as well as featured during the Derby season.

Of course, we in Louisiana were excited that Louisiana jockey Calvin Borel won in May on the horse Super Saver. The Triple Crown would have been great but there's always another horse and another race.

Some people reading this are probably asking, "So, what's a Kentucky Brown?" The simple baked dish was developed by The Brown Hotel and caught on as a favorite ever since, becoming a Derby tradition. It's definitely one of those hearty man-pleaser foods or to dine on at the ski slopes when you are ravenous! Basically, it's a layered open-faced sandwich with turkey, bacon, tomato slices and a three cheese Mornay sauce to smother it Southern style and then baked until the cheese melts. Yeah, it's that good!

Since Bourbon is the whiskey of choice in Kentucky you knew they would come up with a killer bourbon sauce for French Toast. Both of these dishes are calorie city so save up to enjoy them!

Lynn Winter, owner of Lynn's Paradise Café in Louisville, gives a fast-paced funny tutorial of how to create these traditional dishes. Her restaurant is considered artsy, whacky and where Dali meets Southern but the food is awesome.








Kentucky Hot Brown

From: Lynn Winter, Lynn's Paradise Cafe

Serves: 6 to 8

Ingredients:

• 1 loaf of sourdough bread
• 2.5 pounds of roasted turkey breast
• 4 large tomatoes
• 1 pound of bacon
• 6 salted butter
• 1/4 cup of diced onion
• 1/2 cup of flour
• 1 quart of milk
• 1/2 cup of cream
• 1.25 teaspoons of salt
• 1 bay leaf
• 3 whole cloves
• 1 pinch of cayenne pepper
• Dash of olive oil
• 1/4 cup of sugar
• 1/2 cup Pecorino grated
• 1 cup grated Swiss (Gruyere or cave-aged Emmentaler)
• 1 cup sharp white cheddar cheese


Directions:

For the Mornay sauce:

Make the white roux. In a medium saucepan on low heat place butter and diced onions. Sauté until translucent. Add flour and whisk until smooth. Cook the roux until you get a faint nutty aroma. Do not let brown.

For the sauce, combine milk, cream, salt and cayenne pepper in a separate saucepan. Tie a bay leaf and cloves in a cheesecloth ball or tea ball. Heat to simmer.

Pour in the roux while whisking continuously until the roux begins to thicken. Remove sack or tea ball. When thickened, add 1/4 cup Pecorino, 1/2 cup of Swiss and 1/2 cup of sharp white cheddar cheese. Whisk until cheese is thoroughly incorporated.

For the roasted sweet tomato slices:

Brush four large firm ripe tomatoes with olive oil. With tongs, hold the tomatoes over flame or roast in oven. When slight color appears, toss in to bowl with 1/4 cup white sugar. Core then slice.

For the Kentucky hot brown:

Cook bacon and set to the side. In a flat-bottomed ovenproof bowl, place one slice of sourdough bread, top with a touch of Mornay Sauce, 6 ounces of turkey breast, sliced roasted tomatoes, two slices of bacon and cover with 4 to 6 ounces of Mornay Sauce. Sprinkle reserved Pecorino and sharp cheddar cheese.

Place in oven on 375 degrees for six to 10 minutes or until the cheese starts to brown.

Garnish with sweet dried tomato slices and tomato confetti.





Bourbon Ball French Toast

From: Lynn Winter, Lynn's Paradise Cafe

Serves: 6

Ingredients:

• 7/12 cup Kentucky Bourbon
• 2 cups half and half
• 2 quarts heavy cream
• 1 cup whipping cream
• 1.25 cups milk
• 1/8 cup water
• 6 eggs
• 3 egg whites
• 4 large egg yolks
• 3 cups sugar
• 4 teaspoons cornstarch
• 2 teaspoons vanilla extract (homemade is best)
• 1.25 teaspoons ground nutmeg
• 3/4 teaspoon ground allspice
• 3.25 teaspoons cinnamon
• 2.125 teaspoon kosher salt
• 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar
• 1 loaf of cinnamon swirl bread
• 6 cups pecans or pecan pieces
• 1 pint fresh sliced strawberries
• Dark chocolate syrup
• Butter or oil for frying
• Dashes of powdered sugar


Directions:

For the French toast batter:

Beat the three egg whites with nutmeg, 1 tablespoon of cinnamon and 1/8 teaspoon of salt in a medium sized bowl. Whisk in the milk. Set aside.

For the Kentucky Bourbon whipped cream:

Whip heavy cream in chilled mixer until soft peaks form. Add powdered sugar and fold in 1/4 cup of Kentucky Bourbon.

For the sugar spiced pecans:

Beat three egg whites with water until well combined. Add 1.5 cups of sugar, 1 tablespoon cinnamon, 2 teaspoons kosher salt, 3/4 teaspoon ground allspice and 3/4-teaspoon ground nutmeg nutmeg to egg mixture and mix well.

Add six cups of pecans to wet mixture and toss and stir to coat. Transfer to full-size sheet tray covered with non-stick spray. Bake at 300 degrees for 10 minutes

Stir bringing the outside edges of the pecans to the center. Cook for 21 minutes, stirring and rotating at seven-minute intervals. Place on a speed rack to cool. Store in an air tight container.

For the Bourbon vanilla custard:

Heat half & half and 1 cup whipping cream in small saucepan over low heat, until the mixture begins to simmer. Remove from heat and set aside.

Meanwhile, whisk four large egg yolks, 1/2 cup sugar, and 4 teaspoons cornstarch in a stainless steel bowl for about two minutes or until mixture thickens and lightens in color.

Slowly pour hot cream into the egg mixture, whisking constantly. Return the custard to the saucepan and place over medium heat. Stir constantly until the mixture reaches 170 degrees. Remove from heat and stir in the 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract and 1/3 cup of Kentucky Bourbon.

Serve immediately or hold over a hot water bath.

For the French toast:

Slice the cinnamon swirl bread into 18 thick slices. Soak the slices in the batter for about three minutes, turning to coat evenly on both sides.

Heat butter or oil in a sauté pan over medium high heat. Lift the bread from the batter, draining slightly and place it in the hot pan. Add only enough to fit easily in the pan. Sauté on both sides until golden brown.

Place three slices on each plate. Drizzle with warm Bourbon vanilla custard.

Garnish with chocolate syrup and Kentucky Bourbon whipped cream. Sprinkle with sliced strawberries and 1 cup of the toasted sugared pecan halves.


*** THANKS for visiting, feel welcome to drop a comment or opinion, enjoy bookmarking this post on your favorite social site, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!
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Chicken Breast With Orange Basil Pesto

I haven't tried a new recipe for a couple of weeks.  I haven't forgotten about my goal.  I just didn't have a usable kitchen.  My kitchen was in ruins as my husband and brother-in-law finished a backsplash, put down new counters and installed a new sink.  Now that my new and improved kitchen is put back together, I'm ready to cook!  I searched for chicken recipes and picked this one from ifood.tv.  Chicken Breast with Orange Basil Pesto sounds fancy and elegant, but how will it taste?

Ingredients
1/2 cup fresh basil leaves
2 tablespoons grated orange rind
2 cloves garlic, peeled
3 tablespoons Florida orange juice
1 tablespoon Dijon style mustard
2 teaspoons olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste (optional)
3 whole chicken breasts, halved
Directions
Preheat broiler.  Place basil, orange rind and garlic in food processor and process until finely chopped.
Add orange juice, mustard, olive oil, salt and pepper; process a few seconds or until paste is formed.
Spread an equal amount of basil mixture under skin and on bone side of each chicken breast.  Place chicken, skin sides down, on broiler pan.  Place 4 inches from heat source. Broil 10 minutes. Turn chicken over and broil 10 to 12 minutes more until chicken is no longer pink and juices run clear when chicken is pierced with fork.  If chicken browns too quickly, cover with foil.  Remove skin from chicken.

I had 2 oranges in the refrigerator.  I grated my own orange rind and also squeezed 3 Tablespoons of juice from them.  I didn't need Florida orange juice.
First step: basil, orange rind and garlic cloves in the food processor.  I processed until they were finely chopped.
Next: I added the rest of the pesto ingredients (orange juice, mustard, olive oil, salt and pepper) and processed.  Here's the pesto.
Finally: I Spread the pesto under the chicken's skin.  I turned it over and spread some pesto on the bone side as well before I stuck these in the oven to broil.  I used a broil pan and the Lo Broil setting on my oven.  After 10 minutes I flipped the chicken over and checked it again after another 12 minutes.  It wasn't done.  I put a sheet of foil on top of the chicken and let it cook for another 15 minutes.  My chicken pieces were quite large.  They did come out juicy and brown on top.

The Results...
This wasn't bad, but it definitely wasn't extraordinary.  The chicken was nice and moist and it had a hint of flavor from the orange basil pesto.  My kids like chicken and they were happy to eat this.  My husband and I thought it was lacking in flavor.  It needed a little kick from somewhere.  Maybe a sauce or maybe grilling it instead of broiling to add some smokiness?  My 10 year old liked his chicken better when he dipped it in a honey mustard sauce.  I still have enough of this chicken leftover to make another meal, maybe quesadillas?  Chicken breast with Orange Basil Pesto sounds better than it tastes.
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Posts Roundup at Dennys 14 Blogs - 5 June 2010

*** Check it out from the funny to the serious like lots of funny posts with funny ideos, BP oil spill news, political commentary, political cartoons, recipes, poetry, health news.




Photo of coffee from Brazil by Quoquo @ flickr



From Denny: This was a light week for writing as I spent so much time watching a lot of BP oil spill news from everywhere trying to catch details of what was filtered out of the mainstream copycat media. This is a shifting situation minute by minute as BP tries to twist the truth and manipulate the media to report their lies. It's like a giant shell game from a multinational corporation grifter.

Those of us living in Louisiana and others on the Gulf Coast are committed to holding our government AND most especially BP's mean little toes to the hot coals until they comply fully. The philosophy of "The Minimum Acceptable" from Big Business arrogance and cavalier handling of an environmental and economic disaster is unacceptable in America. If this was happening to the British shores I would be just as outraged and pushing back just as hard.




The Social Poets:


Cartoons: Obama vs. BPs Oil Spill - 5 June 2010

Water of Life poem - Libations Friday 4 June 2010

BP Phony Police: Threaten Reporters With Arrest If Report, Photo Dead Animals

BP Oil Spill News Updates - 2 June 2010

Funny Late Night Comedy Roundup - 31 May 2010

Funny Video: Colberts ThreatDown of Food Police, Jazz Robots, Pretty Girls

Funny Video: Colbert Mocks Surburban Backyard Clothesline Terrorist

Funny Video: Colbert Gives Domino Pizza Alpha Dog Award

Posts Roundup at Dennys Blogs - 30 May 2010






Dennys Global Politics:


World Idiots: Israel Gaza Raid Mess, North Korea Cartoons - 5 June 2010

Why Not to Nuke the Oil Spill, Israels International Mess - News Headlines 2 June 2010








Dennys Funny Quotes:


Cartoons: Staycation, New Summer Trend 4 Middle Class - 5 June 2010

Help Create Funny Caption 4 Michelle Obama Photo at Comedy Central


Funny Video: Science-Gate by Cartoonist Mark Fiore

Funny Video: Colbert Instructs How to Ace Your ACTs





Ouch Outrageous Obnoxious And Odd:


Tea Party Weird and Immigration Cartoons - 5 June 2010

Funny Video: Zeek the Dog Plays Piano and Sings





Dennys Blog Feeds:


Funny Fathers Day Cartoons - 5 June 2010




The Healing Waters:


Cartoons: Global Warming Al Gores Surpise Divorce - 5 June 2010

Michelle Obama Fighting Obesity: Chefs Moves to Schools Program

50 Simple Steps: Burn Some Excess Calories




Visual Insights:


Funny Summer Heatwave Cartoons - 5 June 2010

Just Plain Funny: Silly Animal Photos




Romancing The Chocolate:


Yummy Lemon Tea Bread From Southern Living


Unusual 2 Tasty:


New Popular Drink Trend: Sex and The City 2 Cocktails



*** THANKS for visiting, feel welcome to drop a comment or opinion, enjoy bookmarking this post on your favorite social site, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!
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Yummy Lemon Tea Bread From Southern Living

*** Tea time never had it so good! Mmmm... lemon bread.




Another version of lemon bread by little blue hen @ flickr


From Denny: We love lemon at our house, how about you? Simple recipes are always the best too. Southern Living Magazine is a favorite across the nation as they really know how to tap into what people want to cook and bake for their families.

Southern Living also has a new cookbook out and this recipe is one of their promotional items to give you a flavor of family favorites. They pulled from over 10,000 recipes to create this cookbook. I sure would have loved to be on that testing panel! It must have taken months to complete and just think of the joy of wonderful smells coming out of those test kitchen ovens. :)

Take a look - and a test drive - of this easy recipe to enjoy with afternoon tea. The link is to the paperback version already discounted at Amazon.





From:Classic Southern Desserts: All-time Favorite Recipes for Cakes, Cookies, Pies, Puddings, Cobblers, Ice Cream and More” by the editors of Southern Living (Oxmoor House, 2010)



Lemon Tea Bread


Makes: 1 loaf

Ingredients:

1/2 cup butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
2 large eggs
1-1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 cup milk
2 tbls. lemon zest, divided
1 cup powdered sugar
2 tbls. fresh lemon juice
1 tbl. granulated sugar

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Beat softened butter at medium speed with an electric mixer until creamy. Gradually add 1 cup granulated sugar, beating until light and fluffy. Add eggs, 1 at a time, beating just until blended after each addition.

2. Stir together flour, baking powder and salt; add to butter mixture alternately with milk, beating at low speed just until blended, beginning and ending with flour mixture. Stir in 1 tablespoon lemon zest. Spoon batter into a greased and floured 8x4-inch loaf pan.

3. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour or until a wooden pick inserted in center of bread comes out clean. Let cool in pan for 10 minutes. Remove from pan to a wire rack, and cool completely.

4. Stir together powdered sugar and lemon juice until smooth; spoon over top of bread, letting excess drip down sides. Stir together remaining 1 tablespoon lemon zest and 1 tablespoon granulated sugar; sprinkle on top of bread.

Lemon-Almond Tea Bread: Stir 1/2 teaspoon almond extract into batter. Proceed as directed.





From:Classic Southern Desserts: All-time Favorite Recipes for Cakes, Cookies, Pies, Puddings, Cobblers, Ice Cream and More” by the editors of Southern Living (Oxmoor House, 2010)


Amazon review: Selected from the more than 10,000 dessert recipes fine-tuned in the Southern Living test kitchens over the past 40 years, Classic Southern Desserts is the ultimate treasury of best-ever recipes, foolproof baking advice, step-by-step techniques, and gorgeous visuals to turn even the kitchen novice into the best baker in town. Whether it's chocolate you crave or kid-friendly treats, recipes are tagged to suit your needs. Healthy Treat and Bake & Freeze options prove there is something sweet for every lifestyle and schedule.

From old-fashioned Orange-Pecan-Spice Pound Cake to new spins on timeless classics like Apple-Gingerbread Cobbler, you are certain to fi nd a wealth of new recipes to pass down in the family.


*** THANKS for visiting, feel welcome to drop a comment or opinion, enjoy bookmarking this post on your favorite social site, a big shout out to awesome current subscribers – and if you are new to this blog, please subscribe in a reader or by email updates!
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