Savory Pies, Turkey

Turkey Pot Pie with a Twist

Turkey pot pie cooked

I hope you’ve held on to some leftover gravy and some turkey. I found myself planning Thanksgiving dinner with an inordinate interest in what I would cook afterwards with the leftovers.

Pot pies are one of my favorite winter comfort foods. Turkey pot pie is a natural way to use those Thanksgiving leftovers. Add a bit of leftover gravy to your base and it is sublime.

I’ve been making what I think of as a “low calorie” béchamel sauce for several years. It is a great way to shave off a few calories which I add back by using puff pastry as a quick pastry crust. Every little helps.

This looks like a lot of moving parts – it isn’t. Try it once and you’ll have a great recipe to use with all sorts of fillings. Get all the ingredients out and proceed in this order:

  1. Put the puff pastry out on the counter to defrost and turn on your oven (375F)
  2. Get your ingredients out, chopped and measured
  3. Get the béchamel sauce started
  4. Start sautéing the vegetables

Turkey Pot Pie ingredients

Instead of a traditional béchamel sauce (a basic white sauce) which is made by whisking hot milk into a butter/flour mixture – a roux – this version uses cornstarch to thicken flavor-infused low fat milk.

Low calorie Béchamel Sauce

makes 3 cups

Ingredients:

3 T    cornstarch

3c     2% milk

onion tops from the pie filling

carrot tops and tips from the pie filling

2       cloves

2       sprigs thyme (optional)

1       bay leaf

4       peppercorns, whole

½ to 1c leftover turkey gravy (or 2t of More Than Gourmet’s Roasted Duck and Chicken Stock)

salt and pepper

Utensils:

Whisk, medium sauce pan, slotted spoon

Method:

Stick the cloves into your onion tops. Place the milk, carrot, onion, thyme, peppercorns and bay leaf in a saucepan and bring slowly to a boil. Lower the heat and simmer for 10 minutes to extract the flavors.

Turkey Pot Pie bechamel ingredients

Use a slotted spoon to scoop out the vegetable pieces. Whisk the cornstarch and another ¼ c milk together to get the lumps out. Add to the milk mixture. Raise the heat to medium. Whisk in your turkey gravy. If you do not have turkey gravy, add to the milk either a chicken bouillon cube or 2t of the concentrated duck and chicken stock. Whisk constantly for about 5 minutes or until the sauce coats the back of a spoon. Check the seasoning. It should have lots of flavor.

Note: I use the More than Gourmet Stocks and Demi Glaze.  They add a rich full flavor to soups and sauces particularly when you don’t have time to make nor storage room for stocks.  I always take them on sailing trips.

Tip: Without the turkey gravy this is a great gluten-free way to make a low calorie béchamel sauce.

Turkey Pot Pie

Makes 4 pot pies, enough for 4 people

 Ingredients:

1        package of puff pastry, thawed

2c     onions, chopped (about 2 medium onions)

1T     olive oil

1½ c carrots, peeled and diced

1c     celery stalks, diced the same size as your carrots

1T     thyme, chopped (use 1/2T if you are using dried thyme)

1t      sage, chopped

1c     frozen peas (½ of a 10 oz package)

2½c  cooked turkey meat, shredded

1t     kosher salt (taste, because you may need a bit more)

3-4    grinds of pepper

2       sheets of puff pastry (a whole box, usually)

1       egg, beaten with a few drops of warm water

3c     bechamel sauce (see above)

Utensils:

Measuring cups, measuring spoons, large sauce pan, pastry brush, 4 1c oven proof bowls, a cookie sheet

Set your oven to 375F

 In a the large sauce pan, sauté the onions in the olive oil over medium heat just until translucent – about 5 minutes. Add the celery and carrots and continue to cook until the additions are just soft. Add the salt and pepper. Add the turkey.

Pour in the béchamel sauce and add the peas. Taste for flavor.  Stir to combine.

 salt and pepper sprinkled over the egg washed pastry


salt and pepper sprinkled over the egg washed pastry

Pour the turkey mixture into 4 ovenproof bowls of about 1 cup capacity each. Brush the rim of the bowls with the eggwash. Cover each with a square of puff pastry, overlapping the sides. Cut a slit in the middle of the pastry to allow steam to escape. Brush the puff pastry with the egg wash. Place the soup bowls on the cookie sheet and place in the oven.

Bake for 30 to 35 minutes or until the puff pastry is golden brown.

 

Great Gift Ideas, Kitchen Tools, Tips

Favorite Kitchen Tools

 

peelers_

 

Sitting around the table the other night we started taking about each person’s favorite kitchen tool, knives excluded. I had to really think about it.

Joni instantly said her instant read thermometer was one tool she would not be without. A big Kitchenaid mixer was Jim’s choice, because of the bread-kneading elbow grease it saves.

My first thought for my favorite kitchen tool was my set of peelers. I use them daily. I’m really picky about peelers. A dull one or one that has a poor grip can make a simple job frustrating. My next thought was my weighing scale: I use my scale often. And then there’s my juicer: I had just finished making limoncello so my wooden fruit juicer had seen a lot of use.

What do you use most often? A corkscrew is certainly a viable answer. This is important when you have a small kitchen. It is easy to clutter your drawers with what’s non-essential.

Especially since Christmas is just around the corner, I thought I’d pick a favorite tool each week and post it. For this week it’s my set of vegetable peelers.   These peelers  are inexpensive, quite sharp and have held their cutting edge for years. Their handles are well designed to grip easily. One is your typical scalpel peeler, another a julienne peeler and the third is a serrated peeler. Not only do I use these at home but when I travel they are light and easy to pack.

I gave these peelers to my mother for Christmas one year. Her reaction was one of surprise – they are plastic. She finally tried them and figured out what a nifty tool they are.

I’ve added a link to Amazon above in purple if you want to take a look at them.

I’d love to hear what your favorite kitchen tool is!

Bread, Desserts, Fruit, Great Gift Ideas, Snack, Treats

Melissa’s Banana Bread – the best!

LR final-3139-2

Melissa’s Banana Bread – the best banana bread!

I love banana bread. I’ve tried all sorts of recipes and have concluded that finding a great banana bread is hard to do. Sometimes they are too sweet and often they don’t pack a bold banana flavor. I lost my favorite banana bread recipe years ago and I’ve been looking for another one ever since.

Melissa’s Banana Bread is the best I’ve ever eaten.   Sometimes the memory of a really great meal is not just the flavor of the food but is colored by where you were and the people you were with. You’ve had that experience of trying a recipe for the second time because it was so good the first time (and the meal or party was really fun) and it just didn’t taste the same, haven’t you?

The first time I had Melissa’s Banana Bread was aboard the 28’ Beneteau, Booty-Ful, in the Harvest Moon Regatta. This annual race is from Galveston to Port Aransas and takes about 24 hours to complete. We hit the start line perfectly at 2pm. Tom, the captain, put Booty-Ful on a broad reach about a mile off the Texas coast. Just after dark the wind picked up unexpectedly so we sailed into the evening with eight foot waves crashing over the boat. Booty-Ful held her course but with the tossing and crashing of the waves, no one wanted the dinner I had prepared. Instead, we dined on Melissa’s Banana Bread because it was a perfect balance of sweet banana while being easy on the stomach. See the Harvest Moon Regatta – the Voyage of the Booty-Ful for more.

I asked for the recipe, made it, and found that it was as good as I remembered, even without the saltwater and the excitement. I tried making the recipe three ways: according to Melissa’s recipe, adding a few tablespoons of banana liquor and with fried plantains. The recipe really did not need the extras. Melissa’s Banana Bread is perfect just as is.

Tip: Grill or toast it for breakfast.

Melissa’s Banana Bread – the Best Banana Bread Ever

Ingredients:

2 ½ c    all purpose flour

1 tsp      salt – I use Morton’s Kosher salt

2 tsp     baking powder

1 c         coconut oil

1¾ c     sugar

2 c         bananas, very ripe, mashed – about 6

4            eggs, slightly beaten

1 c       chopped pecans, coarsely chopped

Utensils:

2 medium loaf pans, measuring cups, measuring spoons, one small bowl, two medium bowls, a fork, a wooden spoon, and a toothpick or skewer.

Method:

Preheat oven to 350F.

Grease and flour two medium loaf pans.

Mash the bananas with your fork in the small bowl. Beat the eggs together in a medium bowl just until the white and yolks are blended. Stir in the coconut oil, sugar, mashed bananas and pecans. Mix all the remaining dry ingredients together in a bowl with a spoon. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients and stir until the batter is just blended.

banana bread ingredients 20115-_MG_3131.CR2

Pour the batter into the prepared loaf pans and bake for

55-60 minutes. Insert the skewer into the loaf. If the skewer comes out clean, your banana bread is done.

Allow the bread to cool in the pan for 5 minutes then turn the bread out onto a cooling rack and allow to cool completely.

Bread, On the Water, Shrimp, Travel

Harvest Moon Regatta, Voyage of the Booty-Ful

crew of the Booty Ful

Crew of the Booty-Ful , at the finish of the Harvest Moon Regatta,

I figured out long ago that if I volunteered to be the boat’s cook, I’d usually get invited back to sail again. This happened again, but it turned out to be one of those times that Mother Nature flexed her muscles and things did not work out as expected.

The Harvest Moon Regatta is about 24 hours of continuous racing off the Texas coast from Galveston to Port Aransas. We left the dock in Kemah at sunrise and motor-sailed to the starting line off Galveston for our 2pm start. It was a beautiful day. The winds were picking up a bit as the sun rose. Just perfect.

Leaving Booty-Ful's home port in Kehma TX at dawn to reach the startline near Galveston by 2pm

Leaving Booty-Ful’s home port in Kemah, TX at dawn to reach the starting line near Galveston

I wanted the pre-start lunch to be special so I made popovers stuffed with shrimp salad. A popover creates a perfect pocket for all sorts of stuffings – you can hold it in one hand and half of the stuffing doesn’t fall out onto the deck like it would with a regular sandwich. Perfect if you have to do things while you are eating.

shrimp salad_MG_8806.CR2

Shrimp Salad with a Popover

At 28′ Booty-Ful was the smallest boat in the racing fleet. The largest boat was 75′.  86 boats competed and 25 of those boats did not finish the race.  Because of the large number of boats, the fleet was divided into groups of six boats.  Each group was given a specific start time.  Our group hit the starting line at 2pm.

We managed to get a perfect start and away we sailed. Tom, our captain, chose to sail about a mile off shore. As evening approached we held a good direct line to the turning mark on a broad reach almost all the way to Port Aransas. At night, all boats turned on their running lights (a white light at the top of the mast with red and green lights lower down).  You could see the other boats’ lights which looked liked stars: a few sprinkled around us and more between our boat and the shore. We were ahead of all but one boat in our group and passed a few boats that started before us.

As the sun set the wind freshened (blew harder) and before we knew it we needed to put on foul weather gear. The wind increased and waves started to break over the bow sometimes. We were wearing our life lines, which are very strong bungie cord-like lines that attach our PFDs (life jackets) to the boat so no one goes overboard. The boat was pitching so much that you could not stay below standing up. I tried to make roast beef sandwiches and ended up not being able to stand up in the galley. At times when I grabbed the handrails near the ceiling, the floor was at such a crazy angle that I couldn’t get my feet on it! The pitching nauseated most of us who went below. I had planned meals that could be put together quickly with no cooking but the pitching made it too difficult to get to the cooler and put together  the simplest of meals.  On deck everyone was fine, if wet. Melissa, one of the boat owners, came up with a solution for the nausea – she had peppermint oil which we rubbed on the back of our necks. This cured the nausea in minutes!

With the wind blowing stink and wave heights reaching 8′ for a good part of the night, I tried to nap by the side stays, curling up on the walkway between the safety line and the cabin.  The waves would crash over the boat every few minutes so I only dozed a bit.  Several of us took turns at the helm.  I could only drive for about 30 minutes because of the strength needed to sail the proper course with the wind and waves.

Luckily Melissa had made the best banana bread I’ve ever eaten, which really saved us. Easy to eat and slightly sweet, it was perfect for delicate stomachs. Add in a few bags of chips for the salt, of course, and you had our bad weather menu.

Melissa’s Banana Bread

 

My dinner plans of rare roast beef and boursin in challah buns, with fruit and Nutella to be served in mugs for breakfast … all got eaten on the calm sail back to Booty-Ful’s home port north of Galveston.

As the unexpected storm blew in, quite a few boats turned back.  Although she was the smallest boat, Booty-Ful sailed straight and true, finishing well up in the middle of the pack. Small and Fierce we christened her. What a great crew and boat!

Appetizer, Soup, Vegetables

Turnip Soup to Warm the Soul

Turnip Soup 20150921-_MG_2988.CR2

Turnip Soup to Warm the Soul

Turnips used not be the first vegetable I would think of for a creamy, silken soup but this soup is just that: creamy and soul-satisfying. All that and there is no cream to inflate the calorie count. It has become a favorite of mine.

This soup would be a wonderful first course at Thanksgiving. It makes sense in a small kitchen because you can make it ahead of time and warm it up in the microwave. Serve it in small espresso or coffee cups. It will set the stage as a warm small enticement leading to the main course.

I first made this at my mother’s house in the Tennessee mountains one winter. It is adapted from a recipe by Edna Lewis and Scott Peacock.

I like to garnish this Turnip Soup with small pieces of herbed goat cheese and a small drizzle of white balsamic vinegar or a special extra virgin olive oil to add the final touch.

Turnip Soup with Goat Cheese

4 servings

Ingredients:

2 turnips, peeled and thinly sliced

1 sweet onion, chopped

1T butter

1T extra-virgin olive oil

1 Yukon gold potato, peeled and sliced like the turnip

1t fresh sage chopped finely

3c chicken stock

1½t salt

¼ t freshly ground nutmeg

2oz herbed goat cheese (optional)

white balsamic vinegar (optional)

Utensils:

1 medium to large sauce pan, blender

Method:

Melt the butter and olive oil in your pot. Sauté the onions till just

transparent. Don’t let them brown. Add the sage, turnips, potato

and salt. Cook gently for 15 minutes or until the vegetables are

fork tender. Add the stock and nutmeg. Cook at a simmer for

another 10 minutes. Use a immersion blender to puree. Taste.

To Serve:

Cut the goat cheese into pieces. Arrange on top of the soup and

add a few drops of white balsamic vinegar or extra virgin olive oil.

To eat, swirl the cheese into the soup. Enjoy!

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