OK, here ya go. Zinder's Italian-style Awesome
This is a complete menu for an awesome Italian type dinner. The recipes don't all serve the same number, so you'll have to fiddle, but these are all pretty awesome things, and they seem like a pretty good combination.
First, the spaghetti sauce. This is the very first non-trivial thing I learned to cook, and it is the single most commonly-used recipe in my [limited] repertoire. There isn't a written recipe anywhere (well, there is now), but it goes like this:
Doctored Pasta Sauce wrote:1 lb Italian sausage (approx 6 sausages) -- A really good sweet sausage is best, but I have more consistent results with spicy (some sweet sausages taste like air).
1 jar good marinara-like spaghetti sauce (26 oz). Use something that has actual chunks of stuff, plus roasted garlic. Definitely not a kind that comes in a can! (or heaven forbid a powder!)
1/2 onion
1 bell pepper
1/2 cup red wine
spaghetti noodles
salt
Serves 4. Doubles well if your skillet is big enough.
Procedure:
Take a large skillet, add water until there is a layer of water not quite 1/4 inch thick. Add sausage (whole).
Cook over medium-high heat, turning the sausages occasionally until all of the water is gone. [note: if your sausages aren't leaking any juices at all, add a very small quantity of olive oil and watch out for splatter, and next time buy less-healthy sausage]
While that is cooking, chop onion and cut pepper in to small slices. set aside.
When the water is gone, the sausage should look cooked on the outside. Take the sausage out of the skillet, slice them. do not drain the pan, do not discard the fat/drippings/juices Ideally the sausages should be almost-but-not-quite cooked. Place sliced sausage, onion, and pepper back into the hot skillet. If you lost tons of sausage juice when slicing, try to pour it back in to the pan.
When the sausage is browned -- basically as soon as it's done being "cooked", pour in the red wine. That'll start to boil off really quickly, let it go until it boils fiercely for a couple of seconds, then pour in the jar of marinara sauce.
simmer on fairly low heat. You can continue at this step for any length of time. It will be fine if you simmer for as little as 10-15 minutes (while you cook the noodles). It will be masterful if you cook it on low heat, stirring occasionally, for about 4-6 hours. It will also be thicker if you do that.
Now, in a separate large pot, cook the noodles according to the package directions. Add salt to the water after it boils, but before adding the noodles (I dunno, a small handful. not a pinch.)
When the noodles are done, you can eat! As a side note, this recipe reheats great. In fact, it is typically much better the 2nd or 3rd day than it is the first, because the flavors continue to mix after the fact. When reheating, I usually add about 2 T of water to the skillet before I put the sauce in, because the sauce really really thickens in the refrigerator.
Next, the vegetable dish. I recommend something I learned in a cooking class about a week ago that's quite fantastic. It sounds like a slightly weird combination, but I really liked it.
Green Beans with Almonds & Bleu Cheese wrote:1 lb green beans
1 shallot
2 T butter
3 T slivered almonds
3 T bleu cheese crumbles
Cut the ends off of the beans.
In a large pot, boil some water. When it reaches a full boil, add about 2-3 T salt. While waiting for the water to boil toast the almond slivers. (place on a small hot skillet. stir frequently. it will take some time for them to start to toast, but they will go from perfect to black very fast, remove from heat, set aside). Also while waiting, mince the shallot.
Fill a bowl with ice water
Gently place the green beans in the boiling water, cook for about 3-4 minutes, or until the instant they lose the rubbery consistency (they should still be somewhat crunchy).
Remove them from the boiling water quickly, and place them in the icewater. Dunk them under the water to stop the cooking, then remove them from the icewater and set aside.
In a skillet, melt the butter. Add shallot, saute until translucent. Add the green beans, saute until the beans are hot all the way through. Turn heat to lowest setting, add bleu cheese and almonds. Mix together for about 5-10 seconds. Remove from heat. Top with a few more crumbles of cheese if you like.
Serves I dunno, 4-8? It's 1 lb of green beans, you figure it out
Serve with some warm, tasty bread. I recommend
This Irish Soda Bread with raisins.
If your pockets are deep, your guests hungry, and your sweet-tooth aching, I recommend ending with this:
Guinness Chocolate Cake, but I warn you that it cost me almost $50 to make (I had to buy all of the ingredients, because I hadn't baked anything before, plus I apparently live in the food-is-expensive-here district). The recipe says it serves 12. That would be 12 good sized cake slices. I served 12-15 people on half a cake, because most people took tiny slices. It's a pretty rich cake. It's not sickly-sweet like some cakes can be -- but it is rich. Also, this recipe conveniently requires a [US] pint of Guinness, whereas Guinness is typically sold in 12oz bottles. The recipe was designed this way so that you'd have no choice but to drink the remaining 2/3 bottle of Guinness while you bake. As an added bonus, Guinness usually comes in no smaller than a 4-pack, leaving you 2 more backup bottles to drink should the first bottle run out before the cake is done. (If you somehow don't use the backup bottles, they're great later!) Drinking the backup bottles does increase your ingredient cost, but in also enhances the experience... or something like that.
I have made all of these, and they are all great. I've never made them all together. Well, if you don't count the cake, I did... I've only made the cake once. I'm going to make it again, but so far every time I've needed a cake for something, I've made a different kind. It's going to be time for this chocolate cake again soon, though, I think.
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I know this is already obscenely long (as all my posts seem to end up), but one more thing: The post is long, and the recipes don't necessarily seem simple, but: they are pretty simple. The cake turned out fabulous, and it was the first thing
I ever baked (aside from "helping" mom make cookies when I was really young). The soda bread is also pretty easy, and is pretty consistently good. With the beans, super-simple recipe, just be careful not to turn the heat up too high -- butter burns easily, and then you have to start over. (though slightly burnt butter did make the kitchen smell yummy). The sauce... well, it's been a family recipe for so long that by the first time I tried to make it, I'd watched it being made about 500 times... but it too is quite simple. But if you actually make any of these things (and especially if you make several of them), it will look like (and taste like) you did a lot of work. Granted, if you make all 4 recipes, it is a lot of work!