Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Busy Stew
















We all have made this pot of busy many times! My travels come to an end this weekend, so I will post actual food ramblings next week.

Hope all is well and you are busy with your own pots of excitement the past few weeks!

Till then...

(photo taken The Grounds for Sculpture, Hamilton, New Jersey)

Sunday, October 4, 2009

A Blog Date at Jaspers Restaurant

I have truly enjoyed meeting blog personalities this year. My latest was in the Dallas area- That Darn Girl @ Just Telling It Like It Is; whose uses her site to express herself in a creative manner with her own personal life stories (she claims to add lib on many of her adventures). We have been following each other for a year this month, and enjoy reading the others candid and casual post sites.

This fun girl mentioned a while back that she would be in Texas around the same time as I in September, we set up a girl's night out at one of my favorite old haunts, Jasper's Restaurant in Legacy Park, Plano.



















This is the second restaurant concept of Kent Rathburn, who opened and created Abacus in 1997 in the Turtle Creek area. Jasper's website mentions that their menu is back yard style cuisine with dishes like Aged Ham-Gouda 'Mac n Cheese' and Wood 'fire' Roasted Breads as you see in the photo above. You can clearly see the yummy mozzarella is melting over the crusty edges. I had been wanting an excuse to go back to see if Kent was keeping up with his past reputation.

Hubby and I visited Kent's restaurants on many occasions when we lived in Texas years ago. I also had the opportunity to be part of 'The Dirty Dozen' cooking team, and work in Abacus's high tech stadium kitchen along side one of his pastry chefs, Shannon Swindel. The experience was wonderful, and I walked away with many friends I still keep in contact with today.

Once Darn Girl and I settled into our bar booth table and realized we both liked dirty martinis. We ordered Jasper's signature Ketel One Vodka Dirty Martinis with Blue Cheese stuffed Olives, and boy did the blue cheese make that drink!



















We also agreed to share one of their small plate appetizers. This left room for us try a few other light dishes like the Grilled Chicken Masa Soup- clearly an up scale name for a pureed bowl of chicken tortilla soup.





















I soon asked our waitress if the Chef de Cuisine would make there Cast Iron side- Wilted Spinach, Crispy Shallots with an extra addition of tomatoes, and my wish was granted; great staff too. Luckily no one from the kitchen came and popped me over the head with a skillet!


















I felt clearly after a few hours of talking with my new friend, she had to be a great inspiration to her patients (working as a nurse) in the past. I let her know that mom's (like me with a chronically ill daughter) who had to deal with the painful issues of long and tedious hospital stays considered her 'More than a friend'. She is a beautiful person inside and out! I look forward to more of girl's night out with her in the future!

If you get a chance to visit Dallas and head out to Legacy Park in Plano, you have got to stop into Jasper's for a wonderful meal. I think Darn Girl would agree, the Wood Roasted Bread topped off with Spicy Italian Sausage, red onion, and basil pesto was really great, and is now on my 'cravings' list. I would absolutely order it again when I return!

Jaspers
7161 Bishop Road, G-1
Plano, Texas 75024

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Grandma's Chicken n' Dumplings


















A reunion with family and the opportunity to travel to the area where my Scotch-Irish ancestors settled during the 1800's always makes me think of my grandmothers recipe for Chicken n' dumplings...



















Will anyone really know where recipes originally come from, as they are passed down ingredients and things have changed? I know the history of this dish in our family goes as far back as my great-great grandfather, John Akin, who traveled from Tennessee to Texas to make his fortune; where food like this founds its way on to our tables. His wife made them, and taught their daughter-in-law; then it was passed down to my grandmother, and then to her son's wife, my own mother. Chalked full of chicken and yummy handmade dumplings or pinched biscuit dough; they clearly have not changed my memories.
























My friend's husband and man of the house this past week (in Texas), Randy had asked if I could make some good ole chicken n' dumplings. My grandmother had made them so many times they had become a symbol in my mind of hospitality and love…how could I refuse. There are many recipes for this dish, but I decided to try rolling out my dumplings over her biscuit version. This dish is hearty, was, and is an inexpensive way to feed large families, and since we were expecting a large crowd...chicken and dumplings it was.


















A mention of today’s modern home style Texas cooking brings to mind greasy enchiladas, home grown tomatoes, chicken fried steaks with milk gravy, and a long neck beer or tall glass of sweet iced tea to wash them down. Chili, BBQ, and Tex-Mex are classic Texas food groups, but there is also a strong traditional style of cooking with its roots in Southern cuisine but with a uniquely Texas flavor. Many of these dishes were brought over by immigrants and slaves.





















Texas cooking also has a style all its own, influenced by its proximity to Mexico, Native Americans, cowboys, and a frontier spirit. In its beginnings hundreds of years ago original dishes were influenced by settlers from all over the world. Mainly German and Austrian cultures that brought us dishes like dumplings and veal cutlets smothered in gravy.

Those who came to the Lone Star state to seek their fortune, but left more of their culinary mark. The simplicity of seasonings and ingredients clearly represent region of Eastern Europe, and many of these settlements are still standing strong around our great state.

Also popular in the mid-west and southern regions, but also found in many Pennsylvania Dutch kitchens as noodles in a rich chicken stews.



























The popularity of this dish spread to the Pioneers and Cowboys who traveled long hot trails. The food had to be just as rugged with things such as flour, sugar, beans, beef jerky, sometimes corn, and they picked up fresh water and lard for cornbread, tortillas, rabbit stew, and any other varmint they might happen to shoot along the way.

Vegetables and seasonings were often a luxury, and might be why stews and other dishes like this one were barely flavored by the bones of the chicken. On many occasions it was one pot cooking; unless they came across someone or place that was willing to trade a thing or two. If they were invited into a home, or ate at a local eatery that served this dish, well, they were probably more than happy with its meager ingredients.


One Pot Chicken n' Parsley Dumplings


1 large hen, about 5 lbs.
1 onion -- quartered
1 bay leaf
salt and pepper -- to taste
2 cups sifted flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 egg -- beaten slightly
1 tablespoon melted butter
1/2 cup milk
1/4 cup softened butter -- additional
1/3 cup parsley leaves -- very finely minced
1/3 teaspoon black pepper
2 tablespoons butter -- additional

Disjoint the hen as though it were a frying chicken. Place it in a large pot with the onion, bay leaf, water to cover by 2 inches and salt and pepper to taste. Bring to the boil; reduce heat immediately to low and simmer until the bird is tender. Remove chicken. Cut the meat from the bones in large pieces and reserve. Strain the broth and return 6 cups to the pot.

Now sift flour, 1/2 teaspoon salt and baking powder together into a bowl. Combine egg, melted butter and milk, adding parsley as well; beat together and add to dry ingredients. Work to a good dough like consistency, turn out on a floured board and roll to somewhat less than 1/4-inch thickness. Cut into strips 2 x 3 inches.

Bring broth to a good simmering heat; do not boil. Stir in 2 tablespoons flour rubbed with 2 tablespoons extra butter. Cook, stirring, until smooth and thickened. Add the dumplings a few at a time, sliding them down into the hot broth. Continue until all are in. Cover tightly and cook 20 minutes without lifting the lid. Arrange the cut-up chicken on a deep platter, spoon on the dumplings and cover with as much of the delectable sauce as you desire.

A little bit of history: Many upper class back when had considered this dish a 'poor' mans country food, and did not want to see it on menus of higher standard eateries in cities. The meal was messy and slurping of the stew was considered just plain bad manners.

My feelings...this is a great comfort food, and who cares how or what we eat, as long as mom's and grandmas continue to keep us warm, well feed, healthy, and embedded with lots of these kinds of memories...