Tag Archives: half-n-half

Fresh Corn & Potato Chowder

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When October finally rolls around and that old chill appears n the air then I know you’re going to be thinking of chowder just like I was this week!  This recipe, from Southern Living Magazine, luckily popped up perfectly timed for my chowder craving ways recently.   I did tinker with the recipe somewhat, using heavy cream instead of half-n-half and adding pieces of sliced ham for extra flavor. The original Southern Living recipe list below is so easy to adjust for ingredients that you have on hand, or you can try it “as is”.  Either way you won’t be disappointed.

If you are adding ham, cook it with the corn when you first begin.  The potatoes and broth need only 10 minutes of simmering with the reserved corn cobs.; adding them to the broth produces that extra savory flavor which makes this dish so special. Pureeing some of the chowder  in your blender and adding it back to the pot also supplies texture before finishing with cream poured over and stirred in.  It’s a multi-layered fusion of flavor in just one pot.  Delicious!

It will definitely be worth an hour of your time to prepare the vegetables and start right in on this hearty chowder. Don’t make it early or let it sit too long; it is best served up while still warm without reheating.  Heat any leftovers slowly, adding cream, as needed.  Today it was good with the croutons I used but my guess is that a skillet full of cornbread is the best side dish for hungry appetites.   I feel sure that whatever you serve with it, or however you follow the recipe, this chowder will leave you and your friends and family satisfied and smiling!  Added bonus?  A chilly Fall evening will be immediately warmed, and welcomed! =)

Fresh Corn & Potato Chowder

Ingredients

4 T. butter
5 cups fresh corn kernels, reserve 2 cobs
3 fresh thyme springs or 1-1/2 tsp. dried thyme
1 large sweet onion, diced
1-1/2 tsp. sea salt
4 cups chicken both
1 large Yukon gold potato, diced
3/4 cup half-n-half
1 cup chopped ham, optional

Directions Melt butter in a 4-qt. sauce pot over medium heat. Add corn kernels, thyme, diced onion and salt. If using chopped ham, add now. Cook, stirring occasionally, 15-20 minutes or until corn is tender but not browned. Stir in broth, potato, and corn cobs. Increase heat to high, bring to a boil then reduce heat to medium-low, and simmer, stirring occasionally, 8-10 minutes or until potatoes are tender. Discard cobs.

Process 1 cup of corn mixture in a blender until smooth. Return this mixture to stockpot and stir in half-n-half, and remove from heat. Serve while still very warm.

A Well Named Quiche

Quiche 2

Ever since mama and I each noticed and commented on this dish after seeing it in this month’s Southern Living magazine, I wanted to make it. There no crust, only a thick bottom layer consisting of a mixture of cooked grits, sharp cheddar, and an egg, paired with a traditional quiche filling using  heavy cream, half-n-half, and eggs. The dish does  produce a rockin’ taste and has a real take-away heft to it so it makes a satisfying main dish.  I can attest to all the above because I made it twice. In two days. I had to. Yesterday’s effort was not successful. It was good, but it wasn’t the quiche it was supposed to be.  Of course there’s a story here and I will try to be brief in the telling of it.

The first thing to mention is that I’ve renamed this quiche three times. It started with its magazine title, Bacon Cheddar & Grits Quiche, then three more names evolved in my mind as I wrestled with creating it. This morning, while making it again, I renamed it The Second Time Around Quiche. Yesterday’s quiche, baked in a spring form pan as directed in the recipe,  shrank before my eyes as it baked.  When I first set the pan in the oven on a  rimless baking sheet, I initially believed some of the filling sloshed out while placing it on the oven rack.  But when I shut the oven door and turned away, I noticed a puddly trail of quiche filling marching across the floor. My eyes followed the trail over to the bottom cabinets then up to the counter where at least 3/4 cup of the filling was spreading!  The spring form pan had sprung a leak.  With no way of saving what was in the oven, I cleaned up the mess everywhere else and let the quiche bake.  When I peered in the oven after cleaning up, there was another 3/4 cup of filling running off the baking sheet onto the bottom of the oven where the eggs had baked up hard and the cream was already browned.  EPIC FAIL ON THE PAN!

I now couldn’t bake the paltry amount left in the pan as long as the recipe called for and by the time it did come out of the oven, the grits and cheese mixture was great but there was only a thin layer of the filling, somewhat saved by the cooked crumbled bacon and the green onions which rose to the top and baked just fine. This led to its second name, Pizza Quiche, because it looked more like a pizza than anything else in its skinny little state. It actually tasted good and I ate a large piece (not a large wedge because a wedge involves height and we were definitely at pizza level here). I also carried a piece to mama when I went up to visit and she also found it tasty; she cleaned the plate, but, it was obvious: what we ate was truly a ghost of its intended self and that meant baking it again 🙂

Another trip to the store for an 8-oz. block of sharp cheddar, more heavy cream, and a dozen eggs led to the dish now being tagged “Damned Expensive Quiche!” in my mind.  A bright spot here is that it was much quicker to prepare today since the steps were familiar.  I did lessen two ingredient amounts, and ended up with the recipe below.  I used 1-1/2 cups less half-n-half and one less egg in the filling.  And today I used my quiche dish; no spring form pan!

Ta-DA! Today: Winner!  The result is as tasty as imagined.  The grits, cheese and  bacon marry well and the filling  is rich with half-n-half, cream, and four eggs.  I can  definitely see, however, how nice this would look using a high-sided spring form pan, and it would be much easier to serve, but I wasn’t willing to risk losing it all to the bottom of the oven again.  Knowing myself, I’ll keep tinkering with it (not tomorrow)!  BUT, if any of you try it using the spring form pan and the original recipe and it works for you, down the line, please let us in on it by posting a pic!

For now, my spring form pan is back on the shelf reserved for use with cheesecakes and dishes with heavier batters.  The bottom layer of this dish is thick enough to allow using a spring form pan which is surely the trick to making this the Southern Living Way IF said pan can be completely sealed. I imagine this looking even more delightful and serving at least 8-10 people. Meanwhile, the recipe below, as re-written, to serve 6-8, still makes a mighty fine supper.  It’s ono, y’all.

I almost didn’t share this story because I already told you about a major flub occurring when preparing the Bacon Bundled Beans last week, and was, you know, thinking perhaps you would be thinking, “this lady writes a food blog but she’s had two flub ups in the first week she’s been blogging”, and, well, then, you know, you might just move on to somebody’s blog who knows how to cook and never has a dish turn out less than perfect.

But my next thought was that the story does testify to the fact that when we’re cooking, we all have glitches, and we don’t just give up because we are made of much hardier stock than that! Actually, in Missouri, it’s all part of our “show me” attitude.  🙂

Bacon Cheddar & Grits Quiche

6 slices of thick bacon
2-1/4 cups milk
2 T. butter
1/2 cup uncooked instant grits
2 t. sea salt, divided use
1 tsp. black pepper, divided use
2-1/2 cups sharp Cheddar cheese, shredded, divided use
5 large eggs
1-1/2 cups half-n-half
1 cup heavy cream
1/3 cup green onion, sliced thin

Directions Preheat oven to 350. Cook bacon in a skillet over medium heat until crisp. Remove bacon; drain and crumble. Transfer 2 tsp. bacon drippings to a sauce pan.

Bring drippings, milk, and butter to a boil over medium heat. Gradually whisk in grits, 1 t. salt, and 1/2 tsp pepper; cook, whisking constantly 7-8 minutes or until very thick. Remove from heat; let stand 10 minutes. Stir in 1 cup cheese and let stand again 10 minutes. Stir in 1 egg, spread in a 10” quiche dish coated with cooking spray. Spread mixture well to the edges.

Bake at 350 for 30 minutes or until set and browned. Sprinkle remaining 1-1/2 cups cheese over the warm grits, spreading to edges. Let stand 15 minutes.

Reduce oven temperature to 325. Combine half-n-half, cream, green onion, and the remaining 4 eggs; whisk well.  Add the remaining 1 t. sea salt and 1/2 tsp. pepper. Whisk again to blend well then pour over grits mixture in dish; sprinkle with crumbled bacon. Place dish on a foil-lined rimmed baking sheet. Bake at 325 for one hour and 15 minutes or until lightly browned and just set. Let stand 20 minutes then run a sharp knife around edges of the quiche and cut into wedges for serving.

Cherry Buckle

Cherry Buckle 3

This recipe is so simple that I may need to set up a “fast comfort food” category! The original recipe was inadvertently updated when I made a mistake and picked up a can of cherry pie filling rather than the can of unsweetened cherries the original recipe called for. The result featured a light sweet cake-like texture with plenty of fruit; Susie and I thought it was just fine so you may use either the pie filling or the original recipe’s can of unsweetened fruit.

A buckle is akin to a cobbler, but the dish gets its name from its tendency to fall on itself while baking; the batter is first added to the baking dish and the fruit spooned on top; as it bakes the batter tries its best to rise to the top and the fruit is doing its thing heading to the bottom so it all “buckles inward”. This old recipe came highly recommended from one of mama’s neighbors because the ingredients are commonly found on a cook’s pantry shelves. You need only keep a can of pie filling, or a can of unsweetened fruit, on hand and you’re good to go when you want something sweet and something fast.  Jazz it up with a tablespoon of heavy cream poured over individual servings.

Cherry Buckle

Ingredients

1 stick butter
1 cup flour
1 cup sugar
2 tsp. baking powder
1 t. almond extract
3/4 cup milk
1 large can unsweetened cherries or other fruit, drained, juice reserved
1/4 cup additional sugar, to taste
1-1/2 T. half-n-half or heavy cream, optional

Directions Preheat oven to 375. Melt butter in a 2-qt baking dish or 8×8″ pan. In large mixing bowl, combine flour, sugar, and baking powder, stir with a fork to sift. Combine the almond extract with the milk; add to dry ingredients; whisk, blending well. Batter will be thin. Pour batter into your baking dish then top with canned cherries. Swirl the cherries lightly into the batter, add the reserved juice, and sprinkle with sugar. Bake 35-40 minutes. Cool slightly then pour a little heavy cream on top before serving.