cooking recipes Guide

Cooking Recipes Section


 

Cooking Recipes Navigation


|

Cooking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Filipino Cooking Recipes |
Crock Pot Cooking Recipes |
Colonial Cooking Recipes |
Cooking Cajun Recipes |
Marijuana Cooking Recipes |
Lebanese Cooking Recipes |
Gabon Cooking Recipes |
Vietnamese Cooking Recipes |
Smoker Cooking Recipes |
Simple Cooking Recipes |
East Indian Cooking Recipes |
Cookbooks Cooking Recipes |
Cooking Cajun Recipes |
Crock Pot Cooking Recipes |
Elizabethan Cooking Recipes |

List of cooking-recipes Articles


Cooking Recipes Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on cooking-recipes
First Name:
Email:



Main Cooking Recipes sponsors

 

Latest Cooking Recipes link added

...

Submit your link on Cooking Recipes!



Cooking Up a Storm: Recipes Lost and Found from The Times-Picayune of New Orleans
-By: Marcelle Bienvenu, Judy Walker
-Price: $19.22 (New)

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2009: Every Recipe...A Year's Worth of Cooking Light Magazine
-By: Cooking Light Magazine
-Price: $21.92 (New)
$23.35 (Used)

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2007: EVERY RECIPE...A Year's Worth of Cooking Light Magazine
-By: Cooking Light Magazine
-Price: $5.60 (New)
$5.65 (Used)

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2008: EVERY RECIPE...A Year's Worth of Cooking Light Magazine
-By: Cooking Light Magazine
-Price: $14.95 (New)
$7.93 (Used)

Cooking Light 2006 Annual Recipes (Cooking Light Annual Recipes)
-By: Cooking Light
-Price: $13.76 (New)
$6.97 (Used)

Sam the Cooking Guy: Just a Bunch of Recipes
-By: Sam Zien
-Price: $10.50 (New)
$10.50 (Used)

Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2005
-Price: $15.72 (New)
$3.91 (Used)

 

Welcome to cooking recipes Guide

 

Cooking Recipes Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

England's Secret Rhubarb Soup...

from:

To go on a mini-quest to find a unique recipe for a sour vegetable with not much substance is quite a challenge. Let us talk about Rhubarb. With its supply not so abundant and people's demand for rhubarb not quite as high as other vegetables, rhubarb is indeed a rare vegetable.

Though the existence of rhubarb is rare, it can be cooked with fish and fruit. Trust me, the combination which comes across is tongue-smacking.

I first tasted a Rhubarb soup when I was in England. It was quite nostalgic for me as I had lost track of this dish though I used to love it once. Rhubarb soup is a hot favorite soup dish in the UK because of its tendency to fall apart completely even when cooked for a little while.

Rhubarb soup can only be consumed if it is sweet. Sour rhubarb soup tastes so good that you'll ask for more.

Another way to sweeten the rhubarb; you could drench it with juice and a zest of orange in addition to sugar. A dollop of sour cream completes the flavor of rhubarb and ready for cooking.

I recommend that you take about less than a quarter of stems each season if you are harvesting from a plant. You need to be careful because if you take more it loses its energy for future years. After you buy the smallest stems possible, use a vegetable peeler to remove the outer layer.

Just put your hat on... Let's cook rhubarb right now.

-- Orange Rhubarb Soup --

~ 1 cup sugar

~ 1 medium orange

~ 2 pounds rhubarb

~ Sour cream, lightly sweetened yogurt, creme anglaise, whipped cream, creme fraiche, or vanilla or other ice cream, optional

Zest orange and mince zest; juice the orange. Remove string from rhubarb, then cut rhubarb into roughly 2-inch lengths.

Combine rhubarb, sugar, 4 cups water, orange juice and half the zest in a saucepan and bring to a boil. Wrap and refrigerate remaining zest. Turn heat to medium and cook for 10 to 15 minutes, until rhubarb begins to fall apart.

Chill; if you're in a hurry, pour mixture into a large bowl and set that bowl in an even larger bowl filled with ice water. When cool, whisk briefly to break up rhubarb, adding reserved zest at same time. Serve cold, with sour cream or any of the alternatives listed.

-- Carrot Rhubarb Soup --

~ 1 garlic clove - peeled

~ 1 tablespoon diet margarine - unsalted

~ 1 tablespoon ricotta cheese, part skim milk - optional flavoring

~ 1 teaspoon cinnamon - freshly grated

~ 1 teaspoon olive oil

~ 1/2 cup frozen orange juice concentrate

~ 1/2 pound rhubarb - cut in 1/2" pieces

~ 1-1/2 pounds carrots - cut in 1/2" dice

~ 1-1/2 cups low sodium chicken broth - low or no fat

~ 2 cups lowfat 1% milk

~ 2 shallots - minced

~ 2 teaspoons chicken broth

~ 3 ounces sourdough bread (6 slices) - cut 1/2 inch thick

~ 6 sprigs fresh chervil - for garish

~ salt and pepper - to taste

In a large saucepan over medium heat, saute the shallots in the butter-substitute until soft but not browned, about 3 minutes. Add the carrots and cook, stirring to prevent sticking, over medium-high heat for 10 to 12 minutes or until the carrots are just tender. Add the rhubarb and orange juice, cover, and cook for 4 to 5 minutes more.

Puree the carrot and rhubarb mixture with the broth in until smooth. Return to a clean saucepan and combine with the milk. Season with salt and pepper and the ricotta cheese, if using.

CROUTON (3 x 3 - inch piece): Preheat the oven to 350 F. Brush the bread on both sides with some olive oil and/or broth. Arrange on a baker's sheet in a single layer. Toast the bread until nicely browned on both sides in the oven. Rub the bread on one side with the garlic clove and dust with cinnamon.

Jonathan writes for America's Favorite Restaurant Recipes - The place where he reveals how you can quickly & easily duplicate over 600 Restaurant Copycat Recipes in your own kitchen.





 

Cooking Recipes News

Rosedown displays hearth cooking - Baton Rouge Advocate

Staff at the Rosedown Plantation State Historic Site in St. Francisville demonstrated 19th-century down-hearth cooking techniques in the plantation’s old kitchen Saturday. They prepared a traditional New Year’s meal with pork roast using ...

Read more...


Cooking by the book - Toronto Star

British food columnist and TV presenter Nigel Slater dislikes recipes. In his cookbook Appetite he compares them to a pair of too-tight cycling shorts. There is, he says, an enormous difference between following instructions – including his own ...

Read more...


In the kitchen - Sharing favorite family recipes - Daily Post-Anian

When it came to choosing which recipes to share with "In the Kitchen" readers, Chuck Blaylock had a difficult time shortening the list. "It was hard for me to decide what to cook today because I have tons of recipes," he said. "I like cooking ...

Read more...


Author Pam Anderson shares secrets for healthy eating - Asheville Citizen-Times

But the cookbook author and food columnist doesn’t just see dinner tonight, she sees possibilities: The simple bird could be used in a chicken pot pie, added into soup for some extra protein, thrown on top of a favorite pasta dish, and the skin and ...

Read more...


You cook, I cook, Wii cook - CNet

Several months ago, I wrote about the MagiCook Kitchen by Little Tikes , which won't help anyone actually create any meals, but will help to inspire a love for cooking in kids before they're old enough to start dealing with actual culinary hardware ...

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/cooking-recipes.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/bestcook/public_html/recipes/datas/pages.php on line 105

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/recipes/datas/pages.php on line 106

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/recipes/datas/pages.php on line 107