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Finger Food Friday: Pepperoni Pizza Dip

Today’s finger food is for the kids.  It was inspired by my neighbor’s youngest son who, several months back, starting referring to my Finger Food Fridays as “Fun Fridays.”  My neighbor has three boys around the same ages as my gang.  They are always together, unless one of her boys has ball practice or a game.  On sports-free Friday evenings, she’ll typically mosey on down to share a beer and finger food out on my patio.  Our children love it because they know those impromtu visits mean they’ll get to play outside until after dark.  We love it because we [ ... ]

Grillades and Grits (Smoked Gouda Grits)

  According to the turn of the century cookbook, The Picayune Creole Cook Book, a grillade (pronounced “gree-yahd”) is a square of fried meat cooked down with onions, tomatoes, salt, black pepper and cayenne pepper.  The cookbook indicates that plain and breaded (“Grillades Panées”) versions of this “fried meat” were served primarily as hearty breakfast items alongside things like cracked wheat, apple fritters and café au lait.  Among the poorer classes of Creoles, grillades were also served at dinner “with gravy” (“Grillades à la Sauce”) and a “dish of red beans and boiled rice.”  At some point between then and now, [ ... ]

Finger Food Friday: Chicken and Andouille Cocktail Meatballs

  I’ve been under the weather this week and yearning for a big bowl of warm, soothing and spicy gumbo. I just couldn’t find the time or energy to pull it together. So yesterday morning the thought came to me to prepare a knock off of my Chicken and Andouille Gumbo in finger food form. And here it is! What do you think? Okay. Not a fair question since you haven’t tasted it yet. But let me say, these meatballs rock. They’re light and flavorful and perfectly seasoned, especially when partnered up with the gravy (or sauce or whatever you want [ ... ]

Tangy Pulled Pork

  If you’re a Raised on a Roux Facebook fan, you know that I spent most of last week “cooking up a storm” in case my family decided to head this way to escape the wrath of ugly Hurricane Isaac.  It was part of my hurricane preparedness plan.  Even though I currently live 500 miles from New Orleans and am finally outside any hurricane zone, I still plan. The plan is just different now.  Instead of gassing up my car, collecting memorabilia, stuffing important documents into waterproof containers, filling the bathtub with water, duck-taping windows and tying down everything not [ ... ]
Category: Main Dishes, Pork  Comments off

Finger Food Friday: Sausage in Puff Pastry

The hubby and I both come from large families. And it’s not uncommon for family visits to Atlanta to include upwards of 20 relatives at one time. So to take the stress out of feeding that many people three squares times however many days plus snacks, I prepare a lot of food in advance. One of those make-ahead items, one I’ve been making since we first moved away from home, is this Sausage in Puff Pastry. It’s two ingredients–puff pastry and sausage–that bake up into these fabulously flaky pastries. Because the recipe makes plenty plenty, [ ... ]
Category: Appetizers, Finger Food Fridays, Pork  Tags: , ,  Comments off

Finger Food Friday: Sausage Stuffed Cherry Tomatoes

Fest fever continues this weekend in New Orleans with the Creole Tomato Festival.  This one’s held at the French Market and celebrates one of our favorite local crops, the Creole Tomato.  Creole Tomatoes are juicy, meaty and firm thanks to South Louisiana’s rich soil and subtropical (hot and humid) climate.  Unfortunately, the season for these bright red beauties is short and local consumption is high.  So you have to travel to the Greater New Orleans area or neighboring river parishes to get them.  To fully appreciate all that a Creole Tomato is, it’s best to eat them like a local.  [ ... ]

Finger Food Friday: Cajun Corn Dogs with Honey Mustard Ale Sauce

Friday has finally arrived.  Whew!  It’s been a hectic week and I’m so ready for the weekend.  The hubby and I are tackling some long-over-due house renovations, so let me apologize now for any untimely posts.  I don’t have adequate access to my kitchen or the computer.  Hopefully, the craziness will end in about two weeks.  Amid the chaos, though, I was able to sneak into the kitchen late last night for some much needed cooking therapy and a home-cooked meal.  But I have to confess, I didn’t prepare a full-fledged dinner.  It was a finger food.  That’s right. [ ... ]

Baked Ham with Chipotle Cherry Glaze

Growing up, Easter dinner always revolved around my mom’s perfectly baked Chisesi’s ham.  (Chisesi’s Pride makes some of the finest smoked meats in New Orleans.)  She bathe it in a sweet and savory mixture of brown sugar, coca-cola and yellow mustard.  Then she studded the top with canned pineapple rings and marashino cherries.  It was and still is one of the best baked hams I’ve ever tasted.  Unfortunately, we can’t get Chisesi hams here in Atlanta (although the company recently expanded and is looking to make their fine pork products available nationwide–yay!). Even worse, I won’t be able to [ ... ]

Dirty Rice

I consider Dirty Rice to be one of several endangered New Orleans family dishes.  Poppy Tooker, local food personality, culinary teacher and author, uses that term to describe South Louisiana foods and food traditions on the brink of extinction.  We both agree that to prevent those culinary treasures from being lost or forgotten, we need to continue to cook, eat, share and, in some cases grow, them.  This week, I did my part by preparing this incredibly aromatic and homey rice dish. Dirty Rice is similar to Rice Dressing.  The main difference is Dirty Rice calls for ground pork along with [ ... ]

Jambalaya-Stuffed Bell Peppers with Smoked Sausage Gravy

I’m settling back into the grove after what turned out to be a fantastic weekend in Birmingham attending the Food Blog South 2012 conference. This was my first food blog conference and one that I won’t soon forget. To be surrounded by people who eat, drink and sleep food is a wonderful thing. Their passion is undeniable, their knowledge unsurpassable and their willingness to share incredibly generous. I learned so much and made plenty of new friends. I feel refreshed, re-energized and psyched about the future and what it holds for food bloggers and anyone [ ... ]