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December 6, 2011

Orange Ale Eggnog

There are as many different types of eggnog as there are people who love the drink. The recipe featured here is a refreshing rendition.

eggnog
image: janeausten.co.uk

Orange Ale Eggnog
from eggnogaholic.com

2 quarts orange juice, chilled
½ cup lemon juice
6 eggs
¼ cup sugar
¼ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon cloves
1 quart vanilla ice cream
1 quart ginger ale, chilled
Nutmeg

Mix together 3 cups of the orange juice, the lemon juice, eggs, sugar, cinnamon, ginger, and cloves in a very large mixing bowl. Gently beat with a mixer or rotary beater. Stir in remaining orange juice; cover and refrigerate.

Just before serving, pour eggnog mixture into large punch bowl. Carefully scoop ice cream into bowl. Add the ginger ale. Blend all with wire wisk. Sprinkle with nutmeg.

Makes about 30 – ½ cup servings.

December 5, 2011

Appetizer Wreath Recipe

If you’re looking for an easy and fun appetizer to take to your holiday party, well here it is!

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Appetizer Wreath Recipe
cdkitchen.com

2 tubes (8 ounces each) refrigerated crescent rolls
1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon dill weed
1/8 teaspoon garlic powder
1 1/2 cup chopped fresh broccoli florets
1 cup finely chopped celery
1/2 cup finely chopped red bell pepper
Celery leaves

Remove crescent dough from packaging (do not unroll). Cut each tube into eight slices. Arrange in an 11-inch circle on an ungreased 14-inch pizza pan. Bake at 375º for 15-20 minutes or until golden brown. Cool for 5 minutes before carefully removing to a serving platter; cool completely.

In a small mixing bowl, beat the cream cheese, sour cream, dill and garlic powder until smooth. Spread over wreath; top with broccoli, celery and red pepper. Form a bow garnish with celery leaves.

Serves 16.

November 25, 2011

Hartstone Inn For the Holidays

If you are looking for a truly magical dining experience for yourself and those you love this coming holiday season, look no further than Camden’s Hartstone Inn. Publisher Jim Bazin, my son, Jacob, and I enjoyed fine dining at its best there for an afternoon seating of Thanksgiving this year.

The menu was heavenly, and every dish was a rare treat of the most perfectly blended flavors.

For starters, our taste buds were awakened by the Shrimp Timbale with Roasted Butternut Squash and a Thyme-Cream. Beautifully presented and mouth-watering.

ShrimpTimbale_7158Shrimp Timbale with Roasted Butternut Squash and Thyme-Cream.

On to the next course, a Sweet Potato, Rutabaga and Green Apple Soup with a Maple-Cream. We heard an exclamation of “mmm” from around the dining room. Another perfect fusion of flavors and another work of art.

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Caught in the act: Savoring the Sweet Potato, Rutabaga and Green Apple Soup with a Maple-Cream. My son Jacob said “This is so good it could be dessert.”

A Cranberry-Lemon Sorbet came to clear our palates, a small portion but an appropriate tangy taste of the holidays which prepared us for the main course, Rosemary-Roasted Turkey with a Pecan-Apricot Dressing and Shallot Smashed Potatoes. The Turkey was so moist, the dressing, potatoes, squash, and stuffing divine. I knew Chef Michael Salmon was in the kitchen.

And lo and behold, the master appeared at our table to say hello and serve us his signature souffle dessert, this one a Pumpkin Soufflé with a Spiced Crème Anglaise. It was to die for!

I must make note here that the wonderful service put this already amazing meal over the top. Our warm and attentive servers made sure our every need was catered to, and we greatly enjoyed our time talking with Chef Michael’s wife, Innkeeper Mary Jo. We enjoyed their genuine hospitality, warm atmosphere, and superb feast.

The Hartstone is offering special dining all this winter with weekly specials, and check out their amazing Christmas Eve and Christmas Day Menu.

Spend some time at the Hartstone Inn this season and add more wonderful memories to your holiday!

Pumpkin Lasagna

Trying to please a mixed crowd this year for the holidays? With my gatherings, there are often a couple vegetarians, a vegan or two, and several gourmands. This recipe for Pumpkin Lasagna will suit everyone but the lactose intolerant.

We love this dish because it may be made ahead, frozen or not, and packs a bundle of seasonal flavor. I can even imagine it layered with a savory stuffing, and cutting back on the noodles…if carbs didn’t matter. If you grew pumpkin this year use your freshly cooked sugar pumpkin or a dry squash like buttercup. Canned works well, too. Make sure you grab the plain pumpkin purée and not the pie mix! The flavors of this lasagna remind me of a sage butter dressed butternut ravioli and is so much easier!

Perfect on its own, this dish does play well with others and I can use my still flourishing Swiss chard as an ingredient. What’s better than eating out of the garden?!

Pair with a Pouilly Fuisse or another great white.

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image: lifecurrents.dw2.net Continue reading “Pumpkin Lasagna” »

November 23, 2011

Hot Sausage Stuffing

This Thanksgiving, try making Betsy Allport’s Hot Sausage Stuffing!

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image: kitchenparade.com Continue reading “Hot Sausage Stuffing” »

Flagstone’s Fruit Compote

Every family has certain dishes that a holiday meal just wouldn’t be complete without, and this very unusual fruit compote fits that description for my family. There would be a major uprising if this side dish was not served with the ham for Easter and the turkey on Thanksgiving.

My late uncle, Paul Hodgdon, was the Executive Chef at Flagstone’s Restaurant in Newington, New Hampshire (a few miles from Portsmouth) when I was a child. I’m not sure whether he developed this recipe himself or if it was an in-house recipe, but the restaurant became famous for this fruit salad. My Mom has passed the recipe down to my sisters and me and we are all carrying on the tradition of serving it during the holidays. Flagstone’s burned down more than 30 years ago but whenever we drive by the location, I have to smile as I remember the wonderful food Uncle Paul prepared, both at the restaurant and in the kitchen with my Nanie, who was also a fabulous cook. (Who says being a foodie isn’t a genetic condition?)

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image: delish.com Continue reading “Flagstone’s Fruit Compote” »

November 22, 2011

Maple-Painted Baked Winter Squash

All kinds of winter squash grow beautifully in northern climes. They start showing up in farmers’ markets and supermarkets in the fall: scalloped dark green butternuts, oblong orange acorns, striped delicatas, and big chunks of meaty Hubbard. They all take well to this kind of simple glaze of butter, maple syrup, and ginger.

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image: tinyfarmblog.com Continue reading “Maple-Painted Baked Winter Squash” »

November 21, 2011

Roast Turkey with Black-Truffle Butter and White-Wine Gravy

“When food editor Shelley Wiseman was asked to develop a recipe for an over-the-top turkey, she began by rubbing truffle butter under its skin. “It’s a cheap shot,” she admitted, “but it’s damn delicious.” We all agreed—it’s the best turkey most of us have ever tasted. The butter, an excellent carrier of that unmistakable truffle flavor, moistens the turkey’s meat and crisps its skin during a high-heat roast. For this splendid centerpiece, a nuanced French shallot-wine sauce is just the thing.” -from Gourmet magazine, November 2008

photo by: John Kernick
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Continue reading “Roast Turkey with Black-Truffle Butter and White-Wine Gravy” »

November 20, 2011

Apricot and Tarragon Sables

I was reading my way through a recent Food and Wine magazine and came upon the most devastatingly delicious looking savory cookie, engineered by a certain Dorie Greenspan of Manhattan. She is a published cookbook author, (Around My French Table is a favorite), creator of CookieBar, a .com business headquartered in New York City, and understudy to the French “pastry genius”, Pierre Herme.

Herme put salty olive shortbread cocktail cookies, or “sables”, on the map. Dorie has become noted for her sweet, salty, and savory cocktail “cookie canapes” as featured in the newest Food and Wine. Move over gougieres and cheddar shortbreads…I think we have here perhaps the perfect cocktail cookie.

The article in Food and Wine featured several savory cookie recipes, but I couldn’t get past this one for a sweet and savory, chewy apricot and tarragon cocktail cookie. Preferring a rustic look myself, I produced a refrigerator cookie type roll of dough to chill, slice, and bake. Dorie prefers to stamp her cookies out with a cookie cutter into perfect rounds, her signature look.

Cookie cutter. I guess that was never my style.

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image: inmediasrecipe.com Continue reading “Apricot and Tarragon Sables” »

November 7, 2011

Maine Food Events

There are several noteworthy food events going on around the state this week. For example, did you know that it’s Maine Beer Week? Or that there is a Maine Harvest Festival happening this weekend in Bangor?

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Saltwater Farm in Lincolnville is offering a Pig Butchering Workshop this weekend with Master Butcher Craig Linke, as well as ongoing classes and dinners. Check their calendar!

We know a lot of our readers are serious foodies, and many of you enjoy the challenge of entering cooking contests. Why not try your hand at one of these?

And if you’re looking to ease into the holiday spirit this year, there are several fairs and events beginning to happen all over the state!

October 7, 2011

Hot Clam Dip

Great recipe to make for a gathering with friends. They’ll scarf this one down in no time while watching the Patriots this weekend, so we advise you to make a double batch!

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image: websharin.com

Continue reading “Hot Clam Dip” »

October 6, 2011

Apple Pie Party Dip

Enjoy the flavor of a classic dessert — minus the baking! — with this tasty fruit dip.

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Continue reading “Apple Pie Party Dip” »

September 22, 2011

Great American Seafood Cook Off 2011: Part 1

It’s late July and I get mail from the Louisiana Seafood folks:

“Are you coming this year?”

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Margaret Salt McLellan and Joe Ndungu plating up at this year’s Great American Seafood Cook Off.

Continue reading “Great American Seafood Cook Off 2011: Part 1″ »

September 2, 2011

Lani Temple’s Grilled Maine Lamb Chops

In the new issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine, Lani Temple, MF&L columnist and owner of Megunticook Market in Camden shares her favorite meat for the grill: local lamb chops.

LambChops_2216_(485)Grilled Rack of Lamb, prepared by Lani Temple.
image © Jim Bazin 2011

Lani sources her lamb from Ellsfarm in Union, where Perry Ells and family run a 63-acre sheep farm. The result is hormone and antibiotic-free meat, which translates into better health for all.

In Lani’s column, “Easy Entertaining,” she shares how to prepare and grill racks of lamb chops, including a wonderful homemade marinade. She also offers recipes for all the side dishes to make this the perfect meal. Grilled vegetable and accompanying marinade recipes are provided, as well as a delicious recipe for both jicama slaw and Israeli couscous salad.

Grilled-Vegetables_2204_(485)Grilled vegetables and Israeli couscous salad.
image © Jim Bazin 2011

The results of Lani’s efforts are always scrumptious as well as beautiful to behold, as you can see from the accompanying images. She is a frequent guest with Rob Caldwell on 207, where she shares her culinary talents.

Learn how to prepare Lani’s perfectly grilled meal from beginning to end in Issue Number 13 of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine, available now!

Subscribe today!

August 29, 2011

Saltwater Farm Full Moon Supper

In the new issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine, Editorial Assistant Chelsea Sonksen shares the magic of a Full Moon Supper.

Just what is a “Full Moon Supper”, you may ask? We’ll give you a hint: It is a delightful local and seasonal dining experience to be had during the time of every full moon at Saltwater Farm in Lincolnville.

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We were fortunate to join Chelsea on this enchanting communal dining experience. In her in-depth story, she tells the tale of a memorable evening from beginning to end, and Jim Bazin, publisher/photographer, captures the images which made it such a special night.

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Saltwater Farm teamwork applied to putting together a delicious . . .

StrawRhubardShortcake_4018_(485)Strawberry-Rhubarb Shortcake

From appetizers to dessert, gracious hostesses Annemarie Ahern, Ladleah Dunn, Abby Avey, and Irene Yadao brought out the best in the seasonal local ingredients they prepared. Included in this article is their elegant recipe for lettuce and lovage soup.

4Women_4059_(485)From left: Abby Avey, Irene Yadao, Ladleah Dunn, Annemarie Ahearn

Find out what a Full Moon Supper at Saltwater Farm is really all about in this issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine. Subscribe today!

August 25, 2011

Lynn Archer: Archer’s on the Pier

Lynn Archer is something of a celebrity in these parts. She single-handedly threw down Bobby Flay in a match up in Buoy Park in Rockland two summers ago with her “King of Lobster Clubs”. Since then, she’s been continuing to do what she loves, cooking at her beloved Brass Compass Café in Rockland. That is, until a business opportunity and a chance to provide jobs in her community inspired her to add to her already adventurous life.

LynnCioppino_3504_flatLynn Archer at her new restaurant, Archer’s On The Pier.
image © Jim Bazin 2011

Lynn recently took helm of the former Boathouse Restaurant in Rockland, transforming it into her new restaurant, Archer’s on the Pier. Calling The Brass Compass her “grown child,” Lynn refers to Archer’s on the Pier as her “new baby.” With seating capacity for 150, a wraparound deck with gorgeous view of Rockland Harbor, and a menu that supports the local bounty of the state, Lynn is full sail ahead.

CioppinoArcher_3458Cioppino Archer, one of Lynn Archer’s special dishes at Archer’s On The Pier
image © Jim Bazin 2011

Read all about Lynn Archer’s philosophy on cooking and life, her new restaurant, and get her recipe for Cioppino Archer in the new issue of Maine Food & Lifestyle magazine! Subscribe today!

August 24, 2011

Maine Blueberry White Chocolate Cheesecakes

Two great tastes that taste great together, Maine blueberries and white chocolate cheesecake! This recipe comes to us from the 2010 runner-up of the Union Fair Maine Wild Blueberry Dessert Contest, Faye Harvey. Faye is quite an accomplished baker, and her Maine Wild Blueberry Pie took top honors last year as well.

FayeHarvey_8116

image 2010 by Jim Bazin.

Mini Blueberry & White Chocolate Cheesecakes
Faye Harvey, Union

Bottom crust:

1 cup ground nuts
1/3 cup melted butter
3 Tablespoons sugar

Cheesecakes:

1 8-ounce package cream cheese
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 Tablespoon flour
¼ cup sugar
2 ounces white chocolate, melted (extra for drizzling)

Topping:

¼ cup sugar
2 teaspoons cornstarch
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1/3 cup water
2½ cups fresh blueberries

Preheat oven to 375°. Lightly spray mini muffin pan. Blend cream cheese with egg, vanilla, flour, sugar, and white chocolate. Set aside. Mix ground nuts with butter and sugar. Divide mixture evenly among the 12 cups. Press crumbs on bottom and 1/3 of the way up the sides. Fill evenly with cheesecake mixture. Bake for 14 minutes. Cool completely and remove from pan.

Make glazed blueberry topping. In a medium saucepan, stir together sugar and cornstarch. Stir in lemon juice and water. Cook over medium heat until thick and clear, about 1 minute. Remove from heat and add blueberries all at once. Toss gently until coated. Top each cheesecake with 1 Tablespoon of blueberries. Drizzle with white chocolate.

Yields 1 dozen.

August 17, 2011

Everyone Can Cook for Celebrations

If you are looking for that one, year-round cookbook that provides amazing recipes for every holiday, this is it! Everyone Can Cook for Celebrations, by Eric Akis, offers holiday appropriate menus for all seasons. This cookbook comes complete with gorgeous full-page images, information about seasonal ingredients, and Eric’s Options (suggestions by the author to spice up or change up your recipe).

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If you enjoy entertaining, this cookbook is a “must-have.” You’ll never be at a loss for perfect recipe ideas for all your holiday parties with Everyone Can Cook for Celebrations on your shelf. (But we doubt it will ever stay on your shelf for very long, because you’ll be too busy using it all the time!)

Many of the recipes within the pages of this book allow for make-ahead preparation. That way, on your special holidays, you can spend more time with your friends, family, and guests than you do slaving away in the kitchen. Eric’s recipes are easy to follow, making the stress of cooking for holidays a thing of the past.

Everyone Can Cook for Celebrations will help you help you celebrate all the seasons of your life with style. Check our blog as well as Eric’s website for great sample recipes!

August 13, 2011

Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors Show 2011

Maine Boats, Homes & Harbors magazine has done it again! Congratulations goes out to them for another outstanding show! The weather is cooperating nicely, and there is much to see and do at Rockland’s Harbor Park this weekend.

BoatsOnLand_0074Lots of boats on land to look at.

Get down to the show and enjoy book signings and films, the 9th Annual World Championship Boatyard Dog Trials going on Sunday, August 14th beginning around 10 am, the 75th Birthday of Penobscot Marine Museum and Maine Windjammer Fleet, Wine Tastings, Demonstrations, Maritime Activities, and Boats, Boats, and More Boats!

BoatsOnWater_0078Lots of boats on the water to look at.

Enjoy summertime in Maine and all that it has to offer at Maine’s only in-water boat show. With over 70 boats in the water and 150 exhibitors on land where you can see beautiful craftsmanship of everything from jewelry to home design to yachts, there is truly something for every member of the family. Lots of great fun and plenty of good food, too!

FoodCourt_0083Partial view of the Food Court. Lots of food choices for everyone.

And if you’ve got the urge for a special treat, try the ice cream at the Stone Fox Farm Creamery Mobile Cone Truck. This is the real deal homemade ice cream, definitely among the best we’ve ever tasted. Note: the Salted Caramel flavor is HIGHLY recommended, as is the Coconut Cream.

StoneFoxCreamery_0081Stone Fox Farm Creamery Mobile Cone truck, at the Maine Boats Show now!

August 12, 2011

Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest 2011 Winner: Russ James

Winnah_5309Russ James accepts his First Place Awards from contest emcee Louise MacLellan

Retired policeman Russ James from Plainville, CT, took top honors in this year’s Maine Lobster Festival Seafood Cooking Contest. His recipe for “Pan Seared Sea Scallops & Lobster Medallions with Lemon Butter Sauce” wowed judges and audience members alike with its delicious taste and artful presentation.

Russ_5087Russ cooks up his lemon-butter sauce for his scallop and lobster medallions.

“I came up last year to the Lobster Festival and I was in the audience of the cooking contest. Coming to Maine and the festival is a wonderful way to spend a vacation. I enjoy cooking at home, and my wife encouraged me to enter the contest. She tried my recipe and said it was ‘the best thing I ever made,’ so I knew this was the recipe I’d make. I packed a cooler and brought all my ingredients with me and here I am.

LobsterTails_5183Lobster tails and…

Scallops_5200Scallops were the main ingredients in this contest winning dish.

“This is an easy, original recipe that is also very pretty. I enjoy trying out different reduction sauces at home. The reduction sauce for this recipe delicately enhances the seafood. It has a rich, mellow flavor. It is great on cod, scallops, lobster, and other white fish.”

Russ says this recipe is fun to plate and present. He is currently an artist, and spends time doing paintings in oil and drawings in pencil. One of his favorite subjects is lighthouses. He also works designing web pages. His finished dish is an artistic inspiration in its own right: it appears the lobster is offering up the bounty of the sea.

LobsterHeads_5152Russ used lobster heads in an artistic presentation of scallop and lobster dish.

“I would play with that lobster carapace and think of how to best use it on the plate. I saw the creative possibilities in my mind and envisioned the artistic presentation of that meal long before it got to the plate.”

JudgeTastes_5241It appears the lobster is offering up the bounty of the sea.

Upon learning he had won 1st place, Russ said, “I can’t believe it! Everyone was so busy dicing, mincing, and chopping all around me. Each finalist’s dish was amazing and I had very tough competition. But I had made this recipe about 50 times in the past few weeks to perfect it,” he laughs. “I could literally make it blindfolded at this point!”

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Russ’s table was set with striped placemats and sun napkin holders, sunflowers, and shells. And here is his recipe for you to create and plate at your table.

Pan Seared Sea Scallops & Lobster Medallions With Lemon Butter Sauce
Russ James, Plainville, CT

This fantastic Maine seafood combination is hard to beat. Can be served as an elegant appetizer or as a main entrée at your backyard picnic. It’s fun to make and is easy to serve. A great way to introduce inlanders to the classic rich flavor of our New England Ocean without the mess of nutcrackers and lobster bibs!

4 Maine Lobsters, (chix) 1-¼ pounds each
1-½ pounds of large sea scallops, fresh
1 bunch of fresh broccolini (small heads of broccoli will due)
Sea salt (in a small cup for pinching) & fresh crushed black pepper in another cup
1 Tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
½ pound of butter

Put lobsters in large covered pot. Add 2 inches of water, just enough to steam them. When steam comes out, cook for 20 minutes and remove from heat. Spill lobsters out into sink and spray with cold water, removing white yogurt looking stuff (lobster blood). Set them aside for cooling.

While lobsters are cooking, spread out a 5-sheet length of paper towels. Lay sea scallops atop the towels. Lay another 5-sheet length atop the scallops and lightly press down to dry the scallops, top and bottom. Get them as dry as possible. Dust the tops and bottoms with salt and black pepper.

Pre-heat large saucepan until the edge is too hot to touch with the side of your hand. Add olive oil and one small cube of butter until melted. One by one place scallops into pan. Do not overcrowd pan! It may take several separate pan cookings to do them all. Flip them around with tongs as they become brown. When they’re done remove, set aside, and sear the next batch. You may have to add more oil and butter to the pan should it become dry.

Don’t overcook the scallops! Here’s how to tell when done: Make a tight fist with your left hand. Use the index finger on your right hand to poke the soft meaty part of your left hand, just below the thumb. Tap the scallops with the tong. If they feel like that soft part of your hand, THEY’RE DONE! Remember, they will continue cooking for a short time after being removed from the heat. Set all cooked scallops in a covered bowl to stay warm and moist.

In the meantime, place a small steamer pot on to boil. Cover and steam your broccolini. Lobsters will now be cool to handle. Remove claws and pull lobsters breastplate out. Pick the meat out of small legs and thoracic shell pockets. Use a spoon to scrape the tomalley (green stuff) and red roe out of lobster. Set the tomalley and roe aside in separate dish. Crack open claw and remove meat, also set this aside.

Twist the tail section from the body. Use kitchen scissors to cut along the length of the underside of tail shell, front to back. Press down on shell edges and it will crack open. Pull chunk of tail meat out and set out on cutting board. Make a shallow slice down the bottom center of tail meat. Remove and discard the dark strand, especially where it thickens at the tip of the tail. Press tail meat flat on cutting board and slice it into crosswise pieces, making thin round medallions, about ¼ of an inch thick.

Use kitchen scissors to cut each of the 4 carapace shells. Trim along the edges to make a wider opening and trim the bottom so that it sits nicely upon the plate!

Plating:
Intermingle scallops and lobster medallions piled high in center of plate. Crumble tomalley atop the pyramids. If you were lucky enough to have found red roe, use this as the crowning glory on each mound of succulent seafood. Place the carapace, standing, as if to be offering its bounty. Stuff one broccolini stalk into the carapace that delicately flowers out atop seafood, looking like a spray of sea kelp. Lastly, drizzle lemon butter sauce (see separate instructions) over the entire seafood medley, until it makes a golden pool of deliciousness in the plate!

Serves 4.

I made a delicate white butter sauce from some common things found around the kitchen. It starts with white Riesling wine and shallots, and ends with cream sherry, lemon, and butter. Once you try it you’ll find it easy to make, and delicious with any seafood. You’ll be pleasantly surprised with the rich mellow flavor. One word of warning: This delicious topping has a “one time only” shelf life. In other words, this ambrosia cannot be refrigerated. After that, it separates and does not taste the same. While it’s warm try it on cod, scallops, lobster or other white fish to add the air of eloquence to any party.

Lemon-Butter Sauce
1 cup Riesling wine
¼ cup finely chopped shallots
¼ teaspoon white pepper
1 teaspoon white sugar
¼ cup cream sherry
½ fresh lemon, squeezed and juiced
2 Tablespoons heavy cream
8 ounces (2 sticks) cold butter cut into small ¼ inch cubes

Pre-heat large saucepan and add wine, lemon juice, and shallots.

Use medium heat to bring mixture to mildly bubbling simmer. Stir occasionally until mix reduces to about 75% of original liquid.

Turn heat to lowest setting available on your stove. After mix reduces, use a whisk to mix the heavy cream into the reduction. Add 4 or 5 small cubes of butter to the pan and gently “rub” them into mix with whisk. After they’ve slowly melted into the hot reduction, add another 4 or 5 cubes and repeat the process until all the butter is melted. The cold butter is used to flavor and cool the mix.

Turn off the heat and add remaining ingredients: White pepper, sugar, and cream sherry. Gently whisk the mixture until it takes on a pure ivory white color.

Let sit for 2 or 3 minutes, and then ladle the reduction atop any seafood.

Serves 4.

JudgesTable_5245The judges sample Russ James’ dish as the audience lines up for a taste.