Monthly Archives: April 2016

FORKING GREAT Blue-Cheese, Sriracha, Honey, Radish Appetizer Recipe

Forking Great Blue-Cheese, Sriracha, Honey Radish Appetizer

Forking Great Blue-Cheese, Sriracha, Honey Radish Appetizer

This appetizer is a bomb of favors in your mouth. It’s very easy to prepare and is delicious and very light. It does have a little heat to it but not too much heat unless you slip too much with the Sriracha. Use any kind of radish you like. I used a combination of one regular radish and one small watermelon radish. I do note the watermelon radish worked out slightly better because it was the perfect size to pick up. The brand of Sriracha I used was Ninja Squirrel (purchased from Whole Foods) because it’s mild and sort of sweet compared to Huy Fong. Ninja Squirrel Sriracha just seems to match the sweet twang of radish just right. I note Huy Fong will do in a pinch.

Ingredients to make around 25 appetizers it’s up to  5 servings because they are so light.

2 radishes (on the small side) – sliced thin but like a study potato chip

1/4 small sweet red onion – sliced thin

2 oz blue cheese – room temperature

2 Tablespoon unsalted butter – room temperature

1 Tablespoon pure real honey – Best from a squirt bottle-like them bear shaped honey bottles.

2 Tablespoon (scant) Sriracha – (I used the Ninja Squirrel brand because it’s on the sweet side and not too spicy)

Directions

Lay down your radish slices with two pieces of onion on a serving plate.

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Mix up your blue cheese and butter in a small bowl. Get a disposable pastry bag and snip off a small end. Flo down the end of the bag over your hand and spoon in the filling. Twist the end so the filling doesn’t fall out.

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Squirt out about a 1/4 teaspoon filling into the center of each radish.

Now dot each cheese center with a drop of honey. When completed add a small amount of Sriracha around the top of each cheese. (about a total of 2-3 drops)

They are really to be devoured.

Forking Great Blue-Cheese, Sriracha, Honey Radish Appetizer

Forking Great Blue-Cheese, Sriracha, Honey Radish Appetizer

Forking Great!

 Really Forking Tasty and that's The Forking Truth

Really Forking Tasty and that’s The Forking Truth

 

 

WTFork is that?…….The Green Fuzzy Almond

Green Almonds

Green Almonds

Green almonds are only available for about eight weeks in the spring and are considered to be a delicacy and or a treat.. Green Almonds are actually just young almonds and have a fuzzy texture like the peach or apricot that the fruit is related to.

The Green Almond is popular in the Mediterranean and the Mid-East where it is eaten while raw whole and salted. The Green Almond can be shaved raw on a salad or served cooked. For some people the Green Almond is an acquired taste.

I decide to try my first Green Almond. I decide I’ll try just the kernel or nut part first.

I run a knife threw it the same way as a peach or avocado.

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I peal out the seed part.

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It’s like an undeveloped watermelon seed but puffier.

I try it and it doesn’t have much of a taste but it burst like liquid in the mouth with a very slight bitterness.

This is how it looks when you cut it open.

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I tried another one and add a little salt and then it taste slightly better.

I try the outside raw with a little salt since most people eat it.

Raw the fuzzy outside is too bitter for me.

Perhaps it’s better cooked?

I don’t go nuts for the Fuzzy Green Almond but now I know WTFork a Fuzzy Green Almond is.

 The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth

ARIZONA LOX Deconstructed Guacamole and Fresh Made Tortilla Sandwich

Arizona Lox, Deconstructed Guacamole and Fresh Made Tortilla Sandwich

Arizona Lox, Deconstructed Guacamole and Fresh Made Tortilla Sandwich

WOW this taste FORKING Amazing. I have to write it down. This combination is just genius. I was watching Top Chef Master Lorena Garcia on some kind of Chef Competition Show and she mixed lox into her guacamole and served it on a fresh made arepa. Chef Lorena won the battle with this creation and the judges couldn’t stop talking about how great it was. So I did something similar.

I made fresh corn tortillas and just used the recipe that was on my bag of masa flour. Doing a half batch for my first time doing tortillas.

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I don’t have a tortilla press and used plastic wrap on both sides of the tortilla and rolled it out the best I could.

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30 seconds on each side about tree times in a medium high fry pan. I couldn’t forking get mine round but they came out delicious anyway.

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I knew I needed to find a better recipe for tortillas so about a week latter I tried Mark Bittman’s recipe.

I do WARN YOU! This recipe I wouldn’t recommend unless you have a non-stick pan because in a regular pan the tortilla comes out well but it is very hard to clean the pan afterwards. Took me a forking hour to scrub out the black residue.

1 1/2 cup masa harina

1/4 teaspoon salt

2 Tablespoons oil or butter or lard (I used canola oil)

1 cup hot water

Made them the same way and these came out better for me. I didn’t use a press but they came out closer to round, were softer and got nice char marks. (corn tortillas should be served hot and steamy)

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I wish this was my first try at tortillas.

From my first batch of tortillas……

I topped them off with about 1 1/2 oz of regular not the best smoked salmon or what we call lox (******lox is a loose term and is actually just salt cured salmon from the belly area that’s easy to make if you live in an area were you can purchase really fresh salmon.)

Avocado slices sprinkled well with fresh lime juice

Grated frozen jalapeno (I keep jalapeños in my freezer)

Grated one small garlic clove

Some chopped scallions

a little fresh cilantro

Topped with another small tortilla

Arizona Lox, Deconstructed Guacamole and Fresh Made Tortilla Sandwich

Arizona Lox, Deconstructed Guacamole and Fresh Made Tortilla Sandwich

Gosh it really was delicious! I’m surprised I never saw this on a menu anywhere. Who knew the creamy avocado goes so well with lox and all these flavors compliment extremely well. It’s fireworks in the mouth. It’s something really original.

Thanks to Chef Lorena Garcia, I learned from watching her on Bravo TV and got the idea to do what I did.

This sandwich was FORKING AWSOME !

This really was FORKING AWSOME and that's The Forking Truth

This really was FORKING AWSOME and that’s The Forking Truth

 

 

Today it seemed the world turned SRIRACHA Flavored

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There is a whole world of Sriracha out there.

Sriracha is a type of hot sauce made from chili peppers and is named after the coastal city of Si Racha in Eastern Thailand.

I went to the store and it seemed the world turned Sriracha Flavored.

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The two bottles on the left are Sriracha Mayo

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Tabasco sauce is now Sriracha Style

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German Mustard is now Sriracha??????

Ach du Lieber!

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Cheez It Crackers are now Sriracha

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I thought Smoking Sriracha Coconut Chips are Pretty Darn Weird!

Then I forking see something similar in another brand.

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Sweet Baby Ray’s Wing Sauce is now Sriracha

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Sriracha Ketchup by the most popular Sriracha Company in America (Huy Fong Foods INC.)

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Sriracha Ketchup by North America’s most popular Ketchup Company. (Heinz)

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Sriracha Popcorn

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Veggie Straws that are Sriracha Flavored

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Sriracha Peas

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Some sort of Sriracha Sauce that isn’t red.

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How could this forking sauce be forking called “just Mayo” if it’s forking Sriracha Flavored?

I don’t forking know if the next on is the most forked up or if the last one is the most forked up.

The next two are both WTFORKS!

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Momma Mia this is FORKED UP!

Mia’s Kitchen  AUTHENTIC????????

Forking Pasta sauce with——

Sriracha.

This next one is a WTFork too!

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Sriracha Mango Greek Yogurt!

Now that is FORKED up!

Now that is FORKED up!

When I go out to the stores I never know wtfork I’m going to come across. Today it seemed the world turned Sriracha Flavored.

 The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth

Just wait until the world meets Gochujang………..

I Forking Pigged Out at The Salty Sow’s Brunch Buffet in Phoenix AZ****UPDATE NOW CLOSED FOR BUSINESS

The Menu

The Menu

*****UPDATE NOW CLOSED FOR BUSINESS

I Forking Pigged Out at the Salty Sow’s Brunch Buffet in Phoenix AZ. This buffet was NO slop like most buffets. Oh Lardy this was mindfully sourced hand crafted contemporary farm house fare.

The atmosphere is sort of industrial modern with comfortable low booths and mostly high top booths. They also offer a large outdoor dog friendly patio. (Gosh my dogs would have been in HOG Heaven if they got some buffet too)

The Salty Sow offers drink specials for brunch. $5.00 build your own bloody mary’s at the Bloody Mary bar. They give you a glass with vodka and ice and then you top it with a choice of three different tomato juices, Toppers like bacon, hot peppers, cheese filled olives and a variety of many hot sauces, Worcestershire, horseradish lemons and limes. The other drink special is the $4.00 champagne mimosa.

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Got my plate and looked around trying to decide on where to start.

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They didn’t use regular buffet pans and most things stayed hot in fiery cast iron pots and pans.

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Got my first plate.

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I squealed with delight when I tasted the sweet, sticky, crunchy, flavorful boneless fried chicken. Gosh it was really forking good. I put it over a waffle. Didn’t need the waffle but I thought I should eat it that way. Middle left on the plate is Buttered Rainbow Trout Almondine, Middle right on the plate is Fried Green Tomatoes with guacamole. That was very unique usually fried green tomatoes are served with pimento cheese. The tomatoes were crunchy and seemed grease free. On the right side of plate are beets with whipped goat cheese and pistachios. WOW what a great first plate!

Here goes my second plate.

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On the far left corner is Brussels Sprouts Caesar Salad. I could tell they made the dressing and it was very good and just the way Caesar should taste. In front of the salad is Cheese Grits, next to the grits is Cauliflower and rice Casserole, followed by jumbo asparagus and Prime Rib Hash.

Now I have to take a little break because I’m full.

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There are plenty of dishes I didn’t get to try and my husband helps himself to a third plate.

Some of the dishes I missed were the Porcetta, The baked Skillet Egg Dish, Poached Eggs dish. Pork Chile Verde, Pancakes, Bagels, Yogurt and Fresh Fruit.

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We shared some sweets. My favorite was the lemon scone. It was sweet but balanced with lemon and salt. In the middle was something they called bread pudding but it was more like French Toast with chocolate and bananas.

What sets this buffet apart from other buffets in the same price range or even slightly higher priced buffets is the freshness and quality of the foods served. Everything was hot and fresh made. Nothing was just sitting around getting old.

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I Forking Pigged out at The Salty Sow’s Brunch Buffet and I don’t mean to boar you but I will forking do it again.

****UPDATE NOW CLOSED FOR BUSINESS

The Salty Sow’s Brunch Buffet is Worth a Fork!

Worth a Fork..... You might Travel across Town to Dine Here because they offer something different you can't find at most places.

Worth a Fork….. Outstanding Value and Fresh Tasty Food for (at this time) $18.95 a person (I wouldn’t be surprised if the price goes up)

For more information on the Salty Sow please visit www.SaltySow.com

 The Forking Truth!

The Forking Truth!

Blue Cheese Gnocchi with Beets Apples and Walnuts

 

Blue Cheese Gnocchi with Heirloom Beets, Apple and Walnuts

Blue Cheese Gnocchi with Heirloom Beets, Apple and Walnuts

 

I already have a fresh cheese gnocchi recipe published here made with fresh made ricotta cheese that you make yourself. I recently got a great deal on blue cheese so I thought I’d make Blue Cheese Gnocchi. They are very flavorful and do taste very good.  The taste sets them apart from many other gnocchi.

If you never made gnocchi before I recommend that you make my fresh cheese recipe gnocchi first. Even if you don’t make the cheese and purchase cheese you will learn how to make gnocchi better as this recipe is a little harder because the ratio of flour differed.

I sort of regret using the light heirloom beets instead of regular red or golden beets because the regular beets might have been more attractive for this dish.

The hard part for me was deciding on what sauce to prepare with them. I thought that the flavor is powerful so I thought they needed some other flavors and textures for a kind of balance with beets, apples and walnuts.

****************Blue Cheese Gnocchi******************************

Ingredients about 8 servings

10 oz blue cheese – leave out for about an hour so it warms up and gets soft

1 XL egg – beaten

1 1/4 cup + 1/8 cup flour

Water for boiling gnocchi

1 Tablespoon kosher or sea salt – to be added to boiling water

3 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil – for sprinkling on each batch of gnocchi so they don’t stick..(and it also adds another layer of flavor)

Directions

Get your sauce pot filled about 3/4s with water and a Tablespoon of salt on to a medium boil.

In a large bowl add blue cheese, egg and flour and mix well.

hand pinch off one gnocchi and do a tester to make sure you like it because the ingredients do vary depending on the humidity and mostly your cheese. You might need slightly less flour or slightly more flour. I try to make a very light melt in your mouth kind of gnocchi that differs very much from a frozen type. I try to use just enough flour to hold it together.

When you decide you like the gnocchi put about 1/3 of the mixture in a disposable pastry bag with the top tip cut off.

Twist the bottom to hold everything in and squeeze.

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either knock off or swat each gnocchi off with your finger until done or add a string to the handle and use the string to cut off the gnocchi. After the gnocchi float for a few minutes take them out with a slotted spoon and give them a sprinkle of extra virgin olive oil so they don’t stick.

For this recipe I used sheet pans to hold the gnocchi in a single layer to make sure they wouldn’t stick.

*SAVE your gnocchi water because it will be used to used to cook the beets!

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The gnocchi are done and now you can put them aside and prepare the walnuts.

***********************For The Walnuts******************************

Ingredients

cup walnuts

2 cups water

1 Tablespoon extra virgin olive oil

1 Tablespoon sugar

1/2 teaspoon kosher or sea salt

1/4 teaspoon cayenne

fresh cracked black pepper a few cracks

Directions

Put your walnuts and water in a microwave safe bowl and cover with plastic wrap.

Microwave three minutes.

Uncover and drain the brown water you just released some of the bitterness.

Rub the walnuts dry with a paper towel.

Now place them in a small bowl add remaining ingredients mix well and place the nuts in a single layer on a baking sheet in a 350 degree oven for 15 minutes.

Leave out to cool and put to the side.

 

*****************For The Roasted Beet Sauce*************************

Ingredients****** (note I originally made double of this recipe and found that I had 2x of what I needed so I cut recipe in 1/2 so you’d have the right amount of sauce. Feel fee to double because you can freeze it and use for another time over chicken, more blue cheese gnocchi or something else)

1 1/2 large Beets ( I purchased my beets at the farmers market and got the mostly white candy stripe ones that only turn slightly pink) Any beet will do.

2 medium apples pealed, cored and cut in cubes

1/2 small sweet onion

1 garlic cloves

1 carrot

1/2 cup sugar

1/2 Tablespoon kosher or sea salt

1/2 banana pepper (or any pepper with heat that you like)

1/2 cup apple cider vinegar

1/2 teaspoon thyme

about 1/2 the water saved from boiling the gnocchi

neutral non-stick spray

1/2 medium sweet onion – chopped

1 celery ribs – pealed (like you do a carrot)  – chopped small

1small or a 1/2 garlic clove – grated

splash red wine

1/4 cup scallions chopped

Fresh ground salt and pepper to taste.

 

Directions

Put your apple on a non-stick sprayed  baking sheet and roast 30 minutes and put away.

Get the beets, carrot,  garlic clove, banana pepper, 1/2 c sugar, 1/2T salt, apple cider vinegar , thyme and fill about 3/4s with the water saved from boiling the gnocchi  into a pan and roast for about 2 hours.

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I waited till the next day to finish but you can do the same day.

When the contents are cool enough to handle-

Toss out the carrot, onion, garlic and banana pepper.

KEEP THE LIQUID and peal the beets and cut in cubes and put the liquid and cut beets to the side.

Get a large sauce pan on medium high heat and spray with non-stick spray.

Heat up your celery, garlic and onion till soft.

Add the wine and some reserved liquid and let reduce a little and in the mean time gather HALF your beets and HALF your apples and blend them with some of the reserved liquid up to thicken and flavor your sauce. Add fresh ground s&p to taste.

To serve heat sauce up with the apples and beets and near the end add the gnocchi and before serving add top with the walnuts and some scallions.

Blue Cheese Gnocchi with Heirloom Beets, Apple and Walnuts

Blue Cheese Gnocchi with Heirloom Beets, Apple and Walnuts

This really came out delicious.  It’s something unique but really good. Give it a try using any color of beet.

This is really Great and that's The Forking Truth

This is really Great and that’s The Forking Truth

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My Forking Review on Guinness Rich Chili Potato Chips

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I found Guinness Rich Chili Potato Chips at my local Sprouts Store for $2.50. This brand of chips came in two flavors plain and rich chili. I went with rich chili because it was vegan and I didn’t have to worry if a weird animal product was in it.

The bag says that the chips are hand cooked and are made with all natural flavors. I liked how sturdy the chips are with a really good crisp crunch. The chips seemed oil free and came in nearly perfect potato sliced shapes.

I opened the bag and took a big whiff. To me it smells like burnt tomato soup.

I tasted a chip.

Gosh…..

How do I describe this….

The chips are dusty with seasoning.

It taste like a cross between eating  from a really big pot of burnt (the really burnt part) burnt tomato soup, cigar ash and what I can only describe as spoiling perspiration with a bitter finish. I actually ate three chips hoping the taste would change. As I ate the chips the bitterness was just too overwhelming for me and the taste was just awful.

I can’t help but wonder if this is a defective bag of chips because I can’t imagine that someone would make chips to forking taste this bad.

These chips are not for me but your opinion may differ.

Your opinion may differ.

Not Worth a Fork!

Not Worth a Fork!

That was my Forking Review for Guinness Rich Chili Potato Chips.

 The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip Recipe

 

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip

It’s easy to prepare delicious food when you use full fat ingredients. But it’s a challenge to create delicious foods that are reduced in fat. Cream Cheese, Mayonnaise and Sour Cream  are usually the base to most artichoke dips. They all have high fat contents and are high in calories.

3 ounces of mayonnaise is about 142 calories and 29.76g fat

3 ounces of sour cream is about 156 calories and 15.12g fat

3 ounces of cream cheese is about 306 calories and 30.36g fat

while

Silken Tofu is only

3 ounces of silken tofu is 50 calories and 2.5g fat

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For my base I used silken Nigari Tofu. It only has 2.5 g Fat per 3 ounces. That is nearly fat free! It’s a health food. It has almost no flavor so it’s a blank canvas that you can do a lot with it.

I infused the artichoke with flavors. (********see yesterday’s post or just type in artichoke in the search for my directions.) The dip is seasoned to perfection. If the directions are followed exactly your dip should come out delicious.

Ingredients for about 10 servings

8 oz artichoke scrapping (what you scrap off from the leaves after cooking)

11.5 (package) Silken Tofu Nigari

1/2 cup (scant)  parmesan – grated

1 small lemon – just the juice

1/4 cup scallions – chopped

1 Tablespoon Dijon

2 teaspoons garlic confit (I do this in batches and it last for weeks. I roast garlic with a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil covered at 350 degrees F for about an hour. The garlic turns sweet and it gets whipped up with a stick blender and is a smooth butter like texture I like to use in cold food)

1/2 teaspoon black pepper

1 teaspoon kosher or sea salt

Directions

Just combine and blend.

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip

Nobody will ever guess the base is healthy tofu. This really came out delicious!

This is Very Good and That's The Forking Truth!

This is Very Good and That’s The Forking Truth!

 

Large Purple Artichoke

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I seen baby purple artichokes before but this is my first time coming across full grown purple artichokes so I picked two up.

I treated them the same way I’d treat a green artichoke because they were large. I do know the baby purples can be eaten raw. I do note that after cooking the artichokes turn green.

So I started by soaking them in a gallon plastic bag upside down so all the dirt would fall out.  I peeled the steam and sliced the very end off and trimmed them.

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I cooked them on the stove top with……..

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Carrot, 1/2 Onion, Lemon, 3 Garlic Cloves, 2 tiny Bay leaves, 1/2 a Banana Pepper and instead of salt a heaping Tablespoon of Vegetable Base. I covered the vegetables with water and brought to a boil and reduced to simmer for about an hour.

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When the artichokes were cool enough to handle I decided I wanted to prepare my two artichokes two ways. I scraped out the leaves to make Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip and I used the Button and Stem to Fry in Panko and Parmesan Cheese in Butter.

It sounds like a lot of work but it only took me about 15 minutes to scape the two artichoke’s leaves.

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The leaves near the choke have almost nothing to scape off so I just remove those leaves and scrape out the choke.

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I cut the buttons in half and used the stems.

I used 1/4 cup parmesan shredded

1/2 cup panko

1 egg beaten

pinch granulated garlic

fresh crushed sea salt and black pepper

and just fried them in

4 Tablespoons of non-salted butter

Sprinkled some parmesan cheese and scallions on the top.

In a medium bowl combine the panko, shredded cheese, garlic salt and pepper. In a small bowl is your beaten egg. Dip the artichoke pieces in the egg and coat with crump and repeat. Then fry in butter on medium heat. Optional – Top them with either scallions or parsley and some more parmesan cheese.

These came out FORKING GREAT! The button is the best part of the artichoke so you should do something rich and indulgent with it.

Out of the artichoke scrapping I made Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip that’s made with a secret ingredient. NOBODY would ever guess that this is reduced fat. This sure doesn’t taste like reduced fat at all.

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip

Reduced Fat Artichoke Dip

I’ll post this recipe tomorrow.

 The Forking Truth!

The Forking Truth!

My Last Dinner at Binkley’s in Cave Creek AZ 2016

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(apologies if some photos face the wrong way. Some formats will see all the photos correct. I understand the problem now and am working on it)

Binkley’s of Cave Creek Arizona is a fine dinning experience and is considered to be one of Arizona’s finest of restaurants. The cuisine is artistry, French Inspired, imaginative and whimsey. You can expect some molecular gastronomy and benson burners with your meal. The Chef/Owner is a four time James Beard nominated Chef and had experience working at the French Laundry. This was my last dinner at Binkley’s in Cave Creek because the Chef is closing Binkley’s doors the end of June. It is expected that Chef Binkley will open a new concept in the fall.

The atmosphere isn’t terribly fancy at Binkley’s. This fine dinning restaurant is located in a strip mall. The dining room looks like next picture below.

This is the kind of restaurant that you make a reservation for. You don’t just walk in and expect to get a table. For most people it’s a special occasion type of restaurant and depending on your wallet it’s either a one time visit or a once a year kind of visit if you enjoy fine dining.

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Their were many changes to Binkley’s from my previous four visits.

My previous visits offered a choices of tastings menus and ala carte options with bountiful bite size amuse bouche served through out dinner, assortment of bread and choices to customize your menu. For example a choice of three each of cold appetizers, hot appetizers, dinners and desserts or Cheese Courses and you put it together the way you please.

The latest menu I had offered either an already written Petite Menu (5 Course) or a Chef’s Selection Menu (8 Course) Menu. I didn’t really have all these choices this time. I had to order the Petite Menu or the Chef’s menu. I was allowed to swap off plates I didn’t care for to go with vegetarian options. The cheese menu has been discontinued.

I was looking forward to the really delicious assortment of breads we usually get. My favorite was the bite size brioche.

They started us off with a well made crusty bread. Bread has been streamed down to one selection on my visit but it was served with French Butter.

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Next comes our first amuse bouche.

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Parsnip Soup with drops of Sumac Oil. It was so smooth and so rich and full of flavor.

Next comes our second amuse bouche.

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Peas and Carrot with Ginger Oil and Spiced Hazelnuts. Tasty- I would have liked this one slightly bigger or served on a spoon or a piece of lettuce so it would be easier to eat. This one was candy for the eye but also was extremely hard to eat with a fork.

Next came my first course.

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Milk Poached Daikon Radish with Mizuna, Wasabi and in Zabaglione garnished with starry blue flowers. The sauce was rich and smooth. The Mizuna gave this dish some texture.

My second course was….

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Asparagus with Lemongrass Daikon, ( daikon again ?) Shiitakes, Cilantro, Tomato and Galangal. The flavors were mostly mild and the strongest flavor was asparagus. The only technical flaw of the evening of food preparation were the shiitakes. They were very thin and very leathery and chewy.

Next was my third course and favorite plate of the evening.

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It was Leek Risotto with a Parmesan Foam. The rice was al dente and was in a perfectly flavorful seasoned balanced sauce. The Parmesan cream added that wonder umami to it to make it irresistible. This was forking great!

After that was an amuse bouche.

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A palate cleanser of house made Grapefruit Soda.

My main course followed.

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I had Steelhead Trout with a Fiddlehead Fern, Spring Onion, and a Stinging Nettle Sauce. Technically this dish was prepared to perfection but this dinner was far less detailed than other dinners I had previously from Binkley’s. It was good but no fireworks. I also note that no-one cleared empty glasses and previous amuse bouche ware from the table. To my surprise someone served me a very fruit forward Cabernet instead of something that might pair with this dinner. This is NOT typical of Binkey’s. I can’t help thinking that I don’t know if they were short on help or if the help were not running on full fuel because they know their jobs are in limbo with Binkley’s restaurant closing soon.

Don’t take what I wrote the wrong way……The food is always excellent at Binkley’s but in some of my past visits the food was more like this……..

Horseradish Crusted Halibut

Horseradish Crusted Halibut

Lobster Ravioli

Lobster Ravioli

Smoked Loch Etive Sea Trout

Smoked Loch Etive Sea Trout

Complexity …..More Bells and Whistles….FIREWORKS!

Fortunately after being underwhelmed with my entree the best amuse bouche I ever had comes next and dishes are cleared.

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House made Mascarpone Cheese with prunes, a vegetable chip, local honey and Fresh Shaved French Truffles. This was awesome. How could it not be great. This is one of the reasons why  you dine at Binkley’s. I can’t think of another restaurant around the metro Phoenix area where it seems truffles are always on the menu.

Waitstaff come out with a Benson Burner to present us an amuse bouche of Hibiscus Tea infused with lemon and rosemary. It was wonderfully fragrant.

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Our dessert is next. This plate involves molecular gastronomy. The dessert being served was Freezing Strawberry Soup.

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I think I was too close to the dessert because it felt like ice rubbing against my lap.

We finish with two more amuse bouche.

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A mini Chocolate Souffle and Orange Macarons.

We both enjoyed the chocolate souffle the most of the desserts.

We pay and notice the hostess desk is deserted. Usually someone thanks us for coming and hands us a bag of house made snack mix.

We help ourself to our snack mix.

Then in the parking lot someone runs after us to ask us if we got our snack mix. A couple days latter someone does call from Binkley’s and thanks us for dining with them.

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That’s the Truth. It was The Forking Truth.

That was my last Dinner from Binkley’s of Cave Creek 2016.

Binkley’s is evolving into something different and this restaurant is closing summer 2016 The “new” project is expected to open at the more casual Bink’s Midtown Location that will be remodeled for the new dining experience that is expected to be on a higher lever. The new Binkley owned restaurant is expected to open around fall 2016.

Worth a Fork..... You might Travel across Town to Dine Here because they offer something different you can't find at most places.

Worth a Fork….. You will Travel across Town to Dine Here.

For more information in Binkley owned Restaurants please visit.      www.BinkeysRestaurantGroup.com

The Forking Truth

The Forking Truth