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Amy’s Deviled Eggs

Amy’s Deviled Eggs

1 dozen eggs, hard boiled
½ to 1 cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons strong Dijon mustard
¼ tablespoon garlic paste, or more
½ tablespoon curry powder, or more
Salt and pepper to taste
Chives, finely chopped

Boil eggs. Peel and cut in half lengthwise. Carefully pop out yolks into a bowl. Add ½ cup mayonnaise, mustard and seasonings. Mix thoroughly until there are no lumps. You want the consistency to be thicker than pudding, but not look dry. Add more mayonnaise until you get a smooth, creamy texture. Add more spices to taste (I like mine with a strong curry flavor!).

Using a spatula, put yolk mixture in a Ziploc bag, working it toward one of the bottom corners. Cut the corner off and pipe the yolk in a circular pattern into the egg whites. Sprinkle with chives.

Originally published in “All In One Basket”

 

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Ginger Hoisin Salmon Burger

Salmon Cake 049

Ginger-Hoisin Salmon Burgers with Cilantro Mayo

Makes about four standard burger-sized patties

Note: You can make these burgers with raw or canned salmon. I once wanted nothing to do with the latter, until I tried it (thanks, Julia!) It’s delicious. You can find ocean-friendly brands at Whole Foods and similar markets.

There’s a lot of leeway with this recipe — go light or heavy on the various seasonings to suit your taste, and use as much or little ginger and garlic as you like. Those strong flavors will mellow nicely as the patties set in the fridge.

For the patties:

1/2 to 1 inch of fresh ginger (up to one heaping tablespoon, if you chop it by hand — more if you like)
1 to 2 cloves garlic
1/2 tablespoon soy sauce
1 to 1 1/2 tablespoons hoisin sauce
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
2 small carrots, cut into chunks
1 1/2 pound fresh boneless salmon, cut into chunks
or:
2 small (7.5 oz.) cans salmon, drained
1 egg, lightly beaten
Oil for frying

Throw the first six ingredients into a food processor and pulse until well-blended. If you’re using fresh salmon, add that, as well, as pulse until it’s nicely mixed, but not too fine. Scrape into a bowl.
or:
If you’re using canned salmon, scrape your processed ingredients into a bowl and stir in the salmon.

With either mixture, now stir in the egg.

Shape your patties in whatever size you like and refrigerate (removing them is even easier later if you line your plate with parchment or wax paper).

Heat your oil in a skillet, and cook the patties over medium heat for about four minutes per side. There’s egg in there, so don’t undercook them.

Pop your burger on an english muffin or bun with a dollop of cilantro mayo (or skip the bun altogether).

For the cilantro mayo:

This is pretty unscientific, folks. Chop a small handful of cilantro, by hand or in a mini food processor. Stir in a few tablespoons of mayo until it tastes good.

Serve it all alongside a sautee of snap peas and red pepper strips, sprinkled with a shake of sesame oil.

Grill-free goodness. Yum.

 

Originally published in “One Burger Please But Hold the Grill”

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Sweet Pickle Burger

 

sweet-burger-28Pickles (Adapted from Smitten Kitchen)

1 pound cucumbers, sliced 1/4-inch thick — smaller, “pickling” or kirby cucumbers work best here
1 large sweet onion, thinly sliced
1/4 cup kosher salt
1/2 to 3/4 cups sugar
1/2 cup distilled white vinegar
1/4 teaspoon ground turmeric
1 tablespoon mustard seeds
1 tablespoon coriander seeds (if ground, use 1 teaspoon)
1/4 teaspoon celery seed

Combine the cucumbers, onion and salt in a medium bowl. Mix it up well, cover it all with ice and let it stand at rsweet-burger-01oom temperature for two hours. In the meantime, boil the sugar, vinegar and spices in a pot. Drain your now-room temp veggies and add them to the pot with the vinegar mixture.  Bring it all back to a boil and then remove it from the heat to cool.

You can keep those sweet babies in an airtight container for up to three weeks in the fridge. But you don’t have to wait that long … it only takes two hours before they start tasting like pickles.

Assemble the burgers using soft challah rolls, pickles (generous portion), and a couple slices of fresh sweet tomatoes. Enjoy.

Originally published in “To Make A Burger Sweet? Pickles, Of Course!”.

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photo credit to Aaron Otis Photography 2014


July
Watermelon is the perfect summer food. It hydrates, it cools, it's sweet and juicy. We have some great ideas for your table, including a salad, ceviche cups, popsicles and cocktails. Get ready to beat the heat with us!