LOBSTER DIP

Alton Brown suggests that a dip is defined based on its ability to “maintain contact with its transport mechanism over three feet of white carpet”.

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Lobster Dip
Creamy with chunks of lobster and a kick of cayenne, this seafood dip is great with a variety of crackers or bread. Use crab or lobster in this dip, or use a combination.
Course Appetizers
Cuisine American
Prep Time 5 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
Course Appetizers
Cuisine American
Prep Time 5 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
Instructions
  1. Put milk, butter, cream cheese, lemon zest, lemon juice, onion, salt, paprika, and cayenne in a bowl. Blend until smooth; Use a rubber spatula to fold in the seafood. Chill until ready to use. Let sit at room temp for ½ hour before using.
Recipe Notes

Recipe Notes Crab can be substituted for the lobster or you can use a combinatioin of the two. © Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

MACARONI AND CHEESE WITH BACON


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Macaroni and Cheese with Bacon

Rich and creamy with a buttery, crunch crust. This comfort dish is irresistible!

Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes

Servings


Ingredients

Prep Time 25 minutes
Cook Time 25 minutes

Servings


Ingredients


Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Cook the pasta according to the package directions. Meanwhile, melt a stick of butter in a large sauce pan. Add the flour and cook until golden brown - a few minutes. Slowly stir in the milk and cook until thick. Add the gouda cheese, cheddar cheese, pepper, nutmeg, cayenne and bacon. Pour into small ramekins or a large baking dish that has been prepared with oil.

  2. Mix the bread crumbs with the parmigiano reggiano. Sprinkle over the top of the pasta. Melt the remaining stick of butter and drizzle over the bread crumb mixture. Bake for 25 minutes until golden brown and bubbly.


Recipe Notes

Recipe Notes According to a wide-spread misconception, macaroni was brought to Italy by Marco Polo, returning to Venice from China in 1292. This hypothesis has long been disproved, since it seems that macaroni was already used in Italy at least a century before. Moroccan geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi, who lived in Sicily, documented macaroni in Sicily and in particular in Trabia. © Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

MAHI MAHI WITH ORANGE, WINE, GARLIC AND THYME

Mahi mahi with orange, wine, garlic and thyme is a delicious and healthy meal that is as good looking as it is tasting.

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Mahi Mahi with orange, wine, garlic and thyme
Mahi mahi with orange, wine, garlic and thyme is a delicious and healthy meal that is as good looking as it is tasting.
Course Main Dish
Cuisine American
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Servings
people
Ingredients
Course Main Dish
Cuisine American
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Servings
people
Ingredients
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Season the fish on both sides with salt and pepper. Heat a non-stick skillet over medium heat. Add butter and sauté fish for 5 minutes on both sides or until golden brown. Place the fish in a single layer on a parchment paper-lined baking sheet and keep warm in oven. (The general rule of thumb for cooking fish in a 400 degree oven is 10 minutes for each inch of thickness.)
  2. Meanwhile, deglaze the bottom of the pan with wine stirring to scrape up the bits of fond on the bottom. Increase the heat to medium high and add the garlic and thyme. Cook until reduced by about half. Stir in orange juice, and zest; Add the butter and stir until melted. Remove from heat immediately. Season with salt and pepper. Drizzle the fish with the orange sauce.
Recipe Notes

This dish goes great with roasted fennel and saffron rice. You can also substitute chicken breasts for the fish. See "saffron rice" recipe on this website. © Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

MASHED POTATOES AND GRAVY


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Mashed Potatoes and Gravy

Course Side Dish
Cuisine American

Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes

Servings
people


Ingredients

Course Side Dish
Cuisine American

Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes

Servings
people


Ingredients


Instructions
  1. Fill a large bowl with cold water. Peel the potatoes and plunge them into the water as you finish peeling them. Fill a large saucepan half way with water. Cut the potatoes into ½ inch pieces. Add them to the saucepan as you cut to keep them from oxidating and turning brown. Bring the potatoes to a boil over medium heat. Lower the heat and cook for 20 minutes or until they are fork-tender. Drain the potatoes in a colander. Use a Foley Food Mill for a light and silky consistency. Add the butter, cream and salt.

For the Gravy
  1. Melt 3 tablespoons of butter in a saucepan. Add 3 tablespoons of flour to the melted butter and cook it for a couple of minutes until it’s a light golden brown. Add 2 cups of chicken or turkey stock to the pan. Continue to cook and stir until the gravy thickens. Salt and pepper to taste. (if you are cooking a turkey or chicken, use the drippings from the bottom of the pan in your gravy.


Recipe Notes

© Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

MUSTARD SAUCE FOR FISH

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Mustard sauce for fish
Instructions
  1. Combine the sour cream, heavy cream, 2 mustards, shallots, capers, 1 teaspoon salt, dill and 1/2 teaspoon pepper in a small bowl. Spoon the sauce evenly over the fish fillets, making sure the fish is completely covered. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes, depending on the thickness of the fish, until it's barely done. (The fish will flake easily at the thickest part when it's done.)
Recipe Notes

Use any type of fish including red snapper, halibut, salmon, etc. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Line a sheet pan with parchment paper. (You can also use an ovenproof baking dish.) Place the fish fillets skin side down on the sheet pan. Sprinkle generously with salt and pepper. Top with the sauce and bake until done. (about 10 minutes per inch of thickness) © Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

NEGRONI WITH BURNT ORANGE ZEST

“The bitters are excellent for your liver, the gin is bad for you. They balance each other.”

Orson Welles

No one really knows where this fabulous elixir originated, the most popularly accepted account is that it was invented in  Florence, Italy in 1919, at Caffè Casoni, now called Caffè Cavalli. Count Camillo Negroni invented it by asking the bartender, to strengthen his favorite cocktail, the Americano, by adding gin rather than the normal soda water. The bartender also added an orange garnish rather than the typical lemon garnish of the Americano to signify that it was a different drink.  One of the earliest reports of the drink came from Orson Welles while working in Rome on Cagliostro, where he described a new drink called the Negroni, “The bitters are excellent for your liver, the gin is bad for you. They balance each other.”

However, Noel Negroni, a member of the prestigious Negroni family recently researched the family archive and discovered there never was a Count Camille Negroni. According to Noel it turns out that the true inventor of the Negroni is Pascal Olivier de Negroni de Cardi , Comte de Negroni, Noel’s fourth cousin.  According to Noel Negroni, since Corsica is much closer to Italy than France it’s not a huge leap to presume that Comte Pascal would have been very familiar with Italian gastronomy.

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Negroni with burnt orange zest
An Italian cocktail made up of gin, vermouth and compari, garnished with fresh orange and flamed orange zest.
Course Cocktails
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 5 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
Course Cocktails
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 5 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
Instructions
  1. put ice in a shaker with gin, vermouth and compari and shake till cold. Pour into glass over ice. Take a slice of orange zest off an orange and light it for 5 seconds to warm up the oils. With the lighter still on the zest, squeeze it so it flames then run it around the rim of the glass. Garnish with orange segments.
Recipe Notes

© Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

PANNA COTTA WITH HONEY AND BERRIES

Panna cotta, Italian meaning cooked cream, is an Italian dessert made by simmering together cream, milk, and sugar and gelatin. It is believed to have originated in the Northern Italian region of Piedmont, although it is eaten all over Italy. It is not known exactly how or when this dessert came to be, but some theories suggest that cream, for which mountainous Northern Italy is famous, was historically eaten plain or sweetened with fruit or hazelnuts. Earlier recipes for the dish did not directly mention gelatin, but instead included a step in which fish bones were boiled; this is now known to extract collagen from the bones, which turns to gelatin.

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Panna Cotta with honey and berriesFrom: GalleyChef.org
Light as a feather, creamy and easy. This is a dessert that will satisfy that sweet tooth.
Course Dessert
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Passive Time 6 hours
Servings
people
Ingredients
Course Dessert
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 5 minutes
Passive Time 6 hours
Servings
people
Ingredients
Instructions
  1. Place the half and half in a heavy saucepan. Sprinkle the gelatin over. Let stand for 3 to 5 minutes to soften the gelatin. Stir over medium heat just until the gelatin dissolves but the milk does not boil, about 5 minutes. Add the cream, honey, vanilla, nutmeg, and salt. Stir until the sugar dissolves, 5 to 7 minutes. Remove from the heat. Pour mixture through a fine strainer to remove any lumps. Grease 4 ramekins. Pour mixture into ramekins. Cool slightly. Refrigerate until set, at least 6 hours. Remove the panna cotta from the ramekins onto a plate. Spoon berries over the top and serve. Decorate with chocolate drizzle or honey if desired.
Recipe Notes

© Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

PAPARDELLE WITH LEEKS AND BACON

Pappardella are large, very broad, flat  pasta noodles, similar to wide fettuccine. The name derives from the verb “pappare”, to gobble up.  Pappardelle is a well-loved type of pasta in Tuscany.  Tagliatelle, tagliolini, pappardelle, tortellini, and lasagne are some of the pastas made from sfoglia, the “leaves” of egg-and-flour dough. Tagliatelle which simply means cut pasta is a pasta wider than fettuccine but narrower than pappardelle. Legend has it that the tagliatelle shape–strips of pasta about a half inch wide, was invented in 1487 by Maestro Zafirano, a cook from the village of Bentivoglio, on the occasion of the marriage of Lucrezia Borgia to the Duke of Ferrara. The cook was said to be inspired by the beautiful blond hair of the bride. Despite the appeal of this romantic notion, it seems likely
that the invention of tagliatelle in Italy is earlier. Not only do we have pictorial representations of tagliatelle before this date in the Tacuinum Sanitatis, an eleventh-century Arab health manual translated into Italian that was first illustrated in the fourteenth century, but in the Compendium de naturis et proprietatibus alimentorum, a list of local Emilian nomenclature for foods compiled in 1338 by Barnaba de Ritinis da Reggio di Modena, the entry for something called fermentini indicates that it is cut into strips like tagliatelle and boiled.

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Papardelle with Leeks and Bacon From: GalleyChef.org
Creamy, pasta with smoky bacon. This is the best pasta I've ever had!
Course Main Dish
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 6 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
Course Main Dish
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 6 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
Instructions
  1. Heat oil and butter in a large heavy pot over medium heat. Add bacon and cook, stirring often, until fat is rendered and bacon is crisp, 5-8 minutes. Add leeks and season with salt. Increase heat to medium-high and cook, stirring often, until leeks begin to brown, 5-8 minutes. Add cream, tarragon, pernod and 1/2 cup water. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer, stirring occasionally, until sauce is thickened and coats the back of a spoon, 5-8 minutes.
  2. Meanwhile, cook pasta in a large pot of boiling salted water, stirring occasionally, until al dente. Drain pasta, reserving 2 cups pasta cooking liquid. Add pasta, Parmesan, and 1 cup pasta cooking liquid to sauce and stir to coat. Increase heat to medium and continue stirring,adding more cooking liquid as needed, until sauce coats pasta.
Recipe Notes

© Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

PASTA SALAD PUTENESCA

This pasta salad has all the flavors of puttanesca sauce.

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Pasta Salad Putenesca
This salad has the salty bite of feta cheese and kalamata olives with the briny flavor of capers and lemon resulting in a delicious puttanesca - ish taste.
Course Side Dish
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
For the dressing
Course Side Dish
Cuisine Italian
Prep Time 30 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Servings
Ingredients
For the dressing
Instructions
  1. Cook the pasta according to the package directions and drain. While pasta is cooking, combine all the dressing ingredients in a food processor and process until smooth. When pasta is done and drained and still warm, add dressing and tomatoes, olives, cheese and parsley. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Recipe Notes

Recipe Notes Add cooked and cooled shrimp for a more substantial salad. © Galley Chef All Rights Reserved

PIE CRUST THAT’S TENDER, FLAKY, AND LIGHT


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Pie Crust that's tender, flaky, and light

The flakiest, lightest, butteriest, most tender pie crust in the world!

Course Dessert
Cuisine American

Prep Time 20 minutes
Passive Time 1 hour

Servings
shells


Ingredients

Course Dessert
Cuisine American

Prep Time 20 minutes
Passive Time 1 hour

Servings
shells


Ingredients


Instructions
  1. Add the flour, salt, lard and butter to the bowl of a food processor. Pulse a couple of times until the butter is the size of peas. Add the ice water a tablespoon at a time until the dough comes together to form a ball.


Recipe Notes

© Galley Chef All Rights Reserved