The Lexingtonienne
  • Recipes
  • June7th

    5 Comments

    Does your family like to eat?

    Mine doesn’t. When we get together, we prefer the sustenance of fresh air and stimulating conversation.

    Occasionally, we may split an appetizer salad, but only if there are at least 8 of us to share it.

    If we’re absolutely starving, we might have a few carrot sticks and some ice water.


    It’s just that eating is such a chore for us. It’s hardly any fun at all.

    We prefer the tiniest of portions.

    Dessert is the worst. Don’t even offer it to us.

    We will flat-out refuse…

    … because we are bastions of moderation and self-control.

    We do, however, like to wear chicken outfits. Bok bok 🙂

    But — if we are in the mood for punishing ourselves with a very bad time — we might do a little Kentucky surf & turf, where Hubba Bubba makes the ribs, and Sister’s husband fries up the shrimp and hush puppies.

    It is NO FUN, I tell you.

    In case you are in the mood for a no-good time, here’s how you can fix yourself a fun-free, light-as-air meal.

    MIKE DUFFY’S BBQ BABY BACK RIBS
    1 rack baby back ribs per two people
    1/2 C homemade, no-salt dry rub (recipe below)
    2 C apple juice OR beer
    1 C of your favorite BBQ sauce
    salt & pepper to taste

    DRY RUB*
    *all ingredients must be dry or dehydrated

    1/4 C cumin
    1/4 C cinnamon
    1/4 C garlic powder
    1/4 C onion powder
    1/4 C oregano
    1/4 C thyme
    1/4 C sage
    1/4 C basil
    1/4 C red pepper flakes
    1/4 C paprika

    (Mike likes to make a big batch of this and keep it in a tupperware container. It works well for any type of meat. I say you can also buy some store-bought BBQ dry rub, if you’re into short cuts.)

    Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Wash and pat dry the ribs.  Salt and pepper to taste.  Spread liberally with dry rub. Pour beer or apple juice in deep roasting pan. Place ribs meat side up in pan.  Cover tightly with aluminum foil. Roast for 3-5 hours. Remove from oven.  Brush with BBQ sauce.  Grill ribs on both sides. Serve with additional sauce on the side.

    DAN DICKERSON’S FAMILY RECIPE HUSH PUPPIES
    2 C cornmeal
    1 T flour
    1/2 t baking soda
    1 t salt
    1 C buttermilk
    1 egg
    1/2 onion, finely chopped
    chopped jalapeno to taste

    Mix dry ingredients together, then stir in buttermilk, egg, onion, and jalapeno. Prepare deep fat fryer with peanut oil. Drop dough by spoonfuls into hot oil. Deep fry until golden brown. (These are really good with honey!)

    Here’s to your health,
    Hannah

  • June2nd

    17 Comments

    People are often surprised to learn that my husband, Mr. Duffy, is just as Italian as he is Irish. His grandmother was Eleanora Onorato Duffy, and her parents were fresh off the boat Italians. I always wanted to be Italian, and finally, I’m Italian-in-law!

    Every time I visit Philadelphia with Mike, we go to the Italian market on 9th Street, where they have shops full of freshly made pasta, gorgeous mozzarella (“mootzarell” is how they pronounce it), rabbits and lambs hanging in windows sans skin (sick, but it sure feels Italian-y), more varieties of olives than I knew existed, and delightfully stinky cheeses hanging from ceilings. Eleanora’s grandchildren are at home at the Italian market.

    And as you may know from watching The Sopranos, Americans of Italian descent have a vocabulary all their own. The Duffys speak it fluently.

    They say something that sounds like “gadamahd” for calamari (????), they call pasta sauce “gravy” (which, for a Southerner, is downright confusing), and they refer to plain old Americans like me as “Medigans” (say it aloud and think of the word Americans). Whatever. This Medigan doesn’t care what you call her, as long as you pass-a the ravioli.

    While I have sampled many an Italian delight at the Duffy dinner table — brigole, vongole, Italian wedding soup — it is my mother-in-law, Maggie Baxter Duffy, whose family tree grows roots in Ireland and Germany and who hails from Ohio, whose bolognese recipe really takes the torta della nonna.

    When Mike and I were engaged, Maggie hosted a shower for us in Philadelphia. For dinner one night that weekend, she served her spaghetti alla bolognese. It was, in short, exactly the spaghetti with meat sauce I had been hoping for my entire life. Look, my Kentucky mama made some darn good spaghetti when I was a kid, and it was she who made the oatmeal chocolate chip cookie recipe a classic. Mama can cook. But when it comes to bolognese, my mother-in-law’s sauce is, no joke, the Holy Grail.

    For years I had assumed that meat sauce, as we Medigans call it, was marinara sauce with some hamburger dumped in. Past-Self, you’re such an amateur.

    Bolognese is about the meat, and there happens to be some tomato thrown in. If you’re being authentic, your bolognese will often consist of beef, pork, and veal. Not being quite so authentic (What did you expect from a Medigan?) I generally just do very lean beef or turkey.

    Mike, I sure hope nothing ever happens to you… but if it does, I’m going to marry this sauce. I mean this “gravy.”

    Below is Maggie Duffy’s wonderful, amazing, unbelievably delicious bolognese recipe, with a few tiny modifications. The Fotokissen bedrucken is my gift to you. While measurements are listed, I recommend eyeballing it. It’s fine. Also, remember to season with salt & pepper throughout.

    BOLOGNESE ALLA MAGGIE

    1 medium red onion
    2 medium-sized carrots
    1 stalk of celery
    3-4 strips of bacon (Italians use pancetta. Italians-in-law can substitute bacon, which actually lends a very nice smokiness. If your meat counter sells the thick cut applewood smoked kind, use that.)
    1 1/3 pound of lean ground turkey or beef (Maggie’s original recipe calls for just 3/4 pound. I use more because my grocery sells it in that amount. Use anything in that range and everything will be gravy. Get it?)
    2 T tomato paste
    1 large can peeled and diced tomatoes
    1/2 C dry white wine
    a few pinches of ground nutmeg
    3/4 C beef broth
    3/4 C heavy cream (You can use half-&-half or milk, but it’s not my first choice and I don’t recommend it when you’re having company over. Just don’t tell them about the cream; they’ll never know.)

    Cut bacon into small pieces, saute and discard excess fat. Chop half the onion. Saute in butter & olive oil. Chop carrots, celery, and remaining onion in food processor. Add to sauteed onion in the pot and cook for a few more minutes. Add ground meat and a pinch of nutmeg and saute til browned. Stir in tomato paste. Add wine, cook for 5 minutes. Add tomatoes, cook for about 20 minutes. Add another pinch of nutmeg and beef stock, cook about 45 minutes. Add heavy cream, lower heat, and simmer for about 20 minutes.

    The beauty of this sauce is that when your husband, who gets tired of you making this all the time, goes out of town, you can make yourself a big batch of it and devour it every single night while he is gone! It reheats beautifully. It’s also a wonderful main course to serve when you have company. You can make the sauce earlier in the day and then it will patiently hang out on the stove while you clean up the kitchen, drink wine with your guests all no-big-deal style, and act like your life is soooo easy and fun. Which it is.

    Buon appetito,

    Hannah

  • May28th

    11 Comments

    That’s good enough for me. And yesterday I decided some homemade oatmeal toffee chocolate chunk cookies would be good enough for the Homeowners Association meeting Mike and I were hosting.

    But first, it was a rainy day, so you know what that means:

    And now it’s cookie time!

    That’s a butter-flavored Crisco stick I’m using instead of butter. I just don’t think butter does quite as good a job of clogging one’s arteries as shortening does.

    Of course you remember the scene from the movie “Troop Beverly Hills” when Troop Beverly Hills needs to sell a billion Wilderness Girls cookies in order to beat the Culver City Red Feathers?

    So Troop Beverly Hills puts on a concert to promote their cookies and they sing this really awesome song? “Come on down! Come on down! It’s cookie tiiiime!”

    Of course you remember that! Just like I have remembered this cookie recipe in my head for about 15 years.

    Seriously, I don’t have this recipe written down. But I will write it down here, just for you.

    These cookies are very nutritious because they contain oats, which the commercial says will lower your cholesterol. Hooray!

    After you add the oats, get yourself a spoonful for sampling, just to make 100% sure that you have not accidentally made poisonous cookies. You can do this before or after you add the chocolate chunks and toffee bits, but DO NOT SKIP THIS VITAL STEP.

    Bake.

    Meanwhile, cut up some cantaloupe to snack on so you can *try* not to eat all the cookies before the Homeowners Association members arrive for the big meeting.

    When the cookies come out of the oven, as a safety precaution, you’ll need to have another taste, just to make sure the cookies did not become lethal during the baking process. One never knows.

    You’ll need some of this too. It helps those yucky cookies go down easier. They’re like medicine. Blech.

    Aaaaand… Come on down! Come on down! It’s cookie tiiiiiime!

    OATMEAL TOFFEE CHOCOLATE CHUNK COOKIES

    2 sticks of butter or 1 butter-flavored Crisco stick
    1 1/4 C light brown sugar
    1/2 C sugar
    2 eggs
    2 T milk
    2 t vanilla
    1 3/4 C flour
    1 t baking soda
    1/8 t salt
    2 1/2 C oats
    1 11-oz bag chocolate chunks
    1 C (or a little less) toffee brickle

    Preheat oven to 350. In a large bowl, cream butter and sugars. Add eggs, milk, and vanilla and mix on low speed. Combine dry ingredients in a separate bowl, then mix into cookie mixture in two batches. Mix in oats. Then mix in chocolate chunks and toffee. Drop by spoonfuls onto foil-lined cookie sheets (for easier clean up). Bake about 5 minutes, turn your cookie sheet, and bake about another 5 minutes or until desired doneness. Inhale.

    You can add a cup of dried cherries if you like, for a little punch of sour. Or you can leave out the toffee and just go with basic oatmeal chocolate chips. You can also use butterscotch chips instead of chocolate. Basically this is a very flexible recipe that will allow you to do just about anything you want.

    Love,

    Hannah