Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hosted Christmas Eve, enjoying a well deserved bourbon now!
Appetizers:
Roasted oysters with tomato butter
Hot olive cheese puffs
Spiced shrimp cocktail
cheese board
Onion dip and a veggie tray for the kids
Dinner:
Stuffed shells with a fluffy lemon basil ricotta filling and homemade tomato sauce
Coquilles St. Jacques (on the shell!)
Arugula and radicchio salad
Spiedini alla Romana
Dessert:
Panettone Tiramisu
Incredible menu. Any recipes to share?
Sure!
The oysters, cheese puffs, and salad are NYT (Melissa Clark)
Ina Garten’s recipe for make ahead Coquilles St. Jacques, but put them in scallop shells instead of gratin dishes (baked for about 15 mins on 400)
The spiedini alla Romana: Sliced sourdough loaf with mozzarella in between the slices, skewer it together, brush with olive oil, toast in oven, then top it all with a caper anchovy sauce (sauce garlic, and anchovy paste, add capers, wine, lemon juice, reduce, then whisk in some butter).
The stuffed shells were my own: Basic sauce (San marzanos, onion, garlic, olive oil). The filling is ricotta, basil, lemon zest and some pecorino, whipped up in the food processor to make it fluffy. Top with torn mozzarella, a little more sauce, and some more pecorino.
The tiramisu: springform pan, layer in pannetone, drizzle with coffee , then sweetened whipped cream and mascarpone mixture (whip separately then whip together so it’s pretty stiff), some chocolate chips, repeat, and finish with a dusting of cocoa powder.
Merry Christmas! I am not cooking again until 2024 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Christmas Eve
Crab cakes
Panko shrimp
Beecher’s Mac and cheese
Green beans
Christmas cookies
-Christmas morning
Homemade cinnamon rolls
Breakfast casserole
Fresh fruit
-Christmas dinner
Smoked prime rib with horseradish cream
Potatoes au gratin
Steamed broccoli
Butternut squash with spinach, craisins, and onion
Sourdough bread and butter
Homemade pecan pie
Christmas cookies
How do some of you cook all of this stuff?
I’m that PP. It’s a combination of buying frozen or pre-made (Wegmans crab cakes, Beecher’s Mac and cheese, Costco panko shrimp, bread from local bakery), pre-cut/cleaned veggies (green beans, butternut squash), DH smoking the prime rib, and just timing out the prep and cook times appropriately. Plus I genuinely enjoy the meal planning and cooking aspect. So that helps too!
LOL. All of a sudden no longer impressive.
I’m that PP. My family was actually pretty impressed by everything, so that’s all that matters! Sorry you’re hung up on the 4 premium, prepared items I used over the course of those days. Heaven forbid I don’t bake my own bread!!![]()
Anonymous wrote:Ok now I want to do prime rib. Where to buy? How to cook? I’m from a local family in the Midwest and we did ham or turkey at the holidays but this sounds delicious. Would need to add a non red meat main for one eater. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:I don’t celebrate Christmas but have been reading these menus, drooling. All sound so good!
My question is this - based on tv, in books, songs, etc I always thought most people eat ham on Christmas, but it seems most of these menus are not ham. Is ham old-fashioned, or was my impression over-hyped, or does it depend on one’s family culture?
Happy Christmas to all who celebrate!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Christmas Eve
Crab cakes
Panko shrimp
Beecher’s Mac and cheese
Green beans
Christmas cookies
-Christmas morning
Homemade cinnamon rolls
Breakfast casserole
Fresh fruit
-Christmas dinner
Smoked prime rib with horseradish cream
Potatoes au gratin
Steamed broccoli
Butternut squash with spinach, craisins, and onion
Sourdough bread and butter
Homemade pecan pie
Christmas cookies
How do some of you cook all of this stuff?
I’m that PP. It’s a combination of buying frozen or pre-made (Wegmans crab cakes, Beecher’s Mac and cheese, Costco panko shrimp, bread from local bakery), pre-cut/cleaned veggies (green beans, butternut squash), DH smoking the prime rib, and just timing out the prep and cook times appropriately. Plus I genuinely enjoy the meal planning and cooking aspect. So that helps too!
LOL. All of a sudden no longer impressive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Christmas Eve
Crab cakes
Panko shrimp
Beecher’s Mac and cheese
Green beans
Christmas cookies
-Christmas morning
Homemade cinnamon rolls
Breakfast casserole
Fresh fruit
-Christmas dinner
Smoked prime rib with horseradish cream
Potatoes au gratin
Steamed broccoli
Butternut squash with spinach, craisins, and onion
Sourdough bread and butter
Homemade pecan pie
Christmas cookies
How do some of you cook all of this stuff?
I’m that PP. It’s a combination of buying frozen or pre-made (Wegmans crab cakes, Beecher’s Mac and cheese, Costco panko shrimp, bread from local bakery), pre-cut/cleaned veggies (green beans, butternut squash), DH smoking the prime rib, and just timing out the prep and cook times appropriately. Plus I genuinely enjoy the meal planning and cooking aspect. So that helps too!
].Anonymous wrote:I don’t celebrate Christmas but have been reading these menus, drooling. All sound so good!
My question is this - based on tv, in books, songs, etc I always thought most people eat ham on Christmas, but it seems most of these menus are not ham. Is ham old-fashioned, or was my impression over-hyped, or does it depend on one’s family culture?
Happy Christmas to all who celebrate!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hosted Christmas Eve, enjoying a well deserved bourbon now!
Appetizers:
Roasted oysters with tomato butter
Hot olive cheese puffs
Spiced shrimp cocktail
cheese board
Onion dip and a veggie tray for the kids
Dinner:
Stuffed shells with a fluffy lemon basil ricotta filling and homemade tomato sauce
Coquilles St. Jacques (on the shell!)
Arugula and radicchio salad
Spiedini alla Romana
Dessert:
Panettone Tiramisu
Incredible menu. Any recipes to share?
Sure!
The oysters, cheese puffs, and salad are NYT (Melissa Clark)
Ina Garten’s recipe for make ahead Coquilles St. Jacques, but put them in scallop shells instead of gratin dishes (baked for about 15 mins on 400)
The spiedini alla Romana: Sliced sourdough loaf with mozzarella in between the slices, skewer it together, brush with olive oil, toast in oven, then top it all with a caper anchovy sauce (sauce garlic, and anchovy paste, add capers, wine, lemon juice, reduce, then whisk in some butter).
The stuffed shells were my own: Basic sauce (San marzanos, onion, garlic, olive oil). The filling is ricotta, basil, lemon zest and some pecorino, whipped up in the food processor to make it fluffy. Top with torn mozzarella, a little more sauce, and some more pecorino.
The tiramisu: springform pan, layer in pannetone, drizzle with coffee , then sweetened whipped cream and mascarpone mixture (whip separately then whip together so it’s pretty stiff), some chocolate chips, repeat, and finish with a dusting of cocoa powder.
Merry Christmas! I am not cooking again until 2024 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:-Christmas Eve
Crab cakes
Panko shrimp
Beecher’s Mac and cheese
Green beans
Christmas cookies
-Christmas morning
Homemade cinnamon rolls
Breakfast casserole
Fresh fruit
-Christmas dinner
Smoked prime rib with horseradish cream
Potatoes au gratin
Steamed broccoli
Butternut squash with spinach, craisins, and onion
Sourdough bread and butter
Homemade pecan pie
Christmas cookies
How do some of you cook all of this stuff?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t celebrate Christmas but have been reading these menus, drooling. All sound so good!
My question is this - based on tv, in books, songs, etc I always thought most people eat ham on Christmas, but it seems most of these menus are not ham. Is ham old-fashioned, or was my impression over-hyped, or does it depend on one’s family culture?
Happy Christmas to all who celebrate!
We usually eat ham but since the in-laws are not visiting this year I’m doing something different (glazed salmon)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hosted Christmas Eve, enjoying a well deserved bourbon now!
Appetizers:
Roasted oysters with tomato butter
Hot olive cheese puffs
Spiced shrimp cocktail
cheese board
Onion dip and a veggie tray for the kids
Dinner:
Stuffed shells with a fluffy lemon basil ricotta filling and homemade tomato sauce
Coquilles St. Jacques (on the shell!)
Arugula and radicchio salad
Spiedini alla Romana
Dessert:
Panettone Tiramisu
Incredible menu. Any recipes to share?
Sure!
The oysters, cheese puffs, and salad are NYT (Melissa Clark)
Ina Garten’s recipe for make ahead Coquilles St. Jacques, but put them in scallop shells instead of gratin dishes (baked for about 15 mins on 400)
The spiedini alla Romana: Sliced sourdough loaf with mozzarella in between the slices, skewer it together, brush with olive oil, toast in oven, then top it all with a caper anchovy sauce (sauce garlic, and anchovy paste, add capers, wine, lemon juice, reduce, then whisk in some butter).
The stuffed shells were my own: Basic sauce (San marzanos, onion, garlic, olive oil). The filling is ricotta, basil, lemon zest and some pecorino, whipped up in the food processor to make it fluffy. Top with torn mozzarella, a little more sauce, and some more pecorino.
The tiramisu: springform pan, layer in pannetone, drizzle with coffee , then sweetened whipped cream and mascarpone mixture (whip separately then whip together so it’s pretty stiff), some chocolate chips, repeat, and finish with a dusting of cocoa powder.
Merry Christmas! I am not cooking again until 2024 😂