I tried for a light and healthy dinner club this week. As an optional start, I offered elixirs of "sweet garlic juice" (garlic, mango, avocado, kale, cucumber, lemon) -- and everyone partook! For the app, I served French bread with a dual dip: grape seed oil and a mixture of ground coriander, cumin and sea salt. The entrée was fresh snapper with a balsamic reduction. On the side was wild rice and a shredded raw beet and apple salad with a chipotle dressing. Although I liked the beet salad, I was disappointed -- it wasn't fabulous and it took forever to make. For dessert, I served a trio of goodies in a bowl: date balls, chocolate ice cream and vanilla ice cream. (I always forget how good plain ol' chocolate ice cream is!). The date balls were a mixture of dates, walnuts, mesquite flour and maca powder rolled in unsweetened coconut. I topped the vanilla ice cream with a dusting of mesquite and the chocolate ice cream with some of the coconut to combine all the flavors.







For our dinner I made roasted fall vegetables, lentils and mashed sweet potatoes with a hint of banana. Dessert was eggnog pumpkin raisin bread pudding. Our beverage of the evening was hot spiced mulled wine. The vegetables were easy, very colorful and really delicious! I combined a peeled and cubed butternut squash with a peeled and cubed sweet potato and three cubed Yukon gold potatoes in a lightly oiled baking dish. I set aside two seeded and diced red bell peppers and one quartered red onion. I dressed all of the vegetables with a quarter cup of olive oil mixed with 2-3 Tbsp balsamic vinegar, 3 Tbsp chopped fresh rosemary, 1 Tbsp chopped fresh thyme and salt and pepper to taste. I placed the baking dish of root vegetables in a 450 degree oven for about 35 minutes stirring occasionally, then I added the onion and bell pepper in and baked another 10-15 minutes stirring frequently. The mashed sweet potatoes were Rachel Ray's recipe that you can find online. I modified it by substituting stock for
milk and reducing the amount of liquid. It was very good but if I make it again I will cut the amount of butter and banana in half. The mulled wine was made by adding 1 cup of sugar to 3 cups boiling water, add a sliced lemon and or a sliced orange, 6 cinnamon sticks, 6 whole cloves, half a gallon of Carlo Rossi Burgundy wine and nutmeg. Reduce to a simmer once you add the wine and let it simmer on low heat for about 30 minutes before serving. Happy Autumn!
Yes, it did start with a few Mai-Tais, and no, it was not really based on any Hawaiian recipees. We started with bacon wrapped water chestnuts in a sweet soy glaze, fresh fruit and cheese appitizers. For dinner we had a pulled pork sandwich made with a pork roast slow roasted overnight in a slow cooker then shreadded with onions and BBQ sauce.
Topped with chedar cheese and fresh coleslaw (a squeeze of tangerine juice mixed in with the cole slaw dressing made it taste, well, fruity, like I put a squeeze of tangerine juice in it). The side salad was a chopped salad with papaya & cucumber. Dessert was a pineapple upside down cake with whole macadamia nuts. I forgot the ice cream, so we each got a thimble full. "Less is more". That's what I told everyone.
For this one, I whipped up a random array of dishes I thought would be Dinner Club-worthy -- no theme, just stuff I thought folks might like. App number one was a fontina and roasted red pepper pizza on a cornbread crust. The other app was black-eyed peas croquettes with a barley malt dipping sauce.
The entree plate had a scoop of barley casserole and a slice of a sweet potato and goat cheese frittata --separated diagonally on the plate by a baby bok choy with an umeboshi and gomasio vinaigrette.For dessert I made peanut butter and chocolate cups, served in ramekins.
I was pretty happy with how everything turned out considering I didn't have any real inspiration for it.