All Posts Tagged With: "avocado"

Recipe: Creamy Broccoli-Avocado Soup

Linda’s comment:  This is AWESOME SOUP….I of course use everything organic that I can find. I love Broccoli and Avocado….this is also a healthy soup….

Full Recipe: The Garden of Eating: A Produce-Dominated Diet & Cookbook

Excerpt:

Prep: 30 minutes/ Cooking: 30 minutes/ Yield: 6 servings

Avocado adds a rich taste and creamy texture to green vegetable soups without milk or cream. I got the idea for this from the California Avocado Commission. I replaced zucchini in their recipe with broccoli, increased the volume of vegetables, and changed the seasonings. This soup goes well with fish, poultry, or meat with a bright orange, yellow, or red vegetable or fruit. Baked corn tortilla chips would make a great accompaniment.

Recipe: Chipotle Chicken Quesadilla with Avocado

Linda’s comment:  I made this recipe and yummmmyyyy……enjoy

Ingredients

FOR THE CHIPOTLE CHICKEN FILLING

  •  
    • 3 tablespoons organic olive oil
    • 1 organic red onion, finely chopped (about 1 1/2 cups)
    • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • 3 organic garlic cloves, finely chopped
    • 5 chipotle chiles in adobo sauce, finely chopped
    • 3 organic vine-ripened tomatoes (about 1 1/4 pounds total), diced
    •     OR one can organic diced tomatoes (drained)
    • 3 organic green onions, thinly sliced
    • 1 tablespoon organic honey
    • 3 cups coarsely shredded roasted organic chicken breast 
 FOR THE QUESADILLAS 
  •  
    • 4 10-inch-diameter flour tortillas
    • 3 cups shredded white cheddar cheese (about 12 ounces)
    • 2 avocados, peeled, pitted, sliced
    • 1/2 cup fresh cilantro leaves
    • 1/3 cup Mexican crema or sour cream
    • 4 lime wedges

Directions

Heat the oil in a large sauté pan over medium heat. Add the onion, sprinkle with salt, and sauté until tender, about 3 minutes. Add the garlic and sauté until the onions are translucent, about 2 minutes.

Stir in the chipotle chiles then the tomatoes. Cook until most of the liquid from the tomatoes has evaporated and the mixture begins to thicken, stirring often, about 20 minutes.

Stir in the green onions and honey. Stir in the chicken. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Keep warm.

Heat a large flat griddle pan over medium-low heat. Lay 2 tortillas on the griddle and cook until hot but not crisp, about 2 minutes. Turn the tortillas over. Sprinkle 1/2 cup of the cheese over the bottom halves of the tortillas. Spoon about 3/4 cup of the chicken mixture in an even layer atop the cheese over each tortilla. Top each with 1/4 cup of cheese then with half of the avocado slices. Fold the tortillas over to cover the fillings and form a half-moon shape. Cook until the tortillas are crisp and golden and the cheese has melted, about 3 minutes on each side. Repeat to make 2 more quesadillas.

Open the quesadillas and scatter the cilantro over the filling. Drizzle the crema over the filling then close the quesadillas.

Cut the quesadillas into wedges. Serve with lime wedges and enjoy immediately.

Triple-Decker Tomato and Avocado Panini with Mozzarella and Pesto

Linda’s comment:  I made this and it is a great summer recipe.  enjoy….

Ingredients

For the Pesto:
  •  
    • 2 organic garlic cloves, peeled 
    • 1 1/2 bunches fresh organic basil leaves (about 1 1/2 cups lightly packed) 
    • 1/3 cup pine nuts, toasted
    • 1/3 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
    • 1/3 cup organic extra-virgin olive oil
    • 1/2 organic lemon
    •  Sea Salt and freshly ground black pepper
 
For the Panini:
  •  
    • 1 ciabatta loaf
    • 2 organic avocados, peeled, pitted, quartered, and cut into thin strips
    • 2 organic vine-ripened tomatoes, cut into 1/4-inch-thick slices
    • 8 ounces fresh buffalo mozzarella cheese
    • 2 tablespoons (about) organic extra-virgin olive oil 

Directions

Using a mortar and pestle or a food processor, puree the garlic into a coarse puree. Add the basil and pound until it is coarsely chopped. Add the pine nuts and smash to break them up.

Mix in the Parmesan cheese.

Slowly mix the olive oil into the pesto and grind until well blended. Squeeze the lemon juice into the pesto and stir to blend. Season the pesto to taste with salt and pepper and set aside.

Preheat the barbecue or a grill pan over medium heat. Using a serrated knife, cut the ciabatta loaf horizontally into 3 slices.

Lay the bottom and middle bread slices on the work surface. Arrange the avocado slices over the bottom and middle bread slices. Arrange the tomato slices over the avocado. Season with salt and pepper.

Tear the mozzarella cheese and scatter it over the tomato slices.

Spoon the pesto over the cheese.

Assemble the sandwich layers, positioning the middle layer atop the bottom layer. Cover with the top bread slice and press the sandwich firmly to compress. Brush the oil over the sandwich.

Wrap 2 bricks with aluminum foil.

Place the sandwich on the grill. Set a baking sheet atop the sandwich then weigh it down with the bricks. Grill the panini until the bread is toasted and the cheese has melted, about 5 minutes on each side.

Cut the panini into 4 pieces. Arrange the sandwiches on a platter and serve immediately.

NOTES: Panini (singular); Panino (plural): Italian for “small bread,” referring to a sandwich or roll.

ABOUT MOZZARELLA: Mozzarella is a generic term for several kinds of originally Italian cheeses that are made using spinning and then cutting (hence the name; the Italian verb mozzare means “to cut”): Mozzarella di Bufala (buffalo mozzarella), made from domesticated water buffalo milk. Mozzarella di bufala campana (PDO 1996) is a particular type of mozzarella, made from the milk of water buffaloes raised in designated areas of Lazio and Campania; some consider it the best for flavour or quality. Unlike other mozzarellas, 50% of whose production derives from imported, and often semi-coagulated milk,[7] it is protected by European PDO. It is a raw material in Italian style Neapolitan pizza – rather than mozzarella made with pasteurized cow’s milk. Mozzarella is available fresh; it is usually rolled in the shape of a ball of 80 to 100 grams (6 cm diameter), sometimes up to 1 kilogram (about 12 cm diameter), and soaked in salt water or whey, sometimes with added citric acid, until sold. It is a semi-soft cheese. Due to its high moisture content, it is traditionally served the day it is made[3], but can be kept in brine for up to a week[4], or longer when sold in vacuum-sealed packages. Mozzarella fior di latte, made from fresh pasteurized or unpasteurized cow’s milk Fior di latte (written also as fiordilatte) is used to distinguish the mozzarella made from cow’s milk from that made from buffalo’s milk. Low-moisture mozzarella, which is made from whole or part skim milk, and widely used in the foodservice industry. When slightly desiccated (partially dried), the structure becomes more compact; then it is better used to prepare dishes cooked in the oven, for example lasagne. Low-moisture mozzarella can keep refrigerated for up to a month[5], though some pre-shredded low-moisture mozzarella is sold with a shelf life of up to 6 months.

PRODUCTION: Mozzarella is traditionally produced solely from the milk of the domestic water buffalo. After curdling the product is drained and the whey discarded. The cheese is then stretched and kneaded to produce a delicate consistency — this process is generally known as pasta filata. According to the Mozzarella di Bufala trade association, “The cheese-maker kneads it with his hands, like a baker making bread, until he obtains a smooth, shiny paste, a strand of which he pulls out and lops off, forming the individual mozzarella.” [8] It is then typically formed into ball shapes or in plait. In Italy, a “rubbery” consistency is generally considered not satisfactory; the cheese is expected to be softer.

Read more: http://www.kitchendaily.com/recipe/triple-decker-tomato-and-avocado-panini-with-mozzarella-and-pesto-143389#ixzz0uAFXvsrA