Showing posts with label whiskey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label whiskey. Show all posts

Friday, March 22, 2019

Ham with Whiskey Sauce

My sister is visiting for a couple of weeks to help me sort out the stuff in the house. Since she arrived in time for St. Patrick’s Day, we went trolling for an appropriate recipe. I’m well equipped with Irish cookbooks, and we’d just been grocery shopping, so we had all sorts of ingredients. Here’s what we settled on.

Ham with Whiskey Sauce

As usual I tinkered with the recipe (adapted from The Country Cooking of Ireland, by Colman Andres), because there were only the two of us and the term “ham steak” can mean a lot of different things in terms of size. But this recipe worked out well. As you might guess, between the brown sugar and the Irish whiskey, the sweetness of the sauce paired well with a slice of smoked ham.

Ingredients:


2 Tblsp butter
2 pieces of ham (whatever size you like for two servings)
1 onion, thinly sliced
1 Tblsp flour
1 Tblsp dark brown sugar
1/4 cup Irish whiskey
1/2 cup beef stock
1/4 cup heavy cream
Salt and pepper to taste

Instructions:

Melt one tablespoon of the butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Brown the ham steaks on both sides. Remove the ham from the skillet, and set aside, covered with foil, and keep warm while you make the sauce.


Melt the remaining tablespoon of butter in the same pan, the add the sliced onions. Cook slowly for 10-12 minutes until golden brown.


Reduce the heat to low. Sprinkle the flour over the onions in the pan, and mix with the pan juices. Cook briefly, until the liquid has been absorbed by the flour. 

Add the brown sugar and stir, then add the whiskey and beef stock and stir until smooth (if you’re worried, the alcohol in the whiskey will cook off quickly, but the flavor will remain). Whisk in the cream and add salt and/or pepper if you think the sauces needs them.


Put a ham steak on each plate and spoon the sauce over each. Serve with rice, noodles or potatoes.



Slainte!

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Why you MUST try this WHISKEY ROOT BEER FLOAT by author Cleo Coyle


An ice cream float with whiskey? YES! The Whiskey Root Beer Float is becoming increasingly popular, and for good reason. It's astonishingly delicious, and my husband and I highly recommend it for your happy hour joy. And...

While you might not think of serving a kid's ice cream float to adults at a summer cookout, or to dinner-party guests as an "impressive" dessert, Marc and I are about to give you good reasons to consider it...



A note from Cleo...

Cleo Coyle has a partner in
crime-writing—her husband.
Learn about their books
by clicking here and here.

A restaurant in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, charges $11 for this float. With this recipe, you can make it at home for far less--and (even better) share it with friends and family. If they're skeptical (or you are), know this...

This is not your typical ice cream float that many adults would find a little too cloying. While this recipe still gives you a lovely, old-fashioned sweet dessert drink, the bubbly root beer and cold vanilla ice cream are given much more dimension by the warm, burning brightness of the whiskey. 

There are layers of beautiful flavor here, making it much more than an overly-sweet kid's treat. It's a superb culinary experience, one you shouldn't miss!

Jameson Irish Whiskey was our choice because of its sharp, almost lemony brightness, which turns a ho-hum ice cream float into a mind-blowing HOLY COW IS THIS GOOD experience. If you try it, we hope you like it as much as we did. May you drink with joy!

~ Cleo


Whiskey Root Beer Float

Serves 1

Ingredients:


Well-chilled root beer
1 shot Jameson Irish whiskey (or whiskey of your choice)
1 scoop of vanilla bean ice cream


Directions:  Pour a small amount of root beer into a pre-chilled, short tumbler. Add your shot of whiskey. Drop in one scoop of ice cream. After the foam settles, slowly fill the glass with root beer and drink with joy!









Drink with joy!

~ Cleo Coyle

New York Times bestselling author of
The Coffeehouse Mysteries

Yes, this is me, Cleo (aka Alice). 
Friend me on facebook here.
Follow me on twitter here
Visit my online coffeehouse here.




* * *



Our latest mystery is now

a bestselling hardcover!


Coffee. It can get a girl killed.

Amazon * B&N




A Mystery Guild Selection
A Baker & Taylor "Trends" Pick
Three "Best of Year" Reviewer Lists


Dead to the Last Drop 
is a culinary mystery with 
more than 25 delicious recipes!

See the free illustrated 
Recipe Guide by clicking here.



*  *  *



The Coffeehouse Mysteries are bestselling
works of amateur sleuth fiction set in a landmark
Greenwich Village coffeehouse, and each of the
15 titles includes the added bonus of recipes. 


GET A FREE TITLE CHECKLIST
OF BOOKS IN ORDER

(with mini plot summaries)


* * * 


Marc and I also write
The Haunted Bookshop Mysteries

Get a free title checklist, 
with mini plot summaries, 



Or learn more about the 
books and meet Jack Shepard, 
our PI ghost by clicking here.


* * * 


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Friday, November 13, 2015

Irish Pork Chops

by Sheila Connolly 

Now that the New England Crime Bake is over for another year (sigh), I’ve shifted to planning mode for my imminent trip to Ireland (more research, of course!). So you may be seeing a lot of Irish recipes from me (depending on Internet accessibility), or maybe wannabe Irish recipes. I cannot say often enough how much Irish food has improved since I first visited! (But I’d go over there anyway.)


Thanksgiving is looming, and somehow that holiday always demands a lot of cooking, for a lot of people (did I mention I’m leaving the country rather than face that?). So having a few quick and simple recipes on hand, for before and after, is a good idea. This is one of those.

And I get to put in a plug for my favorite Irish distillery, West Cork Distillers, in Union Hall/Skibbereen (Union Hall is what is says on the label, but I’ve visited where they make it in Skibbereen, a few miles away). It’s one of the newest in the country, with some pretty stiff competition, but they’re making really good stuff—yes, I’ve tested it—and the guys who run the place are even going to be in my next County Cork book (and not for their whiskey!).

For those of you who don’t know it well, Irish whiskey tastes a bit sweeter than Scotch (which is why I like it). But it won’t overpower a savory dish. Think of this as Irish sweet-and-sour pork.


Pork Chops with Lemon-Honey-Irish Whiskey Sauce


This recipe was originally intended to serve six, but I cut it in half. I did give the full measurements for the sauce, in case you want to spoon it over your side dishes.




3 boneless pork cutlets or bone-in pork chops (I like the bone-in ones for flavor, but the boneless ones make this dish quick and easy to prepare).

Salt and pepper
1 tsp vegetable oil
1 Tblsp butter
1 Tblsp minced shallot
1 tsp flour



Sauce:

1-1/2 tsp finely grated lemon rind
1/2 cup Irish whiskey
1 cup chicken broth
1 Tblsp honey
1 Tblsp lemon juice

1 Tblsp butter

Dry the meat with paper towels and sprinkle with salt and pepper.





In a large skillet over medium-high heat, heat the oil until it shimmers. Add the pork and cook until they are browned on the bottom (timing will depend on whether you’re using boneless chops, which cook quickly, and how thick they are—they should be slightly springy when you touch them, not stiff). Turn and brown the second side. Transfer to a plate, cover and keep warm.

Swirl the butter in the skillet. Lower the heat to medium-low. Add the shallot and a bit more salt and cook until the shallot softens (about one minute). Add the flour and cook, stirring, for another minute (to cook the flour).

Remove the pan from the heat and stir in the whiskey. Return to the heat, raise it to medium and simmer, stirring to incorporate the tasty stuff in the pan. This is where you burn off the alcohol in the whiskey, in case you’re worried. After about a minute, add the chicken broth and whisk. Simmer, stirring occasionally, until the liquid is reduced to about 1/2 cup (it should thicken slightly). 





Add the honey and lemon juice and heat through over medium-low heat. Add one more tablespoon of butter, then taste for seasoning, and add salt and pepper if you think you need it.




When you serve your dish, spoon the sauce of the meat and serve immediately. (Noodles, rice or potatoes would pair nicely.)



A Turn for the Bad, the fourth book in the County Cork Mystery series, will be released in February 2016.

And there's whiskey! I visited the distillery last year and met the owners, and since then I've watched their bottles appearing on store shelves all over my area. Of course I had to put them in this book!

You can pre-order it at Amazon or Barnes and Noble.

www.sheilaconnolly.com