Pineapple with cranberries & mint |
We spent Christmas morning at Meakin’s brother’s house where we enjoyed a scrumptious brunch after opening packages. As you can see, our little nieces were thrilled with what Santa brought them.
Our niece loves The Little Mermaid |
Our niece showing Aunt Tammy her new boots
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Popovers |
Pineapple with cranberries & mint |
Adapted from Ocado
1 large fresh pineapple
About 3 tablespoons (or more if you wish) dried cranberries
1 – 2 tablespoons gold rum
1 lime, zest grated and juice reserved
About 3 tablespoons (or more) fresh mint leaves, chopped
2 tablespoons brown sugar
Using a sharp knife, cut away the skin from the pineapple and discard the skin and top. Cut the flesh into quarters, remove and discard the woody core, and slice into spears. In a small bowl, pour some gold rum over the dried cranberries and set aside to plump.
Arrange the pineapple spears on a serving platter and squeeze the lime juice over, and then scatter the cranberries over the pineapple and drizzle with the rum. In a small bowl, add the chopped mint, lime zest and brown sugar, and mix well. Drizzle the mixture evenly over the fruit, then chill the fruit in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour. Before serving, bring back to room temperature. Serves 6 to 8.
Cheddar cheese grits souffle |
Cheese Grits Soufflé
Adapted from Southern Living
4 cups milk
3 tablespoons butter
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
1 cup uncooked quick-cooking grits
1 large egg, lightly beaten
½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 cups (8 ounces) shredded sharp Cheddar cheese
½ cup finely chopped parsley or herbs of your choice
4 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
Bring milk just to a boil in a large saucepan over medium-high heat; add salt, then gradually whisk in butter and grits. Reduce heat, and simmer, whisking constantly (whisking keeps grits from spattering on you and the stove), 5 to 7 minutes or until grits are done. Remove from heat and taste for salt. (We usually add more salt.)
Into the hot grits, stir in the lightly beaten egg, freshly ground black pepper, cheese, and chopped parsley. Pour into a lightly greased soufflé dish. (You could also use a 11- x 7-inch baking dish.) Sprinkle the grits with grated Parmesan cheese. Bake, covered, at 350° for 35 to 40 minutes or until mixture is set. Serve immediately. Garnish, if desired. Yield: 6 – 8 servings.
Cheese grits souffle with red peppers |
Prepare grits as above and add the sautéed red peppers at the same time you add the cheese.
1 sweet red bell pepper, finely chopped
1 tablespoon olive oil
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
In a 10” non-stick skillet, heat the olive oil, and then add the chopped red bell pepper and sauté for about 4 to 5 minutes, until it softens. Season with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Remove from the heat and add to the hot grits when you add the cheese.
I'm glad you all had a wonderful Christmas. I made the ham with Ina Garten's glaze to bring to friends house and it was a huge hit. Thanks for posting that recipe earlier. It's not the warmest here in Florida but no snow so that's okay. Take care.
ReplyDeleteWe ate pineapple all Christmas Day but it was not as lovingly prepared as your platter. High praise for Nueske's apple-smoked bacon! And the grits warmed the cockles of my heart. Love the photo (photos sort of) of your niece. She has very good taste in mermaids!
ReplyDeleteLovely food! I am a big fan of popovers.
ReplyDeleteGood to know you had a wonderful Xmas.
Cheers,
Rosa
After all our snow (always expected), I've been checking out Florida rentals for next winter!!
ReplyDeleteYour Christmas looks like a lot of fun and delicious. Andrew made a cheese grits souffle for our Christmas brunch. Not as tasty as yours looks but very good. His recipe was from the Chicago Tribune a few years ago. I do believe Southern Living's would win hands down!!
Best,
Bonnie
Cheese grits souffle sound wonderful!!!
ReplyDeleteMmmmm....looks wonderful. What a nice brunch.
ReplyDeleteSo glad to hear you had a wonderful Christmas and welcome back to Florida! Only problem is, it's in the 30 degrees here but at least it's not snowing, right?! A fruit platter is always great to have in the fridge & yours looks delicious as do those amazing grits! Thanks for the tip about salting the water beforehand - I will be sure to keep that in mind:)Love the photo of the popovers too - I love to make (and eat) them served with strawberry butter a la Neiman Marcus. What a spread you guys had - Cheers to your fabulous and talented family!
ReplyDeleteThat cheese grit dish looks wonderful Sam! Gotta give that one a try. Let me get this straight...you didn't like the snow? I'm about to plunge into depression because we've hardly had any snow at all this Winter. I love having 4 seasons so don't think Florida would work for me. Love the niece photos.
ReplyDeleteWishing you had a merry Christmas too and the best od new years too! I would have loved coming to that brunch. Cheese grits are our favorite and we make them often...so hearty and easy! The pop-overs look wonderful. I haven't had them since I lived in Hawaii, my cousin would make them on Sundays. Mmmm...so good!
ReplyDeleteIs the boot close enough:)? I smiled:)
ReplyDeleteAll the food looks yummy..one of our local chefs..Mtl..actually uses Christmas tree sugar on his citrus platters:) Nice twist..I bet the mint was so refreshing!
Your fruit salads never cease to amaze me and I love cheese and grits in any fashion. Snowed in for Christmas in the mountains is what you're supposed to hope for. The roaring fire, a glass of good wine, sitting in the clothes optional hot tub with your man - what could be better?
ReplyDeleteThat souffle is sinful!!!
ReplyDeleteLove those popovers, wow!
Happy New Year Sam & Meakin!
I had such funny comments about the boot picture really being what the niece learned from watching the UFC MMA stuff and was going to ask about those pop over trays....
ReplyDeleteThen I saw those glorious cheese grits. I am a ***** for grits and those look **** ***** ***** good! Seriously *******ing good. Did I mention I love real grits and these look *********** perfect?
*****
What a wonderful brunch! Though we haven't done badly here in snowed-in WNC . . .
ReplyDeleteOh my, what a lovely breakfast! I would love your fruit salad, Sam, especially with the addition of the boozy cranberries. And a souffle...and popovers...heaven!
ReplyDeleteWow Mary, that grit recipe looks tempting. Happy there are no egg whites to mess with... On my list. Stay warm for the rest of us!
ReplyDeleteAh, so you avoided the snow! Good maneuver! And, it looks like your meal combined the best of Carolina and the sunny tropics. Here's to a Happy New Year, Sam!
ReplyDeleteWow, this all looks FABULOUS! Not sure what I like more ...those adorable boots or those popovers but I will take a litle of every thing please! :) Nice round up post!
ReplyDeleteSounds like you had a wonderful Christmas, Sam, snow aside. Well, Florida is not exactly warm right now either, but no snow at least. :)
ReplyDeleteI love a grits souffle. Have been making one for years! The food looks marvelous...those popovers are making my mouth water. With a little fruit butter, they are yummy!
Happy New Year, Sam!
Those grits look good!
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like a fabulous way to begin a holiday morning. Your fruit platter stole the show, but those grits were a close second. I hope you've arrived safely back in Florida and will be able to enjoy the remainder of the holiday. Blessings...Mary
ReplyDeletegreat salad and he he nice you could head back to the warmth of FL :-) hugs Rebecca
ReplyDeleteHappy to hear you made it back to sunny FL!!! Love everything you made! I'm going downstairs right now to make that pineapple platter, and souffle - I have all the ingredients! Thanks for the great recipes! Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteMary
The pineapple platter looks marvellously tasty and fresh...and that souffle!! Wow, I wish I had a big bowlful right now...having some unseasonly cold and windy weather here in Cape Town, South Africa!
ReplyDeleteWhat a refreshing salad. Love all the fruits and colorful mix of ingredients i it.
ReplyDeleteHappy 2011 to you!
What a fantastic spread! Hard to beat a SL grits recipe but I have to say that fruit salad was beautiful! What a great idea for presentation. Sorry about getting snowed in! It certainly was a White Christmas for much of the country - that's for sure;) Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteCute photos, Sam! I'm glad you had a wonderful Christmas and the brunch dishes look fantastic. Glad to see you using some, fine Wisconsin bacon ;) Nueskes my favorite too. They even sell it at a kiosk in one of our nicer malls.
ReplyDeleteThe cheese grits souffle sounds excellent, I like the addition of red bell pepper, an excellent Christmas morning brunch!
ReplyDeleteThe food looks DELICIOUS! I'm definitely going to try the Cheese Grits souffle!
ReplyDeleteNothing better than a fruit platter if you ask me. I'm planning to have much fruit in the upcoming year. That's my resolution!
ReplyDeleteNisrine
Happy New Year Sam! I just love your fruit platter, I will be borrowing that!
ReplyDeleteFunny thing, Sam . . . I decided to put together a simple fruit salad for Christmas eve for the first time to lighten up our dinner and with the pineapple, dried crans and more, it was a huge hit! It was just tossed though and not presented as nicely as yours is. Now those grits, I've just got to try soon! Roz
ReplyDeleteYou just reminded me of how I made popovers at the assisted living I worked at years ago, and I loved them so much!
ReplyDeleteI just bought some grits (the slow-cooking kind, though) to try out. I like cheesy grits, but have never made them myself--yours look wonderful!
ReplyDelete