• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

JudicialPeach logo

  • Breakfast
  • Appetizers
  • Soup
  • Breads
  • Sides
  • Salad
  • Dinner
  • Dessert
  • About Us
  • Conversions
  • Recipe Index
  • Stuff to Try
  • Tips & Techniques

Quick and Easy

Almond Butter, Banana, and Membrillo Sandwich

May 24, 2009 by Charles 1 Comment

Membrillo

The PB&J Sandwich needs no introduction.  Its ingredients and structure are tried and true.  Add slices of banana, and the PBB&J Sandwich might merit a fleeting handshake.  But the ABB&M Sandwich is all but unknown – a foreign dignitary of sorts, whose presence deserves a formal introduction.

Membrillo is Spanish for quince, a lumpy, yellow-green fruit that resembles a cross between an apple and a pear.  The quince, born in the Caucasus, dates back to man’s earliest conquests and temptations.  The quince started the Trojan War, after Paris awarded the fruit to Aphrodite for the hand of Helen of Troy.  The quince is also said to be the apple that tempted Adam and Eve. Which may have been somewhat disappointing for Eve, since the quince is a hard and bitter fruit.  Only a few varieties can be eaten raw.

ABBM Sandwich

In its modern form, membrillo usually refers to …

Read More

Filed Under: Entrees Tagged With: Griddle, Quick and Easy, Quince, Sandwich, Spanish

Almond Butter

May 24, 2009 by Charles 7 Comments

Almond Butter

When I made my Chinese Chicken Salad, I had to find a substitute for the peanut butter – the result of a peanut allergy.  The substitution was hardly a problem; Whole Foods carried freshly ground cashew butter and almond butter in its bulk section.  After sampling each, I decided to go with the almond butter.  The rest of the recipe went according to plan.

After sampling the chicken salad, Caitlin suggested that I should make my own almond butter.  I was skeptical.  Just a few weeks earlier, I had made Almond-Stuffed Baked Apples, and after several seconds of grinding almonds, no such butter had appeared.

Almond Butter Collage

But sure enough, …

Read More

Filed Under: Miscellaneous Tagged With: Almonds, Quick and Easy, Spreads

Banana Chocolate-Chip Muffins

May 21, 2009 by Charles 9 Comments

Banana Muffins

I tend to stock-pile bananas.  Every weekend, without fail, I buy enough bananas to get me through the work-week.  Unfortunately, I tend to overindulge my banana enthusiasm.  And before I know it, I’ve tossed another two overripe bananas into the freezer – with the idea that some day soon they would find themselves in banana bread.

“Soon” soon took on new meaning.

Banana Muffins

Last week I opened my freezer to a veritable army of frozen bananas, their ranks having swelled over the …

Read More

Filed Under: Breads Tagged With: Baking, Banana, Brunch, Quick and Easy

Homemade Bread Crumbs

March 29, 2009 by Charles 1 Comment

Seasoned Bread Crumbs: Awaiting Processing

Bread crumbs are one of those indispensable ingredients.   They give gratins and casseroles their attractive topping, they give meatloaf its consistent texture, and they give fried chicken its trademark crunch.  To accommodate these various roles, bread crumbs come in two styles: fresh (soft) or dried.

As the name implies, fresh, or soft, bread crumbs are fluffier and softer than their dried counterparts.  Because of their consistency, they are frequently used as a binder in meatloaf and dumplings, or as a topping for gratins and casseroles.  Dried bread crumbs, on the other hand, are finer and crisper than the fresh variety.  Their crisp texture makes them perfect for breading meat and seafood.  With the addition of herbs and spices, each variety can be transformed into seasoned bread crumbs.

Any good bread can serve as the raw material …

Read More

Filed Under: Miscellaneous Tagged With: Bread Crumbs, Quick and Easy, Spices

Sauteed Broccolini

March 23, 2009 by Charles Leave a Comment

img_40501

Like the Camry, the Walkman, and the Wii, broccolini is one more Japanese product making its way into the American household.  And like its predecessors, the vegetable is one part engineering and one part marketing.

Broccolini was developed in 1993, when the Sakata Seed Corporation crossed broccoli with gai lan, or Chinese broccoli.  Sakata originally marketed the green as “aspiration,” perhaps a not so subtle allusion to its hopes for the product.  The name may have also been designed to suggest a connection to asparagus.  Indeed, Sakata also tried calling it asprobroc and asprospeer – never mind its misleading nature.  Crossing broccoli with asparagus, one article noted, would be like breeding a chipmunk with a tree: it can’t be done.

Ultimately, the more accurate broccolini prevailed, though brocoletti was in the running for some time.

Broccolini is basically …

Read More

Filed Under: Sides Tagged With: Ina Garten, Quick and Easy, Sauteing, Vegetables

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 5
  • Go to page 6
  • Go to page 7
  • Go to page 8
  • Go to page 9
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Connect with JudicialPeach

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest

About Us

We are two lawyers, with three young children, who are managing the daily juggle (as best we can!), and striving to put tasty and healthful meals on the table each week. We invite you to read along.

Meet the Members of JudicialPeach

Never Miss a Recipe

Copyright © 2025 JudicialPeach on the Foodie Pro Theme

 

Loading Comments...