Sunday, December 15, 2024

Alabama Fire Crackers

 



Tis the season for guests. You just never know when your friends are coming by. So it's important to have some extraordinary snacks to pass around. And extraordinary works best when you create the snack.

Alabama Fire Crackers are absolutely over the top. Originally made with Saltine or Ritz crackers, the recipe is actually better when made with oyster crackers. The oyster crackers are smaller....easier to eat....and encourages your guests to grovel for them by the handful. 

INGREDIENTS
1-1/2 cups canola oil
2, 1-ounce packets dry ranch dressing
3 tablespoons crushed red pepper flakes
teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon onion powder
1/2 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper

16-ounces  oyster crackers


DIRECTIONS
  1. Combine first 6 ingredients in a zip lock bag. Close and shake until combined.
  2. Add oyster crackers to bag. Close bag and gently turn until all crackers are coated. Let bag sit at room temperature overnight.
  3. Preheat oven to 250º. Arrange crackers a single layer on a baking sheet. Bake for 15 minutes. 
  4. Enjoy with your friends. But keep them away from Santa. Residents of the North Pole are extremely sensitive to spicy food....especially Alabama Fire Crackers!








Saturday, December 14, 2024

Ann Seranne's Bone-in Prime Rib Roast

 



Ann Seranne was born in Ontario in 1913. She moved to the United States in 1936.  She became famous for two things: dogs and food. She was a very serious breeder of Yorkshire terrier show dogs. And she was a serious lover of all things having to do with food. She earned her living as a food consultant and eventually became the editor of Gourmet Magazine.

But she is little remembered these days, for she was a one-hit wonder in the vein of Billy Ray Cyrus and his song "Achy Breaky Heart". But, oh, what a hit she had. She single-handedly created the greatest recipe for medium-rare prime rib. Published in the New York Times in 1966, it was revolutionary. It was beyond simple. And absolutely foolproof.

Her recipe called for blasting the bone-in roast at 500º for a brief period and then turning off the oven...leaving the beef undisturbed for 2 hours. Unbelievably perfect medium-rare, every single time. Plus you can carve the roast the minute you take it out of the oven because it has already been resting for 2 hours.

For the recipe to work, your prime rib roast must be bone-in. You can cook it with the bones intact or do what I do... I have the butcher cut the bones and then tie them back to the roast. That way, I can just make a couple of snips of the butcher's twine and carve the roast up....reserving the ribs for a later snack that only I will get to enjoy.


Ingredients
One, 2 to 4 rib, beef prime rib roast, weighing 4 to 12 pounds
Kosher salt
Fresh Ground Pepper


Directions
  1. The day before you are going to cook the roast, unwrap it and set it on a wire rack inside a cookie sheet. Salt the entire roast generously with Kosher salt. Place roast, uncovered, back in the refrigerator and let it rest overnight.
  2. Remove the roast from the refrigerator 4 hours before cooking and let it come up to room temperature.
  3. Preheat the oven to 500 degrees.
  4. Place the roast in an open, shallow roasting pan, fat side up (bone-side down). You don't need a roasting rack as the bones will serve that purpose.  Season generously all over with salt and pepper.
  5. Put the roast in the preheated oven (on the second lowest rack) and roast according to the roasting chart below, timing the minutes exactly  When cooking time is finished, turn off the oven. Do not open the door at any time. Allow the roast to remain in the oven for two hours. The roast will have a crunchy brown outside and an internal heat suitable for serving as long as 4 hours after removing from the oven. Makes about 2 servings per rib.


A.   2 rib roast (4 to 5 pounds)...32 minutes at 500º, then rest 2 hours, door shut

B.   3 rib roast (8 to 9 pounds)...47 minutes at 500º, then rest 2 hours, door shut

C.   4 rib roast (11 to 12 pounds)...62 minutes at 500º, then rest 2 hours, door shut

{Formula = 15 minutes per rib + 2 minutes to the total} 





Wine Pairing: Barolo