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TIP OF THE DAY: July 4th Menu Ideas

There’s plenty of time to create a star-spangled menu for July 4th. Here are recipes for foods and drinks:

BREAKFAST

  • Yogurt Parfait: Start the day with plain or vanilla yogurt, or cottage cheese, topped with raspberries and blueberries.
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    LUNCH & DINNER

  • Patriotic Cheeseburger: Cut cheese slices into star shapes and tint the pickles blue. Recipe.
  • Potato Salad: Make red, white and blue potato salad with your favorite recipe. If you can’t find purple Perurvian potatoes (pretty close to blue!), keep the skins on red-jacket potatoes. Sprinkle top with crumbled blue cheese or goat cheese, and decorate the bowl with a perimeter of blueberries or a dice of cooked Peruvian potatoes.
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    SNACKS

  • Bean Dip: Make a white bean dip and garnish the perimeter of the bowl with chopped, seeded tomatoes. Serve with a mix of blue corn, red corn and white corn tortilla chips. Recipe.
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    Red, white and blue cookie pizza. Photo courtesy California Strawberry Commission. Get the recipe.
     

  • Fruit, Cheese & Crackers: Spread crackers with goat cheese and garnish with a strawberry slice,
    topped by a blueberry. For a sweet version, use graham crackers and cream cheese.
  • Goat Cheese Stuffed Celery: Crunchy, creamy and accented with pomegranate arils and blueberries. Recipe.
  • Tortilla Chips: Use blue and red tortilla chips with your regular nachos recipe, along with white Cheddar or other good white melting cheese. Sprinkle some blue cheese or goat cheese (it‘s very white) atop the red salsa.
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    DESSERTS

  • Angel Food Cake: White cake with red and blue berries. If you’re grilling, grill the cake first. Recipe.
  • Parfait: Layer vanilla ice cream with strawberry or raspberry purée; top with whipped cream and blueberries.
  • Patriotic Cookie Pizza: Sugar cookie dough (from the supermarket), whipped cream, vanilla yogurt, strawberries and blueberries. Recipe. Similarly, you can top a white-iced cake or vanilla pudding pie or tartlets with red and blue berries.
  • Patriotic Cupcakes: Red velvet cake, white frosting and blueberries. Recipe.
  • Patriotic Toll House Cookies: America’s favorite cookie is cut into star shapes with a red, white and blue icing and garnish. Recipe.
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    If you have a favorite July 4th recipe, please share!
      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Make A July 4th Cocktail


    A star-spangled cocktail (photo © Congress Hall).
      We serve Bloody Marys, Margaritas and Martinis year-round. But we love occasions that merit special cocktails.

    So we were more than pleased when this red, white and blue “Star Spangled Banner” cocktail recipe arrived from Congress Hall, a 200-year-old classic American resort on the ocean in Cape May, New Jersey (so charming, we wanted to make a reservation—see the photo gallery).
     
     
    RECIPE #1: STAR SPANGLED BANNER COCKTAIL RECIPE FOR JULY 4TH

    This drink delivers delightful flavor from the two orange liqueurs and fresh raspberries.

    Ingredients Per Drink

  • 3 tablespoons fresh raspberries, macerated and muddled
  • ¾ ounce orange liqueur (Cointreau, Curaçao, Grand Marnier, GranGala, triple sec)
  • ¾ ounce blue Curaçao
  • 2 ounces vodka
  • Coarse sugar or drink rimmer with red or blue flecks
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    Preparation

    1. Moisten the rim of a Martini glass and dip it a half inch deep in sugar (use a shallow bowl for the sugar).

    2. Combine the muddled raspberries with the orange liqueur. Add to the bottom of the glass.

    3. Combine the vodka and blue Curaçao. Blue Curaçaos vary in color. If you want a darker blue, add a scant drop of blue food color (Curaçao is colored with food color. Cointreau, Grand Marnier and other high-end orange spirits are based on Cognac or other aged spirit, which yields a natural rusty orange color.)

    4. Shake with ice and strain into glass. Serve.

     

    RECIPE #2: THE PATRIOT COCKTAIL
     
    For a red, white and blue effect, you can also use whipped cream and blueberries atop a red drink. You don’t have to sweeten the whipped cream; unsweetened, it provides a more sophisticated contrast atop a sweet drink.

    Adapted from a Congress Hall recipe.

    Ingredients Per Drink

  • 1 part vodka
  • 3 parts cranberry juice or pomegranate juice
  • Whipped cream (how about Bourbon whipped cream?)
  • Garnish: blueberries
  • Ice cubes
  • Straw
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    Preparation

    1. Shake vodka and juice with ice in a cocktail shaker. Pour over ice cubes in a collins glass.

     
    2. Top with a small amount of whipped cream. Garnish with blueberries and serve with a straw.
    Find more of our favorite cocktail recipes.

     
    Whipped cream and blueberries turn any sweet red cocktail into a patriotic one (photo © Congress Hall).

      

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    JULY 4th: Bipartisan Truffle Party Favors


    Party line party favors for July 4th. Photo
    courtesy Choclatique.
      If your crowd spends a preponderance of time discussing politics, serve some of these clever chocolates for July 4th.

    Made by the creative L.A. chocolatier Choclatique, white chocolate shells are filled with chocolate ganache and topped with colored white chocolate donkey and elephant medallions in party colors.

    They are sold in two-piece party favors (one elephant, one donkey per box in a 12-box package) and boxes of 8, 15 and 30 pieces, all ranging from $18.00 to $55.00.

    And of course, given party politics, each size is available in all-donkey or all-elephant.

    Head to Choclatique.com and search for “Capitol Collection.”

    Find more of our favorite chocolates.

     

      

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    TIP OF THE DAY: Compound Butter For “Instant” Sauces

    Want to become a more impressive cook instantly? Use compound butter! Also known as finishing butter, or beurre composé in French, it’s unsalted butter that has been blended with seasonings.

    There are endless variations. Escoffier published 35 combinations in 1903, and cuisine has evolved in many directions since his classic renderings of anchovy butter and beurre à la maître d’hotel (lemon parsley butter).

    In Continental cuisine, compound butter is added to the pan to finish a sauce, placed directly atop meat, fish or vegetables to create a flavorful garnish, or mixed into pasta and rice. Just a dab transforms a dish: If you think butter makes everything taste better, think of what butter infused with great seasonings will do.

    Herb butter (most often served atop steak), Roquefort butter (ditto) and anchovy butter (a classic with grilled seafood) are staples at fine steakhouses. Read a French restaurant menu and maître d’hôtel butter (lemon parsley) is certain to be garnishing some dish. And that delicious sauce of butter, lemon juice, parsley and garlic served with escargots? Compound butter.

     
    Compound butter made with crawfish and herbs. Photo courtesy Chicken Fried Gourmet.
     

    Compound butters are an easy alternative to more complex sauces. Make them ahead of time and keep them in the freezer, slicing off a pat as needed. They can be modestly to highly flavorful to enhance the main ingredient.

    Compound butters are meant to be decorative: not simply melted butter, but punctuated with seasonings and/or color. In addition to the recipe below for crawfish butter, try these compound butter recipes: citrus butters, savory butters, spiced butters and sweet butters.
     
    CRAWFISH BUTTER

    Served with anything from toasted French bread to grilled fish, oysters or shrimp, this delectable butter will spice up your meal with a Cajun zest. Thanks to chef Michael O’Boyle of Chicken Fried Gourmet in Shreveport, Louisiana, for the recipe.

    Ingredients

  • 3 sticks unsalted butter
  • 1 pound crawfish tails (if you can’t find crawfish, substitute another shellfish)
  • 5-6 cloves of whole garlic
  • 1 shallot diced
  • 3 tablespoons Cajun seasoning*
  • 1/3 cup dry white wine
  • 3 tablespoons of lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon of dried basil
  • 1/3 cup chopped fresh parsley
  • 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
  • Salt and pepper to taste
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    *You can make your own: Combine 2 tablespoons paprika, 1 tablespoon salt, 1 tablespoon black pepper, 2 teaspoons garlic powder, 2 teaspoons onion powder, 2 teaspoons cayenne pepper, 1 teaspoon dried oregano and 1 teaspoon dried thyme. Use leftover spice on popcorn.
     
    Preparation

    1. Leave butter to soften at room temperature for 1 hour before starting recipe.

    2. Sauté crawfish with 1 tablespoon of Cajun seasoning over medium heat for 3 minutes. Add wine and garlic and simmer till evaporated. Set aside to cool for 5 minutes.

    3. In a food processor combine butter, crawfish and rest of ingredients. Process until all ingredients are incorporated evenly throughout butter.

    4. Spread butter mixture out on a plastic wrap and roll into a log. Wrap with a second coating of plastic wrap and seal the ends by twisting. Place in a sealed bag and freeze till solid.

    5. Slice off as needed and think of different ways to use it in your everyday cooking: fry breakfast eggs in it, flavor mashed potatoes and cooked vegetables, use on sandwiches instead of mayonnaise.

      

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    PRODUCT: Grow Back To The Roots Mushrooms In Your Kitchen

    Here’s a fun, educational and tasty summer activity for adults and kids alike: Grow mushrooms in your kitchen.

    Back to the Roots shows the joy of home farming via a small cardboard box that produces two micro-crops of mushrooms.

    Two UC Berkeley students came across the idea during a class, which mentioned the potential to grow gourmet mushrooms entirely on recycled coffee grounds.

    Inspired by the idea of turning waste into fresh food, they succeeded in growing oyster mushrooms on recycled coffee grounds. With some initial interest from Whole Foods and Chez Panisse, and a $5,000 grant from the UC Berkeley Chancellor for social innovation, they decided to forgo their corporate job offers and become urban mushroom farmers.

    Now, everyone can enjoy freshly-harvested oyster mushrooms with a Grow-Your-Own Mushroom Garden. That which is not edible is compostible or recylcable.

     
    Our kitchen mushroom farm. Photo by Elvira Kalviste | THE NIBBLE.
     
    Last year, the kit helped families grow more than 135,000 pounds of fresh mushrooms at home, reusing one million pounds of coffee grounds from Peet’s Coffee & Tea. This year, the company expects to reuse 3.6 million pounds of coffee grounds.

    A sustainable project that yields good, healthy food: This is a feel-good purchase and gift.

    The kits are available at some Whole Foods Markets and online.
      

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