Teriyaki Sauce Glaze

Don’t buy the bottled stuff – this is really good.

Ingredients:

  • 1/4 c brown sugar
  • 1/4 c soy sauce – or to taste
  • 2 tsp kiwi paste or other fruit paste
  • 1 Tab rice vinegar
  • 2 Tab sherry
  • 1 tsp ginger puree
  • 1 tsp pressed garlic

Directions:

  1. Mix in a small sauce pan.
  2. Simmer for at least 10 minutes.

Serves:  about 1/2 cup

Source:  Margie Kleerup

Dave’s Margaritas

Dave makes the BEST margaritas evah!

Ingredients:

  • 3 parts Tequila
  • 2 parts lime juice
  • 1 part Triple sec
  • 1 part simple syrup

Directions:

  1. Mix and pour over ice or
  2. Blend with ice and serve

Serves:  Really???? Who knows!

Source:  Dave Hill

Note: To make simple syrup heat 1 cup of water and 1 cup of sugar until the sugar is dissolved.  Will keep in the refrigerator for a long time.

Sidecar

Margie decided this would be her elegant bar drink when she wasn’t going for something with Scotch.  It has a very Roaring 20s feel to it.

Ingredients:

  • Juice of ¼ Lemon*
  • 1 oz. Triple Sec
  • 1 oz. Brandy

Shake with ice and strain into a cocktail glass.

*A medium lemon will produce about 3 Tbsp of juice; a large one 4 Tbsp (¼ cup).

Gimlet

This is a gin drink that tastes remarkably not-all-that-ginny. Very refreshing on a warm day.

Folks who hang out in bars insist that a Gimlet can only be made with Rose’s Lime Juice. I’ve never been thrilled with that, preferring something made with fresh lime and sugar.

Ingredients

  • 2 oz. gin
  • ¾ oz. lime juice
  • ¾ oz. simple syrup

Notes:

  • That works out to a 8:3:3 ratio.  You could also go 2-2/3 oz. gin and then 1 oz of the other two ingredients.
  • Mr. Boston calls for 1½ oz. gin, 1 oz. lime juice, 1 tsp. powdered sugar, shaken and strained.

 

Caipirtweenha

This is a “tween”/teen “virgin” version of the Caipirinha.  I invented it to serve our (at the time) 11-year-old daughter whilst Margie and I were drinking the boozy version.

Ingredients

  • 2 oz Club Soda
  • 1 Lime
  • 2 tbsp Ultrafine (Baker’s) Sugar (or Simple Syrup equivalent) (see notes)
  • Liberal Splash of Sprite (or similar lemon-lime soda).
  • Crushed ice

Instructions

  1. Take a lime, cut it in half lengthwise, remove the white pith in the center.
  2. Cut the lime half in half lengthwise, then cut laterally into four smaller wedges.
  3. Put lime wedges in a lowball (“rocks” or “old-fashioned”) glass
  4. Add sugar.
  5. Muddle the lime and sugar.  Get as much juice out of the limes as you can without squeezing the bitter oils out of the rind.
  6. Fill the glass with crushed ice.
  7. Fill the glass with club soda (should be roughly 2 oz.).
  8. Add a splash of Sprite
  9. Mix well (ideally, use a larger glass or shaker over the top and shake well).
  10. Garnish with lime slice (optional).

Notes

  • It’s pronounced “cuy-per-tween-ya.”
  • The amount of sugar is somewhat to taste.  Various recipes call for 1-3 tbsp. Simple syrup can be used, but part of the fun in a Caipirtweenha is a bit of unmuddled sugar at the bottom of the glass.
  • Some folks swear by lime slices instead of wedges.
  • For refills, I add a half-lime (since there’s usually plenty of juice left in the remainders) and another tbsp of sugar (ditto), muddle in the existing glass, then follow the rest of the recipe (club soda, liquor, Sprite).
Source
  • Dave the Hubby invented this.

Caipirinha

The “National Cocktail of Brazil,” we fell in love with the Caipirinha via the good graces of our local Fogo de Chao restaurant.  It’s a relatively easy recipe, bounded largely by the proportions you use.

Ingredients

  • 2 oz Cachaça (or, alternately, white rum — see notes)
  • 1 Lime
  • 2 tbsp Ultrafine (Baker’s) Sugar (or Simple Syrup equivalent) (see notes)
  • Splash of Sprite (or similar lemon-lime soda).
  • Crushed ice

Instructions

  1. Take a lime, cut it in half lengthwise, remove the white pith in the center.
  2. Cut the lime half in half lengthwise, then cut laterally into four smaller wedges.
  3. Put lime wedges in a lowball (“rocks” or “old-fashioned”) glass
  4. Add sugar.
  5. Muddle the lime and sugar.  Get as much juice out of the limes as you can without squeezing the bitter oils out of the rind.
  6. Fill the glass with crushed ice.
  7. Fill the glass with cachaça (should be roughly 2 oz.).
  8. Add a splash of Sprite
  9. Mix well (ideally, use a larger glass or shaker over the top and shake well).
  10. Garnish with lime slice (optional).

Notes

  • It’s pronounced “cuy-per-een-ya.”
  • Cachaça is a rum-like spirit from Brazil, also known as aguaridente. It is similar to rum (and is stocked in better liquor stores next to it), but is produced directly from cane juice rather than from molasses.  You can use white rum instead, but it’s not quite as good. (In theory you can also use vodka in this recipe, making it a “Caipiroska,” but that just sounds vile.)
  • The amount of sugar is somewhat to taste.  Various recipes call for 1-3 tbsp. Simple syrup can be used, but part of the fun in a caipirinha is a bit of unmuddled sugar at the bottom of the glass.
  • Some folks swear by lime slices instead of wedges.
  • For refills, I add a half-lime (since there’s usually plenty of juice left in the remainders) and another tbsp of sugar (ditto), muddle in the existing glass, then follow the rest of the recipe (ice, liquor, Sprite).
  • There are a lot of caipirinha recipes out there. This one is simple.


Creamy Macaroni and Cheese

Anything, anything to stay away from the Kraft Cheesy Mac!

As Adam, the source, notes, “The idea here is that rather than making a fussy white sauce, something I never seemed to get the hang of, you make a custard for the cheese.  It’s fantastic and easy — not much harder than the box, and so much better.”

Ingredients:

½ lb. Macaroni
4 tbsp Butter

2 lg Eggs
12 oz. Evaporated Milk
¼ tsp Hot Pepper Sauce
1 tsp Mustard

3 cups Grated Cheese

Pepper
Salt

Instructions:

  1. Boil up the Maraconi in salted water, definitely al dente.
  2. Drain Macaroni, transfer to a large fryer, dutch oven, or large pan (if the original isn’t large enough).  Should be something with a thick bottom such that heat is distributed evenly.
  3. Add Butter; leave it to melt in the hot macaroni.
  4. Mix Eggs, 1 cup (8 oz) Evaporated Milk, Pepper Sauce, Mustard, Salt & Pepper (to taste) in a small boul.
  5. Put Macaroni (and Butter) on medium heat.
  6. Pour the Egg mix over the Macaroni along with 2 cups of the Cheese.  Stir constantly until the cheese starts to melt.
  7. Gradually add in the rest of the Cheese and Evaporated Milk, stirring constantly, for about 5 minutes more.  The whole mix will look overly liquid to begin with, but as the cheese melts and the egg cooks, it will thicken.

Serves:  4
Prep Time: 20 minutes

Ingredient notes:

  1. The original recipe calls for half  Cheddar, half Monterey Jack.  Since we always have some Mexican Blend shredded in bags in the house, we use that.
  2. You could go for more Macaroni; as is, the recipe has a high sauce-to-mac ratio.
  3. The original recipe calls fo 2 tsp Mustard.  Consensus in our household is that’s too much.

Serving notes:

  1. If you want to be fancy, you can take the individual servings, put them in a small ceramic dish, sprinkle bread crumbs or crumpled croutons, and put them under the broiler for a short bit.
  2. The original writer suggests the recipe is not as good the second day, but it can be reheated on the range, slowly, with a little extra milk.

Source:  Adam Blust at “Words Mean Things,” who originally got it from Pam Anderson’s The Perfect Recipe.

Jamaican Breeze

This was Dave’s drink of choice at Margie Gras – Labor Day 2008. Cool and crisp, but unlike most drinks of this sort the ginger keeps it from being cloyingly sweet. 

2 oz. white rum
2 slices fresh ginger
3 oz. cranberry juice
3 oz. pineapple juice

Shaker, muddler, ice, highball glass

  1. Pound/muddle the ginger and run together in the bottom of a shaker.
  2. Add ice and the remaining ingredients.
  3. Shake and strain into a highball filled with ice.

You can, of couse, do the muddling at the bottom of the glass, add ice, and pour the rest of the juice in. You’ll end up with bits of ginger in the drink, but that’s not that bad of a thing.

Source: Ben Reed, Cool Cocktails.