Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers

I think these appetizers of Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers are adorable because of the way you can get multiple colors with the orange, yellow and red which are so cheerful, and then presentation wise the way they stand up in little rows or formations so bravely. These are vegetarian but can be made vegan if instead of feta and cream cheese you use Tofutti or some other vegan cream cheese.
Recipe for Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers, easy peasy and are adorable because of the way you can get multiple colors with the orange, yellow and red which are so cheerful, and then presentation wise the way they stand up in little rows or formations so bravely

It does take a little time to stuff these, but I just did it sitting on the couch while watching Gilmore Girls. You can go faster if you pipe these into the peppers, but pushing them in with a little butter knife like I did will also do the trick.

These are perfect for a holiday gathering or potluck as you can just get a 1-2 pound bag of these and with approximately a pepper person get your lil cheese stuffed mini peppers soldiers in line or in wreath or tree formation or whatever you’d like! A 1 pound bag yields about 15 or so mini peppers, at least it did for me.
Recipe for Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers, easy peasy and are adorable because of the way you can get multiple colors with the orange, yellow and red which are so cheerful, and then presentation wise the way they stand up in little rows or formations so bravely

Ingredients:

  • 1 16 ounce bag of mini sweet peppers
  • 5 ounces of fresh, soft feta cheese or alternatively goat cheese
  • 8 ounces of cream cheese, softened to room temperature
  • 4 tablespoon chives, finely chopped
  • 3 cloves worth of minced garlic
  • 1 teaspoon red pepper flakes
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon fresh squeezed lemon juice
  • salt, to taste
  • ground pepper, to taste

Directions:

  1. Cut off top about 1/2 inch from the stem to make the hat, and also cut at the bottom about about 1/2 an inch so the pepper can stand upright. Remove the seeds from the top and inside the pepper if any (most of the seeds will be at the stem), and rinse and dry the peppers.
  2. As the peppers are finishing drying, in a mixing bowl combine the 5 ounces of fresh soft feta cheese, the 8 ounces of softened room temperature cream cheese, the finely chopped 4 tablespoons of chives, the 3 cloves worth of minced garlic, teaspoon of red pepper flakes, tablespoon of olive oil, teaspoon of lemon juice. Mix well until everything is a smooth creamy texture

    Recipe for Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers, easy peasy as you combine the feta, cream cheese, chives, garlic, olive oil, red pepper and bit of lemon juice and mix until smooth

  3. Now, it’s just a matter of filling the peppers and topping them with its matching hat! After you are done, you can serve now or refrigerate until ready to serve (say the next day!)

Recipe for Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers, easy peasy and are adorable because of the way you can get multiple colors with the orange, yellow and red which are so cheerful, and then presentation wise the way they stand up in little rows or formations so bravely Recipe for Cheese Stuffed Mini Peppers, easy peasy and are adorable because of the way you can get multiple colors with the orange, yellow and red which are so cheerful, and then presentation wise the way they stand up in little rows or formations so bravely

An alternative way to serve these cheese stuffed mini peppers is that instead of whole like you see above, to cut the peppers in half length-wise instead. Then you don’t need to deal with the stuffing… but I couldn’t resist this because I just found it so stinkin’ cute!

What’s your favorite holiday appetizer to bring to a party?

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Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips

For a get together with a neighbor to discuss some shared property plans, they provided the wine and fruit plate along with cheddar, and I pondered what to bring with my wine. I wanted something that was a snack, but was above and beyond just regular chips and dip, or throwing more sliced cheese on a platter.

A recipe that I recall several of the reps from a Food Should Taste Good event mentioned came to mind. They had raved about one of the recipes on the website, a Caramelized Shallot Jam with Goat Cheese for being super easy and tasty. I had onions instead of shallots in my pantry, but otherwise I had the ingredients on hand and decided to give a try.
Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips and Willamete Valley Farmstead Brindisi

I paired this with sweet potato tortilla chips. Food Should Taste Good chips are gluten free, vegan, non GMO, low sodium and ingredients that when I read the list, I understand and recognize: Stone Ground Corn, High Oleic Sunflower Oil and/or Safflower Oil and/or Canola Oil, Dried Sweet Potatoes, Cane Sugar, Sweet Potatoes, Sea Salt. No weird science names.
Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Food Should Taste Good gluten free GMO free Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Food Should Taste Good gluten free GMO free Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips

The sweet potato chips were one of the discoveries I made when I attended a Food Should Taste Good promotional event a couple months back – I have always stood by the multigrain chips. That event, plus the fact that while I was in Denver, they had these sweet potato chips at Denver Airport’s beer flight event, put them onto my radar for a great chip that embodies fall without having to go to pumpkin spices and apple cinnamon donuts and ciders.

This Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips is great for a small get together for 6-10. You will want to start making the jam at least an hour ahead of time so it has time to cool off from hot to warm before you serve it. At the same time, make sure you have your goat cheese out from the fridge so it can soften and warm to room temperature to be spreadable.
Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Food Should Taste Good gluten free GMO free Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips

Ingredients:

  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • 1 cup of diced onions (or 4 large shallots, thinly sliced to equal about 1 cup)
  • 1/2 cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup red wine vinegar
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 6 oz plain goat cheese
  • 1 bag of Food Should Taste Good Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips (or other chips or bread or vehicle of your choosing for the onion jam and goat cheese)

Directions:

  1. In medium saucepan over medium-high heat, heat the oil for a few minutes. Now add the 1 cup of diced onions and saute for a minute or until the onions start turning translucent.
  2. Add the 1/2 cup of brown sugar. Stir constantly to combine the two for the next 5 minutes or so. Turn down the heat to medium and let cook, stirring once in while, so that it all reduces into a consistency like jam.
  3. Then carefully pour in the 1/4 cup red wine vinegar (it may steam up) and generous pinch of salt to your caramelized onion and brown sugar jam. Stir well, let reduce for another couple minutes, and then remove from heat.
    Caramelized Onion Jam uses onions, brown sugar, some red wine vinegar and heat and just a lil patience for it to reduce! Caramelized Onion Jam uses onions, brown sugar, some red wine vinegar and heat and just a lil patience for it to reduce!
  4. Place the Caramelized Onion Jam in a small serving dish and let it cool from hot to warm. Now place it on a serving platter or alongside a small serving dish of your softened goat cheese (mash it down if it comes in a tube or other odd shape to encourage spooning and spreading it).
  5. Serve with the Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips and it’s all fancy when you know this was all silly easy.

Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Food Should Taste Good gluten free GMO free Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese and Food Should Taste Good gluten free GMO free Sweet Potato Tortilla Chips

Even if you don’t make this recipe for Caramelized Onion Jam with Goat Cheese (I could also see the combo working in a sandwich), you should definitely check out these delicious Sweet Potato Chips!

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Recipe: Cashew Cheese on Cucumbers

With the heat wave in the past couple weeks,  I wouldn’t be surprised to hear that you might want to keep things simple when making food. I have been mostly doing quick sautés or dishes that require no cooking at all.

This recipe for Cashew Cheese on Cucumber does require a little forethought to soak the cashews in water for a few hours. Otherwise you only need a processor and a knife plus the ingredients to put together appetizers for a potluck or picnic, or just a healthy snack at home.
Cucumber with cashew ricotta and pesto

I like this combination for the refreshing cool crunch of the cucumber,  creamy but cheesy flavors with hint of garlic of the cashew cheese, and touch of salty herb from the pesto. I eyeballed a lot of these so make sure you taste to see what amounts fit your taste levels. The more nutritional yeast you use, the cheesier the flavor while being dairy free. Nutritional yeast is also a great topper to sprinkle on popcorn to have cheese popcorn with your movie!

Ingredients:

For the Cashew Cheese

  • 1 1/2 cups raw cashews soaked in water for 2 hours
  • 1/4 cup – 1/2 cup water; the more water used, the thinner and creamier the cashew cheese will be, so you want to add to your liking for consistentcy a bit at a time
  • 3 or so tablespoons of freshly squeezed lemon juice, more to taste if you’d like
  • 1-2 tablespoons of nutritional yeast, or more to taste if you’d like
  • 1 clove of minced garlic, or more to taste if you’d like
  • Dash of onion powder
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt or more to taste
  • 1 teaspoon of freshly ground pepper or more to taste

For the Pesto – this is more of a rough guideline as I often just eye it after grabbing handfuls from my plant

  • 2 cups fresh basil
  • 1/4 cup or so of olive oil
  • 1/8 cup or so of pine nuts (for more flavor, toast the pine nuts in a dry skillet for a few moments until aromatic, but be careful it doesn’t burn)
  • 1/2 tablespoon of minced fresh garlic
  • pinch or so of salt
  • a few grounds of freshly ground pepper

Directions:

For the Cashew Cheese

  1. First, you will need to soak the raw, unsalted cashews in water for about 2 hours. The water level should cover the tops of your cashews.
    1 1/2 cups of unsalted cashews Soak 1 1/2 cups of unsalted cashews in water for 2 hours
  2. Then, drain the water. Place the cashews, nutritional yeast, 1/4 cup water, lemon juice, the minced garlic and onion powder and salt in the food processor and pulse until roughly blended.
    After 2 hours of soaking, drain the water from the cashews To make the cashew cheese, place the drained pre-soaked cashews, nutritional yeast, 1/4 cup water, lemon juice, the minced garlic and salt in the food processor and pulse until roughly blended
  3. Now as you continue to taste, add in the remainder of the water to get the consistency you would like. If you’d like, you can choose to add more lemon juice, or more nutritional yeast, or more minced garlic or salt to your preference depending on how garlicky, cheesy (from the nutritional yeast), lemony, etc you enjoy.
    To make the cashew cheese, place the drained pre-soaked cashews, nutritional yeast, 1/4 cup water, lemon juice, the minced garlic and salt in the food processor and pulse until roughly blended. Add more water if you want it to be creamier, or leave it rustic and more dense To make the cashew cheese, place the drained pre-soaked cashews, nutritional yeast, 1/4 cup water, lemon juice, the minced garlic and salt in the food processor and pulse until roughly blended. Add more water if you want it to be creamier, or leave it rustic and more dense
  4. Add a few grounds of freshly ground pepper. You can serve as is immediately, but if you refrigerate it for a couple hours the flavors will develop more and texture get a bit thicker so  it will be even more tasty the next day – put it in a container to be used as a dip for a picnic with veggies, or spread on a sandwich, so many possibilities!

For the Pesto

Blend all the ingredients for pesto together – you may want to add a little bit more olive oil, salt, or pepper to taste. Puree until the mixture is smooth. Make sure you pause once in a while to scrape the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula as needed to make sure it all gets mixed well, as well as to taste and adjust to your liking.

For the final Cucumber Cashew Cheese appetizers

Slice the cucumbers and slather on a bit of the cashew cheese. With a spoon, add on a bit of the pesto. Serve!

Cucumber with cashew ricotta and pesto Cucumber with cashew ricotta and pesto

I put this combo on cucumbers buy it’s also great in sandwiches and the cashew cheese can be substituted in pasta like Ricotta in pasta shells or lasagna too.

What have you been making in the kitchen during this extended heat wave in Portland (or wherever you may be when it’s hot in the summer!)?

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Sides for your Fourth of July Weekend

I thought I would pick out some of my recommendations for Sides for your Fourth of July Weekend from my recipe archives.

Well, not all of them are from the archive. This initial one is merely a suggestion and guideline. First, you could start off with a patriotic Red, white, and blue potatoes dish (ok, purple potatoes but close enough) for breakfast. You can do these in a skillet like here, or you can roast them in the oven or even put them on the grill and make it a bbq side if you’d prefer.
Recipe idea for your Fourth of July, red and white blue (purple but close enough) potatoes that you can make on the skillet or oven or grill. Start your day with a patriotic breakfast or make these as a side dish! Vegetarian and very versatile, season to your liking

Season how you’d like- I don’t know if I ever make them the same way twice as I quite liberally open up my spices and seasonings to pull things out and keep tasting until I like it. You’ll definitely want salt and pepper of course, but sometimes I use cumin, or rosemary, or dill, or chili powder, or onion or garlic powder (or I’ll throw actual diced onion or minced garlic in), the possibilities are endless based on what you have and like.

It’s still strawberry season, and these Strawberry and Cheese Bruschettas – either with mozzarella or with goat cheese – just look so elegant and classy.
Strawberry Bruschetta, vegetarian and easy to put together with fresh strawberries, basil, olive oil and balsalmic vinegar, and fresh mozzarella cheese on good bread Strawberry Bruschetta, vegetarian and easy to put together with fresh strawberries, basil, olive oil and balsalmic vinegar, and fresh goat cheese on good bread

More fruit won’t hurt on the table, such as these Prosciutto wrapped Cantaloupe with Red Pepper Lime Oil and Manchego
Prosciutto wrapped cantaloupe with red pepper lime oil and manchego recipe

Besides your fruit, add more vegetables to your Fourth of July weekend with via this recipe for Chilled Vegetable Pizza that can be a rainbow of various colors depending on what veggies you choose and can easily serve a crowd. You can also adapt this version to have fruit instead for a chilled dessert fruit pizza!
Summer Appetizer Recipe: Chilled Vegetable Pizza with dill/chive cream cheese mixture and broccoli, asparagus, baby carrots, red and orange bell peppers, corn kernels!

Upgrade your pasta salad side dish with a little heat as well as with avocados, corn, and Cotija cheese with this Elote Pasta Salad
Elote Pasta Salad - mixing pasta, pan roasted corn, cotija cheese and avocado

This dessert only has strawberry, but no reason you can’t add blueberries or blackberries to complete the red white and blue, and you will be no fool with this Strawberry Fool Recipe  of blended strawberries with cut strawberries and the fresh whipped vanilla cream.
April Fool's Recipe with no Trick: Strawberry Fool Recipe is blended strawberries with the cut strawberries and the fresh whipped vanilla cream (Grand Marnier optional)

If you are making burgers or hot dogs for a group, consider having a variety of cheeses besides Cheddar such as Swiss or Pepperjack (even if you are doing hot dogs!) and also bacon. Not only can you top your burger with bacon, but believe me, I am happy to add it to my hot dog as well.

Besides ketchup and mustard and relish and pickles, for you might consider having little dish where guests can add toppings of sauteed mushrooms, sauteed onions, guacamole, salsa (and your guac and salsa can double to go with chips),  bbq sauce and/or blue cheese (MMMM bbq sauce and blue cheese!).

Also, if you haven’t tried this before, if there are potato chips at the party you are having/attending, try taking a handful and adding them on to your burger or hot dog!

For the fourth of July itself, which falls on a Friday this year so I think everyone is enjoying at least a 3 day weekend, I will not be doing any cooking. In fact, instead I’ll be judging cooking- I will be seated as one of the PNWBA judges at the Dallas Oregon Freedomfest BBQ competition. If you are in the area, they will be holding it in Dallas City Park and you will have an opportunity to sample some of the best BBQ in the Northwest ($1 for 2 oz sample) and a fireworks show that evening too! There should be some great teams because at 18 teams, the competition counts as a qualifier for the national competition.

This means that probably during the weekend, there will probably be at least one dish of bbq mac and cheese with some leftovers from the BBQ competition that I take home!

What are you doing for the Fourth of July? Is there a special dish you are making or looking forward to? Are you going to watch the fireworks live or on TV (I personally like the DC ones!)?

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Hipcooks Cocktail Party Review

Last week I returned to Hipcooks Portland on NE Failing and Williams for a class called “A Cocktail Party”. This is my second class with Hipcooks (after my cheese class with Cheyenne) but I had such a good time I wanted to try another one. The purpose of the cocktail party class is to learn how to make lots of things for a cocktail party. This turned out to be nine hors’dourves taught by a chef, and six drinks taught by a bartender. This class fills up pretty quickly and I kept forgetting to sign up online as soon as the new classes are posted (one month or so in advance). But recently I finally got into one. It was on Friday evenings starting at 6:30 (it looks like the next classes starting in April start at 7), which means you just have time after work to grab a quick happy hour bite to eat at Tasty N Sons before coming to class.

The hors’ dourves and drinks were divided basically into 3 parts. First we started a few appetizers, then we learned about a couple cocktails at the big communal table where 4 bar stations were laid out and we would nibble on some of the appetizers we just finished prepping while learning drinks. Then, back to the kitchen part for making a few more appetizers, back to the bar station for two more cocktails and eating the fruits of our appetizer labor…  and then the final few canapes and we sat down to learn our last couple of drinks and finish with a sweet bite.

Each time, as we were working on the drinks, some of the appetizers would come out of the oven or be finished in prep by the chef and assistant so we could snack while tasting the beverages so we only had to worry about the creation and not watching any ovens or finishing enough for the group. We were able to get the hands on instruction and then just move on. This was a great way to break up the class so you didn’t get overwhelmed by the number of things the class offered to teach you or bogged down making enough for a dozen people of every single recipe so efficient in using the learning time as well.

Here’s the list of what was on the class menu, including when we broke out for mixology:

  1. Spicy candied nuts
  2. Warm crab dip
  3. Crisp potato cakes with goat cheese and thyme
  4. Cups with caviar, crème fraîche and chive
  5. The Perfect Martini
  6. Vanilla Martini
  7. Endives stuffed with gorgonzola and roast pear
  8. Warm goat cheese prosciutto-wrapped dates
  9. Mojitos
  10. Caiprinhas
  11. Leek and goat cheese tartlettes
  12. Tuna tartar on cucumber strips with wasabi roe
  13. Dark chocolate hearts with raspberry cream
  14. Ginger Lemon Drops
  15. Amaretto sour with cracked pepper

We started the class with items that we would not enjoy until a later appetizer, but needed time in the oven. So, we rolled out the dough, cut with  glass,  and put in the muffin tins so they could be returned to the fridge/freezer to form into tartlettes  before filling. And, we started the pears so they could caramelized in the oven. Then we went right into the four appetizers that we would be having with our first pair of drinks we would learn.

First step of making Candied Almonds, Cashews and Pecans: nuts and butter with heat to melt the butter… The spicy candied nuts was a simple recipe, but the highlight is that we all were being taught and practiced how to flip food in the pan. Since these were nuts and not an omelet or something more invested before the flip, it was something pretty safe and any nuts that got lost onto the counter, since we had just wiped down the counter, could return back to the nut family in the pan. The finished product, after adding rosemary and brown sugar and Tabasco, were returned to the fridge briefly to harden but could still be eaten while a bit warm and were finger licking salty spicy sweet. Perfect for when you are making a perfect martini with just vodka/gin and dry vermouth.

 

Next up was Warm Crab Dip served with my favorite kind of crackers, Triscuits. This was super easy to make, and you can prep this earlier, keep it in the fridge, and just put it in the oven so it will be hot when guests need to snack. The second photo shows a closer look at the top which has paprika and parsley sprinkled for color, and the creamy crab underneath which is almost equal parts crab and cream cheese and bit of mayo.

The third was the Crisp Potato Cakes with Goat Cheese and Thyme. This one was a bit more of a cheater, since the potatoes that we were layering with the cheese and thyme were already prepped for us with a mandolin.

The fourth canape we made was Caviar Cups with Crème Fraiche and Chive. The key here was learning where to get very affordable caviar… would you believe Ikea? And we talked about how buying premade pastry shells is so worth it in saving the mess and time to make them from scratch, and having at least one squeeze bottle (which we would see used a few different ways in the recipes that night) can also make your life so much easier. Sorry for the blurriness of these caviar cups with creme fraiche and chive. I took all the pics during class with my camera phone instead of my camera since we were standing at the counter in a hands on class, and it had to fit in my pocket. I particularly like how the caviar cup looks so expensive and fancy, but takes minutes to make and only 4 ingredients.

A better perspective on the size of the Caviar Cups with Crème Fraiche and Chive: just a bite

In our first round of bartending, we learned about how to properly shake cocktails, how to twirl lemon peel after we have wiped the rim of the glass with the lemon oils from the peel, and practiced with and without a pourer how to to count out a 2 oz pour instead of measuring with a shot glass.

Learning about how to properly shake cocktailsLearning about how to properly shake cocktailsLearning how to twirl lemon peel after we have wiped the rim of the glass with the lemon oils from the peelLearning to count out a 2 oz pourShaka shaka... these two to my left were a mother and daughter taking the clasdTasting our perfect martini. In the background, the Crisp Potato Cakes with Goat Cheese and Thyme

Next round of appetizers. The pears came out of the oven smelling wonderful and all caramelized, so we each got to stuff one endive with the gorgonzola and roast pear and gush about what a wonderful finger food vehicle endives are and color they bring to the table (red and green leaves). In disappointing news, we were supposed to make Warm Goat Cheese & Nut-Stuffed, Prosciutto-Wrapped Dates, but when they opened the prosciutto package that they had just bought the day before, there was a little mold on it so they didn’t want to serve it to us, understandably. We each still got to stuff a date, but no meat wrapping. Then we were sent back to the bartending area to learn to make Mojitos and Caipirinhas, which are more time consuming since now we had to start dealing with squeezing juices (no mixes here!) and muddling.

In the back, prepping the Warm Goat Cheese & Nut-Stuffed, Prosciutto-Wrapped Dates (but without the prosciutto wrapping), and in the pan caramelizing the pears for the Endive, Gorgonzola and Roast Pear canape To the left the Warm Goat Cheese & Nut-Stuffed, Prosciutto-Wrapped Dates minus the prosciutto because the package when opened turned out moldy, and the Endive, Gorgonzola and Roast Pear to the right

Third round of appetizer making. In preparing Tuna Tartar on Cucumber Strips with Wasabi Roe, we were impressed with how easy something that looks so fancy can be.

This last hors’dourves was the favorite of almost everyone. This was one we had done a little bit of prep in round 1, but I put all the photos together here. In the first round, we had prepared the little tartlettes. Now we sauteed leeks in butter and white wine to the tartlets. The cooking leeks make the room smell incredible… better than any air freshener in welcoming guests to a home. Only fill the tartlets halfway because when spooning the leek mixture in because next… we added eggs and cream into a squeeze bottle and shook vigourously, and then squeezed the mixture (minimizing things to clean up!) into the tarts. And then… top with got cheese. Delicious.

After this step, put it back in the fridge or freezer briefly to let the shapes harden

We finished off with Dark Chocolate Hearts with Raspberry cream, again making use of having a squeeze bottle in the kitchen. At this point, everyone was getting more tired, and we were content with the chef instructor showing us by doing it himself, and then returning to focus on drinks.

 

This last lesson from the bartender was for the Lemon Drop, including the sugar rim. My favorite was the last drink though, Amaretto Sour, using all fresh squeezed juices from the fruit, and then talking about the use of egg whites. I’ve had egg whites before in libations in Chicago and in Portland from Clyde Common and The Secret Society, so I already love the frothy light foam touch it adds- more than any sugared rim could do. However, I also learned that I really like Disaronno- and don’t think I would have a Amaretto Sour that uses this with a mix because I don’t want the sourness to ruin it, making it to just balance the sweet is what I’m looking for.

Just like the cheese class, we didn’t need to worry about writing anything down- everything was emailed the next morning. A lot of it was just by watching and listening and putting in a little practice, just like if you were learning a well loved recipe from a family member. I thought the email I got from the cheese class, which has more details about where to buy ingredients and Plan B when things might not quite turn out perfectly, was more thorough and thoughtful then the one for this cocktail class. Although it wasn’t in the email, he did verbally cover tips on ways to flavor to your taste and balance as you taste, where to get some of the ingredients, things to look for when examining the ingredients to purchase, and what could be done and in the fridge the day before and what ones are sorta fun to do as guests are arriving and they can give you a hand! Just like in the cheese class, we all got a chance to have hands on experience, taste stuff in progress and eye what it looks like until its ready

Because of the breaks between the prep food/prep drink stations, we also got to do a bit more informal socializing and get tastes of everything more often throughout the class time. Bouncing between two people also gives the other a break to “recharge” during the 3-3 1/2 hour class so they was a lot of positive energy and keeping us pumped as the night continued (after all, I did work all day on Friday too!). This class turned out to be all ladies although the instructors were male, and the assistant female, so guys certainly are not unwelcome- and could have had some flirting time with the single ladies. Still, I suppose that’s pretty apropros based on who usually preps hors’dourves for a party- most men would lay out nuts and chips and salsa and some beer and call it a day without too much worry for the mixed drinks, even though it would impress any female guest. I would definitely recommend taking this class with girlfriends, or as two ladies did in my class, with their mom! This would also make a fun gift to a foodie.

I’m keeping my eye out for the dim sum class and cajun classes that matches up to my schedule, so don’t be surprised if you see another Hipcooks class blog entry later this year. I also keep looking at Caprial and John’s (I’ve only attended a supper club so far) but menus and dates haven’t matched up yet, but it has been highly recommended by friends if you are looking for another alternative in the same price range. Caprial and John’s are only in the evenings, but allow you to bring your own beverages (such as wine and beer). I like HipCooks slant in pairing and incorporating learning about beverages in the class but they don’t allow you to BYOB. The fact that they have classes on Sat and Sun during the day just fits better schedule-wise than mostly T-Th evenings at least for me, and they have a large number of classes to choose from. Did you also notice how many things they cover in the class? I also know about In Good Taste but they are almost twice the cost per class.

Wherever you may look and/or decide, cooking classes is a fun way to go out and enjoy food which doesn’t involve just eating and blowing your calories per day, or cooking so much that you are then stuck eating the 6 portions for the next few days, or having to wait for guests coming over to learn and try a recipe while panicking that it might not turn out and then what… From my experience with Hipcooks Portland, everyone has been engaging and laid back like a friend you know, but also an expert at their recipes like they make it home off the cuff all the time and know lil tips and tricks and variations from all that experience. You are both learning and relaxed and having fun all at the same time in a no pressure environment. Having hands-on step by step experience is particularly important to me as the visual is more important than the recipe’s measurements (I dislike cookbooks that don’t have lots of pictures), and Hipcooks definitely gives you that.

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