Cooking advice

Trying Organic Food : If you are sick, you might feel sicker temporarily, as your body dumps stored toxins (heavy metals, drugs, cooked-food residues) that overwhelmed it and accumulated over a lifetime. This is called detoxification. Take it slow-eat more raw fat or cooked starch to slow down detoxification, if needed. Your body has tremendous healing power. Give it time (months or years) to fully recover from years of abuse.


Buy Local Food : The most local food of all comes from your own garden. Plant a new garden, enlarge the one you already have, or extend your growing season by using row covers and cloches.





Oyster Artichoke Bisque Recipe

Oyster Artichoke Bisque Category Soup Recipes 
Views 20 
Ratings
Ingredients And Procedures

-----WALDINE VAN GEFFEN VGHC42A----- 1/8 pound Butter -- not margarine

1 cup Onion -- chop

1/2 cup Celery -- chop

1/4 cup Bell pepper -- chop

10 slices Bacon; cook -- crumble

1/4 cup Bacon drippings

36 Fresh oysters -- chop

6 small Artichokes; cook -- scrape

chop bottoms 2 cups Oyster liquor

1 cup Artichoke stock

2 teaspoons Fresh basil

2 pints Whipping cream

Salt and black pepper Cayenne Parsley; chop -- for garnish

Melt the butter in a 5-qt Dutch oven and saute the onions, celery and bell pepper until they soften. Toss in the bacon, the drippings and the chopped oyssters and simmer gently over low heat, stirring constantly, until the oysters curl and a rich gray-colored base forms. Drop in the artichoke pulp and bottoms and blend them well into the mixture. Stir in the oyster liquor and the artichoke cooking stock. Bring it to a boil, but be sure to keep stirring or the oyster liquor will scorch and stick to the bottom of the pot. Boil for about 4 minutes. Stir in the basil, reduce the heat to simmer and let the bisque cook slowly for another 5 minutes. Stir in the cream, a half-pint at a time, and turn the fire back up to high! When the mixture comes back to a boil, reduce the heat again so that the bisque just barely "bubbles" and add the salt and pepper. Taste before adding the salt as the oysters contain a lot of salt. After 10 minutes, remove from the heat and allow it to "set up" for 15 minutes so that the flavors blend. Serve, garnished with parsley. Source: Frank Davis Cooks Naturally N'Awlins.

 
Rate this recipe!
1   2   3  4   5  
 
Post this recipe to your site




Search Recipe Database: