Weekend Brunch

Yes, two Brunch Posts in a row. But yesterday’s was about a fancy schmancy brunch at a Thai restaurant. Today’s is fancy, easy brunch right at home!
Cornmeal chive waffles with super eggs and thick bacon. Butterscotch apple breakfast cake. We’ve got salty/corny/bacony/egg and sweet/buttery/apply/cake. We’ve got yummm. I made these at the same time, and it takes an hour. Just warning you, but it’s brunch and a treat, so turn on a record or your favorite morning show, and Let’s get started. 

cornmeal chive waffles with super eggs and thick bacon
4-6 servings, but easily doubles
This dish is hearty, delicious, and beautiful brunch on a plate. Serve with orange juice or strong coffee. If you have room, add a sweet pastry on the side, or maybe just some fruit.
adapted from Joy the Baker
12 slices of bacon (2 for each person)
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup cornmeal (fine cornmeal is good, but I love a coarse grind for this recipe)
3 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon coarse ground black pepper
1/2 cup melted unsalted butter
4-6 large eggs (one for each person) + salt/pepper/dried rosemary
2 1/2 cups buttermilk
4 tablespoons chopped chives
1/4 cup chopped cilantro
1/2 cup salsa
4 additional eggs
Step one: Preheat your oven to 350. Preheat your waffle iron. Once the oven is preheated, lay bacon on a cooking rack, which is rested on a jellyroll pan. (This cooking rack–most can be put in the oven–allows the bacon grease to drip down into the walled pan, instead of just letting the bacon soak up grease while it cooks on the pan.) Set the timer for 25 minutes for the bacon.
Step two: In a large bowl, whisk together flour, cornmeal, baking powder, sugar, baking soda,  and salt.In a second bowl, whisk together 4 eggs, butter, and buttermilk.  Add the wet ingredients, all at once to the dry ingredients.  Add the chives.  Stir until just incorporated; there may be a few lumps, which is a-ok.
Step three: Cook waffles according to your waffle iron instructions. While the waffles cook, fry up some sunny side up eggs in a nonstick frying pan, one egg for each person eating. Season eggs with a bit of salt, pepper, and dried rosemary.
Serve waffles warm with hot fried eggs and then topped with fresh cilantro and salsa on top.  Top with extra chives and shredded cheese (optional).  Serve crispy bacon on the side. Waffles are best served immediately.

Now on to the sweet treat…

butterscotch apple breakfast cake
serves 6–8
This breakfast cake is a mix of scone and bread, with apple bits baked right in and creamy/crunchy butterscotch in each bite. It is buttery, hearty, and real comfort food. Not for the faint of heart.

1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
3/4 cup butterscotch chips (next to chocolate chips in the store)
3/4 cup chopped apple bits (I used pink lady)
1 stick of butter or margarine, softened
1 egg
1 cup milk
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
12 slices of apple (to garnish on top)

Step one: Preheat the oven to 350 (or add a rack on top of where you’re cooking bacon for the waffle dish).


Step two: Two bowls, one large and one medium. In the large bowl, combine the dry ingredients (flours, sugar, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg, and butterscotch chips). In the medium bowl, combine the apple bits, butter, milk, egg, milk and vanilla. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients and combine until just moistened. It will be lumpy.

Step three: Line a jellyroll pan with parchment paper (or foil, if you must). Roll the dough onto the pan and spread into a disc shape, with about 1/3 inch thickness. Bake for 30–35 minutes, adding the apple slices on top halfway through the baking. Remove after cake is firm in the middle and baked throughout. Eat warm and love it.

I do hope you like the cake. It is pretty and imperfect and sweet. Hmm, that’s actually a good describer of a person, too. Anyhow, I hope you do enjoy these two recipes. My waffle iron is at my parents’ house, so we enjoyed this brunch together at their casa. I hope your weekend (tomorrow) is full of food and happiness.

Happy eating!
Laurel

~Laurel~

Malai Thai and Easter

Happy Wednesday after Easter!

Have you been eating leftover candy for your three square meals? I imagine the antacid companies have a spike in sales this week…but I suppose it’s all worth it.

We decided to go to Malai Kitchen for Easter brunch, a Thai/Vietnamese inspired cafe. Yes, that is a non-traditional Easter, but why not? It is definitely one of my faves in Dallas, and I’ve just gone there once. However, the quality, taste and attention to detail in each of the dishes was remarkable. And the prices, well, are reasonable by my budget but I think they’re (honestly) underpricing their dishes. Just don’t tell the chef/owners that I said that. The prices are next to each dish.

My parents treated us to a beautiful brunch. Here’s what we shared and devoured:

 Some appetizers…

Green Papaya Salad  8                           Shredded with Candied Bacon, Ripe Mango, Chopped Peanuts, Chili Lime Dressing  This was one of the most non-salad salads I’ve ever had.                                                                                            The flavors of lime, peanuts, mint, basil, carrots, et cetera, exploded out of the dish. My mom and I loved this. Honestly, I’ve never had a dish with mint and basil (and was tasty!)…this was, for sure.

Malai Favorites Sampler  10                                             Grilled Beef & Chicken Satay, Imperial Rolls, Spring Rolls, & Vietnamese Meatballs

A-ma-zing variety. These little nuggets were full of flavor. I’m usually reluctant about unknown foods with”mystery meats,” but the beef and chicken satay (kabobs) were delicious, the meatballs were tasty, and the salad and rolls were incredible (and I’m not a fried “roll” person, really). The dipping sauces were incredible, too.

Chicken Vietnamese Soup (Pho Ga)  6,9
Spiced Chicken Broth, White Meat Chicken,
Thin Rice Noodles, Bean Sprouts, Fresh Herbs

My dad got this soup and loved it. It meant a lot when he said, “how do I eat this?” and the chef/owner politely gave us a lesson in seasoning pho ga–the perfect union of spicy and sweet–using the accompanying plate of sauces, limes, chilis, and basil. It was a nice lesson for all of us. This huge bowl of soup was a SMALL, a mere $6. Insanity.

Some entrees…

Vietnamese Sandwich (Banh Mi)  7
Vietnamese Baguette, Pickled Carrots, Daikon, Cucumbers, Spicy Aioli, Sriracha, and Herbs
Choice of Protien and a side of Cucumber Salad, Wok-Seared Vegetables, or Imperial Rolls

Dad ordered this for his entree, after that giant bowl of soup. It looks beautiful, doesn’t it? It reminded mom and me of this awesome little place in downtown Houston, with huge and tasty Vietnamese sandwiches and the sweetest iced coffee of your life. Mmm.


Banh Mi French Toast 8
Thick Sliced Vietnamese Baguette, topped with Flambéd Bananas, and Tamarind Maple Syrup. Served with Savory Breakfast Potatoes

This french toast was very moist, the tamarind maple syrup had a nice light flavor, and the dragonfruit garnish added color and beauty to the pile of french toast happiness. Mom and I split this.

Thai Eggs Benedict 11
 Scratch Coconut Biscuits Piled High with Spinach, Thai Basil, Shrimp, and Poached eggs with Thai Chili Hollandaise. Served with Cheesy Rice-Grits                                                                                                                                               This was, by far, the star of the show. The giant shrimp upon hearty coconut biscuits, the fluffy egg drizzled with Thai chili hollandaise, it was all incredible. The grits were a bit sweet and very creamy. I’m not a big fan of grits but I like these. 
Malai is now one of our Dallas favorites…which I suppose we must repeat in order to be a favorite. You MUST try this food if you’re in town. And brunch is served ’til 3 or 4, so thats good. I do hope you had a great weekend and are enjoying your week. Next time you eat out…be brave and try something different!!

A cross in front of our church…each person could add a flower to it. Beautimous.

Happy eating!
Laurel

~Laurel~

Spiced Apples & a Happy Egg Sammie

 Happy Saturday afternoon!

Today included sleeping in and having a little brunch. Our take on the classic diner special…the egg sandwich.

retroroadmap.com
Blue Plate Special!

 On this quick sandwich, we cooked to eggs over hard, added salt, pepper and a little dried cilantro. We had some organic farm cheese (tastes like mild cheddar) on hand and I added some spinach leaves for a little green. Quick and easy!

Happy Egg Sammie
makes 2 sammies
4 eggs (with or without yolks)
Dash of salt, pepper, and cilantro/basil/rosemary (pick one!)
4 slices of wheat (or your fave whole grain) bread
4 small slices of cheese
handful of spinach leaves

1. Toast the bread. Preheat a non-stick skillet on medium-high heat.
2. While bread is toasting, crack the eggs in the skillet (I sprayed with Pam). Let cook until the eggs are not runny and solidify. Split eggs into 2 parts, one for each sammie. Flip over and let cook on the other side for a few minutes.
3. Assemble sammie with spinach, cheese, eggs and the top piece of toast. Enjoy!

 On the side, we needed a non-boring/healthy choice. So I cut up an apple into quarters and sprinkled:

  •  cinnamon on two pieces
  • ground ginger on one piece
  • and paprika on a piece

The verdict??

  • cinnamon–always good
  • ginger–different, but a nice flavor on the tart apples
  • paprika–okay, but smoked paprika would’ve been better; it’s like smoky with sweet (a la barbecue sauce) 

Hope your Saturday is bright and sunny…send some sunlight to Dallas, please. 🙂

Happy eating!
Laurel

~Laurel~

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