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Perfect Roasted Red Pepper Hummus + Video

July 7, 2017

This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus – it’s super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make!

This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Click here to save this recipe on Pinterest!

Discovering Hummus

When Philip and I first got married I had never eaten hummus before. Remember that this was back in 2001, when Chattanooga didn’t have any natural foods stores and you couldn’t buy prepared hummus in the deli case at any old grocery store. I bought a book that had a hummus recipe (albeit pretty unorthodox, as it was made with yogurt) in it and started making hummus about once a week for a good long while.

Those early days of hummus making were daunting because my dang food processor was so flipping cheap (please promise me that when you buy small appliances for your kitchen, you will buy quality ones – even if you have to save up for them) that every time I used it some new plastic piece broke off of it. $13 for a mini-chopper was not a good decision. Luckily, we pretty quickly invested in a basic Cuisinart and it saved the day.

I kind of got sick of hummus for a while, since we ate it all the time. Not to mention that, in all honestly, my hummus kind of sucked. Earlier this year, I bought a couple of tubs of Sabra hummus on a whim because they were buy one get one free. Suddenly I was buying hummus every week. Their roasted red pepper hummus is pretty good, but I couldn’t shake the feeling that I really should be making this myself.This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Saving Money?

The thing about making your hummus yourself is that, if you just compare the cost of making it yourself to buying a tub, well, no, you aren’t saving any money. But then, if you consider how much more hummus you get when you make it yourself, then yes, yes you are saving money. I knew my hummus recipe needed revamping, and when I saw a recipe from Milk Street Kitchen I jumped at the chance to try a different way…and it was perfect.
This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.comThis hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Hummus Tips

My perfect roasted red pepper hummus is not an exact replica of the recipe from Milk Street, but I did use some of the principles to develop this recipe. Here are a few of the things that I learned:

  1. Don’t buy tahini in a can. Please don’t. I did it for years and all it was good for was to waste a whole lot of tahini. I apologize if your mom owns the tahini-in-a-can company, but it just never worked for me. I could never get the oil to stir back down into the tahini. Plus, tahini is best stored in the fridge, so I like to microwave the tahini for a minute or so to get it flowing smoothly. Just spend an extra buck or two to buy jarred tahini.
  2. Liquid is good. There’s a pretty fair amount of liquid in this recipe, including the liquid that I drained from the chickpea can. Not to mention that the hummus will firm up in the fridge, so I stir a little water into it when we’re eating the leftovers too.
  3. It’s best at room temperature. If you’ve ever eaten hummus and declared that you hated it, consider whether that hummus was cold or room temperature. Much like the tahini, I give my refrigerated hummus a quick whirl in the microwave to warm it up and loosen it up a little bit. It makes a huge difference.
  4. Garnishes are a good thing. A swirl of olive oil, a sprinkle of cumin and paprika, a handful of reserved chickpeas and chopped red peppers….they all add flavor and textural variety that will make your hummus sing.
  5. Garlic? We don’t need no stinking garlic. I mean, if you want garlic, then you can certainly add it…but after making it without I don’t know that I’ll go back. You may not be able to scare off a vampire but this hummus is delicious without the garlic and you won’t be embarrassed to go into a meeting after eating this for lunch.
  6. Blend till you think you’ve over blended it, then blend some more. Seriously. Some bloggers tout removing the skin from the chickpeas to get super smooth hummus, but I’d much rather let my food processor do the work. Trust on this.

If you think you hate hummus, give this roasted red pepper hummus a try (or leave out the roasted red peppers if you aren’t a fan). You may just change your mind!

Save the recipe to your Pinterest snack board!
This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.com


Mary

Yield: 2 cups hummus

Perfect Roasted Red Pepper Hummus

This recipe was adapted from a recipe from Milk Street Kitchen

10 minPrep Time:

10 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 1 can reduced-sodium chickpeas, drained (liquid reserved)
  • 3/4 cup tahini (warm or room temperature)
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • juice of 2 lemons
  • 1 roasted red pepper, chopped (see notes for directions on roasting a pepper, or use a jarred red pepper)
  • olive oil, for garnish
  • crudite, pita wedges, or crackers, for serving

Instructions

  1. Set aside 2 tablespoons of chickpeas. Place the remaining chickpeas in the food processor and process for 3 minutes, stopping to scrape down the sides of the bowl when needed.
  2. Add the tahini and salt and process for another minute. Scrape down the sides of the bowl.
  3. Add 3/4 cup reserved chickpea liquid (this was all of the liquid from my can of chickpeas), the lemon juice, and the red peppers (set aside a tablespoon of the chopped red peppers for garnish). Process until perfectly smooth, one to two minutes. Taste and add additional salt if needed.
  4. Pour the hummus into a large, shallow bowl. Make a swirl in the bowl and add a drizzle of olive oil. Sprinkle the reserved hummus and red peppers on top. Serve immediately.
  5. Refrigerate leftover hummus for up to a week. To serve, microwave briefly warm slightly and add a bit of warm water to loosen up the mixture.

Notes

To roast your own red peppers, place an oven rack in the highest position and preheat the broiler. Slice the sides off of a red pepper. Place on a baking sheet and place under the broiler. Broil until blackened, watching closely. Place in a bowl and cover with plastic wrap for 15 minutes. Remove and discard the blackened skin and chop the flesh.

7.8.1.2
516
https://chattavore.com/perfect-roasted-red-pepper-hummus/

This hummus fits my bill of roasted red pepper hummus - it's super smooth and creamy, so delicious, and takes less than ten minutes to make! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: Appetizers, By Course, By Main Ingredients, Easy Recipes, From Scratch, How to Cook From Scratch, How-To, Recipe Videos, Recipes, Salads and Cold Dishes, Snacks, Tools, Vegetables or Vegetarian, Videos Tagged With: appetizers, snacks, vegetarian By Mary // Chattavore 10 Comments

Pimento Cheese Stuffed Jalapeños (Grilled or Smoked) + Video

June 30, 2017

You're going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they're a perfect summer party snack! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

You’re going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they’re a perfect summer party snack!

Your going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they're a perfect summer party snack! | Recipe from Chattavore.com
I have a weird relationship with jalapeños. I know that as hot peppers go they are considered pretty pedestrian, but you guys, I am a mall-walker level pedestrian. Or perhaps I am being pushed in a stroller by a mall-walker level pedestrian. My poor tastebuds, they cannot deal. They. Just. Can’t. If you ask me to cook with a serrano or (God help me) a habanero, that’s gonna be a big fat no. Once, we ate dinner at a Mexican restaurant and I ordered a chile relleno (a stuffed poblano). Apparently this one was grown near some hot peppers or something because it was so hot I couldn’t eat it. And I was sad.

The problem is that I actually love the flavor of jalapeños, so I cook with them fairly often. Much to my husband’s chagrin, I will sometimes half the amount, and I always remove the seeds. Sometimes it’s enough, sometimes not. By the way, I love cayenne too and I use it in all the things but I am so timid with it. Same for Sriracha. And Frank’s. And whatever else. Sigh.
Your going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they're a perfect summer party snack! | Recipe from Chattavore.com
My love for stuffed jalapeños began at my first teaching job at a nonprofit called Signal Centers in Brainerd. It was near a Sonic, so just about every teacher work day a carload of us would truck it down to the Sonic for jalapeño poppers (okay, Ched’R Peppers) and cherry limeade. Sometimes my mouth could take the heat from those jalapeños stuffed with molten cheese, breaded, and fried, and sometimes…not so much. These days I usually get mozzarella sticks when I make a Sonic run, but dang, I remember all those Ched’R Pepper trips fondly (as I have completely romanticized my 8 years at that job…I loved it so much).
Your going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they're a perfect summer party snack! | Recipe from Chattavore.com
I’ve never made stuffed jalapeños at home until recently, but I have become 100% obsessed with my grill and my smoker. I haven’t turned my oven on in weeks except to bake a pan of blondies (because my brownie pan won’t fit in my oven) and most of my cooking has been done outside. I’ve smoked chicken thighs and corn, potatoes, shrimp, and hot dogs (hot dogs, y’all) and I’ve grilled just as many different things. Naturally, when I decided that my blog needed a recipe for pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños (because my fridge is never without a container of pimento cheese), I decided that those needed to be grilled or smoked…or both. These were indeed delicious, but we kept a glass of milk nearby (milk is the best antidote to tame the burn of spicy foods)!
Shared on The Weekend Potluck on The Country Cook and Meal Plan Monday on Southern Bite!
Your going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they're a perfect summer party snack! | Recipe from Chattavore.com


Mary // Chattavore

Yield: about 30 stuffed jalapeño halves

Pimento Cheese Stuffed Jalapeños (Grilled or Smoked)

30 minPrep Time:

1 hr, 30 Cook Time:

2 hrTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 1 pound jalapeños, halved and seeded
  • 3/4 cup pimento cheese (you will probably have a little bit left over)
  • uncooked bacon (1 strip for every 3 peppers halves - I used 10 strip)

Instructions

  1. Prepare grill for indirect cooking over medium-low heat (I heated the two center burners and cooked on the two outer racks) or preheat smoker to 225?, making sure you have enough chips to keep the smoke going for an hour and a half.
  2. Cut the bacon into thirds. Stuff each pepper half with about a teaspoon of pimento cheese then wrap with a piece of bacon.
  3. If using the smoker, place the peppers on a pan or wire rack (this is what I use) that will fit in your smoker. Smoke for an hour and a half, checking frequently to make sure that it is still producing smoke and adding more chips if necessary.
  4. If grilling, grill on the cool side of the grill for half an hour to 45 minutes, until bacon is done (it will not be crispy). A grill spatula is more effective than tongs for removing the peppers from the grill (ask me how I know).
  5. Serve stuffed jalapeños immediately.

Notes

The cook time is mostly inactive.

7.8.1.2
514
https://chattavore.com/pimento-cheese-stuffed-jalapenos-grilled-smoked/

Your going to want these pimento cheese stuffed jalapeños in your life. Grilled or smoked, they're a perfect summer party snack! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: Appetizers, By Course, By Main Ingredients, Easy Recipes, Grill, Recipes, Sides, Snacks, Tools, Vegetables or Vegetarian, Videos Tagged With: appetizers, snacks, special occasions By Mary // Chattavore 11 Comments

Frozen Watermelon Margarita (non-alcoholic version included) + Video

June 26, 2017

This frozen watermelon margarita is like summer in a salty sugar-rimmed glass! For the kids and teetotalers, a non-alcoholic version is included! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

This frozen watermelon margarita is like summer in a salty sugar-rimmed glass! For the kids and teetotalers, a non-alcoholic version is included! Scroll down for video!

This frozen watermelon margarita is like summer in a salty sugar-rimmed glass! For the kids and teetotalers, a non-alcoholic version is included! | Recipe from Chattavore.com
Who out there can’t get enough ?watermelon? in the summertime (??)? Interestingly, I married a man who will eat watermelon if he is forced to, but since he’s never forced to, he doesn’t eat watermelon. He’s never liked cantaloupe or honeydew, and honestly, though I like them, I get that. Watermelon though? He used to like it but now he doesn’t. What gives?

Because of this, I have been forced to buy these little mini watermelons. I have seen them called “personal” watermelons and that always makes me laugh. It’s my own personal watermelon…it really is. It’s really kind of convenient, because even if Philip were eating it too a big watermelon would be way more than we’d ever finish before it went south and I don’t think I have any storage containers that big anyway.

Funny story about the watermelons used to make this recipe…I’ll admit that while I usually try to get my produce, at least in the summer, from local stands and what not, I bought these at Costco, which had these baby watermelons in pairs in a little mesh bag. My friend was grabbing dog food over by the wall and I told her that I was going to go grab some watermelons, and went traipsing back to the cart carrying two small watermelons right. in front. of my chest. Ooooooops. Also, how many of you can’t carry a watermelon without thinking about Dirty Dancing? I know I can’t (can you believe that Philip has never seen that movie?!?!).
This frozen watermelon margarita is like summer in a salty sugar-rimmed glass! For the kids and teetotalers, a non-alcoholic version is included! | Recipe from Chattavore.com
Mostly I’m a watermelon purist. I really don’t care to eat it in a salad or anything like that, and I would never, ever put salt on my watermelon. But…there’s something about a watermelon margarita that gets my heart pumping (especially a frozen watermelon margarita!). Watermelon and lime go really well together, and frozen watermelon is basically like melon flavored ice. I literally just chunk my watermelon up and freeze it – so easy. Instead of lime juice, I use frozen limeade concentrate here. You all know I usually go for fresh but I read a lot of articles about frozen lime margaritas and they all recommended limeade concentrate because it retains its flavor better. I’m not one to argue.

This frozen watermelon margarita comes together super-quick in your blender, and a non-alcoholic version is as simple as subbing in lemon-lime soda for the tequila and triple sec. And, I’m going to commit heresy against myself here, but a rimmed glass is an absolute necessity when you are having a margarita, virgin or not (I like a mixture of sugar and salt). I rolled my eyes at myself when I realized that I had put a straw in a rimmed glass, but then I realized that this drink does well with a good stir from time to time, so I recommend you follow suit!
This frozen watermelon margarita is like summer in a salty sugar-rimmed glass! For the kids and teetotalers, a non-alcoholic version is included! | Recipe from Chattavore.com


Mary

Yield: 1 drink

Frozen Watermelon Margarita (non-alcoholic version included)

10 minPrep Time:

10 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • 1 cup frozen watermelon chunks
  • 2 tablespoons frozen limeade concentrate
  • 1 1/2 ounces (one shot) silver tequila (gold is fine too, but I always prefer silver)
  • 2 teaspoons triple sec
  • OR sub 1/4 cup lemon-lime soda (Sprite, 7Up, or Sierra Mist) for the tequila and triple sec
  • 3-4 ice cubes
  • lime wedges for garnish
  • For rimming the glass
  • lime juice or water
  • 2 tablespoons kosher or sea salt
  • 2 tablespoons granulated sugar

Instructions

  1. Pour the lime juice or water into one small plate and the sugar and salt into another plate. Mix the sugar and salt together with your fingers. Dip the rim of your glass into the water or lime juice then twist into the sugar/salt mixture. Set aside.
  2. Combine the watermelon, limeade, tequila and triple sec (or lemon-lime soda), and ice cubes in a blender. Blend until smooth. Pour into the rimmed glass and serve garnished with a wedge of lime.
7.8.1.2
513
https://chattavore.com/frozen-watermelon-margarita-non-alcoholic-version-included/

This frozen watermelon margarita is like summer in a salty sugar-rimmed glass! For the kids and teetotalers, a non-alcoholic version is included! | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: By Course, By Main Ingredients, Drink Recipes, Drinks, Easy Recipes, Fruit, How to Use Tools & Techniques, How-To, Recipe Videos, Recipes, Tools, Videos Tagged With: beverages, cocktails, drinks By Mary // Chattavore 10 Comments

Sweet Tea Sorbet

June 19, 2017

Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that’s a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink.

Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com
Sweet tea is sacred in the South. I haven’t met many people around who don’t like it, and if you don’t…well, you live in a world I don’t understand. It’s hard to find a bottled tea worth the money you pay for it (though I will admit that bottled tea technology – haha – has advanced considerably over the last 20 years). Don’t you dare buy the store brand of tea, either. I don’t care how committed you are to saving money, you wait until Lipton or Luzianne goes on sale down at the Publix or the Food City and you buy it then. And for a lot of us, it’s Lipton OR Luzianne and not both (I am not one of those people, though – I’ll drink either).
Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com
Contrary to popular belief, we don’t all like our tea to be so sweet it tastes like something you could put on pancakes. I’ve been known to dilute my sweet tea at fast food restaurants (yes, I eat at fast food restaurants) with unsweetened tea, and half-and-half tea is my mom’s standard order in a restaurant (you have to be careful, though, because to some people half-and-half means sweet tea and lemonade, otherwise known as an Arnold Palmer).

And yes, we call it SWEET TEA, not “sweetened tea”. A lot of people from the North like to say that it’s one word down here, sweettea, to which I just sort of roll my eyes. It’s sweet tea. Like hot coffee or salty chips – sweet tea. Got it? Okay, I’ll stop harping now.
Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com
The important thing – the really important thing – is that sweet tea is culturally significant. The Southeast is the only part of the United States where you can walk into pretty much any restaurant and get sweet iced tea (I have been to a few upscale restaurants that did not serve it). When I used to drink sweet tea as my standard drink (it’s water now), I took a trip out West and had never been happier than I was when we ate lunch at a Cracker Barrel in New Mexico and I got sweet tea for the first time in two and a half weeks. It’s part of the fabric of who we are down here.
Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com
Sweet tea sorbet is an idea that, honestly, I can’t believe took me so long to think of. As I was scooping out some of the no-churn red, white, and blue ice cream I made last week, I was thinking about what other types of frozen desserts I could make, and it just popped into my head: sweet tea sorbet. I’m not saying it’s a stroke of genius but I am saying I was pretty flipping excited about the prospect of turning my favorite Southern front porch sipper into a frozen dessert. With a hint of lemon (zest and juice), my sweet tea sorbet is perfect for front porch spooning (no double entendres intended).

Shared on The Weekend Potluck on Served Up With Love!
Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Mary

Yield: About 3 pints

Sweet Tea Sorbet

35 minPrep Time:

5 minCook Time:

40 minTotal Time:

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Ingredients

  • zest of 2 lemons
  • 1/2 cup lemon juice (this took me three lemons)
  • 3 1/2 cups water
  • 3 family-size black tea bags (Lipton or Luzianne - I used Luzianne)
  • 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar

Instructions

  1. In a medium saucepan, combine the lemon zest, lemon juice, and 1 1/2 cups of the water. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Once the mixture boils, remove from the heat and place the tea bags into it. Steep the tea bags for five minutes.
  2. Remove the tea bags, using a spoon to press as much liquid out of them as possible. Stir in the sugar until dissolved. Add the remaining water and pour into a jar or container with a spout. Cover and place into the refrigerator until chilled.
  3. Churn the sweet tea mixture in an ice cream maker until frozen, 20-25 minutes. Immediately transfer to a bowl or loaf pan and place into the freezer. Freeze for at least 3-4 hours before serving.

Notes

The prep/cook time does not include time to chill the tea or time to ripen the sorbet in the freezer. If you prefer to leave out the lemon, simply omit the lemon juice and zest and replace with water.

7.8.1.2
511
https://chattavore.com/sweet-tea-sorbet/

Sweet tea sorbet is a sweet, cool, and slightly tart frozen treat that's a take on a classic (the most classic!) Southern drink. | Recipe from Chattavore.com

Filed Under: By Course, Dessert, Easy Recipes, How to Use Tools & Techniques, How-To, No-Bake Desserts, Recipe Videos, Recipes, Tools, Videos Tagged With: dessert, frozen, Southern By Mary // Chattavore 12 Comments

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About Chattavore

Hi, I'm Mary! Welcome to Chattavore, a destination for people who want to feed themselves and their families well every day! Life can be crazy, which means that getting dinner on the table can be a challenge (more often than not!) and my mission is to take all your favorite recipes and figure out how to serve them on a Tuesday.

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