The Meow Cafe

Cooking and cats

Turkey Meatloaf with Cranberries, Roasted Garlic and Herbs November 11, 2008

Filed under: dinner,fancy,meat — kathleen @ 8:45 pm
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I love meatloaf. It’s easy to put together, you throw it into the oven and forget about it, and you can make it as fancy (as in this version) or as simple as you want. 

I am also convinced I’ve found the perfect meat for meatloaf – extra lean ground turkey. I picked up a package on a whim at Safeway, since it’s hard enough to find ground turkey or chicken, and to see extra lean ground turkey is even more rare. 

What makes extra lean ground turkey so amazingly perfect for meatloaf is threefold:

  1. Much better for you than ground beef
  2. Sticks together so well you can dispense with breadcrumbs and egg
  3. Doesn’t overwhelm more subtle flavours, like ground beef would

I came up with the basic idea for the loaf while at the gym, and then did my usual highly experimental cooking when I got home to throw it together. I realize most people balk at the idea of serving meatloaf when entertaining, but this came together so well, I would serve this at a dinner party.

Ingredients:

  • 3 cloves of garlic, roasted (instructions to follow)
  • 2 sprigs fresh rosemary (or 1/2 tsp dried rosemary)
  • 1/2 tsp sage
  • 1/3 packet onion soup mix 
  • approx 1 lb extra lean ground turkey
  • 1/3 cup dried cranberries (or fresh, if you have them)
  • ground pepper to taste

Method:

1. Pre-heat oven to 350

2. Roast garlic! Take three cloves of garlic and peel them, then put them in a pan and put the pan into your hot oven until the garlic is golden brown – about 10-15 minutes should do it. Check on your garlic a couple of times. Once golden, remove garlic from oven, let cool a bit, then chop/smash into small chunks.

3. In a bowl, combine ground turkey, rosemary, sage, pepper, onion soup mix, cranberries and roasted garlic. Note – if you use fresh cranberries, they will be quite tart. Depends if you like that sort of thing. I do. Mix together until ingredients are well mixed and you can form a loaf that stays together easily. 

4. Put the loaf in the pan you roasted the garlic in, then put that in your 350 degree oven, and bake for about 35-40 minutes until cooked all the way through.

5. Slice and enjoy! Smells divine, tastes like Christmas, and is low in fat and calories for a comfort food like meatloaf – served two ravenous roommates.

Funtime Bonus – to serve this at a dinner party:

  • Double the recipe
  • Instead of making one loaf, make four mini loaves
  • Put a tsp of cranberry sauce into the centre of each loaf before baking
  • Garnish with crispy fried sage and prosciutto ham, or wrap each loaf in prosciutto before baking!
 

Roast Lamb September 7, 2008

Filed under: dinner,fancy,meat — kathleen @ 10:23 pm
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I was born in New Zealand, and I love Lamb, mainly because I was raised on the stuff. It makes a great Sunday dinner because it’s quick and easy to roast, and doesn’t require you to make a gravy for it. This recipe was adapted from one by Jamie Oliver.

Ingredients:
1 leg of New Zealand lamb, thawed
50 grams proschutto ham
Fresh rosemary
Salt
Pepper

1. Take your lamb, and make 10 to 12 thumb sized slits in the leg.
2. Take short pieces of rosemary about 1 to 2 cm long, and wrap them in chunks of ham, making little plugs of pure goodness.
3. Plug those holes! Gross!!
4. Sprinkle the lamb with salt and pepper.
5. Seat the lamb at 400 degrees for 15 minutes, then drop the temperature to 350 and roast for 20 minutes a pound. Your meat thermometer should read 150 in the thickest part of the leg to get a leg that has a nice mix of well done to medium rare meat.
6. Devour!! Graham and Adam got roast lamb with Boursin mashed potatoes, and I slivered up some lamb onto a raw spinach and cabbage salad. It was really, really good!!