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In GloBelle Kitchen, Kentucky on
March 15, 2019

CLASSIC KENTUCKY HOT BROWN

Close up of cheesy goodness, open face turkey, cheese, tomato, and bacon sandwich

During winters in New England when the cabin fever sets in, it’s easy to fall into a state of nostalgia for my far away former Kentucky home. Some guides encourage reaching for a host of remedies to cure the homesickness disease. Photo albums, making phone calls, or working out are just a few suggestions. I find, when I’m missing Kentucky, nothing fights homesickness better than good ol’ comfort food seasoned with warm memories.
That said, here’s a recipe that is sure to word off any homesickness Kentuckians living away from home may be feeling this winter, the classic Kentucky Hot Brown.

During winters in New England when the cabin fever sets in, it’s easy to fall into a state of nostalgia. Some guides encourage reaching for host of remedies to cure the homesickness affliction. I find, when I’m missing Kentucky, nothing fights homesickness better than good ol’ comfort food seasoned with warm memories.  Here in Boston, southerners have to make their own comfort foods because stores around here do not sell southern staples like sweet tea and sweet potato pie pre-made.

CLASSIC HOT BROWN INGREDIENTS
Makes Two Hot Browns

• 2 sticks (one cup) Butter
• ¼ cup (2 oz.) All-Purpose Flour
• 1 cup (8 oz.) Heavy Cream
• ½ Cup of Pecorino Romano Cheese
• Bourbon (enough or none at all) *
• ¼ pound thick sliced roasted turkey breast
• French bread/baguette
• 4 Slices of crispy smoked pepper bacon
• 2 Roma tomatoes
• Paprika
• Parsley
• Salt and Pepper

PREP

Select a thick, flavorful cut of turkey from your butcher or local deli. I chose pepper-maple turkey. And since it’s just me, a ¼ pound slice was perfect. Soak the turkey in enough* bourbon to cover overnight (or three hours or more). 

Select a quality, think chunk of turkey from your local deli.

For the Sauce

While making the sauce, bake the turkey in the bourbon at 300 degrees.

In a saucepan, melt butter over medium heat and slowly whisk in flour until combined and forms a thick paste (roux). Continue to cook the roux, stirring frequently. Then add heavy cream into the roux and whisk until the cream begins to simmer (about 2‑3 minutes). Slowly whisk in Pecorino Romano Cheese until the sauce is smooth. Keep warm and add salt and pepper to taste.

Assembling the Sandwich

Slice the French bread in half and into sandwich sized slices. These will make two open-faced sandwiches.

Next, lightly toast the top of the French bread. I broiled it in a cast iron dish for this. You can also use Pyrex or a backing dish in a toaster oven.

After that, layer the toast with your warm bourbon baked turkey.

Then, pour the cheese sauce completely over the sandwich.

Next, top with tomatoes (where the tomatoes go in the equation is debatable. Some like it under the cheese, I like it on top so it boils).

Almost finished. Just broil this before adding the toppers.

Sprinkle with additional Pecorino Romano cheese.

Place the entire dish under a broiler until cheese begins to brown and bubble.

While it broils, fry your bacon.

Remove the dish from broiler, cross two pieces of crispy bacon on top.

Garnish with paprika, parsley, or cheese and serve immediately while hot.

Now, sit back in your reading chair with your bubbling Kentucky sandwich, a copper cup of bourbon apple cider, recall the history of the Hot Brown and dial (855) 883-8663 to hear our state song sang by the former governor, Happy Chandler.

Tale in all of this cheesy, turkey, bacon, and tomato goodness while you remember home.

Disclaimers:

Yes, I also recognize dang near all of my recipes call for bourbon which can be habit-forming for some. It’s a non-essential ingredient in most recipes. Just take it out if you need to. 

*Take a peep here to understand my views on being precise with measurements in recipes and why I intentionally don’t do it.

I’m also aware of Happy Chandler’s problematic statements and views. Someone with a beautiful singing voice should record the song to give us more listening options.

In GloBelle Kitchen, Uncategorized on
February 14, 2024

Après Ski Fondue: The Perfect Treat

“Après Ski, French for “after ski” describes the nightlife, culture, and festivities after the slopes. Skiing is a social winter activity in itself. However, the socializing that goes on after the slopes is just as important as your downhill adventures. Après Ski includes the drinks, the hot tubs, the fashion, the partying, the music, and, of course, the food. Fondue is the perfect après ski treat!

A post-ski fondue party continues the social atmosphere because the cheese and fixings are communal, not individual. A few years ago, while stationed in Germany, I went on a ski trip to Chamonix, France. It’s a great ski town, where you can take a lift up and then decide if you want to ski down the mountain into France, Germany or Switzerland. After skiing, our group gathered together in the chalet’s common area for an interactive dinner featuring fondue. The staff served us trays and trays of food (and bottles and bottles of wine) as we gathered around communal, heated cheese pots.

Here are some après ski fondue ideas to set up your own fondue party and have you feeling like you’re sharing a chalet in Chamonix or Zermatt even if you’re miles from the slopes.

The Cheese

First, there’s no such thing as Swiss Cheese in Switzerland. If you ask for it anywhere in Europe, no one will know what you’re talking about. Switzerland is home to many kinds of cheese (Fuurtfel, Alter Schweizer, and Appenzeller, to name a few). In America, Swiss cheese is a generic term for an American imitation of Emmentaler cheese.

Remember, there’s no right way to make fondue.  Since it’s a recipe derived from the Alps, Swiss Cheese/Emmentaler cheese is the traditional main ingredient.  But you can do whatever you want to do. I encourage getting creative with your cheese blends — the Bougier the cheese, the better. Consider Jarlsberg,  Havarti, Comte, Raclette, Brie, Parmesan, and Asiago…anything from the fancy cheese bar in the produce section will make a nice blend. Cream cheese is a great blend too. I stick with light-colored cheese just for the optics.

Here’s the recipe I used for two people:

Après Ski Fondue

Après Ski Fondue dippers with chocolate

Ingredients

8 oz (half a pound) block of Swiss Cheese (aka Emmentaler in Europe), shredded

Leftover shredded Gruyere (about a half cup)

Asiago, parmesan, and  cream cheese (I actually omitted it)

Minced garlic (how much? As garlicky as you want it…start with a tablespoon)

½ quart half & half (I actually just used milk)

Sprinkles of nutmeg (realized I didn’t have any and used paprika and cinnamon instead)

Olive oil

Dry white wine (or try dry sherry, brandy, bourbon, or beer…it doesn’t matter!)

Cup of flour

Instructions

  1. Using a bowl or zip bag, toss/mix shredded cheese with flour. Tossing the shredded cheese with flour helps keep the melting cheese smooth and dippable.
  2. In a saucepan, drizzle a little olive oil and sauté the garlic, add a little white wine
  3. Once the garlic browns, add the cheese.
  4. Stir until melted
  5. Use a little half-and-half to help the creaming process
  6. Drizzle with olive oil and mix in the nutmeg

**The flavor combinations are endless. Some folks like adding stone ground mustard, horse radish, sautéed, minced onions, or a hint of cayenne. I like mine savory with a hint of sweetness, just like me! J/k.**

Fondue Equipment

Williams Sonoma (https://www.williams-sonoma.com/search/results.html?words=fondue) has a few fondue sets at various price points.  But if you don’t foresee fondue parties happening regularly, skip the costs, effort, and space allotment of buying a dedicated set.  Instead, try these options:

  1. I used the base for a teapot warmer, a large tea candle, and a cute ceramic dish in the Anthropologie sale rack.
  2. You can also use a heavy-bottomed saucepan or double boiler and an electric burner or hot plate for the table. I scoped out a $10 hotplate at the Dollar General Store. Lowes, Home Depot, and of course Amazon have affordable electric options.
  3. To dip, use metal BBQ skewers, wooden kabab skewers, chopsticks, or just the smallest forks you own.

Après Ski Fondue Dippers

The cheese is the main course at this party; everything else is just a condiment. Get something to dip from every food group.  Everything goes with Cheese so don’t hold back. 

Fondue Après Ski Ideas

A list of dippers for fondou
Use this list as a starter of all the possibilities to dip into the cheese.

For Chocolate

After the cheesy main course, go for a sweet after-dinner chocolate fondue. Just whisk a bit of heavy cream, whole milk (or half and half, or flavored coffee creamer) with high-quality melting chocolate or chocolate chips. I actually used leftover hot chocolate from Williams Sonoma’s Christmas collection. It’s just pure, high-end chocolate flakes. Melt until fondue-y.

Consider topping it with flaky sea salt, adding mint to the mix, etc. It’s your call. You can even melt marshmallows or white candy pieces.

Dip it in chocolate, melted cream cheese frosting, or royal frosting.

Fondue isn’t just limited to ski getaways. It works well for date nights, easy dinner nights, and “let’s clean the leftovers out of the refrigerator” nights.

Drop some feedback on this list of Après Ski Fondue ideas in the comments. Let me know what you like to dip in your cheese.

In Globelle Home, GloBelle Kitchen on
April 17, 2019

Extra Boozy Kentucky Bourbon Balls

Bourbon and chocolate slow dance together in an authentially Kentucky, Bourbon Ball recipe

They say, there isn’t a Kentuckian who isn’t headed home or thinking about home. These extra boozy, chocolate bourbon balls will have you doing both.

My great-grandma was buried in Hardin County, Kentucky when I was in first grade. Consequently, I don’t remember her. All I have is a picture of her holding me at eight months old and her legacy, passed down from my mom. That legacy is that her traditional Kentucky bourbon balls were extra boozy and burned going down.

Bourbon and chocolate slow dance together in an authentially Kentucky, Bourbon Ball recipe
Bourbon and chocolate slow dance together in an authentically Kentucky, Bourbon Ball recipe

Flash forward to my young adulthood:

I was working at my first duty station in Montgomery, Alabama right after college. Feeling a little homesick during the first week of May, I decided to experiment in my kitchen and came up with the perfect mix of chocolate and booze for Kentucky Bourbon Balls.

Since the military brings folks from all over the globe together, it’s standard to share our regional traditions. So I decided to share my Kentucky traditions and brought my concoction to work for my co-workers. It wasn’t a whole five minutes that my bourbon balls were on the free-for-all table that my outlook started blowing up with e-mails:

“OMG, it burns!”
“I’m going to be driving home drunk!”
“These cookies are like taking a shot.”
“Keep em’ coming!”

Oh, maybe bringing balls of bourbon was not the best idea. Didn’t think that one all the way through. Or perhaps it was the best idea ever! Depends on your perspective. It was even mentioned at my going away, the time I set the whole office drunk. Whoops! I’m not sure exactly how Mama Claire made her bourbon balls, but they seemed to yield the same effect. I just chalk any differences in recipe up to generational evolution. Most recipes out on the interwebs today call for ‘Nilla wafers. I nix that. Instead, my balls go for max chocolate flavor dancing with maximum bourbon flavor.

So, if you find yourself hosting a Kentucky Derby party this spring, or just longing for home, make sure this recipe is used to keep it authentically Kentucky.

Mama Claire’s Great Grand Daughter’s Bourbon Balls

Prep: 1 day (Yes Really, a whole day)
Yields: 75 balls

INGREDIENTS

1 cup chocolate graham crackers finely crumbled in a food processor
1 cup Oreo cookie crumbs (Oreo makes 8-inch pie crusts that measures out to be 1 cup of cookie crumbs, or you can scrape the icing out of the cookies then use a food processor, they cost about the same using Oreo brand)
1 cup Bourbon (Wild Turkey Honey, Knob Creek, Woodford Reserve, Buffalo Trace Four Roses…I used Makers, just make sure it’s from Kentucky)
1 cup Chopped pecans (or sliced almonds or ground walnuts)
5 0z package of dry chocolate pudding mix
1/2 cup Cocoa powder
1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
1 cup Brown sugar
4 TBS unsalted, softened butter
1 TBS vanilla extract

Optional toppings:
Melted Chocolate sauce (dark or white)
Cocoa powder
Finely chopped nuts
Powdered sugar
Coconut
Icing

Notes: You might take people’s nut allergies into consideration and make a nut-free batch. Although most of my recpes follow my cultural tradition of seasoning until the ancestors say enough, I actually tested this recipe for measurment accuracy.

picture of a bowl chocolatey dry ingredients with a smaller bowl of pecans soaking in bourbon and a telltale silhouette of Maker's Mark bourbon artistically blurred in the background.
I love these beautiful shades of brown from the different types of chocolate plus, brown sugar.

DIRECTIONS

  1. In a covered bowl, soak one cup of finely chopped pecans in a cup of bourbon for hours. HOURS!!! Try eight. Soak the nuts in the morning, go to work, come back that evening and start mixing. Or soak overnight.
  2. In a mixing bowl, combine your cookie & cracker crumbs, cocoa powder, semisweet chocolate chips, and brown sugar. Mix.
  3. Add pecans & bourbon soak to the dry chocolate ingredients bowl. Then add the rest of the wet mix ingredients and mix together until the mixture is moldable like damp sand. If you overdo it and the mix is too runny (it won’t be) add powdered sugar. If it’s not mixing enough, add hints of more bourbon.
  4. Using a mini cooking scoop, roll the batter into 1-inch balls. Sit them in mini cupcake cups for individual servings or let sit on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper for an hour.
  5. To decorate: Roll balls in powdered sugar, ground nuts, chocolate sprinkles, cocoa powder or drizzle with sweetened condensed milk or icing for garnish.
The scent of pecans soaking in bourbon is how I imagine Heaven will smell when I get there…especially if Mama Claire is already there in the kitchen.

Store in an airtight container and chill in the refrigerator. These taste best two days later after bourbon has had time to permeate. They also freeze well. You know you made them just right when you get the enthusiastic reaction and have folks telling you it burns going down like a shot of bourbon in cookie form. These extra boozy, chocolate treats will have you back in the bluegrass in no time, if only in your heart.

While you’re in a Kentucky state of mind, head on over to my Hot Brown recipe and make it a Kentucky kind of day.