ASPARAGUS AND PROSCIUTTO PHYLLO ROLLS

This is easy but so elegant and tasty, hard to come up with a better idea to impress guests or just enjoy a beautiful side dish on a warm Spring evening. I caught the recipe during a recent episode of TheKitchen, courtesy of Alex Guarnaschelli.

ASPARAGUS AND PROSCIUTTO PHYLLO ROLLS
(very slightly modified from FoodTV Network)

Kosher salt
18 medium stalks asparagus, ends trimmed
24 to 28 sheets phyllo dough, defrosted
olive oil spray
1 cup finely grated Parmesan
12 thin slices prosciutto

Prepare an ice bath with a medium bowl half filled with water and ice cubes.
In a large pot, bring 4 quarts water to a rolling boil. Add salt until it tastes like mild seawater. Layer a baking sheet with a clean kitchen towel. Drop the asparagus into the boiling water and cook until slightly tender when pierced with the tip of a knife, 2 to 3 minutes. Use a large slotted spoon to remove the asparagus from the water, transferring them immediately to the ice bath so that they cool down and don’t continue cooking. Let chill 5 minutes, then drain the asparagus and spread them on the baking sheet with the towel.


Heat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Place one sheet of phyllo on a flat surface with the short end closest to you. Spray the phyllo with olive oil. Sprinkle with a little of the Parmesan. Place another sheet of phyllo directly on top. Brush with additional butter and sprinkle with Parmesan.

Arrange 2 slices prosciutto in a single layer closest to you on the phyllo. Place 2 to 3 stalks of asparagus in bunches along the short side of the phyllo on top of the prosciutto and tightly roll the asparagus up in the prosciutto and phyllo to form a log. Trim the ends of the phyllo to fit the asparagus perfectly. As you make the asparagus rolls, arrange them on a baking sheet with distance between each so that they brown when baking. Spray their tops with olive oil right before baking.

Place the baking sheet in the center of the oven and bake until golden brown on the outside, 20 to 25 minutes. Sprinkle with salt.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: I wrote the recipe as published, except for the use of olive oil instead of melted butter. Amounts are really going to be flexible, I only made four rolls for us, we had three at dinner and one was my lunch next day, still delicious. I never go through the trouble of making the ice bath, I just rinse the blanched asparagus in running very cold water in a colander, and call it a day. But do as it pleases you, your kitchen, your rules. I have stopped brushing phyllo with butter a long time ago – the olive oil spray is amazingly easy, never hurts the sheets and gives enough flakiness without the extra saturated fat. We love the taste also, so it is a win-win situation for us.

I hope you give this super easy recipe a try, it is wonderful! And if you want to go the vegetarian route, maybe a little black olive tapenade or red bell pepper pesto could be nice instead of the prosciutto.

ONE YEAR AGO: Beet-Pickled Deviled Eggs

TWO YEARS AGO: My Cookie Blog Turns Two!

THREE YEARS AGO: Masala Shrimp

FOUR YEARS AGO: Victoria Sponge Mini-Cakes

FIVE YEARS AGO: Red Beet Sourdough

SIX YEARS AGO: A Modern Take on Tarte Tatin

SEVEN YEARS AGO: Minnie-Macarons, a Fun Project with a Happy Ending

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Nigella Lawson in the Bewitching Kitchen

NINE YEARS AGO: Walnut-Raisin Bran Muffins

TEN YEARS AGO: Gingersnaps with White Chocolate Chips

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Turkey Chili with Almond Butter

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Secret Recipe Club: Leek and Cheese Tart

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Secret Recipe Club; Triple Chocolate Brownies

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Shaved Asparagus Salad

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: Indonesian Ginger Chicken

THERE’S A PARTY NEXT DOOR!

My cookie blog turns FOUR YEARS OLD TODAY! Please stop by to see a cookie set I made to celebrate the occasion…

CLICK HERE

PEANUT BUTTER ENERGY BARS

And now for something completely different! I don’t normally make this type of stuff, but my dear stepdaughter-in-law urged me to give them a try. First, no oven is needed, they require no baking. Second, you can customize them in many different ways. She adds dried fruits, uses maple syrup instead of honey, they always work. I made the recipe exactly as published in my first time but the husband already requested that I add seeds and nuts to future batches. I don’t eat energy bars but must say that after trying a bite of these, I was hooked. Sweet, but not too sweet. Delicious! And a little bit goes a long way indeed, as energy bars are supposed to do.

PEANUT BUTTER ENERGY BARS
(from Erin Lives Whole)

1 1/4 cup oat flour (store bought is best for ultra fine texture)
1/4 cup vanilla protein powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup natural peanut butter
1/3 cup honey
1 tsp vanilla extract
1– 2 tbsp melted coconut oil
3/4 cup mini chocolate chips

In a large bowl, mix together oat flour, protein powder, and salt.

Add in peanut butter, honey, vanilla extract, and 1 tbsp coconut oil. Mix. It will be very thick, I suggest using your hands to really mix well. It should eventually come together like playdough, but if it’s still too dry add more coconut oil. You want them to be FIRM not soft and too much coconut oil will make them soft. Mix in chocolate chips.

Press into a bread pan (~8×4) and add more chocolate chips on top if desired. Press them into the top.

Let sit in fridge for at least 1 hour before cutting into. Store in fridge.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: Check the original post to see all the variations Erin has tried. Apparently these are copycat versions of a popular brand called Perfect Bars. I had never heard of them, but as I mentioned, it’s not something I consume. The husband is more into cereal bars and things of that sort. I will be making them again for sure, they lasted a little less than a week for us, and stayed unchanged in flavor and texture sitting in the fridge. Courtnie, my daughter-in-law says they also freeze well. She likes them with maple syrup instead of honey and with tiny bits of dried blueberries…

.

ONE YEAR AGO: Cocoa-Lattice Sourdough

TWO YEARS AGO: Pistachio Sugar Cookies, the Uzbek Way

THREE YEARS AGO: Carrots and Zucchini Stir-Fry with Peanut Sauce

FOUR YEARS AGO: Cookie Therapy, Anyone?

FIVE YEARS AGO: The Quasi-Vegan Quiche

SIX YEARS AGO: Not Quite Moqueca

SEVEN YEARS AGO: Roasted Butternut Squash with Cashew Nuts

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Mississippi Roast and the Open Mind

NINE YEARS AGO: Walnut-Raisin Bran Muffins

TEN YEARS AGO: A Star is Born!

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Chestnut Flour Sourdough Bread

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Kinpira Gobo and Japanese Home Cooking

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Walnut Sourdough

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Thai Chicken Curry

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: Zen and the art of risotto

EASTER BAKES



A small collection of bakes to celebrate the occasion… Cupcakes, cookies, bonbons…
Let’s start with cupcakes, shall we?

For the cupcakes, I went with chocolate, and used this recipe which is simple and wonderful. Frosting was a simple American buttercream, but the gilding of the lily was the little nest made with rice noodles broken up in little pieces, coated with melted chocolate and assembled in mini-muffin tins. I have tried other methods to make the nests and this was by far my favorite.

This is really a very very messy process, and there was some colorful language going around The Bewitching Kitchen, I won’t lie to you. But aren’t those nest super cute? Totally worth the trouble. Get the noodles and cut them with scissors in small little pieces. It will make a Royal mess in your kitchen and you will find pieces of noodles in unexpected places. Melt chocolate, coat them well (gloves are mandatory), and while everything is still pliable and warm, stick little portions inside mini muffin tins. Add the eggs and let it all set.

TRI-DIMENSIONAL EASTER EGGS

These are not made of chocolate, the shells are my favorite chocolate cookie (click here for recipe, I omitted the chipotle powder for this version) baked into these cute little molds. Once they are baked, I brushed them with luster powder mixed with vodka, decorated with Royal icing and filled with mini peanut butter eggs.

.

BUNNY BONBONS

A little labor of love, you’ll need a special mold for these babies, found at one of my favorite stores, Evil Cake Genius. It is a three component mold, so you make the top, let it set, fill with whatever you want (I used lemon brigadeiro), then close the bottom with more chocolate. A very detailed video is available here.

.

EGG NESTS CHOCOLATE COOKIES

Very little icing on these cookies, I brushed them with Americolor White + a touch of turquoise before baking. Then just added a few details with piping consistency icing, and placed mini eggs on top. They went together nicely with the cupcakes!

.

THE GOLFING RABBIT

Same cookie, made with the help of AI-generated image, and a mini-projector… Love these goofy fellows!

If you celebrate the date, I wish you a Happy Easter! Hope you have a wonderful day…

.

ONE YEAR AGO: Bicolor Ravioli

TWO YEARS AGO:  Crispy Asparagus Salad with Toasted Bread Crumbs

THREE YEARS AGO: Low-Carb Super Fast Chicken Parmigiana

FOUR YEARS AGO: Sundried Tomato Spelt Sourdough

FIVE YEARS AGO: A Duet of Chocolate Bonbons

SIX YEARS AGO: Chocolate Tartlets with Honey-Caramel Filling

SEVEN YEAR AGO: Zucchini Soup with Tahini

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Black Sesame Macarons

NINE YEARS AGO: Fine Tuning Thomas Keller

TEN YEARS AGO: Cauliflower Tortillas

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Majestic Sedona, Take Two

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Secret Ingredient Turkey Meatballs

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Swedish Meatballs and Egg Noodles

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Italian Easter Pie

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: Black Olive Bialy

INCREDIBLY SIMPLE PROSCIUTTO BAKED EGGS

This recipe was inspired by a version from Mark Bittman published back in 2022. I really like the modifications I included, and hope you will also. In typical Sally’s fashion, I got so hooked on it that it was my lunch several days in a row. Yeah, that’s the way I roll. Sometimes.

BAKED EGGS WITH PROSCIUTTO AND TOMATO
(inspired by Mark Bittman)

serves two

2 low-carb tortillas (or any other flour tortilla you like)
olive oil spray
2 slices beefsteak tomato
2 slices of prosciutto di Parma
2 eggs
Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese
drizzle of heavy cream (optional)
salt (very little)

Heat oven to 375F.

Cut the tortilla to fit snuggly and the bottom of your dish. Spray the dish with olive oil, add the tortilla, spray the top lightly with oil.

Place a slice of tomato on top, a slice of prosciutto, break the egg over it. Add cheese, and if you want, a little drizzle of cream. Salt lightly, the prosciutto will be very salty.

Bake for 15 minutes, or until egg yolk cooked to your liking. If egg white is not fully cooked, run under the broiler. You can also start the baking covering the dish with aluminum foil to help steam the egg white and cook it properly.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: To me, this is almost a perfect lunch. You can kick it up a notch using a slice of sourdough bread instead of tortilla, but I like to keep it light. Beefsteak tomato is underrated, in my opinion. I love it and in this preparation it is really the best kind to use. It stands to baking and contributes moisture and flavor. You can use ham instead of prosciutto, although I rather stick with the latter. The only tricky part is baking long enough to cook the egg white without overcooking the yolk, but play with it and you’ll find what works best in your oven.

ONE YEAR AGO: Bicolor Ravioli

TWO YEARS AGO:  Crispy Asparagus Salad with Toasted Bread Crumbs

THREE YEARS AGO: Low-Carb Super Fast Chicken Parmigiana

FOUR YEARS AGO: Sundried Tomato Spelt Sourdough

FIVE YEARS AGO: A Duet of Chocolate Bonbons

SIX YEARS AGO: Chocolate Tartlets with Honey-Caramel Filling

SEVEN YEAR AGO: Zucchini Soup with Tahini

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Black Sesame Macarons

NINE YEARS AGO: Fine Tuning Thomas Keller

TEN YEARS AGO: Cauliflower Tortillas

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: Majestic Sedona, Take Two

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Secret Ingredient Turkey Meatballs

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Swedish Meatballs and Egg Noodles

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Italian Easter Pie

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: Black Olive Bialy