ALPINE POTATOES
I got this out of a small cookbook put out by the local courthouse employees. It's a great Idaho potato dish!
Provided by MizzNezz
Categories Potato
Time 1h5m
Yield 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- In saucepan, cook and stir butter and soup until smooth.
- Remove from heat; add sour cream.
- Add onions, celery, and cheese; mix well.
- Add salt, pepper and diced potatoes; mix well.
- Pour into 9x13 baking pan; top with potato chips.
- Bake at 350* for 45-55 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 279.5, Fat 21.3, SaturatedFat 12.6, Cholesterol 53.7, Sodium 445.4, Carbohydrate 14.6, Fiber 1.4, Sugar 1, Protein 8.4
TARTIFLETTE
This Alpine potato and bacon casserole bakes up golden and gloriously gooey thanks to the slices of soft, pungent rind cheese nestled on top. More traditional recipes call for boiling the potatoes separately in one pot, browning the onion and bacon in a skillet, and then combining everything into a casserole dish for baking. This streamlined version accomplishes it all in one large sauté pan. Serve this with a leafy salad of peppery, bitter greens to cut the richness.
Provided by Melissa Clark
Categories dinner, casseroles, main course
Time 1h20m
Yield 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Heat oven to 400 degrees. Add bacon to a cold (10- to 12-inch) skillet and place the pan over medium heat. Let bacon cook until some of the fat renders and the edges turn golden, about 7 to 10 minutes. (You're not looking to crisp the bacon.)
- Add onions to the pan and raise the heat to medium-high. Cook, stirring occasionally, until golden and soft, about 10 minutes longer. Stir in garlic, thyme and nutmeg, and cook for another minute until fragrant.
- Add potatoes, wine, 1/2 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper, and toss until well combined. Cover the pan and cook, stirring every once in a while so nothing sticks, until potatoes are just tender and the liquid has mostly evaporated, 20 to 25 minutes. If the pan dries out while the potatoes are cooking, add a splash or two of water.
- Leaving the rind on, cut the cheese into slices or wedges. Stir crème fraîche into the potatoes, then nestle the cheese in evenly. Transfer the skillet to the oven and bake, uncovered, until the cheese melts and the potatoes are very tender, 25 to 35 minutes. Serve hot or warm.
TARTIFLETTE - ALPINE MELTED CHEESE, BACON AND POTATO GRATIN
Fast becoming a classic, Tartiflette is the perfect palliative supper dish for chilly autumn and winter evenings. This delicious, rich and hearty dish hails from the Alpine Haute Savoie region of France. For authenticity's sake, try to get hold of a whole Reblochon cheese. Reminiscent of Camembert or Brie in flavour, texture and shape, Reblochon has the perfect melting quality for Tartiflette. In addition, as this dish can be prepared a day or so ahead, it could make the ultimate Bonfire Night or Halloween centrepiece! This is a truly indulgent dish, which is best appreciated after a strenuous morning on the ski-slopes - or at least a brisk winter's morning walk. It is important to use a ripe Reblochon, preferably bought a few days in advance and left to reach maturity out of the fridge. For this to happen, it should be uncategorised. Of course, if you have a good cheese monger you will be able to buy one ripe and ready to eat. Serve the Tartiflette hot and straight from the gratin dish with fresh salad, crusty bread and assorted pickles. Edited to add: One reviewer made a comment that you should fry the bacon and discard the fat - it IS stated in the main instructions to do just that! Also, if your potatoes are not cooked after 15 minutes plus 25 minutes in the oven, you have not cut them thin enough - try to cut them quite thinly, as shown in all the photos. Reblochon cheese is a very STRONG cheese - do not try this recipe if you are not a lover of strong cheese! Merci:-)
Provided by French Tart
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 50m
Yield 1 Tartiflette, 4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/gas mark 5.
- Bring a large pan of water to the boil and cook the potatoes whole, in their skins, for 15 minutes.
- Meanwhile, cook the onion and bacon in the butter in a heavy frying pan over a medium heat; they should sweat but not brown. When they are cooked, discard the fat and add the glass of wine and the creme fraiche and mix well.
- Drain the potatoes and as soon as they are cool enough to handle peel them - the quicker the better. Slice thinly across.
- Choose an ovenproof earthenware dish and rub it well with the cut halves of garlic. Layer half the sliced potatoes across the base, season them with salt and freshly ground black pepper, then scatter over half the onion and bacon mixture.
- Cut the Reblochon cheese in half through the centre of the cheese, leaving you with a cut edge and a skin/rind edge, then lay one half of the cheese on top of the potato, bacon and onion mixture. Add the remaining bacon and onion mixture followed by the rest of the potatoes and more seasoning.
- Place the remaining half of cut Reblochon cheese skin/rind side up on top of the potatoes. Bake for 10 minutes, then reduce the heat to 180C/350'F/gas mark 4 for a further 20-25 minutes. The Reblochon should melt within its skin and the cheese drip down throughout the dish, while the potatoes will become crispy and golden brown.
- Tartiflette is a filling dish and all you really need to go with it is a mixed green salad, crusty French bread and a selection of pickles.
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- Fondue. After a long and snowy day, enjoy time with family and friends with this melted cheese dish from the Alps mountains. Fondue comes from the French word “fondre” which means to melt.
- Raclette. Another cheesy dish that comes from the French and Swiss Alps is the raclette. After a long day of skiing (and even if you haven’t been skiing), sit down and share a raclette with family and friends.
- Génépi. Génépi is one of those that can be enjoyed as an aperitif or a digestif since it is not very sweet. It has an alcohol content of around 40% and a strong herbal flavor.
- Diots. Another tradition of savoyarde and alpine cuisine is the Diots de Savoie sausage. The name comes from the savoyard dialect and means “small sausage”.
- Rösti. Influenced by next door neighbor Switzerland, the rösti is one of those traditional Alpine foods that everyone is bound to love. Originally made from leftover potatoes that are grated and formed into patties, they used to be cooked in lard to soften and add flavor.
- Vin de Savoie. There are many wine regions in France, and the alpine region of Savoy is no different. The most well-known Vin de Savoie AOC is a white wine that is light and acidic.
- Reblochon, Tomme de Savoie and other cheeses. France is famous for its cheeses, and the Alps-Savoy region is no different. Reblochon is a traditional cheese from the alpine region of Savoy, which is said to date back to the 14th century.
- Tartiflette. If you like cheese and potatoes, there is nothing not to like about a tartiflette. This hearty meal has copious amounts of reblochon cheese and bacon lardons topped onto sliced potato dish, and is delicious as a side dish or a main dish by itself.
- Crozets. Similar in appearance to the ravioles in nearby Valence, the crozets are small pieces of dough made from sarrasin flour. These small squares taste like pasta and are just as ubiquitous.
- Chartreuse. Chartreuse is famously made by Carthusian Monks located in the Chartreuse Mountains near Grenoble in France. It is said that only 2 monks know the exact recipe combination of the 130 herbs, plants, and flowers as per the instructions given to them by François Annibal d’Estrées in 1605.
18 FOODS YOU MUST TRY IN THE ALPS - LAYLITA'S TRAVELS
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- Fondue. One way to enjoy cheeses from the mountain cows is to make the traditional fondue. Fondue means “melted” in French, and is made with 2 to 3 different cheeses depending on the recipe.
- Raclette. The raclette is another popular way of enjoying melted cheese in the mountains, this time with more flexibility. In the fondue, the cheeses are picked in advance and everyone eats from the same pot.
- Tartiflette. More melted cheese dishes? Welcome to the French Alps. The tartiflette is very similar to the raclette and fondue, but the mixing work is already done for you.
- Reblochonade. It is tempting to think about the Reblochonade as the same dish as the tartiflette or very similar to a raclette meal, and that’s okay, because the differences are minimal.
- Boite Chaude. There is a lot of redundancy in some of these cheese based dishes. The boite chaude (translates as hot box) is a dish where the cheese is melted in its own container or in a small wooden container).
- Diots. The diots are pronounced “dyo”, and in English the word can sound like a close word to something else 🙂 The word diot means sausage, and its etymology comes from the old dialect in the Savoie region.
- Crozets. Crozets are square-shaped little pastas made with buckwheat flour. They can cooked and served as you would regular pastas, or they can also be used in a dish called croziflette, which is like a tartiflette but made with the crozet pasta instead of potatoes.
- Gratin dishes. The gratin is a dish made in the oven, typically with potatoes or other vegetables. In French, gratin comes from the verb gratiner, which means to broil.
- Salads. Salads are usually included as side dishes with many of the main meals in the Alps. As a side salad they’re usually very simple, but refreshing and with a tasty dressing.
- Charcuterie: Ham {Jambon), saucisson, and cured meats. Cured meats, including jambon de Savoie and saucisson, are must have sides for many Alpine dishes.
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4.2/5 Phone (239) 325-9499Location 2355 Vanderbilt Beach Rd. Suite 158 Naples, FL 34109
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