Archive for the ‘Restaurant Recipes’ Category

Cracker Barrel Old Country Store Banana Pudding

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

Source: Cracker Barrel Restaurant - Phoenix, Arizona

1 1/2 quarts milk
1 1/4 cups liquid eggs
1/4 cup imitation vanilla extract
1 1/8 cups flour
1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
12 ounces Nilla Wafers
1 3/4 bananas, peeled
8 ounces Cool Whip®

Heat milk in pot to 170 degrees F.

Mix eggs, vanilla extract, flour and sugar in separate container. Add mixture to milk; cook until custard-like, stirring constantly.

Spread Nilla Wafers on bottom of baking pan. Slice bananas and place over Nilla Wafers. Pour custard over cookies and bananas; cool.

Spread Cool Whip over top.

Cheesecake Factory Bakery Oreo Cheesecake

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Cheesecake Factory Bakery Oreo Cheesecake 

Crust

1 1/2 cups. Oreo Cookie Crumbs (about 23 Oreo cookies finely chopped)

2 tablespoons. Melted Butter

9″ Spring Form Pan (buttered on bottom and sides)

Filling

1 1/2 lbs. Cream Cheese

1 cup Sugar

5 Large Eggs

1/4 teaspoon Salt

2 teaspoon Vanilla

1/4 cup Flour

8 oz Sour Cream

5 Oreo Cookies (coarsely chopped for the batter)

10 Coarsely Chopped Oreo Cookies for the Top of Cheese Cake

PREPARATION

Crust

Mix melted butter with Oreo crumbs and press in spring pan cover the bottom and 1 1/2″ up the sides with crumbs, set aside.

Filling

All Ingredients need to be at room temperature before beginning.

Beat cream cheese until light and fluffy. Keep mixer on a low setting during the mixing and beating process. Add sugar gradually  and continue beating cream cheese until mixed through. Add eggs one at a time and continue to beat until blended.

Measure the vanilla, salt and flour, pour into cream cheese and egg mixture and beat until smooth. Add the sour cream and beat well.

Turn off the mixer and stir in the coarsely chopped oreo cookies with a spoon.

Pour cream cheese into the spring pan and place the nine coarsely chopped Oreo Cookies on to of the cream mixture. Place pan on the

top rack and in the middle of a preheated oven at 325 degrees and bake for one hour and 15 minutes. When time is up prop the oven

door open and let the cheese cake stay in the oven for one hour.

Remove from oven and let cool enough to place in the refrigerator for 24 hours. It is worth the anticipation. A cheese cake should

season. The flavor ripens and becomes enriched.

How To Copy Restaurant Recipes

Monday, February 18th, 2008

by: Sarah Sandori

Copying restaurant recipes can be easy or hard. It depends on whether a dish is simple, as many side dishes tend to be, or complex, as many main dishes or entrees are–especially the ones that are considered to be a restaurant’s “billboard” or signature menu item.

The key to becoming a skilled restaurant menu copycatter is to sample a wide variety of dishes from many restaurants. Also, you should try to train your taste buds and nose to be able to detect and differentiate between different spices, herbs and other flavorings. Make a list (mental or on paper) of all of the ingredients you think are in the next food item you have in a restaurant, and ask your waitperson to tell you if you pegged them correctly.

If the waiter, cook or manager of your favorite recipe is willing to give you a copy of the actual recipe used to create a particular dish, you are most of the way home to being able to copy it in your own kitchen.

Having the list of ingredients and some instructions for putting them together and preparing them is most of the battle, of course. But even then, you might have to compensate for not having some special cooking utensils or devices that the restaurant uses to make the dish. Or, you might have to scale down the recipe considerably if the recipe you’re given is for making large batches at a time.

There are books available now that have worked out these problems for you. Their authors have spent many hours tracking down or figuring out scores of those secret restaurant recipes, testing them over and over, and then modifying them as needed for the average cook’s kitchen.

Where there’s a will there’s a way. If it is your fondest desire to be able to copy your favorite restaurant’s top recipe at home, know that you can do it … so get to work!

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Sarah Sandori is the food and entertaining columnist for the Solid Gold Info Writers Consortium. Have you ever wanted to be able to exactly duplicate a favorite dish from a favorite restaurant? Check out Sarah’s article where she reveals her source for the most mouth-watering secret restaurant recipes in America: http://www.solid-gold.info/most-wanted-recipes.html