Bacon Granny Smith Apple Grilled Cheese Sandwich

Bacon Granny Smith Apple Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Everyone loves a good grilled cheese sandwich. It doesn’t matter if you’re young or old, sometimes a grilled cheese sandwich is the perfect lunch. Yes, even lactose intolerant people love grilled cheeses, though their colons don’t. So get out your holy cheese and pray to Cheezus Crust, and make this divine grilled cheese sandwich or are you a naan believer?
Bacon Granny Smith Apple Grilled Cheese Sandwich
In the words of Buster Bluth, “I was told there would be grilled cheese.” This isn’t any old grilled cheese though, it’s a grilled cheese that puts all others to shame. Sure, you could go with something simple and safe, but what’s the fun in that? I personally don’t understand people who take the safe route; life is for living, so add some apple and bacon to that sandwich! Some people will say apples don’t belong on a sandwich, but let them talk and have their wrong opinion. They don’t know the joy of something weird and different, so they can enjoy their meal of quiet judgement while you eat one of the best grilled cheese sandwiches of your life.

Bacon Granny Smith Apple Grilled Cheese Sandwich
Grilled Cheese
Granny Smith AppleGrilled Cheese Sandwich

Bacon Granny Smith Apple Grilled Cheese Sandwich

Yields one sandwich
  • 2 slices of Sourdough Bread
  • 2 tablespoons Butter
  • 3 oz. Tillamook Cheddar Cheese grated 
  • 2 oz. Gruyere cheese grated
  • 1.5 Bacon Slices cooked
  • 1 Granny Smith Apples thinly sliced 
  • 1 teaspoon Dijon Mustard
  • 1/4 teaspoon Black Pepper freshly ground
  1. Heat up two CLEAN skillets over medium heat. That’s right two. 
  2. Butter one side of each slice of yo’ bread. 
  3. Add the mustard and pepper to one slice of bread (on the non-butter side, but you’re clever so you probably figured that out on your own). 
  4. Pile on the cheeses. Stack 2 apple slices and the bacon strips to the pre-sandwich. Top it off with the other slice of bread, butter side up.
  5. Place in one of the hot skillets. Let cook for 30 seconds. Take the other hot skillet and place on top of the sandwich and press down. This will help melt the cheese and make it easier to flip. After a minute or so, flip the sandwich over and continue cooking until both sides are golden brown. 
  6. Serve with a little salad or some tomato or  butternut squash soup. 

It’s that easy to mix up the everyday routine and make something different and delicious. Don’t be afraid of people judging your fruity sandwich. Go ahead and make this great sandwich, because if you don’t I’ll be judging you.
Say cheese, all photos by Katy Weaver 

Apples

Palak White Cheddar Pastries

Planning on throwing a party sometime soon? If you are then I suggest making these appetizers. If you’re not then you can make them alone and contemplate why you’re not invited to more dinner parties.

Tillamook dairy was kind enough to send me some of their delicious cheese. If you’ve never had Tillamook cheese before it makes store brand cheese seem like some sort of cheap rubber substitute they used in WWII. The sharpness of the white cheddar cuts right through the spinach and Indian spices, but doesn’t overpower them. The pastry, spinach, cheese and spices seem to form a team that works extremely well together, much like the “A Team,” but for copyright reasons let’s say “An a Team.”

garlic

spices
White Cheddar Cheese
tomatoes and spinach

Palak White Cheddar Pastries

Yields 18 pastries
  • 2 bags of packaged Spinach chopped
  • 1/4 cup Water
  • 1/2 Lemon juiced
  • 2 Tomatoes diced
  • 1 Large Onion diced
  • 4 cloves Garlic diced
  • 1 teaspoon Olive Oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon Ginger ground
  • 1/2 teaspoon Coriander
  • 1/2 teaspoon Sea Salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon Paprika
  • 1/4 teaspoon Cinnamon
  • 2 teaspoon Garam Masala
  • 1 Tablespoon Greek Yogurt
  • 8 oz. Tillamook Vintage White Cheddar cubed
  • 1 Egg whisked
  • 1 package (9 x 9.5 in) Puff Pastry* thawed
  1. Preheat the oven to 400°. Add the spinach, water, and lemon juice to a medium-sized sauce pan, cover and heat over medium heat until all the leaves have wilted down.
  2. While the spinach is cooking, add the onions, garlic, and olive oil to a large skillet and cook over medium heat until the onions have slightly caramelized. Add the spices to the onions. After cooking for 3-5 minutes stir in the tomatoes and yogurt. Cook for another 5 minutes. Add the onion and tomato mixture to the spinach. Let simmer for yet another 5 minutes.
  3. Use a food processor to blend until you get the consistency of chunky peanut butter.
  4. Cut the pastries into 1 x 1 inch squares. place evenly on a greased cookie sheet with parchment paper. Place two cheese cubes at the center of each pastry square. Scoop 1 Teaspoon of the spinach on top of each square.
  5. Pinch two opposite edges of the square together, as pictured below. Brush each folded pastry with the whisked egg. Bake at 400° until golden brown, which should be about 15 minutes.
  6. Serve with rice and enjoy!
*Yes, I use store-bought puff pastry. In the words of the greatest poet of our generation, “ain’t no one got time for that.”

Coconut Lime Basmati Rice

  • 1 cup Basmati Rice
  • 1 can Coconut Milk
  • 1 Lime zested
  1. Rinse the rice 3 times. Add everything to a rice cooker. Wait about 20 minutes. Boom you’re done.

puff pastry
Katy Weaver once again out doing herself with some outstanding photography.

Open Face Steak Sandwich

Here’s a cooking tip for everyone reading, if you want to make a sandwich fancier, make it an open face sandwich. It shows off all the content in the sandwich in an appetizing way. Want to make that PB&J sandwich more interesting? Just make it an open face sandwich. Boom! All your dinner guest will be impressed with your culinary skills. Here’s another cooking tip, don’t serve PB&J sandwiches at a dinner party, unless it’s some weird dinner party for 8 year-olds.

Everyone loves steak, even vegetarians, they just won’t admit it. Steak is amazing and an important part of a balanced diet, but sometimes just eating a hunk of meat doesn’t cut it. Not even with a steak knife. And most of the time when I order a steak sandwich from a restaurant, it’s either super greasy or very dry, occasionally I’ll find a place that’s somewhere between the two, but those places are pretty rare. That’s why I wanted to make my own steak sandwich and use the most marbled pieces of meat I could find. 

Caramelized Bourbon Onions

  • 1 large yellow onion chopped
  • 1 teaspoon minced garlic
  • 2 tablespoons butter
  • 1 teaspoon sugar
  • 1 shot of bourbon

Serves about 4

    1. Get a skillet, melt the butter, and add the garlic. After about 30 seconds add the onions, and sugar. Cook over medium high heat until the onions are caramelized.
    2. Add the shot of bourbon to deglaze the pan and cook until the liquid is gone.

    Open Face Steak Sandwich

    • 1 lbs Denver steaks
    • 1 tablespoon olive oil
    • a dash of salt and pepper
    • 1/2 cup shredded white cheddar
    • 1 loaf of ciabatta bread thickly sliced 

    Serves about 4.

      1. Preheat your oven to 500 and place a cast iron skillet in the oven (I used my cast iron griddle and it worked just as well). 
      2. While the oven is heating up. Place the steaks in a bowl and toss them with the olive oil, salt and pepper.
      3. Once the oven reaches temperature take the skillet out of the oven and place it on the stove top over medium high heat. 
      4. Place the steaks on the skillet for 30 seconds. Flip and cook the other side for 30 seconds as well. Flip the steaks again and place the skillet back into the oven for 2 minutes. Flip the steaks one last time and let cook for another minute. Take the steaks out of the oven and let them sit on a plate for about 3 minutes before cutting them into strips.
      5. Take a slice of ciabatta and spoon enough of the bourbon onions on it to barely cover the bread.  Sprinkle the cheese over the onions, that way it gets all melty. Then slice the steaks into strips and place on top.  Enjoy!

      This steak sandwich pairs nicely with the chard from this recipe, and if you’re looking for an appetizer, yam hash browns make a wonderful opening to this dish.

      Once again all these stunning pictures are by Katy Weaver.

      French Onion Soup

      It’s been kind of cloudy and grey the past couple of days in Portland, even though it’s terrible June weather it does make for great soup weather. French onion soup is filling and warm, so it’s a nice contrast to the cold and wet weather outside.

      I’m a terrible food blogger, because when I went to the store I forgot to buy a loaf of French bread. As a replacement I used the whole grain sourdough bread that was sitting in the bread box. The sourdough was a good replacement, I recommend using sourdough if you don’t have any French bread.

      This is a very simple dish with only a few ingredients. The hardest part about preparing this dish is cutting the onions, it’s going to make you cry, so it’s a good time to work through some emotions and think about that childhood pet that’s now, “living at a farm upstate.” If the onions make you cry too much don’t worry, eating the finished soup is like a warm hug.

      French Onion Soup

      (4 servings)
      • 3 1/2 medium yellow onions coarsely chopped
      • 3 TBS. butter
      • 3/4 cup dry white or red wine (just make sure it’s not sweet wine)
      • 1 pint vegetable stock or beef stock
      • 1 TBS flour
      • 4 slices of french bread
      • 5 oz. grated Gruyere cheese
      • salt and pepper
      1. Find the largest pot in your kitchen, okay maybe not that big, but large enough to hold a pint of stock and three and half onions. Melt the butter in the pot over medium high heat. Once the butter has melted add the onions.
      2. Preheat the oven to 375. Toast the bread, just a little to remove most of the moisture. It should be slightly crisp. 
      3. Occasionally stir the onions, until most of them have turned golden brown. This is an import step in the soup, because it’s where most of the flavor develops. Once the onions have browned add 1/2 cup of the wine. Stir occasionally until all the wine has cooked out. Then add the flour to the onions and let the flour brown and stick to the bottom of the pan. Add the stock once that’s happened. Scrape the flour off the bottom of the pot and add the rest of the wine. Add salt and pepper to taste. Let the soup simmer for 5-10 minutes and allow the wine to cook off. 
      4. Grab 4 oven proof bowls and scoop the soup until it fills 3/4 of the bowl. Lay one slice of bread on top of the soup and layer the grated cheese on top of the soup until you can barely see the soup and bread. Place the bowls in the oven and bake until the cheese is melted and the edge cheese browns a bit. 
      5. Remove from oven and eat with fork.
      The bowls will be very hot! It’s a good idea to have a mat or pad to place the bowl on once you remove it from the oven. 
      For a soup that’s mostly onions, it’s very filling. If you want a good red wine to pair with this soup I recommend a Cabernet Sauvignon, because of the wine’s rich buttery taste. Enjoy!
      Photos by Katy Weaver