Sunday, July 25, 2021

Carlota de Limón – Lime Charlotte

Marie biscuits are layered with a tangy filling of lime juice, sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk to make this easy no-bake Carlota de Limón or Lime Charlotte.

Food Lust People Love: Maria biscuits are layered with a tangy filling of lime juice, sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk to make this easy no-bake Carlota de Limón or Lime Charlotte.

When it’s hotter than all get-out outside, what we all need is a dessert that can be made without turning the stove or oven on, don’t you agree? That’s why I chose no-bake desserts as this week’s Sunday FunDay theme. Personally, I think some of us should get extra points for a dessert that's served super cold as well.

Make sure you scroll down past my recipe to see the other lovely no-bake desserts my blogger friends are sharing, perfect for these hot summer days. 

Carlota de Limón – Lime Charlotte

Carlota de Limón is a classic Mexican dessert that is served very cold (as if it were an ice cream cake). As you make your shopping list, keep in mind that Marie biscuits are also called Maria biscuits or cookies in some places. In a pinch, you could also substitute plain graham crackers. 

Ingredients
1 1/2 cups or 360ml evaporated milk
1 can (14 oz or 397g) condensed milk
1⁄2 cup or 120ml dulce de leche (or sub more condensed milk) 
1⁄2 cup or 120ml fresh lime juice
Zest 1 lime
Maria biscuits – about 30

Optional to decorate/serve:
Whipped cream
Strawberries, halved 
1 lime, sliced thinly

Method
Use electric beaters or a whisk to combine the condensed milk, dulce de leche and evaporated milk. Add in the lime juice and zest and beat until thickened.


Line a deep round pan with foil and cover the bottom with a layer of Maria biscuits, scoring and breaking some to fill the gaps. I had a bunch of crumbs in my biscuit packet so I sprinkled them on the base as well. 


Spoon in one third of the filling, spreading it carefully to cover the biscuit base.


Top with another layer of Maria biscuits, again, scoring and breaking a couple to fill the gaps.


Top with second third of the filling, a final layer of biscuits, then the last third of the filling.


Pop the carlota de limón in the freezer for an hour or two or until firm.

When you are ready to serve, remove the carlota de limón from the freezer. Lift it out of the pan with the foil and carefully move the carlota to a serving plate. Decorate with whipped cream, halved strawberries and sliced limes, if desired.

Food Lust People Love: Maria biscuits are layered with a tangy filling of lime juice, sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk to make this easy no-bake Carlota de Limón or Lime Charlotte.

Enjoy! 

Food Lust People Love: Maria biscuits are layered with a tangy filling of lime juice, sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk to make this easy no-bake Carlota de Limón or Lime Charlotte.

Check out the no-bake desserts my Sunday FunDay blogger friends are sharing today! Which one will you make first? 

We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.

Pin this Carlota de Limón – Lime Charlotte!

Food Lust People Love: Maria biscuits are layered with a tangy filling of lime juice, sweetened condensed milk and evaporated milk to make this easy no-bake Carlota de Limón or Lime Charlotte.
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Monday, July 19, 2021

Easy Pork Vindaloo - Instant Pot

This easy pork vindaloo is a super tasty dish and quick to the table because it’s made in an Instant Pot. Vindaloo is classically a very spicy curry but you can tone that down by scaling back on the red chili peppers. 

Food Lust People Love: This easy pork vindaloo is a super tasty dish and quick to the table because it’s made in an Instant Pot. Vindaloo is classically a very spicy curry but you can tone that down by scaling back on the red chili peppers.

I remember watching a Jamie Oliver show years ago and he was cooking beef stew. He didn’t bother browning the meat saying that he had tried making the stew both ways, browning and not browning, and didn’t see a difference in the flavor of the resulting dish. In fact, for his wife Jool’s Favorite Beef Stew, the beef is chucked into the pot along with the vegetables. (That might have been the dish he was making, I don't recall.)

This story is my way of assuring you that this pork vindaloo is going to turn out just fine, more than fine actually, delicious, even though the pork isn’t browned. In case you were worried. 

Easy Pork Vindaloo - Instant Pot

If you don’t have an Instant Pot, you can use a Dutch oven to cook this recipe on your stovetop, slow simmering the pork in the spices until tender. Just keep the lid closed tightly and add more water if necessary. 

Ingredients
1 teaspoon monosodium glutamate
2 1/2 lbs or 1134g pork shoulder, cut into 1.5 in or 4cm cubes
4 tablespoons canola or other light oil
1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1/2 teaspoon brown mustard seeds
3-4 red chili peppers
4 cloves garlic
1 knob fresh ginger, peeled
2 onions
1/4 cup or 60ml white vinegar
1/2 cup or 120ml water

For the spice mix:
4 teaspoons paprika
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon coriander powder
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne

For garnish: 
cilantro

To serve: cooked rice and/or flatbread


Method
Sprinkle the MSG on the cubed pork. Set aside while you prepare the other items. 


Use a small food processor (or a sharp knife) to mince the garlic, chili peppers and ginger. Cut the onions into quarters and again use the food processor to mince them. 


Press the sauté button on your Instant Pot. Add oil and allow it a minute to heat up. Add the cumin and mustard seeds. 


Once the cumin seeds brown and the mustard seeds begin to pop, add the onions. Sauté for 8-10 minutes or until the onions begin to brown slightly.


Add the pork, garlic, ginger and peppers. Stir well until the pork is coated with the onions, garlic, ginger and chili peppers. 


Add the spice mix, give everything a good stir then add the vinegar and water.


Secure the lid and make sure the pressure valve is closed. Cook for 25 minutes on “normal.” 

Naturally release pressure for 10 minutes, then manual release. 

Remove the lid and press the sauté button. 

Food Lust People Love: This easy pork vindaloo is a super tasty dish and quick to the table because it’s made in an Instant Pot. Vindaloo is classically a very spicy curry but you can tone that down by scaling back on the red chili peppers.

Cook for 5 minutes to boil off some of the liquid and reduce the gravy to a stew like consistency. Taste for salt and add a little more, if needed.  

Garnish with cilantro and serve with cooked rice and/or your favorite flat bread. 

Food Lust People Love: This easy pork vindaloo is a super tasty dish and quick to the table because it’s made in an Instant Pot. Vindaloo is classically a very spicy curry but you can tone that down by scaling back on the red chili peppers.

Enjoy!

It’s MultiCooker Monday and my blogger friends are sharing all sorts of lovely dishes cooked in small appliances. Check out the links below. Many thanks to our organizer and host, Sue of Palatable Pastime


Multicooker Monday is a blogger group created by Sue of Palatable Pastime for all of us who need encouragement to make better use of our small appliances like slow cookers, Instant Pots, Air Fryers, rice cookers and sous vide machines. We get together every third Monday of the month to share our recipes. If you are a food blogger who would like to post with us, please request to join our Facebook group. 


Pin this Easy Pork Vindaloo!

Food Lust People Love: This easy pork vindaloo is a super tasty dish and quick to the table because it’s made in an Instant Pot. Vindaloo is classically a very spicy curry but you can tone that down by scaling back on the red chili peppers.

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Friday, July 16, 2021

Southern-style Tuna Salad

My Southern-style tuna salad is an old family recipe, the one I grew up with. It’s like egg salad but, of course, with added tuna, like we make it in the Southern United States. 

Food Lust People Love: My Southern-style tuna salad is an old family recipe, the one I grew up with. It’s like egg salad but, of course, with added tuna, like we make it in the Southern United States.

Another short tale. Many years ago, I was on the board of the American Association of Malaysia. Once a month, we would meet to deal with association business and we would bring dishes to share for a working lunch. 

One month I made tuna salad sandwiches. They were fancy sandwiches, crusts cut off, this recipe inside. We were discussing some item on the agenda when the chairperson stopped short and looked right at me. “Your egg salad has tuna in it!” she exclaimed. My retort was “No, my tuna salad has eggs in it! Doesn't yours?” 

A lively discussion by the whole board (a mixed group of Americans from all over) followed whereby I learned that there seems to be a north-south divide. In the northern US states tuna salad does not have eggs, southern-style tuna salad does. Who knew? 

Growing up, this is the way I remember my grandmothers and my mother making the “dressing” for not only tuna salad but also potato salad (at least on the days when no one had the wherewithal to whip up homemade mayonnaise.) Homemade mayo was always preferred but, you know, who has time for that? (Another parenthetical aside: My elder daughter would disagree. She always has time for that and she is a pro at homemade mayo! But she is not with me right now and I cannot be bothered.) 

Southern-style Tuna Salad 

You can chop up the egg yolks along with the whites and just add them to the tuna salad but you’ll miss the opportunity to enrich the mayonnaise and mustard dressing and make it seem more like homemade. Trust me, it makes a difference in flavor somehow. 

Ingredients
4 hard-boiled eggs
2 cans (5 oz or 142g) wild-caught chunk white albacore tuna in water
1/2 cup or 120ml mayonnaise
2-3 tablespoons yellow mustard
1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
1/4 medium onion

To garnish: chopped green onions and a good sprinkle of cayenne

Method
Drain the canned tuna in a sieve and use the can lid to press out as much liquid as you can. If you don't the tuna salad will be a bit "wet."


Cut the boiled eggs in half with a sharp knife and put the yolks in a mixing bowl. Mash them with a fork. 


Add in the mayonnaise, mustard and seasonings then grate in the onion. I use a microplane so the onion is very fine (and juicy) because I like the flavor but personally don’t like to find crunchy bits of onion in my tuna salad. You are welcome to mince the onion with a sharp knife if onion bits don’t bother you. Mix well. 


Chop the egg whites and add them to the mixing bowl, along with the tuna. Mix well to combine. 


Food Lust People Love: My Southern-style tuna salad is an old family recipe, the one I grew up with. It’s like egg salad but, of course, with added tuna, like we make it in the Southern United States.

Garnish with some chopped green onions and a sprinkle of cayenne pepper, if desired. 

Food Lust People Love: My Southern-style tuna salad is an old family recipe, the one I grew up with. It’s like egg salad but, of course, with added tuna, like we make it in the Southern United States.

Chill until ready to serve. This tuna salad is great on bread rolls, sliced bread or crackers. It is perfect for a picnic. Just bring it chilled in the cooler, provide the appropriate starchy things and let everyone help themselves! 

Food Lust People Love: My Southern-style tuna salad is an old family recipe, the one I grew up with. It’s like egg salad but, of course, with added tuna, like we make it in the Southern United States.

Enjoy! 

This month my Fish Friday Foodie friends are going on a picnic. Check out all the picnic friendly recipes below! Many thanks to our host and organizer, Wendy of A Day in the Life on the Farm


Are you a food blogger who would you like to join Fish Friday Foodies? We post and share new seafood/fish recipes on the third Friday of the month. To join our group please email Wendy at wendyklik1517 (at) gmail.com. Visit our Facebook page and Pinterest page for more wonderful fish and seafood recipe ideas. 


Pin this Southern-style Tuna Salad! 

Food Lust People Love: My Southern-style tuna salad is an old family recipe, the one I grew up with. It’s like egg salad but, of course, with added tuna, like we make it in the Southern United States.
 .