Are you looking for Applebees Dessert Recipe?
What's the reason you want Applebees Dessert Recipe? I bet I know....
Have you ever visited a restaurant and gone away asking: "just how do they make those
dishes?" I guarantee that you sat there trying to find out just what has gone into the dish, what sort of ingredients
they're using.. Maybe you have even tried to ask the waiter or the chef for the recipe it
was so good! Chances are they didn't give you the recipe, and probably for good reason, if
they did give it out to every person who asked for it, they could soon be out of business.
So you or someone in the family loves a certain meal so much that you attempt to copy it at home. Maybe you had some success, chances are that you weren't even close to getting the recipe right. The solution to this issue is to use what are called copycat
restaurant recipes. They are specially researched and reverse engineered dishes like
Applebees Dessert Recipe that have been tried and tested many times and hence can be successfully used to
recreate your favorite restaurant dishes.
Another great thing about cooking restaurant copycat recipes at home, is that you will save big money. Imagine not having to go out 3 times a week or more just to eat your favorite dishes. You'd be surprised just how much you could save in a year.
Wherever your tastes lie, it is no longer difficult to find out the ingredients in most copycat recipes. With a little detective work and a quick visit to the local grocery store, you can be serving up a dinner that no one will be able to resist.
Here are a couple of Free recipes from Recipe Robot for you to copy and
enjoy...
Outback Steakhouse Coconut Shrimp
1 1/2 lb large raw shrimp
1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1/2 cup cornstarch
1 Tbl. salt
1/2 Tbl. white pepper
2 Tbl. vegetable oil
1 cup ice water
oil for deep frying
2 cups short shredded coconut
1/2 cup orange marmalade
1/4 cup Grey Poupon country mustard
1/4 cup honey
3-4 drops Tabasco sauce
Peel, devein & wash shrimp. Dry well on paper towels. Set aside.
In a bowl, mix all dry ingredients for batter. Add 2T oil & ice water.
Stir to blend. To fry: heat oil to 350 in deep fryer or electric
skillet. Spread coconut on a flat pan a little at a time, adding
more as needed. Dip shrimp in batter, then roll in coconut.
Fry in hot oil until lightly browned, about 4 minutes.
Bake at 300 5 minutes to finish cooking of the shrimp.
Serve with sweet & sour sauce or the following sauce: Combine
marmalade, Grey Poupon mustard, honey & Tabasco sauce to taste.
|
Maid Rite Sandwiches
1-1/2 pounds ground beef
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
3-4 teaspoons prepared mustard
4 Tablespoons beer
To Taste:
red pepper
black pepper
garlic salt
salt
Brown & drain the hamburger. Stir in the other ingredients and simmer.
Spices are added "to taste."
The Maid Rite serves their sandwiches with a choice of cheese, mustard and
chopped fresh onion.
|
You can get hundreds more like these with Recipe Robot
The new Recipe Robot solves all these common problems
to finding good Copycat Recipes...
You never need to download any recipe ebooks!
You never need to purchase anymore outdated recipe
ebooks or cookbooks!
You'll be able to have your favorite Copycat Recipes
right at your fingertips anytime you wish!
This is a brand new program, designed specially for
getting Copycat Recipes and this is the only place you can get it. I invented this
program!
You'll never have to spend money at the high priced
Restaurants.
If my 81 year old grandmother can use it...any one
can!!
|
Cooking - Kitchen - Recipe Tips...
* Marinate red meats in wine to tenderize.
Cooking a Turkey:
* If you hate the memory of dry turkey from the old days,
buy a
fresh-killed (meaning, never frozen) turkey. They truly are
juicier,
tenderer, and tastier than frozen birds.
* Turkeys range in weight from the 6- to 8-pound
category to as
large as 26 pounds. Very small and super-big are not
better.
Small ones get blotchy. Big ones present food safety
problems
because their mass resists total heat penetration. Best to
go
with a basic 12- to 16-pound turkey.
* Trussing: The point of tying string around a turkey is
to make
the bird into a round -- no protrusions, no wings sticking
out.
This prevents burning of exposed areas. Twist the wing
tips, which
will burn first, under themselves, using some force. Now
run a strand
of string under the turkey's girth and up each side,
catching the
wing tips under the string. Continue the string over to the
drumsticks,
catching them and the fatty tail flap (Pope's Nose), and
tie tightly.
* Turkey lifter: This major help comes in two styles.
One resembles
an L-shaped metal prong. The prong goes right up the
turkey's cavity
while a handle remains in your hand. All you do it lift. If
you've
stuffed the turkey, get the type that looks like snow
chains, lies
under the bird, and acts like a sling. Either device ends
burned
hands, greasy potholders and lost drumsticks.
* Instant-read thermometer: This is your most important
tool. With
this, you don't need a roasting chart or a clock. Read the
facts on
the dial. There will be no question about the internal
temperature
of your meat. If you don't have one, get one!

Copycat Recipe - Recipes From Olive Garden - Free Applebees Recipe - Privacy Policy