Have you been looking for Copycat Free Recipes Resdaurant?
Just why are you looking for Copycat Free Recipes Resdaurant? I bet I know....
Have you ever been to a restaurant and come away from it asking: "just how do they make those
dishes?" I guarantee that you sat there trying to uncover 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 knowing how much you love that special dish, you try cooking it at home. Maybe you had some success, but I bet yours didn't turn out at all like the original. The solution to this dilemma is to use what are called copycat
restaurant recipes. They are specially researched and reverse engineered dishes like
Copycat Free Recipes Resdaurant that have been tried and tested many times, which means they can be successfully used to
recreate your favorite restaurant dishes right from home.
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...
Red Lobster`s Roasted Maine Lobster with Crabmeat Stuffing
***STUFFING:***
1 pound blue crab meat
1 teaspoon shallot, minced
1 teaspoon parsley
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
1 tablespoon bread crumbs
1 whole egg
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1/8 teaspoon Worcestershire
***LOBSTER:***
2 whole Maine lobsters
1 stick butter, cut into pieces
1 teaspoon paprika
2 tablespoons lemon juice
STUFFING: Blend all ingredients except crab. Fold in crab meat, refrigerate
LOBSTERS: Split lobsters lengthwise with a large knife, remove stomach sac. Place equal
portions of crab stuffing in each head. Crack claws with the blunt side of knife. Pour
lemon
juice on tail meat, then sprinkle with paprika and dot with pieces of butter. Bake in a
400°F
oven for 15 minutes. Serve with melted butter and lemon wedges.
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Corn Syrup
2 cups granulated sugar
3/4 cup water
1/4 teaspoon cream of tarter
Dash of salt
In a heavy 2 1/2 quart saucepan, combine all ingredients over medium heat.
Stir till mixture comes to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer. Cover pan and cook
3 minutes, just to reduce crystal build-up on sides of pan. Uncover and
cook, stirring often to "soft ball stage"--or when you drop a little from a
spoon into a glass of cold water and it drops to bottom of water in a soft
ball. Cool the syrup completely and store in covered container at room
temperature to be used within 2 months. Makes about 2 cups.
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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 recipe 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 again.
If my 81 year old grandmother can use it...anybody
can!!
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Cooking - Kitchen - Recipe Tips...
* For fresh flavor in orange juice add the juice of one
lemon.
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!

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