How would you like Copycat Recibe Carrabba's?
Why are you searching for Copycat Recibe Carrabba's? I bet I know....
I'm sure you've been to a restaurant and gone away asking: "just how do they make those
dishes?" You have probably 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 and your family enjoy certain meals so much, you try to copy a version of it in your own kitchen. Maybe you had some success, chances are that you weren't even close to getting the recipe right. The solution to this problem is to use what are called copycat
restaurant recipes. They are specially researched and reverse engineered dishes like
Copycat Recibe Carrabba's 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 cool thing about cooking restaurant copycat recipes at home, is that you'll save a bunch of money. Think about not having to go out 3 times a week or more just to eat your favorite dishes.
With a good cookbook full of copy cat recipes you can eat restaurant food at home and it is both faster and less expensive. With practice you will find you can prepare several copy cat recipes at once with ease. I frequently make an entire meal for my wife and I including appetizers, main course and a desert in under 1 hour. Restaurant copy cat recipes have saved me time and expense by giving me a way to enjoy all my favorites easily at home.
Here are a couple of Free recipes from Recipe Robot for you to copy and
enjoy...
Outback Steakhouse Walkabout Soup
2 cups thinly sliced yellow sweet onions
2 tablespoons butter
14 - to 15-ounce can chicken broth
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon fresh ground pepper
2 chicken bouillon cubes
1/4 cup diced Velveeta cubes (compressed in a measuring cup)
1 1/2 to 1 3/4 cups white sauce, recipe follows
Shredded Cheddar cheese, for garnish
In 2-quart saucepan, place 2 tablespoons butter and sliced onions. Cook at
low to medium heat, stirring frequently until soft and clear but not brown.
Add chicken broth from can, chicken bouillon cubes, salt, pepper and stir
until completely heated through. Add white sauce and Velveeta cheese. The
white sauce will be thick because it has been removed from the heat. Simmer
on medium low heat until cheese is melted and all ingredients are blended,
stirring constantly. Turn temperature to warm and let cook for an additional
30 to 45 minutes.
Serve with a garnish of shredded Cheddar cheese and a couple of slices of
warm dark Russian bread.
Thick white sauce:
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoon flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 1/4 cups whole milk
In 1-quart saucepan, melt butter and add flour, cook on medium heat until
flour turns thick and comes away from side of saucepan. Pour milk into flour
mixture a little at a time and stir constantly, taking care not to let
mixture lump. Set aside (off the heat) until ready to use in the soup.
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Lynchburg Lemonade
3 parts 7-up
1 part sweet and sour mix
1 part triple sec
1 part bourbon
Mix together. Add some sliced lemons and limes.
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Restaurants again.
If my 81 year old grandmother can use it...anybody
can!!
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Cooking - Kitchen - Recipe Tips...
* When slicing a hard boiled egg, try wetting the knife
just before
cutting. If that doesn't do the trick, try applying a bit
of
cooking spray to the edge.
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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