Sunday, August 14, 2011

Cold Veggie Ranch Pizza

This recipe is from the Fool’s Gold Family Recipes Cookbook, a PDF cookbook that you can download for free at www.foolsgoldca.com/funstuff.html. The full-color cookbook has 48 pages of recipes contributed by the characters of Fool’s Gold – everything from Mayor Marsha’s Citrus-Grilled Steaks to Low Carb Cheesy Cauliflower from Dakota Hendrix, the heroine of the latest Fool’s Gold book, ONLY MINE.

I love the vegetables of summer. I know we have the luxury of being able to get fresh vegetables year round, but somehow, the vegetables of summer taste better. They’re more colorful, more flavorful. I’m sure there’s a reason – probably because they’re coming straight from local farmers instead of being shipped north from Chile.

One of my favorite ways to use fresh vegetables is in this cold vegetable Ranch pizza. It’s something of a misnomer to call it pizza, since only the crust is cooked – and it’s not actually a crust but rather crescent roll dough. But I don’t know what else to call it, so I stick with pizza. My husband doesn’t love it. I think he’s crazy, but I’m convinced the reason for his ambivalence is because the word “pizza” creates expectations in his head that this pizza doesn’t meet. So bite into it with an open mind and enjoy. If you love vegetables and ranch dip, I don’t see how you can go wrong.

Recipe: Cold Veggie Ranch Pizza


2 tubes Pillsbury Crescent Roll dough
1 pint sour cream
1 package Ranch mix
4 C fresh vegetables, in ¼-inch pieces
2 C cheddar cheese, shredded
1 can sliced black olives (optional)

Flatten the crescent rolls in a single layer in an ungreased 13x9-inch pan. Cook at 350 until golden brown, 10-12 minutes. Cool. Meanwhile, mix the ranch dip with the sour cream. When the crust is cool, spread the ranch dip over it. Top with vegetables, cheese, and olives, if desired.

When choosing vegetables, stick with those that won’t get slimy or wilted if you’re planning to store the pizza for a few days. (I like to make it on Sunday and then have it for lunch throughout the week.) I use carrots, cauliflower, broccoli, sugar snap peas, red peppers and onions. Plus, I drain a small can of Green Giant Niblets corn and include that. The more colors, the prettier!

Friday, August 5, 2011

Garlic Butter Salmon with Teriyaki-Glazed Green Beans

You’ll find more free recipes – and excerpts of my books – at SusanMallery.com!


The hero of my latest book, ONLY MINE, Finn Andersson is a sexy, rugged small airplane pilot from Alaska. When ONLY MINE hit #10 on the New York Times bestsellers list, my friend Marilyn of Marilyn’s Romance Reviews suggested I should celebrate with an Alaskan salmon dinner. What a perfect idea!

Marilyn sent me a recipe for barbecue sauce for salmon, but I wasn’t in the mood for a tomato-based sauce. She also sent me a link to this recipe for Taku Glacier Lodge Salmon Baste. That recipe looked delicious, but I didn’t have any brown sugar on hand. Plus, it was a recipe for 8 salmon fillets, which means I would have to do math to cut the recipe down for me and my husband.

I decided to use the two recipes from Marilyn as inspiration for my own salmon basting sauce. This Garlic Butter Salmon is, if I do say so myself, incredibly delicious! I paired it with Teriyaki-Glazed Green Beans. All in all, a terrific way to celebrate the #10 spot on the New York Times list. Life is good!

Recipe: Garlic Butter Salmon

2 salmon fillets, 1 pound total
¼ C butter
4 cloves garlic
1 t soy sauce
1 t granulated sugar

Cut the butter into chunks and put in a small microwave-safe bowl with the garlic, soy sauce, and sugar. Microwave at 50% power for 30 seconds. Stir well until all the butter is melted.

Preheat the grill. (I use an indoor grill.) Create an aluminum foil boat for each salmon fillet. Brush the bottom of the foil with the butter mixture. Place the salmon on the foil boats and baste with butter. Grill for about ten minutes, basting every two minutes, until salmon flakes easily with a fork.

Recipe: Teriyaki-Glazed Green Beans

1 lb fresh green beans
1 T sesame seeds
1 T sesame oil
1/3 C teriyaki sauce

Place the greens in a large sauté pan with about half a cup of water. Cover. Cook over medium heat until the water is mostly gone, about 5 minutes. While the green beans are cooking, toast the sesame seeds in a small, dry sauté pan. Be careful, the seeds will burn easily.

Uncover the beans. Add the sesame oil to the pan and toss to coat. Cook another 2 minutes. Add the teriyaki sauce and toss to coat. Put on a plate and then sprinkle the beans with the sesame seeds.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Gravlax (Salt and Sugar Cured Salmon)

Find more free recipes - and excerpts of my books, including the latest Fool's Gold romance, ONLY MINE, at www.susanmallery.com!


I'd like to welcome Louisa Edwards to my kitchen! Louisa writes a series of steamy, sexy romances with a cooking twist.

Louisa Edwards:

My next book, Too Hot to Touch, is out on August 2nd! It’s the first installment in my new contemporary romance trilogy, and it introduces a team of talented young chefs competing in a high-stakes culinary competition for fame, fortune…and each other’s hearts.

As you might have guessed, there’s plenty of food in my books! I think you can say a lot with what you choose to cook—and my hero, Max Lunden, definitely understands the language of food. The language of love? That, he needs a little help with. Luckily, he’s got Jules Cavanaugh, their tough-talking team leader…who just happens to have had a crush on Max since they were teenagers. Now that they have to work together, though, she’s determined to keep her cool—no matter how hot it gets!

The competition is fierce, and the whole team has to pull together to create a winning menu. I wanted to share one of the three recipes that appears in the back of Too Hot to Touch. This one is for gravlax, one of my favorite things to make. It’s a super adaptable recipe, perfect when you’ve got houseguests or a dinner party, because it’s one of those where you throw the ingredients together and then just stick it in the fridge and forget about it.



I know it sounds fancy, but gravlax is just salt and sugar-cured salmon—sort of like smoked salmon without the smoke! The salt/sugar blend “cooks” the fish, and leaves it with a firm, supple texture and a delicious, lightly sweet and herbal flavor that you can change, depending on what you add while it’s curing. I’ve made it with dill and gin instead of tarragon and Pernod, with no alcohol at all (it’s completely optional), and it always tastes delicious and refreshing. Perfect for such a hot summer!

I hope you enjoy the Too Hot to Touch team’s version…and if you want to find out whether the recipe helps them win a spot in the Rising Star Chef competition, and if Max and Jules figure out how to tell each other what they really feel, read the book!

Too Hot to Touch on Amazon
Too Hot to Touch on Barnes & Noble

Recipe: Beck’s New York-Style Gravlax


2 lb whole salmon fillet, skin on (ask fishmonger to remove all pin bones)
2 cups granulated sugar
1 cup salt
4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
1 tablespoon black pepper
4 bunches fresh tarragon
¼ cup Pernod, or other anise-flavored liqueur (optional)

Rinse the fish, checking for loose scales, and pat dry with paper towels.

Stir together the garlic, sugar, salt and pepper in a large bowl. Coat the bottom of a 9 x 13 casserole with about a third of the mixture.
Lay the fish, skin side down, across the sugar mixture in the pan. Place one bunch of tarragon around the sides of the salmon, then pour the rest of the sugar mixture over the top of the fish, making sure to cover it completely.

Spread the rest of the tarragon over the coated fish, then (if you want) pour the Pernod over all and cover with plastic wrap.

You may place a weighted 8 x 11 pan on top of the covered salmon to help the curing process and absorption of the tarragon oil into the sugar, but it’s not strictly necessary.

Put the pan in the refrigerator and allow to cure for two to three days. Check the salmon every twelve hours or so to make sure it’s still covered, adding more sugar and salt if needed.

When ready to serve, remove the gravlax from the pan and rinse well. Pat dry with paper towels and slice thinly across the grain. Great on sandwiches, in salads, with eggs—anywhere you’d use smoked salmon! It’s especially good on crackers with sour cream, diced red onion, and capers…