

The only trick this treat is hiding is how easily it will disappear during any Halloween festivity. https://kerrygoldusa.com/recipes/pumpkin-cheesecake-with-chocolate-cookie-crust/


The only trick this treat is hiding is how easily it will disappear during any Halloween festivity. https://kerrygoldusa.com/recipes/pumpkin-cheesecake-with-chocolate-cookie-crust/


Give any meat or indeed vegetable a Thanksgiving twist with
rosemary, cranberry & clementine butter. We adore it on BBQ turkey legs…what would you try? kerrygold.com/au/recipes/ros #thanksgiving #kerrygold #recipe #turkey
Risotto. Creamy rice, a splash of wine, a big dollop of butter, and cheese, glorious cheese. What’s not to love about a dish like that? The infernal stirring, that’s what. It’s such a good, restorative, comforting dish, but really, who has the patience? Sure, it can be meditative, standing and stirring with Buddha-like calm as the wine cooks down, and ladle after ladle of broth plumps the rice. But, truly, can you give a handful of rice 30 minutes of unblinking attention while all manner of homework mayhem ignites in the other room? Here’s one way to eliminate the long stand, stir and stare: enlist your oven. Contrary to the stiff-necked (and armed) belief of cranky purists, you can bake a perfectly fine risotto. While it’s not completely stir-less, this method will cut your stove-top workout down to a couple dozen reps. And while the rice, onions and broth happily bake, you’ll have plenty of time and focus to roast asparagus with one hand, and put out homework fires with the other. And honestly, if you slipped a bit to one of those stiff-necked purists I’d bet you good money they’d never know.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F
In 3.5 quart wide Dutch oven or any wide, heavy pan with lid, melt the butter over medium heat
Sauté onion until translucent and tender
Add rice, stirring occasionally, until rice is slightly toasted, about 2-4 minutes
Add garlic and salt (to taste), stirring until garlic is just fragrant, about a minute
Add the wine, and let cook for one minute
Stir in 3 cups of broth, turn up the heat to medium high, and bring to a simmer
Cover and place pot in oven.
Stir once halfway through cooking, after about 15 minutes
Cover pot again and continue to cook until the rice is tender and broth is absorbed, about 25-30 minutes
About 10 minutes before rice is done, coat asparagus pieces in the olive oil and spread on an aluminum-foil lined baking sheet
Sprinkle asparagus with salt
Place asparagus in oven (along with the rice) and roast until tender (about 7-10 mins)
Remove risotto from oven
Stir in remaining 1 1/2 cups warm broth, cheese, asparagus, butter pieces plus salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
Serve immediately with extra grated Dubliner Cheese, if desired.
http://kerrygoldusa.com/recipes/baked-risotto-with-roasted-asparagus
We have several farmhouse goat’s-cheesemakers in Ireland.We use Ardsallagh goat’s cheese, St Tola from Inagh in Co.Clare is also heaven, as is Gortnamona from Cooleeneyfarm in Co. Tipperary and Corleggy from Co. Cavan.We bake this soufflé until golden and puffy in a shallow oval dish instead of the traditional soufflé bowl. It makes a perfect lunch or supper dish. Little individual bowls are also perfect as a starter. Reduce the cooking time accordingly.
Preheat the oven to 230°C/450°F/gas 8. Brush the bottom andsides of a 30cm (12in) shallow oval dish (not a soufflé dish) or six individual wide, rimmed soup bowls with melted butter.Put the cream and milk into a saucepan, add the carrot, onion,peppercorns and fresh herbs. Bring slowly to the boil, and then setaside to infuse for 10 minutes. Strain, discarding the flavourings(we rinse them off and throw them into the stockpot if there isone on the go).Melt the butter, add the flour and cook for a minute or two.Whisk in the strained cream and milk, bring to the boil and whisk
until the sauce thickens. Cool slightly. Add the egg yolks, goat’scheese, Gruyère and most of the Coolea or Parmesan (reservingsome for the topping). Season with salt, cayenne, freshly groundpepper and nutmeg. Taste and correct the seasoning.Whisk the egg whites stiffly and fold them gently into the mixtureto make a loose consistency. Spoon into the prepared dish, scatter thethyme leaves over the top and sprinkle with the reserved Coolea orParmesan.Bake in the preheated oven for 12–15 minutes (or 9–11 minutesfor the individual soufflés) or until the sides and top are nicely puffedup and golden – the centre should still be creamy. Garnish withthyme flowers. Serve immediately with a good green salad.
http://cookwithavonmore.ie/recipe/ardsallagh-goats-cheese-and-thyme-leaf-souffle/

Ready to roll shortcrust pastry, thawed if frozen
6 eggs
100 ml milk
100 g sour cream
120 g goat’s cheese
80 g blackberries, cut in halves
2 tsp fresh thyme leaves
Salt & pepper
1Pre-heat oven to 180°C/160°C fan assisted.
2Gently roll the shortcrust pastry out over a 20cm loose-bottomed quiche tin. Press pastry into the tin and then trim away excess pastry. Chill in the freezer for about 10 minutes.
3In a large bowl or jug, whisk together eggs, milk, sour cream and a generous pinch of salt and pepper.
4Slice goat’s cheese then cut each slice into quarters.
5Pour egg mixture into chilled pastry then evenly distribute the goat’s cheese and halved blackberries. Sprinkle with thyme leaves.
6Carefully transfer to the preheated oven and bake for 30-35 minutes, until quiche is set around the edges and has lost its glossy top but there’s a slight wiggle in the centre.
7Leave to cool for about 15 minutes before enjoying warm. Can also be served cold

The Good Batch Café, Ballyjamesduff, Co. Cavan


#FlahavansOats #FlahavansRecipes