TRADITIONAL GYROS
I absolutely love being able to make my own gyros at home! You have to try them!
Provided by BetterCookingForSingleFathers
Categories World Cuisine Recipes European Greek
Time 3h15m
Yield 12
Number Of Ingredients 19
Steps:
- Place onion in a food processor and blend until finely chopped. Transfer onion to a piece of cheese cloth and squeeze out the liquid. Place onion in a large bowl.
- Mix lamb, beef, garlic, oregano, cumin, marjoram, thyme, rosemary, black pepper, and salt with the onion using your hands until well mixed. Cover bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate until flavors blend, about 2 hours.
- Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C).
- Place meat mixture in a food processor and pulse until finely chopped and tacky, about 1 minute. Pack meat mixture into a 7x4-inch loaf pan, ensuring there are no air pockets. Place loaf pan into a roasting pan and pour enough boiling water around the loaf pan to reach halfway up the sides.
- Bake in the preheated oven until no longer pink in the center, 45 to 60 minutes. An instant-read thermometer inserted into the center should read at least 165 degrees F (74 degrees C). Pour off any accumulated fat and cool slightly.
- Thinly slice the gyro meat mixture.
- Spread 1 tablespoon hummus onto each pita bread; top each with gyro meat mixture, lettuce, tomato, red onion, feta cheese, and tzatziki sauce.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 424.8 calories, Carbohydrate 42.8 g, Cholesterol 60.6 mg, Fat 40.8 g, Fiber 3 g, Protein 22.4 g, SaturatedFat 6.7 g, Sodium 620 mg, Sugar 4.1 g
GYROS - AN AUTHENTIC RECIPE FOR MAKING THEM AT HOME
Yes, you can make authentic gyros at home --> the texture and flavor of this meat is as good as you get in a good Greek restaurant, without the traditional rotating spit.. but this is just the recipe and technique for making the meat, for I'm assuming you know the drill on making the classic gyro sandwich - stuff the meat in a grilled pita with sliced tomatoes, onions and tzaziki sauce.. Enjoy!
Provided by steve in FL
Categories < 4 Hours
Time 1h20m
Yield 10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Combine all ingredients in a bowl, and mix well.
- Knead the mixture on the counter for 10 minutes - just like you're kneading bread. You may want to use a dough-scraper to help keep the counter clean. (I do). Pick that meat up and SLAM it into the counter, continuing to do so for the 10 minutes. This is key to getting the correct texture. I'm no Alton Brown, but I think the thing we're doing here is melting the fat so that we get a nice smooth texture in the end.
- Form into a flat loaf - I like to put the meat onto a piece of wax paper, and flattening it into a 3" high slab rectangle. I cover it with another piece of wax and use a rolling pin to flatten it out, just make sure you straighten out the edges to form a rectangle so that when it comes time to slice, they are nice and even.
- Bake the loaf on a broiler pan (or pan with raised edges, because it will leak grease!) at 350 for about an hour. Alternatively, you can grill it over coals, that's my favorite way, just be sure to turn often so as to distribute the juices.
- Allow to cool for at least 10 minutes before slicing thin.
PIEROGIES
Though pierogies are a classic Polish dish, food editor Paul Grimes had them every Easter at his Russian grandmother's house. Pierogies are satisfyingly rich, so you'll only need to serve 2 or 3 per person as a first course; leftovers make a great breakfast.
Categories Mixer Onion Potato Side Easter Vegetarian Cheddar Boil Gourmet Sugar Conscious Pescatarian Peanut Free Tree Nut Free Soy Free No Sugar Added Kosher
Yield Makes 48 pierogies
Number Of Ingredients 18
Steps:
- Make dough:
- Put flour in a large shallow bowl and make a well in center. Add water, egg, oil, and salt to well and carefully beat together with a fork without incorporating flour. Continue stirring with a wooden spoon, gradually incorporating flour, until a soft dough forms. Transfer dough to a lightly floured surface and knead, dusting with flour as needed to keep dough from sticking, until smooth and elastic, about 8 minutes (dough will be very soft). Invert a bowl over dough and let stand at room temperature 1 hour.
- Make filling while dough stands:
- Peel potatoes and cut into 1-inch pieces. Cook potatoes in a large saucepan of boiling salted water until tender, about 8 minutes. Drain potatoes, then transfer to a bowl along with cheese, salt, pepper, and nutmeg and mash with a potato masher or a handheld electric mixer at low speed until smooth.
- When mashed potatoes are cool enough to handle, spoon out a rounded teaspoon and lightly roll into a ball between palms of your hands. Transfer ball to a plate and keep covered with plastic wrap while making 47 more balls in same manner (there will be a little filling left over).
- Make onion topping:
- Cook onion in butter in a 4- to 5-quart heavy saucepan over moderately low heat, stirring occasionally (stir more frequently toward end of cooking), until golden brown, about 30 minutes. Remove from heat and season with salt and pepper.
- Form and cook pierogies:
- Halve dough and roll out 1 half (keep remaining half under inverted bowl) on lightly floured surface (do not overflour surface or dough will slide instead of stretching) with a lightly floured rolling pin into a 15-inch round (1/8 inch thick), then cut out 24 rounds with lightly floured cutter. Holding 1 round in palm of your hand, put 1 potato ball in center of round and close your hand to fold round in half, enclosing filling. Pinch edges together to seal completely. (If edges don't adhere, brush them lightly with water, then seal; do not leave any gaps or pierogi may open during cooking.) Transfer pierogi to a lightly floured kitchen towel (not terry cloth) and cover with another towel. Form more pierogies in same manner.
- Bring a 6- to 8-quart pot of salted water to a boil. Add half of pierogies, stirring once or twice to keep them from sticking together, and cook 5 minutes from time pierogies float to surface. Transfer as cooked with a slotted spoon to onion topping and toss gently to coat. Cook remaining pierogies in same manner, transferring to onions. Reheat pierogies in onion topping over low heat, gently tossing to coat.
ETROG (ESROG) JELLY
The etrog (citron) is used by Jews worldwide for the holiday of Sukkot. What do you do with it after the holiday? My instructions are for someone like me who (almost) never makes jelly. You need 2 days before cooking to soak the etrog to get rid of bitterness. Get long tongs to take jars out of boiling water. For a small quantity, use 2 esrogim, 3/4 cup sugar, 1 tblsp pectin, 3-4 tblsp orange marmalade. Save & re-use glass jars with lids (jelly, pickles, anything).
Provided by RivkaD
Categories Jellies
Time 2h
Yield 6 cups
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- GET RID OF BITTERNESS: Wash etrog and trim off the ends. Slice thinly, or chop. Put the slices and the seeds into a cheesecloth bag. Day 1: Cover with water and let stand at least 12 hours. Bring to a boil, and simmer uncovered for 20 minutes. Drain fruit. Cover with cold water & repeat on Day 2.
- Day 3: Drain fruit, then cover with cold water & simmer uncovered 1 hour. Take out the bag of fruit and seeds. Let it cool down, then squeeze every drop into the pot and throw out the mush.
- Mix pectin with 1/4 cup sugar. Add sugar, pectin & marmalade and simmer. To become jelly, there has to be the right concentration of sugar, so if you put in more water or less sugar it takes longer to boil down. It will probably reach 200º quickly, but then it takes up to an hour to get up to "jelly" temperature (220º-222º). After it gets to 215º stir constantly and DO NOT WALK AWAY - it burns easily. If it does burn, just dump the jelly into a clean bowl, wash out your pot, put the jelly back in and continue.
- Put a saucer in the freezer to check for when your jelly is done. It should gel when you pour a little on your very cold saucer. If it still won't set after getting to 220º, cook 15-20 minutes more! (You could also just quit & call it etrog syrup.) If you overshoot the "gel" point, you will end up with more of a candy than a jelly.
- How to put in jars: Put your clean jars and lids in a pot, fill the pot and jars with cold water. Bring to a gentle boil for 10 minutes. Drain out a hot jar, fill with hot jelly leaving 1/4" "headspace," put on the hot lid tight. As it cools, the little button on the top that popped up when you first opened it will pop down again. This is what keeps out the bacteria that would spoil the jelly.
- Keeps 3 years in pantry. After opening, keep in fridge 4-6 months.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 411.7, Sodium 30.3, Carbohydrate 107.5, Fiber 0.8, Sugar 99.2, Protein 0.1
More about "etrogesrogjelly recipes"
AUTHENTIC GREEK CHICKEN GYROS RECIPE WITH TZATZIKI SAUCE
From foodiesterminal.com
GREEK GYRO RECIPE WITH HOMEMADE GYRO MEAT - THE …
From thefoodcharlatan.com
GREEK MARINATED PORK GYROS RECIPE WITH HOMEMADE …
From realgreekrecipes.com
HOMEMADE GREEK CHICKEN GYRO RECIPE - THE …
From themediterraneandish.com
WHAT IS ETROG AND HOW DO YOU COOK WITH IT? - FOOD …
From foodrepublic.com
RECIPE FOR TRADITIONAL GREEK GYRO
From greekboston.com
9 ESTROGEN-RICH FOODS TO ADD TO YOUR DIET | THETHIRTY
From thethirty.whowhatwear.com
THE BIRTH AND AFTERLIFE OF ISRAEL'S PRECIOUS ETROG FRUIT
From npr.org
IS IT SAFE TO EAT YOUR ETROG? | THE NOSHER - MY JEWISH LEARNING
From myjewishlearning.com
ESTROGEN-RICH FOODS: FIVE FOODS HIGH IN ESTROGEN
From flo.health
10 FOODS HIGH IN TESTOSTERONE AND LOWER ESTROGEN LEVELS
From thewownutrition.com
14 FOODS HIGH IN ESTROGEN FOR BALANCED HORMONES - MENU PRICE
From menu-price.net
HOW TO MAKE GYRO MEAT | EPICURIOUS
From epicurious.com
MAKE IT A HABIT TO EAT VEGETABLES, FRUITS, WHOLE GRAINS AND PROTEIN …
From food-guide.canada.ca
VEGETABLES | METRO
From metro.ca
I HEART GYRO | DELICIOUS & AUTHENTIC MEDITERRANEAN FOOD
From iheartgyro.com
THYROID AND PHYTOESTROGENS: 4 ESTROGENIC HEALTH FOODS TO AVOID
From forefronthealth.com
11 FOODS THAT AFFECT YOUR THYROID HEALTH - PALEOHACKS BLOG
From blog.paleohacks.com
EASY HOMEMADE GYRO RECIPE - THE SPRUCE EATS
From thespruceeats.com
GYRO RECIPES | ALLRECIPES
From allrecipes.com
ETROG: A FRUIT YOU'VE PROBABLY NEVER HEARD OF AND 3 WAYS TO USE IT
From spoonuniversity.com
ETROG FRUIT INFORMATION - WHAT IS AN ETROG AND CARE OF CITRON
From gardeningknowhow.com
ESTROGENIC FOODS TO AVOID | LIVESTRONG
From livestrong.com
GOODFOOD :: MEAL KIT DELIVERY
From makegoodfood.ca
10 ESTROGEN BOOSTING FOODS - MARION GLUCK
From mariongluckclinic.com
HOW TRADITIONAL GREEK GYRO IS MADE - THE SPRUCE EATS
From thespruceeats.com
HOW TO MAKE GREEK GYRO MEAT AT HOME - MELANIE COOKS
From melaniecooks.com
TIPS & INFORMATION ABOUT ETROG - GARDENING KNOW HOW
From gardeningknowhow.com
9 GREEK FOODS YOU NEED TO TRY THAT AREN'T GYROS
From spoonuniversity.com
FOODS THAT PROMOTE ESTROGEN DETOXIFICATION | YOUR HORMONES
From yourhormones.com
CEREAL - FLAVOURS TO GO
From flavourstogo.ca
DON'T EAT YOUR ETROG UNLESS YOU KNOW IT'S ORGANIC - GREEN PROPHET
From greenprophet.com
17 HEALTHY FOODS HIGH IN ESTROGEN | THE FIT MOTHER PROJECT
From fitmotherproject.com
10 BEST FOODS TO NATURALLY LOWER ESTROGEN LEVELS
From bensnaturalhealth.com
ESTROGEN FOODS LIST: 50 HIGH NATURAL PHYTOESTROGEN SOURCES
From superfoodly.com
GYRO (GYROS) - TRADITIONAL GREEK RECIPE | 196 FLAVORS
From 196flavors.com
FOODS THAT ACT LIKE ESTROGEN | HEALTHFULLY
From healthfully.com
ESTROGEN DOMINANCE: WHAT YOU SHOULD EAT & WHAT YOU ... - KIM …
From kimmaravich.com
GYRO RECIPES YOU CAN (ALMOST) EAT WITH ONE HAND - BETTER HOMES …
From bhg.com
FOODS HIGH IN ESTROGEN! - BOOST YOUR LOW TESTOSTERONE
From boost-your-low-testosterone.com
THE TOP 5 HIGH ESTROGEN FOODS TO AVOID | DR. JOSH AXE - YOUTUBE
From youtube.com
HOMEMADE GREEK GYROS WITH TZATZIKI SAUCE RECIPE - CHRISTINA'S …
From christinascucina.com
IS GYRO MEAT HEALTHY? | LIVESTRONG
From livestrong.com
You'll also love