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Easy tasty vegetarian recipes. . . post em . . .

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The other day the guys from BaconToday.com contacted me in search for some barbecue bacon recipes. Of course I have plenty of great uses for bacon in a barbecue pit, but the longer I thought about it, the more I wanted to step it up a notch and clog a few arteries for those guys. Behold, BACON EXPLOSION!!! Here?s what you?ll need?

2 pounds thick cut bacon
2 pounds Italian sausage
1 jar of your favorite barbeque sauce
1 jar of your favorite barbeque rub

To kick off the construction of this pork medley you?ll need to create a 5×5 bacon weave. If the strips you?re using aren?t as wide as the ones pictured, then you may need to use a few extra slices to fill out the pattern. Just make sure your weave is tight and that you end up with a nice square shape to work with.

The next step is to add some barbeque seasoning on top of your bacon weave. Being the barbeque addict that I am, I whipped up a batch of Burnt Finger BBQ?s competition pork rub for this special occasion. Seeing as not everyone has the time, or the expertise, to create a tasty rub of their own, I would recommend trying Bad Byron?s Butt Rub, Rendezvous Famous Seasoning, or Steven Raichlen?s All-Purpose Rub.

Now that you?re pork is well seasoned, it?s time to add more pork. Take two pounds of Italian sausage and layer it directly on top of your bacon weave. Be sure to press the sausage to the outer edges of the bacon creating a patty that is the same thickness all the way across. Most grocery stores carry loose sausage, so just pick out one you like. I chose to go with a mild sausage, but spicy would work just the same. If you really want to get crazy, take a stab at making your own homemade sausage.

Next up is bacon layer number two. Take the remaining bacon slices and fry them up the same way you would for breakfast (or lunch, or dinner, or a midnight snack). If you like soft bacon, make it soft. If you like crunchy bacon, make it crunchy. If you like your bacon burnt to hell so the smoke detectors go off, then burn it to hell so the smoke detectors go off. These pieces are going to be a major part of the inner flavor of our sausage fatty, so cook them your favorite way. Personally, I like my bacon right at the point when it starts to get crispy, but hasn?t quite lost all of the softness yet. Regardless of how well done you like yours, you?ll need to crumble or chop the cooked strips into bite size pieces and place on top of the sausage layer. (Note-It?s okay, and encouraged, to snack on these pieces while your chopping/crumbling. But keep in mind that once those bacon morsels touch the raw sausage, you?ll need to resist all temptations to nibble. This can and will be difficult, but hospital trips are no fun, so stay strong.)

Since this is a barbeque recipe, we need to add another layer of barbeque flavor. Take your favorite sauce and drizzle it all over the top of the bacon pieces. Personally, I prefer to use Burnt Finger BBQ?s homemade competition sauce, but if you?re torn on what brand to use I recommend Cowtown, Blues Hog, and Fiorella?s Jack Stack. Once you?ve sauced the bacon, sprinkle on some more of the barbeque seasoning you used on the bacon weave.

Now comes the fun part. Very carefully separate the front edge of the sausage layer from the bacon weave and begin rolling backwards. You want to include all layers EXCEPT the bacon weave in your roll. Try and keep the sausage as tight as possible and be sure to release any air pockets that may have formed. Once the sausage is fully rolled up, pinch together the seams and ends to seal all of the bacon goodness inside.

At this point we can start to see the final shape of our Bacon Explosion, but we?re missing one key item. To complte the constuction process, roll the sausage forward completely wrapping it in the bacon weave. Make sure it sits with the seam facing downward to help keep it all sealed up.

Sprinkle some barbeque seasoning on the outside of the bacon weave, and now this bad boy is ready for the smoker. Cook your Bacon Explosion at 225 degrees in a constant cloud of hickory smoke until your Thermapen gives an internal temperature reading of 165 degrees. Normally this will take about 1 hour for each inch of thickness, but that could vary depending on how well you maintain your fire and also how many times you open the smoker to take a peek. Mine took about 2.5 hours, which was right on target with its 2.5 inch diameter.

Now that our Bacon Explosion is fully cooked, we need to add some finishing flavors. Remember that barbecue sauce we used for inner flavor? We?ll be using that same sauce to glaze the cooked bacon weave. Using a basting brush, coat the entire surface with a thin layer of sauce. Sweet sauces are loaded with sugars, so they?ll give your fatty a nice glossy finish. Spicy and vinegar based sauces don?t contain as much, so they won?t set up as well. If you?re dead set on using those sauces, just cut them with a bit of honey and you?ll get the same effect.

Slice the Bacon Explosion into quarter to half inch rounds to serve. If your roll was good and tight, you should now see a nice bacon pinwheel pattern throughout the sausage. Obviously pork is best served by itself, but if you feel the need to make this meat monster into a sandwich, try placing a couple Bacon Explosion slices on a warm Pillsbury?s Grands Biscuit. You?ll reach pork Nirvana is no time flat!
 
Originally posted by: Nik
The other day the guys from BaconToday.com contacted me in search for some barbecue bacon recipes. Of course I have plenty of great uses for bacon in a barbecue pit, but the longer I thought about it, the more I wanted to step it up a notch and clog a few arteries for those guys. Behold, BACON EXPLOSION!!! Here?s what you?ll need?

Nice wholesale, unattributed, quotation unless of course you're "Jason"
http://www.bbqaddicts.com/blog/recipes/bacon-explosion/
 
I bought these packaged curry dinners at Target for about 4 bucks. Red bean curry with basmati rice and lentils in cream sauce. They are awesome.
 
Originally posted by: tefleming
Originally posted by: Nik
The other day the guys from BaconToday.com contacted me in search for some barbecue bacon recipes. Of course I have plenty of great uses for bacon in a barbecue pit, but the longer I thought about it, the more I wanted to step it up a notch and clog a few arteries for those guys. Behold, BACON EXPLOSION!!! Here?s what you?ll need?

Nice wholesale, unattributed, quotation unless of course you're "Jason"
http://www.bbqaddicts.com/blog/recipes/bacon-explosion/

Everyone who's anyone knows what the Bacon Explosion is. It's been posted and reposted and reposted here. :roll: That's why I posted it in this thread.
 
Originally posted by: queenrobot
I bought these packaged curry dinners at Target for about 4 bucks. Red bean curry with basmati rice and lentils in cream sauce. They are awesome.

they are also unhealthy as hell
 
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: queenrobot
I bought these packaged curry dinners at Target for about 4 bucks. Red bean curry with basmati rice and lentils in cream sauce. They are awesome.

they are also unhealthy as hell

Yeah, most things like that have LOTS of sodium
 
I can't stand tofu. It always seems like it's trying to be like chicken, and I've taken several vegetarian dishes that call for tofu, substitute chicken and they're much better.

Avoid vegetarian things that try to "be like meat" or try to "replace meat". They don't work well and will just remind you of what you're missing.

That being said, there are some excellent dishes that do not involve meat at all.

Pasta with home made sauce:
Saute some garlic, onion, and shallot in butter.
Take some cans of low sodium plain tomato sauce and add to the garlic etc.
Add fresh herbs (large bunch of basil, italian parsley, cilantro)
Simmer for 20-30 minutes to blend the flavours.
Put in the blender and blend until smooth.
Pour through a strainer (you may have to force some of it through). Discard the really fleshy stuff left in the strainer.
Re-heat until it starts to simmer. Taste. Add a little salt, stir well, taste. Keep going until the flavour changes but doesn't become salty.
Add some heavy cream to the sauce and re-heat until it starts to simmer. Pour on your pasta.

You can make curry as well, look up recipes for that. Most are quite good.
 
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: queenrobot
I bought these packaged curry dinners at Target for about 4 bucks. Red bean curry with basmati rice and lentils in cream sauce. They are awesome.

they are also unhealthy as hell

With the exception of the high sodium count, they aren't too unhealthy.
Definitely beats fast food any day.
 
Originally posted by: episodic
Gaghalfrunt: What difference does it make if I get protein from alternate sources most days? I love nuts, I love beans, I love brown rice. . . you can't tell me I'm going to fall apart from going without meat for 5 days a week. . .

No you're not going to fall apart, but then on the other hand, there's nothing WRONG with meat. If I was going to change my diet I'd try to eat less fat and sugar and salt and chelesterol rather than less meat as such. I mean, if you think replacing a lean chicken breast with something made from buckets of beans and cheese is healthy, then you're on the wrong track. Replacing a rump steak with a lean chicken breast would be a lot better.
 
Originally posted by: TallBill
Why the hell would you avoid meat? Just take a look at how human teeth evolved. We eat meat and plants.

Except that we aren't as good at hunting meat with spears as we are at gathering plants with our hands.

It is due to technology, not evolution, that we eat as much meat as we do today. We are evolved to eat meat sure, but not 2 lbs of it per day.
 
Originally posted by: silverpig
Originally posted by: TallBill
Why the hell would you avoid meat? Just take a look at how human teeth evolved. We eat meat and plants.

Except that we aren't as good at hunting meat with spears as we are at gathering plants with our hands.

It is due to technology, not evolution, that we eat as much meat as we do today. We are evolved to eat meat sure, but not 2 lbs of it per day.

Well I'll be enjoying my tasty meat all the way to my grave, even if it comes early.
 
Originally posted by: CatchPhrase
Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
Originally posted by: episodic
I'm trying to become a weekday vegetarian - in other words, I'm trying to avoid meat M-F.

I don't think I can go full time, but I figured this would help my health somewhat.

If you think that simply going veggie 5 days a week is a building block of good health you need to give this hare-brained scheme a LOT more thought. Eating healthy is about balancing the bodies needs, not painting proteins as evil and avoiding them. The human body is meant to consume meat, that's why we can digest it, why we need the nutrients in it and why we have the teeth to eat it. Your body needs a wide variety of vitamins and minerals, fats and fibers, grains and meats and dairy and produce in the right proportions. A vegetarian diet isn't necessarily any more healthy than an all-meat diet. Neither one is any good for you if you entirely cut out other stuff you need. If you're really going vegetarian you need to construct a menu plan that includes everything you need, otherwise you're just going to kill yourself in a far less tasty way than the all-bacon diet.

In bold means wrong unless a dog posted.
you need to take a biology course.
 
Originally posted by: episodic
I'm trying to become a weekday vegetarian - in other words, I'm trying to avoid meat M-F.

I don't think I can go full time, but I figured this would help my health somewhat.


I've been eating lots of rice stir fries and just seasoned rice out of the rice cooker.

I'm looking for different ways to flavor rice - especially anything 'hot and spicy'.

I'm also looking for good bean recipes. I fixed some black bean burritos the other day that were good.


I need stuff that I can cook in small quantities as I seem to be alone in this endeavor.

Also, do you recommend tofu? Never touched it before. . .

Thanks for some thoughts. . .
here are 42,000+ recipes: http://www.recipezaar.com/recipes/vegetarian

:Q
 
Originally posted by: episodic
My reasoning is 2 fold - to reduce cost of food (increasing my rice staple alot) and to eat healthier - I won't start gorging myself on deep fried mozzeralla sticks. Never tasted Red Bull, and I'm not a fry fan.

As a suggestion, I would avoid making rice a staple for EVERY meal. It's the best way to gain a good deal of fat weight. If you are going to pursue that route, then i suggest very small quantities per meal. Remember, rice is just carbs.

BTW, i'm an Indian vegetarian so I know the difficulty of staying full but healthy.
 
Originally posted by: Connoisseur
Originally posted by: episodic
My reasoning is 2 fold - to reduce cost of food (increasing my rice staple alot) and to eat healthier - I won't start gorging myself on deep fried mozzeralla sticks. Never tasted Red Bull, and I'm not a fry fan.

As a suggestion, I would avoid making rice a staple for EVERY meal. It's the best way to gain a good deal of fat weight. If you are going to pursue that route, then i suggest very small quantities per meal. Remember, rice is just carbs.

BTW, i'm an Indian vegetarian so I know the difficulty of staying full but healthy.

Lentils ftw? I'm only a part-time vegetarian, but I'm plenty full on a plate of dhal and some vegetable curry.
 
Originally posted by: Descartes
Originally posted by: Connoisseur
Originally posted by: episodic
My reasoning is 2 fold - to reduce cost of food (increasing my rice staple alot) and to eat healthier - I won't start gorging myself on deep fried mozzeralla sticks. Never tasted Red Bull, and I'm not a fry fan.

As a suggestion, I would avoid making rice a staple for EVERY meal. It's the best way to gain a good deal of fat weight. If you are going to pursue that route, then i suggest very small quantities per meal. Remember, rice is just carbs.

BTW, i'm an Indian vegetarian so I know the difficulty of staying full but healthy.

Lentils ftw? I'm only a part-time vegetarian, but I'm plenty full on a plate of dhal and some vegetable curry.

Good suggestion. I used to eat a lot of rice when I lived at home with the family. A LOT of south indian dishes are based off of rice (Dosa, Idli, Vada, and of course RICE) so it's hard to avoid it. I recently switched to more tofu and vegetable dishes and mostly cut out the rice but I have other vices (cheese, breads etc.). Trying to balance it out so I avoid saturated fat foods but it's tricky. Also, I only have time to cook simple dishes such as stir fry as I'm out of my apt most of the day.
 
Why do you think this is healthy or good for your health?
I know it's not healthy to eat 24oz steaks and burgers and pork chops and bacon every day, but some meat is recommended on a daily basis. The origin of the protein doesn't really matter as far as your health is concerned....

Anyhow, Some indian vegetarian dishes are good, but AFAIK, Addition of chicken, pork, or beef is always an improvement.

My favorite vegetarian things are
Ice Cream
Cheese
Beer
Mead
Coffee Cake
Coffee
Cookies
Cake
Pie
Cheesecake
Chocolate
Skittles
Starbursts
Lemonheads
Good'n'plentys
Tangy Taffy
and Nutella. Nutalla makes everything better.

 
There are plenty of good reasons to reduce or eliminate meat consumption from a person's diet; for example, meat is generally high in cholesterol, saturated fat and relatively low in fiber (Yes, even "lean" meats). So if you are having problems with high cholesterol, obesity, high blood pressure and constipation, swapping out the bulk of your steak dinners for one of lentils and vegetables might be a good idea.

OP, if you are going vegetarian M-F for health reasons, you may wish to consider eliminating dairy from those meals as well. Simply swapping out meat for cheese/butter/cream based dishes with some vegetables mixed in isn't going to do anything positive for you.

Recipes

I like Alton Brown's recipe for Lentil Soup

And this website for Indian food recipes

I usually leave out the butter and cream if called for in indian recipes and also reduce the oil to up the health factor.

You can flavor rice with anything. add some salsa and tomato juice while it's cooking for a Mexican flavor, diced green chilies, mixed veggies, cumin, mexican oregano, cilantro, cumin, whatever.

Tofu fine for a change of pace, but I don't make it an every day thing. I like to broil it in the oven until crispy brown and toss it with some broccoli in a stir fry.

I would suggest however that rice and tofu only make up a small part of your overall meals and legumes and greens/veggies be the primary focus.
 
Season porterhouse w/ salt and pepper, grill both sides on cast iron skillet, throw in 325 preheated oven and bake for 20 min. Mmmm juicy.
 
Originally posted by: sdifox
Originally posted by: ElFenix
1) cook some bacon
2) use the bacon grease to make an omlette
3) avoid eating the tasty delicious bacon. you must have an iron will to do so, though. it'll build character.

lol, the bad parts of bacon is the fat 🙂

'bad' and 'bacon' are antonyms.
 
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