April 2009


shrimp-mango-quesadilla-011

Recipes and photos reprinted with permission:

Sue Doeden’s All About Food Blog

http://www.areavoices.com/sdoeden/

In her own words, from All About Food Blog:

Are you ready for my next food mania? I’ve moved from lemons to mangoes.

Although mangoes seem to be in grocery stores almost year ’round, I always seem to find the most deliciously sweet mangoes in the spring. My favorites are the small, flattened oval-shaped mangoes that are often labeled Adolfo or Ataulfo. I’ve also seen these yellow-skinned mangoes referred to as Champagne mangoes.  Whatever you call them, they are buttery smooth and delicious. When I am lucky enough to find them in the store, I buy a whole case of them.

Fresh mangoes are rich in vitamin C and are a good source of dietary fiber and potassium. I chop them up and toss the fruit into salads, layer mango chunks with yogurt to make parfaits, stir the juicy bits into scones and quick breads, cook them up to make savory soup, and puree them in the blender to make smoothies and frozen mango daiquiris.

You can’t always tell if a mango is ripe by its color. Some mango varieties stay green, even when they are ready to eat. When ripe, mangoes will feel soft when given gentle pressure with your thumb. If you purchase mangoes that aren’t quite ripe, allow them to sit out at room temperature. Once they are ripe, they can be refrigerated to extend their life for a few more days. I like to remove the fruit from the skin, cut the mango into chunks and freeze in tightly sealed containers. These frozen chunks are perfect to toss into the blender when making my morning smoothies.

I love the great versatility of mangoes. They’re just as happy paired with chicken or pork as they are with pound cake or scones. And, as I recently discovered, they feel quite comfortable with shrimp.

Shrimp and Mango Quesadillas are a quick-to-fix Mexican-style toasted sandwich, using tortillas rather than the traditional bread to hold the filling together. Shrimp seasoned with chili powder and ground cumin takes just minutes in the oven to roast to perfection. Once the roasted shrimp is chopped, it is layered on tortillas along with cheese, bits of sweet red bell pepper and chopped fresh mangoes. Heated in a skillet, the cheese melts and embraces all the other ingredients in its warm and gooey stickiness.

All of the filling ingredients can be prepared before serving time and stored in the refrigerator. At meal time, line up the ingredients and have hungry diners create their own quesadillas.

Black Bean Salsa makes the Shrimp and Mango Quesadilla experience complete. It’s also good just served as a salsa with chips.

Serve Shrimp and Mango Quesadillas with Black Bean Salsa for lunch or supper. Cut the quesadillas into small wedges to serve as an appetizer before a meal out on the deck. And if you’re thinking ahead to Cinco de Mayo, these tasty toasted tortilla sandwiches would be a great addition to a party menu.

At my house, Shrimp and Mango Quesadillas with Black Bean Salsa will get me to my next mango creation as I deal with my mango mania.

Shrimp and Mango Quesadillas with Black Bean Salsa
1 pound shrimp (26 to 30 count), peeled, deveined, tails removed
1 teaspoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1 clove garlic, minced
1 teaspoon olive oil plus more for brushing on quesadillas
1 lime
1 (15-ounce) can black beans, rinsed and drained
1/2 cup finely chopped red onion
3 plum tomatoes, seeds removed, chopped
1 jalapeno pepper, seeds removed, minced
1/4 cup chopped cilantro
2 large ripe mangoes, peeled, seeds removed, chopped, divided
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 ripe avocado, peeled, seed removed, chopped
1 (10-count) package flour tortillas
16 ounces shredded Monterey Jack cheese
1 red pepper, seeds removed, chopped

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Place shrimp in a large bowl and toss with chili powder, ground cumin, garlic and olive oil to coat. Transfer to an aluminum foil-lined baking sheet. Roast seasoned shrimp in preheated oven for 6 to 8 minutes, until the shrimp is cooked through. Remove from oven and set aside to cool.

Make Black Bean Salsa by placing beans, red onion, tomatoes, jalapeno pepper, cilantro and chopped fruit from 1 mango in a large bowl. Sprinkle with salt. Grate the zest from the lime and add to bowl. Cut the lime in half and squeeze the juice from one half over the ingredients in bowl. Gently toss together. Cover bowl and place in refrigerator until serving time. At serving time, gently toss in chopped avocado.

Chop roasted shrimp and place in a bowl. Sprinkle with juice from remaining half of lime. Toss.

To assemble the quesadillas, lay tortillas on work surface. Sprinkle half of each tortilla with cheese. Layer with shrimp, some chopped mango, chopped red pepper and more cheese. Fold the bare half of tortilla over the half layered with ingredients. Brush the top of each quesadilla with olive oil. Lay the quesadilla, oiled side down, in a preheated grill pan or other heavy skillet. When brown, brush top side with olive oil and flip over. Heat until tortilla is brown and cheese inside is melted.

Serve black bean salsa on the side. Makes about 10 quesadillas.

Tips from the cook

–Quesadillas can also be cooked on an outdoor grill or baked in the oven. The oven works well when you are feeding a crowd because you can prepare several at the same time. Place oiled quesadillas on a baking sheet. Slide the baking sheet into an oven preheated to 375 degrees. Bake for about 10 minutes. Use a large metal spatula to carefully turn each quesadilla and bake another 5 minutes, or until brown and crisp.

–I prefer to use the whole wheat tortillas that can be found in most grocery stores.

For some extra crunch add a few strips of cucumber of red bell pepper.

For the Sauce

1/4 cup seasoned rice vinegar

4 teaspoons hoisin sauce

1 Tablespoon minced fresh ginger

2 teaspoons chili-garlic sauce

1 Tablespoon of brown sugar if desired

Mix first all ingredients in  a small bowl.  Pour sauce into ramekin.

For the Filling

You will need  8 inch diameter rice paper rounds

2  2/3 cups of coleslaw mix (shredded cabbage and carrots).  You can always shred your own.  I have done both.

4 Tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro

8 teaspoons chopped fresh mint

8 cooked, peeled, deveined medium shrimp.  Halved horizontally.

Submerge 1 rice paper round in a large bowl – I use a pie dish-filled with room temperature water.  Let stand till soft but not limp.  About 1 minute.

Place softened round on work surface.  Mound about 2/3 cups of the coleslaw mix at end of round closest to you; sprinkle with 1 tablespoon of cilantro and 2 teaspoons of mint.  Top with 4 shrimp halves, cut side down.  In a single layer.  Fold in ends of round; roll up tightly into cylinder.  Repeat with remaining ingredients 2 or 3 more rolls.  Cut rolls diagonally in half.  Serve with sauce.

My friend Marla brought this to our last tennis match.
I am not a big dessert fan but this is amazing.  Hope you all like it as much as I do.  I served it at a recent dinner party and warmed it before serving and added a scoop of vanilla ice cream. I also now make it as a school snack.  My kids usually end up in a class that has peanut allergies so this is a great snack.
Crust and Topping

1 1/2 cups all- purpose flour
1 1/2 cups rolled oats
1 cup firmly packed brown Sugar
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 cup unsalted butter, cut into chunks.
Filling

3 cups blueberries or 2 cups blueberries and 1 cup raspberries.  Fresh or frozen
3/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
1 Tablespoon lemon juice
Generously spray an 11×7 baking pan with non stick cooking spray. A 9×13 pan will work too.
For Crust and Topping in a food processor, put flour, oats, brown sugar, baking powder, salt
and cinnamon and pulse to blend, about 20 seconds.  Add butter and pulse to cut butter into dry ingredients until you have
a crumbly mass, not dry but not sticking together.

For Filling toss berries in a bowl with sugar, cornstarch and lemon juice.

Spread or pat half of oatmeal mixture firmly into pan.  Spread on blueberry mixture.  Top as evenly as you can with remaining oatmeal mixture and press slightly.  chill 30 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350.
Bake 40 to 45 minutes until fruit starts to bubble; then reduce oven temp to 325 and bake until done, another 15- 20 minutes or until the fruit that bubbles is deeper in color and the edges of the squares are browned.  Cool completely in pan before cutting.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.