Cynthia wrote:Or Google "brie recipes" -- I did, and there were 99,000 hits.
bananasandwiches wrote:buy some frozen sheets of puff pastry, take the wheel of brie, cut the rind off, smear a good layer of mango chutney on the top of the wheel of brie. Wrap in puff pastry, wrap in wax paper, then foil, then into a freezer bag into the freezer. When unexpected guests drop by pop it into the oven til pastry is brown and cheese is warmed through all the way (you can even do it in a toaster oven) and you have a great appetizer or nibble
Liz in Norwood Park wrote:Well, I was at Jerry's today & they had these nice wheels (14oz) of brie on sale at 2/$4.00. I bought four. I can't resist a bargain. They also had wheels of Presidente camembert for 98 cents each...I bought 3.
YoYoPedro wrote:Liz in Norwood Park wrote:Well, I was at Jerry's today & they had these nice wheels (14oz) of brie on sale at 2/$4.00. I bought four. I can't resist a bargain. They also had wheels of Presidente camembert for 98 cents each...I bought 3.
Where is Jerry's? Think they'd have the same deal today?
Liz in Norwood Park wrote:Cynthia wrote:Or Google "brie recipes" -- I did, and there were 99,000 hits.
Yes I did do that. But how to know which recipes were actually good? That's why I asked here.
I can kind of "taste" recipes by reading them, so just looking at recipes is usually enough for me to figure out if they're good
Liz in Norwood Park wrote:Well, I was at Jerry's today & they had these nice wheels (14oz) of brie on sale at 2/$4.00. I bought four. I can't resist a bargain. They also had wheels of Presidente camembert for 98 cents each...I bought 3. Other than giving them away to friends, what can I make with them? I'm thinking brie en croute, but I have never done that before. Do you remove the rind? Does the rind mellow with baking? I know some people add raspberries & stuff...does it go on top of the brie before the puff pastry? Can cheese be frozen? Is there a cleese soup recipe, maybe? A fondue?
So much cheese! Please help!
MAG wrote:Slice in half horizontally, spread a tomato marmalade or some other piquant spread in the middle, sandwich again, wrap in brie and bake. Crunchy, creamy, sweet and tart.
MAG wrote:Truthfully, if you're going to do the caloric indulgence of brie en croute, I would go with an all-butter puff pastry (Pepperidge Farm is not). Du Four makes an excellent version, available at Fox & Obel or Whole Foods. Better yet, make it yourself. It's really not hard, it just takes time, mostly unattended time. I've posted my recipe here http://having-company.blogspot.com/2008 ... astry.html after I taught a class at Bloomingdale's, partially focused on puff pastry.
funholidaygirl wrote:I made the best recipe with brie, it is from Epicurious and it uses rigatoni and kalamata olives. Changes made, I added some italian sausage (actually turkey italian sausage) and I didn't use rigatoni I think I used somehting along the lines of bowtie but a little larger. I have been cooking for my boyfriend for six months and this was his favorite. It was creamy goodness!
Here is the recipe
http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/238283