Chicken
Cordon Bleu
Fancy without the fuss. Chicken
roll-ups with a golden coating and ham and Swiss filling
8
boneless chicken breasts
8
slices of thin deli ham8 slices of Swiss cheese
2 eggs
1 cup 2% milk
2 cups of crushed cornflakes
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon sale
1/2 teaspoon pepper
1. Flatten the chicken breasts by placing each one between two pieces of waxed paper or a plastic baggie. Start from the center to the outer edges and pound with the flat side of a meat mallet to an even thickness. Top each breast with a slice of ham and a slice of Swiss cheese. Roll them up, tuck in the ends and secure with a toothpick.
2.
Whisk the eggs and milk in a shallow bowl. Combine the cornflakes and
seasonings in another shallow bowl. Dip each rolled chicken breast in the egg,
then roll in the cornflake mixture.
3.
Place on a greased baking sheet and bake at 350° for 40-45 minutes or until
juices run clear. Discard the toothpicks before serving.
I’m
a big fan of things that are easy to make and look like they took lots of
effort. Here is an easy recipe for Chicken Cordon Bleu. For those cooks who are
adventurous, different fillings can be substituted. I’ve used spinach and
gorgonzola cheese or sautéed mushrooms and onions to name a few. If you use
more than one filling and are serving this to a large crowd, it’s fun to put a
toothpick with a little sign saying what the filling is in one of the pieces in
each group.
The Mafia Funeral and Other Short Stories – Review by Martha A. Cheves, Author of Stir, Laugh, Repeat; Think With Your Taste Buds; A Book and A Dish
The procession of forty black limos and one flashy yellow convertible made its way along the thirty-five mile route from downtown Los Angeles to the cemetery in Tustin, flanked by at least fifteen officers on motorcycles. The heads of drivers in nearby cars whirled to take in the sight, probably wondering which dignitary had died.
In The Mafia Funeral the dignitary that died turned out to be a family member of the mafia. Eliot’s wife is mistaken for the daughter of a Mafia Don and has a time convincing the ‘Uncle Johnnie’ that she isn’t. This story has a sadness, a touch of humor and a bit of oh my.
Rip Off takes Stephen Rollins from a bad life to a good life and back to the ultimate of bad.
Saying Goodbye to Miss Molly is a story that brought tears to my eyes.
Morgan St. James has written a garden of stories with some of them being as beautiful as the daisy, some with the beauty of the rose but will stick you with their thorns and some that are as threatening as a weed. The Mafia Funeral is a collection of short stories, some true, some fiction but all well worth reading.
Now I’m impatiently waiting on her next book Confessions of a Cougar that is due out in late 2012.
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