Welcome to The Cow-Town Kitchen
Welcome to the Cow-Town Kitchen! My name is Doug Freeman and this is my personal Cooking/Grilling/Foodie Blog for all things Good to Eat, Fun to Prepare and always fun share and enjoy with others. As a long time Texan and a Proud Resident of Fort Worth you can understand where the name originated. Enjoy my content and check back from time to time as updates will always be added.
Cooking with a Lone Star Flare!
Recipes
Salsa Options
Tarleton Texan Salsa
Background: This recipe is named Tarleton Texan Salsa for the pure reason of being an alumni and I did not want to just name it My Salsa. Enjoy!
Ingredients:
3 (Raw/Fresh) Jalapenos
1/4 Clove Garlic
1 Medium Fresh White Onion
2 Large Cans of Diced/Stewed Tomatoes (Can use fresh tomatoes but if time is a crunch canned tomatoes can be used)
1 Medium Green Bell Pepper
Cilantro
Lime Juice
Salt and Pepper
Directions:
1. Core the Jalapenos and remove seeds. (Leave the seeds to add heat to the sauce. Your Choice)
2. Chop Jalapenos into very fine cubes.
3. Chop 1/4 close garlic.
4. Chop 1 whole onion.
5. Chop 1 medium bell pepper.
6. Chop cilantro leaves
7. Blend 2 large cans of diced/stewed tomatoes with previous chopped contents plus lime juice.
8. Salt and Pepper to taste.
** For Added Kick Use Rotel instead of the cans stewed tomatoes. This will add more heat to the salsa.
Gas Griddle Options
Simple Breaky Quesadillas - Serves 6
Ingredients:
12 oz bacon, preferably not thick, cut into ¾” pieces
8 large eggs
1/2 cup pico de gallo, store bought or homemade (see recipe for homemade Pico), plus more for serving
3/4 tsp sea salt
freshly ground black pepper to taste
2 Tbsp butter, olive oil or reserved bacon drippings
cooking spray, more butter or olive oil
6 oz cheddar, grated
6 oz freshly grated pepper Jack or Monterey Jack cheese
12 (8-inch) flour tortillas (See recommendations for where to purchase)
1 large avocado, sliced
sour cream, for serving
Tarleton Texan Salsa, optional but recommended
Directions:
Preheat the gas griddle and add appropriate amount of oil (I prefer/recommend olive oil.)
Cook bacon until crispy. (Place bacon in pan or plate with a paper towel to help remove excess grease.)
In mixing bowl add eggs, pico de gallo and pepper and whisk until smooth and ready to cook.
Back to the griddle and again clean and add appropriate amount of oil. Pour Egg Mixture onto the griddle. With proper spatula push and flip eggs until they become "Set" but still a little "Wet". (Please Note: Egg mixture will set quickly so please take extra care when preparing this step.)
Crumble and mix in the bacon cooked earlier into the now cooked but still "Wet" egg mixture.
Depending and how you want to serve them either one at a time or all together depends on the tortilla preparation. Clean griddle and add more/appropriate amount of oil. Put a tortilla on the griddle and add 2 tablespoons cheddar cheese, a layer of the cooked eggs, a layer of crumbled bacon and finish with a layer of 2 tablespoons pepper jack or Monterey cheese. Top with a second tortilla. Cook for 3-4 minutes on each side, flipping carefully, until the cheese is melted and the filling is warmed through. Repeat with the remaining tortillas and ingredients.
Slice the quesadillas into wedges once complete with cooking and serve with avocado, sour cream.
Optional/Recommended - Add fresh or pickled jalapenos and Tarleton Texas Sala for taste.
Meat - Beef, Pork, Turkey and Chicken
Beer Butt Chicken
Background: This recipe for beer can chicken is seriously one of my favorite items to cook. I love it on the grill and/or in the oven. Since you cook a whole chicken on top of a can of beer (Shiner Bock Preferred), the end result is both white and dark meat that is so juicy and tender that heaven is the only description.
Ingredients:
Whole Chicken: Purchase a whole chicken that is around 3-4 lbs. Make sure to leave the skin on, but to remove any and all innards.
Create the Dry Rub or Purchase: a delicious dry rub is used to flavor this chicken. Take liberty in how you season the outside of the chicken, I like to make a mixture a Pink Salt, Pepper, Garlic Salt, Onion Salt and a Herb Garlic/Serendipity Mix to create my dry rub. (** There are many types of dry rubs, experiment for taste.)
Butter: butter is used in between the meat and the skin so that the skin comes out nice and flavorful and crispy. It’s serioulsy a dream.
Olive Oil: olive oil is used on the outside of the bird to help the spices stick and to help further crisp up that skin.
Beer: And last but not least, the star of the show – Shiner Bock Beer! Any kind of beer should work well for this recipe but Shiner Bock Beer is the preferred Choice of the Beer Butt Chicken given it's dark and flavor.