Google Alert - recipe |
- <b>Recipe</b>: Grilled Cheese With Bacon, Apples And Blue Cheese
- Skinny Chicken Tortilla Casserole: Updated <b>Recipe</b>! | Skinny Mom <b>...</b>
- The Scoop on the East Nashville Chili Bowl Chili Cook-Off — Plus <b>...</b>
- <b>Recipe</b>: Slow Cooked Shoulder of Lamb with Rosemary Scented <b>...</b>
- <b>Recipe</b>: Raw Salted Caramel Sauce - Keeping Healthy Getting Stylish
- Forrester's Three-Step <b>Recipe</b> for CMO, CIO Alignment - Direct <b>...</b>
| <b>Recipe</b>: Grilled Cheese With Bacon, Apples And Blue Cheese Posted: 12 Nov 2013 02:30 AM PST Today's recipe is for a fall-inspired grilled cheese sandwich with bacon, apples and blue cheese, served that with a side of broccoli steamed in a little apple cider with dried cranberries. Ingredients: Procedure: While you're keeping your eye on the bacon, add 1/3 cup crumbled blue cheese to a mixing bowl and add a generous tablespoon of mayonnaise, and use a fork to mash that together. If you're using the broccoli you'll want to cut about two cups into thin florets. Take the bacon out of the pan when it's nice and crisp and drain it on paper towels and then pour off the rendered bacon fat. Then turn the heat off underneath the pan and add 1/2 cup apple cider and 1/4-1/3 cup dried cranberries and let those soak. Spread the blue cheese mixture evenly over all four slices of bread, and top two of those slices with thinly sliced crispy apple. Top those with half of the bacon each, and then place the other slices of bread on top and gently but firmly press it down. Then, spread a layer of room temperature butter over the top of each sandwich. Next, add the broccoli florets to the pan with the apple cider, and cook those along until they're tender crisp with a lid on top. Turn the heat to medium high underneath another large heavy bottomed nonstick pan, and add the sandwiches, butter side down. Then, spread a little more butter over the top side and cook them just like you would any other grilled cheese sandwich. |
| Skinny Chicken Tortilla Casserole: Updated <b>Recipe</b>! | Skinny Mom <b>...</b> Posted: 12 Nov 2013 02:00 AM PST Everything about my Skinny Chicken Tortilla Casserole screams comfort food! At under 300 calories per serving, you're going to feel very comfortable serving this to your family! Two kinds of cheese, chicken and cream cheese blend into creamy, melty, yummy goodness, while green chiles, enchilada sauce and layered tortillas add just the right Mexican kick! Within an hour you have a fab family dinner! Enjoy! |
| The Scoop on the East Nashville Chili Bowl Chili Cook-Off — Plus <b>...</b> Posted: 12 Nov 2013 01:35 AM PST
It feeds a crowd and keeps us warm while instigating a friendly fight over prizes and bragging rights. Healthy competition, after all, helps make our collective chilis better. That's part of why I enjoy the East Nashville Chili Bowl Chili Cook-Off, which happens again tomorrow, Tuesday, Nov. 12, at 7 p.m. on the back patio of 3 Crow Bar on Woodland Street in East Nashville. Competitors will be wearing game faces and carrying Crock-pots cloaked with dish towels to protect secret ingredients -— from chicken in white chilis to lamb or sausage in beer or tomato-based versions to seasonal butternut squash. Organizer and 3 Crow bartender Wayne Hanan said a few competition spots remain. So if you think you've got what it takes, contact Hanan as soon as possible at wlhanan@gmail.com. Entry to compete is $20 or just $3 to taste (and judge — there's a people's choice award as well as panel of official judges tasting entries blind). All proceeds go to East C.A.N. Last year's champ and Margot Cafe bartender Brian Jackson generously shared his winning recipe below. But look out, chili cooks. Jackson will be sitting at the judges' table this year. Venison Chili Pie 4 tablespoons vegetable oil or rendered pork fat For the cornbread Heat oil in 5-quart pot or Dutch oven. Heat oven to 400. Recipe from Brian Jackson |
| <b>Recipe</b>: Slow Cooked Shoulder of Lamb with Rosemary Scented <b>...</b> Posted: 12 Nov 2013 01:11 AM PST by Sally Hall 12th November 2013 08:40:30 Aside from veggies, who doesn't love a lamb roast? Here's one to impress with this weekend...
Prep time:30 minutes Cooking time: 4 - 5 hours You'll need: 1 boneless shoulder of lamb 1 head of garlic ½ bunch of rosemary 2 peeled carrots 50ml olive oil Salt and pepper 400g whole round peeled shallots 20g tomato puree Pinch of flour 1 litre of chicken stock Ask your butcher to take out the bone of the shoulder but give it to you to use in the pan when roasting the shoulder to help make the gravy. What to Do: 1. Go over the joint and remove any large fat deposits or unsightly skin. 2. Stab the joint several times over with the tip of a small sharp knife and insert one ½ clove of garlic per incision. Also stick in a little sprig of rosemary per incision to enhance the flavour. 3. Place the shoulder on the lamb bones with the 2 carrots cut just in half, drizzle over the olive oil and season with sea salt and pepper. 4. Place in the oven at 160c for 4-5 hours, covering with a sheet of foil for the first 3 hours.With one hour to go, throw in the peeled shallots and remove the foil. 5. When the lamb is cooked and the shallots are also cooked, remove everything from the tray and allow to rest somewhere warm. 6. Add the tomato puree and flour to the cooking tray and place back on the stove to cook slightly. Then add the stock and bring to the boil. 7. Strain through a very fine sieve into a clean pan and bring back to the boil, season if required. 8. Carve the lamb onto a warm serving dish, place the shallots around and put the gravy in to a sauce boat. 9. Serve with green vegetables and some potatoes. Blowfish, The Bermuda Triangle... and Segways: How Not To Die Film review: The Hunger Games: Catching Fire Recipe: Slow Cooked Shoulder of Lamb with Rosemary Scented Shallots Exclusive clip from behind the scenes on Pacific Rim Interview: Pixies Album review: Kings of Leon - Mechanical Bull What if living your dream meant living a lie? Heart-wrenching video paints a sad picture of Sochi Winter Games Students encouraged to buy TV Licence and avoid £ 1,000 fine Anchorman 2: An Exclusive Message From Ron Burgundy Interview: David Tennant New Band of The Day: Shovels and Rope Five apps that all students should have Recipe: Slow Cooked Shoulder of Lamb with Rosemary Scented Shallots 7 ways to feel more positive every day Recipe: Indonesian braised Chicken in sweet Soy Sauce with Tenderstem Coconut Rice Top Ten Stress Busting Tips Bonfire Recipe: Baked & Spiced Pink Lady Apples with Pink Peppercorns Watching the fireworks? Stay safe out there... Meningitis: Know the facts Recipe: Spiced Pink Lady Apple Tarte Tatin Halloween Recipe: Roast Shallots with Pennoni Regati, Chargrilled Butternut Squash and Pumpkin Seeds Don't Forget: It's Good to Talk |
| <b>Recipe</b>: Raw Salted Caramel Sauce - Keeping Healthy Getting Stylish Posted: 12 Nov 2013 12:01 AM PST Redirect Notice The previous page is sending you to http://keepinghealthygettingstylish.com/2013/11/recipe-raw-salted-caramel-sauce.html?utm_source=rss. If you do not want to visit that page, you can return to the previous page. |
| Forrester's Three-Step <b>Recipe</b> for CMO, CIO Alignment - Direct <b>...</b> Posted: 11 Nov 2013 11:43 PM PST November 11, 2013
Marketing and IT can often seem like oil and vinegar: Their work flows, agendas, and objectives just don't mix. But collaboration can diminish frustrations and lead to solid business results. Forrester Research, Inc. advises marketing and IT leaders to follow a three-step recipe and align their people, process, and technology in its latest report "The CMO and CIO Must Accelerate on Their Path to Better Collaboration" based on an online survey conducted in partnership with Forbes Insights. "Marketers can no longer effectively lead marketing organizations that deliver results without having technology intertwined into their business practice," says VP and Principal Analyst Sheryl Pattek, author of the report. People While marketers are constantly engaging with consumers and have time-to-market needs IT focuses on back-end areas like security and data alignment and have slower implementations, Pattek says. Hence, the two departments often have conflicting viewpoints when it comes to the sense of urgency needed to meet consumers' expectations. Pattek says these conflicting viewpoints often tempt marketers to try and work around IT and implement cloud-based solutions--a habit that eventually leaves marketers with several solutions that aren't integrated. As a result, marketers can't leverage the back-end data that they need, and they end up turning to IT to integrate the systems, she says. "The main reason why we see marketers going around IT is that they don't trust IT's ability to deliver the results that they need," Pattek says. And a lack of communication between departments only makes the mistrust worse. According to the report, 70% of IT leaders agree that they have adapted their internal processes to support faster delivery of time-sensitive marketing projects; however, only 45% of marketers would agree. IT professionals claim to have a better understanding of marketing's priorities as well. The report cites that 68% of IT leaders agree that they communicate marketing's strategic priorities; yet, less than half of marketers surveyed (49%) say that they can return the favor. To help facilitate better communication, marketing and IT need executives who are fluent in both tongues, such as a marketing technologist. And while 49% of IT employees say that their CIOs hire employees with marketing knowledge, just 19% of marketers say their CMOs hire technology experts focused on customer engagement, according to the report. "If you think about people who speak totally different languages—somebody speaks French and somebody speaks Spanish—the most difficult thing is to reach a common understanding," Pattek says. "When you hire people with those skills and the ability to have the understanding on the other side of the fence, you really create a translator between the two organizations who can translate each other's needs, and achieve that commonality behind those needs, and focus on how to move forward together to achieve the business goals." Process Marketing and IT employees don't disagree on everything. Seventy-eight percent of marketers and 81% of IT staff members deem customer intelligence a strategic priority. The two departments must take this common goal to fuel joint efforts. Both departments are beginning to make some headway on this front. Seventy percent of IT leaders and 51% of marketing leaders agree that they have shared ownership and responsibility for marketing technology projects, according to the report. To help align these processes, 68% of IT heads and 55% of marketing leaders participate in joint committee that approves marketing projects requiring technology. Furthermore, 61% of IT heads and 45% of marketing heads say their CMOs and CIOs meet regularly to evaluate objectives and progress. "When CMOs and CIOs meet regularly, they build a level of trust with each other and then establish a culture for the entire organization that they can lead by example in that they are openly communicating and supporting each other's priorities," Pattek says. Technology Marketing technology is the heart of marketing today, Pattek says. But defining a marketing technology strategy that supports both marketing and IT is easier said than done. In fact, less than half of marketers surveyed (45%) say their organizations have established a marketing technology strategy, compared to 61% of IT leaders. This technology is needed to help drive a single view of the customer. But once again, marketers and IT heads have differing views on how well their organizations are achieving this goal. According to the report, 47% of marketers say their organization's customer touchpoints are designed to deliver and collect information, versus 61% of IT professionals. In addition, only 38% of marketers agree that their company has a single view of customer interactions across touchpoints and over time, compared to half of IT employees. Where to start Getting CMOs and CIOs to collaborate takes time and organizational change. Here are four of Pattek's suggestions on how companies can get their CMOs and CIOs to work together.
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