Bea Arthur's Tomato-Mushrooms on Toast/Carrie Sheridan
- Ready In:
- 15mins
- Ingredients:
- 6
- Yields:
-
2 sandwiches
- Serves:
- 1
ingredients
- 1 tablespoon kerry irish gold salted butter
- 2 medium tomatoes, sliced
- 3⁄4 cup chopped fresh mushrooms
- 1⁄4 - 1⁄2 teaspoon salt
- 1⁄4 teaspoon fresh ground black pepper (to taste)
- 4 slices bread, toasted
directions
- Preheat toaster oven to 250 degrees.
- Melt the butter in a saute pan over medium heat.
- Add the tomatoes and mushrooms and saute until soft, about 4 minutes.
- Season to taste with the salt and pepper.
- Put some of the tomato and mushroom mixture on each piece of toast.
- Heat in the toaster oven for 2 minutes before serving.
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
56, an Army brat who has lived in 20 different locations [born in germany, went to kindergarten in japan] including new york city, palo alto CA, maine, georgia, chicago, after growing up in small-town kansas...
have some fabulous recipes from well-traveled army people...
recently started adding just a splash of bourbon or brandy to real maple syrup - and it really gives french toast or pancakes a special, more sophisticated flavor...
a friend jokes that bourbon is my new "secret ingredient" that i'll be adding to everything - it's not true but i'm telling you - you should try it! it's really very good [for adults, anyway]
sugarpea's apple pancake recipe is a deadringer for Walker Brothers Pancake House in north shore Chicago - i've searchd for this for 34 years - and it's easy as well as To Die For!!!
the Dutch Baby pancake is a huge seller there too - with the same gooey comfort-food but elegant batter...
also if you search for lettuce wrap - the 2 recipes for PF Chang's come up... this is also SO GOOD, truly a memorable entree...
for cookbooks: With a Jug of Wine, More Recipes With a Jug of Wine were written by the San Francisco Chronicle food writer decades ago - and most everything in them is superb - and i learned a lot as a new cook, young wife, from reading through them in the late 1970s... i got a [very French] sense of food as a way of life