View Full Version : Tina's Cheese Spread
Tina Brooks
03-11-2006, 05:50 PM
Asked and answered:
Ingredients:
2 pounds Cheddar cheese cubed (at room temperature)
2 cloves garlic minced
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 tbsp Hurricane Mash or 3 fresh hot peppers minced
1/2 bottle beer give or take
1 teaspoon salt
Cooking Directions:
Process the cheese in a food processor or blender until perfectly smooth. Add garlic, Worcestershire, mustard, and peppers. Blend until fully incorporated. Begin to add the beer, a little at a time, while continuing to blend. When the mixture is a good, firm spreading consistency, add the salt. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Serve as a spreadable cheese or add a little more beer and make a salsa con queso.
Expect 15 to 20 servings.
Cap'n Bones
03-11-2006, 06:58 PM
Thanks Tina, I'll have to add that to my growing list of things to try! I may have to add just a bit more peppers and grog, but other than that, it sounds great!!
Cap'n
huvason
03-11-2006, 07:09 PM
Beer and peppers? GENIUS Tina, GENIUS.
:)
Tina Brooks
03-11-2006, 07:13 PM
I'm so worthy, I'm so worthy.
Feel free to genuflect.
T
huvason
03-11-2006, 07:52 PM
I'm so worthy, I'm so worthy.
Feel free to genuflect.
T
I would if I knew what it meant :D
sevver
10-28-2006, 04:22 PM
I am making the cheese beer thing for tomorrows Harvest Day Picnic, I am sure it will be a big hit. I am thinking of making two batches, possibly three...
marcosauces
10-28-2006, 04:26 PM
Sevver specifie the cheese beer thingy....
sevver
10-28-2006, 04:29 PM
Asked and answered:
Ingredients:
2 pounds Cheddar cheese cubed (at room temperature)
2 cloves garlic minced
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 tbsp Hurricane Mash or 3 fresh hot peppers minced
1/2 bottle beer give or take
1 teaspoon salt
Cooking Directions:
Process the cheese in a food processor or blender until perfectly smooth. Add garlic, Worcestershire, mustard, and peppers. Blend until fully incorporated. Begin to add the beer, a little at a time, while continuing to blend. When the mixture is a good, firm spreading consistency, add the salt. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Serve as a spreadable cheese or add a little more beer and make a salsa con queso.
Expect 15 to 20 servings.
Here ya go. I should have quoted it to begin with.
Off to the store for ingredients.
marcosauces
10-28-2006, 04:33 PM
Coool..let us know the results..:)
sevver
10-28-2006, 05:52 PM
Ok I am making two batches, one with Habnero's, and one with Jalepino's (I feel like I butchered the spelling of both of those). I will post the firey results. I just know that the people from my church are going to love these. lol
:mouthonfire:
marcosauces
10-28-2006, 06:19 PM
or hate them..:)
sevver
10-28-2006, 07:39 PM
ok, I made one with only one jalepino, for my sissy wife, and it is not hot at all. Then I made another one with three habenero's and that one is better. Neither one of them has been refridgerated yet though, and I am hoping that tomorrow makes it better.
As for a recipe though, it is very good, the cheese definately needs to be at room temperature as the food processor needed several smoke breaks even while it was, I actually had to add beer as I went just processing the cheese, and each one took almost a can, probably like three quarters of a can each batch.
Tomorrow is going to be the ultimate test though once it has a chance to settle. I have a feeling though that the next time I make it six habeneros will be going in there.
sevver
10-29-2006, 06:00 PM
Asked and answered:
Ingredients:
2 pounds Cheddar cheese cubed (at room temperature)
2 cloves garlic minced
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon dry mustard
1 tbsp Hurricane Mash or 3 fresh hot peppers minced
1/2 bottle beer give or take
1 teaspoon salt
Cooking Directions:
Process the cheese in a food processor or blender until perfectly smooth. Add garlic, Worcestershire, mustard, and peppers. Blend until fully incorporated. Begin to add the beer, a little at a time, while continuing to blend. When the mixture is a good, firm spreading consistency, add the salt. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Serve as a spreadable cheese or add a little more beer and make a salsa con queso.
Expect 15 to 20 servings.
Ok so I gave this a try, and here is what I have to say about it. For starters, I could not get cheddar cheese, but I got sharp cheddar, and the rest of the stuff I was able to find ok. I had the store cut the chees a half inch thick, I I cubed it from there, and put it in the food processor, cold at first, which is definately not good, and later at room temperature. The cheese was a lot of work for the processor, and I found that adding the beer first helped matters, alot. But in each one I only used one clove of garlic, which was fine for us. And initially I wanted to do two batches, one with three jalepinos and one with three habs. My sissy wife talked me into one jalepino though, which was actually a good mild one for the lighter people. And the other I used three habs, which was good.
I took this to a harvest day festival with around two hundered people there or so I would guess, and this stuff was a big hit with everyone. Personally I loved it. In hindsight, I feel that the jalepino needed more peppers, and the hab one could have used another hab or two, or maybe even a jalepino to round it off. The hab one had a nice warm afterglow to it and it will definately be one of my favorite recipes. By the time I bought everything for this, including four boxes of crackers, it was $41 or so, the cheese was around $10 per 2 pounds alone. But it was worth it to see people enjoy it.
Thanks for that Tina, Good Stuff.
Steve
GreenHot
10-29-2006, 06:09 PM
I don't eat cheese anymore myself but how does the cheese you used compare to english cheese? From what I remember, when I was in the US last the cheese I tried was all very mild and good cheese in england tends to be quite strongly flavoured and often quite salty.
Also, the beer you used, was it a lager or an ale?
I'd quite like to make a similar spread but dairy/fish free so I'm trying to work out what ingredients I'll need.
Hillbilly Chili
10-29-2006, 08:30 PM
BRILLIANT!!!
Hillbilly Chili
10-29-2006, 08:51 PM
ok here I go......stupid question...what is huuicane mash?
thehotpepper.com
10-29-2006, 08:57 PM
The brand name of her product. In other words, this was an advertisement in disguise :shocked: It was also in the pizza thread, but I split the thread.
Hillbilly Chili
10-29-2006, 09:11 PM
Thanx HP You a rock, as always
sevver
10-30-2006, 12:07 AM
I don't know anything about English Cheese, but I would say that ours is mild. I don't much like the strong stuff, yucky.
And as for beer, honestly the difference between a lagger and ale excape me, my true drink of choice are Long Islands. Sencond to that is Rum and Coke. Beer is something for hot days of mowing, and usually only one or two will do me just fine.
So, for Beer; Miller Lite. :lol:
Two for two here on this site. The spicy meatballs and Tina's Cheese Spread. I need to cook more often.
Hillbilly Chili
10-30-2006, 06:29 AM
Hey sevver,
You might want to reduce the baking time 5 min or so. The wife came home and saved mine from burning. I think I said 25-30, should be 20ish minutes. I should find and edit
that thread. They would be a great snack for MNF tonight.Dont forget the “Made E.Z.” ;)
Scotty
11-02-2006, 08:55 PM
How did you guys add the cheese to the processor? Just curious if you used the shredder attachment first.
sevver
11-02-2006, 09:32 PM
I had the deli slice it 1/2" thick, then I cubed it the rest of the way and tossed it in. The shredder may have helped, I am not much of a genius with the processor, I realized that there were other attatchments for it a couple of days after that. I always just use the blades. I need to see what else is in the box and put some thought into how they could be used.
imaguitargod
11-02-2006, 11:26 PM
I had the deli slice it 1/2" thick, then I cubed it the rest of the way and tossed it in. The shredder may have helped, I am not much of a genius with the processor, I realized that there were other attatchments for it a couple of days after that. I always just use the blades. I need to see what else is in the box and put some thought into how they could be used.
Wow Sevver, you mus' heave one of der fancy proceasiors. My el chipo Huntington Beach food processor only had 9 settings and not exchangable blades. Quite frankly, I didn't even know that different attachment blades were available. :shocked:
I'm going to have to use "the google" for this. Thanks for the info!
GreenHot
11-04-2006, 08:41 PM
Wow Sevver, you mus' heave one of der fancy proceasiors. My el chipo Huntington Beach food processor only had 9 settings and not exchangable blades. Quite frankly, I didn't even know that different attachment blades were available. :shocked:
I'm going to have to use "the google" for this. Thanks for the info!
Just make sure you don't use "the shopping channel" :lol:
Sickmont
11-06-2006, 02:04 PM
How did you guys add the cheese to the processor? Just curious if you used the shredder attachment first.
Just put it through a wood chipper a few times. Then add it to the processor. Or, you can stake the chesse to the ground and hit it with a stump grinder a few times.
sevver
11-06-2006, 05:03 PM
The handheld stumpgrinder is actually what I used, I love it when it bounces two feet in the air.
sevver
11-22-2006, 09:27 PM
I made it again, this time I used 5 Habs and 1 Jalepino in one, and three jalepino's for the sissies in the other. I will post results tomorrow. I used mild cheddar cheese this time, and made to cheese beer mixture, and put it in the kitchenaid mixer and mixed in the rest of the stuff. Much better, the food processor actually sighed in relief when I did that.
Shooty*
11-23-2006, 02:50 PM
It's amazing how much of a legacy Tina has left... apart from her very attractive avatar.
Do I take it most of her threads were either
1. This is a great recipe: Various ingredients and ONE OF MY SAUCES, damn you.
2. Politics! Woo-haa!
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