Rolling Hills Blog

Recipes made easy at the Corning Wine, Food and Art Festival

Thursday, March 01, 2012

Rolling Hills Casino chefs demonstrated how to make artichoke-encrusted halibut, bananas foster, wild mushroom beurre blanc, and other delicious dishes at the recent Wine, Food and Art Festival.  After the demonstrations, attendees sampled the food they had just learned to make. 

The food was as beautiful as it was delicious.  Don’t take my word for it.  Check out this two-minute YouTube video with highlights of the demonstrations and entertainment. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3r7lyWiB0XA&feature=youtu.be

More than 1,000 people attended the event, which raised over $10,000 for the Corning Rotary Foundation. After expenses are paid, the profits will go towards scholarships and local charities.

Here’s a few of the recipes our chefs made for you to try:

Timbers Artichoke Crusted Halibut

Ingredients:

6 ounces drained, marinated artichoke hearts
1 tbsp. lemon juice
½ tbsp. lemon zest
1 tsp. chopped peeled garlic
6 ounces extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup grated Parmesan
Kosher salt and fresh ground pepper to taste
4-6 fillets of halibut weighing 6 to 7 ounces each
4 ounces of Japanese Panko breadcrumbs

Preparation:

In a stainless steel mixing bowl combine your artichoke hearts, lemon juice, lemon zest, and garlic, and blend together. Then add your Parmesan cheese, panko, and a nice drizzle of olive oil.

Once your crust is well blended, take spread the crust evenly and not too thick on one side of the filet.

Heat your skillet with the remaining olive oil and place the fish, crusted side down, into the pan and cook until golden brown. Flip the halibut over and place in a 350 degree oven for 10 minutes


Bananas Foster

Ingredients:

1/4 cup butter
2/3 cup dark brown sugar
3 1/2 tablespoons rum
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
3 bananas, peeled and sliced lengthwise and crosswise
1/4 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
1 pint vanilla ice cream

Preparation:

In a large, deep skillet over medium heat, melt butter. Stir in sugar, rum, vanilla and cinnamon. When mixture begins to bubble, place bananas and walnuts in pan. Cook until bananas are hot, 1 to 2 minutes. Serve at once over vanilla ice cream.

Pan Seared True Cod with Wild Mushroom Beurre Blanc

The Cod

Ingredients:

2  six ounce cod fillets
Salt and pepper to taste
2 Tb. olive oil
¼ cup all purpose flour

Preparation:

Trim, rinse and portion cod fillets. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Heat olive oil in heavy frying pan. Lightly coat fish with flour and shake off excess. Place fish in pan skin side up and cook until the fish releases easily from the pan. Turn fish over and finish cooking other side.

The Wild Mushroom Beurre Blanc

Ingredients:

3 Cloves Garlic (Chopped)
1 Shallot (Chopped)
½ Onion (Chopped)
1 Thyme Sprig
½ Carrot (Chopped)
White Wine
3 Tb. Butter
3 Tb. Lemon Juice
1 Tb. Capers
1 Cup Wild Mushrooms
¼ Cup Tomatoes (Chopped)
¼ cup Fish Stock
Parsley Garnish

Preparation:

With the same pan used to cook the fish, add garlic, shallots, onion, carrots, thyme and a splash of wine.  Let cook until carrots are soft.  Add butter, lemon juice, capers, mushrooms, tomatoes and stock. Let cook until mushrooms are soft.

Rice Medley

Ingredients:

¼ cup Wild Rice
1 cup Stock
1 cup Assorted mixture of  other hardy rice
2 cup Stock

Preparation:

Cook the wild rice and assorted other rice separately. Add rice and stock together, and bring to a boil. Turn down to a simmer, cover, and cook for about 50 minutes.

Once cooked, mix the two rices together.

Vanilla Bean Ice Cream

Ingredients:

2 cups Whole Milk
2 cups Heavy Cream
1 cup Granulated Sugar, divided in half
Pinch Salt
1 Whole Vanilla Bean, Halved and Seeds Scraped
5 Large Egg Yolks
11/2 Teaspoons pure Vanilla Extract

Preparation:

In a medium pan over medium low heat, whisk together the milk, cream, half of the sugar, salt and the vanilla bean.  Bring mixture to a boil. While the milk mixture is heating, combine the yolks and remaining sugar in a medium bowl.  Using a hand mixer on low speed or whisk until mixture is pale and thick. Once the milk mixture comes to a slight boil, whisk about 1/3 of the hot mixture into the yolk mixture.  Add another 1/3 and return to the sauce pan.  Using a wooden spoon stir the mixture constantly over low heat until it thickens and coats the back of the spoon.  Do not boil or the yolks will overcook. Pour the mixture through a sieve, cover and refrigerate for 1-2 hours. Add to ice cream maker until ice cream is achieved.

Poster Winners for the 2012 Wine, Food, and Art Festival Announced

Saturday, January 28, 2012
We’re pleased to unveil the winning poster for the 2012 Corning Wine, Food and Art Festival at Rolling Hills Casino, which is a fundraiser for the Corning Rotary.  There was a tie for first, but the Rotary ultimately chose the poster designed by Corning High School students Oscar Avila and Jorge Bobadilla as the winner. It was a very difficult choice for the Rotarians as all posters submitted by students of Christine Lee’s design class were exceptionally creative and effectively designed. Second place went to the poster created by Nicole Mason and Salvador Sauceo, and third place went to Michael Mejia. Posters submitted by Sammy Solorio and Amber Gueter also got favorable notice. Visit our facebook page at 
facebook.com/rollinghillscasino to see all these posters.

The poster project was assisted by Scott Chandler, a marketing manager at Rolling Hills Casino. Scott wanted to make a difference in the education of local students, so he called Christine Lee and offered to share his knowledge of the elements of effective design in marketing and advertising. “The students got a good look at what good and bad design looks like,” he said.  “The goal of good design is to sell something — a service or a product or an idea. The goal is not art.”
 
With this in mind, he worked with Christine to guide the students through development of the 2012 Corning Wine, Food and Art Show posters. Making multiple return visits to the classroom, he offered critiques and small presentations to help the students relate to this real-world opportunity. After the posters were completed, he taught the students how to present their entries professionally for judging.
  
While the 2012 poster project has ended, the collaboration with the classroom has not. Rolling Hills has purchased a year's subscription to Communication Arts magazine for the school, to keep the students updated on the field. Cooperation between Corning High and Rolling Hills is also helping the classroom upgrade their design software to Illustrator. Christine Lee plans to take design courses over the summer to refresh her own skills.
 
“I hope to expand my involvement,” says Scott. “I am so grateful to find something that applies my experience to the next generation. It feels good.”
 
Rolling Hills Casino and Expect More Tehama encourages more people to take Scott's lead by finding meaningful ways to extend their personal experiences and passions to the educational experience of young people.