Pita Pocket Sliders
Tailgate Thursday - week 7
When I first started planning the tailgate series, I sent out invitations to many friends to participate and received many fine ideas in return. Like this one today from my buddy Terry. His blog site, The Random Gourmet, contains many fine recipes and interesting writings related to, well food and life. Although Terry has taken a temporary hiatus in his postings, we all wish him and Cynthia bright comings and kindled opportunities in the future.
This is Terry’s salute to tailgating and he sent it out on Sept 1st with a reference to “Party at Drick’s” – thank goodness only a few showed up.
Pita Pocket Sliders
I love football! Well, not really, but I love to tailgate...
Actually, I just love to eat...
Anyway, to me the secret of good tailgating food is food that can be eaten with one hand: one hand to hold the paper plate and one hand to bring the food to your mouth.
Better yet, one hand to hold the food and one hand to hold the beer.
We've been doing a lot of sliders at our house lately, partly for portion control but mainly to increase the ratio of filling to bread. To me, a normal-sized 1/4 to 1/3 pound burger fits best on a slider roll. But mostly, sliders are fun.
I love Sloppy Joes and thought that converting such a classic into a slider would be perfect tailgate food if it weren't so, well...sloppy. And keeping that saucy mess in a tiny bun would be the definitive futile exercise. Then I remembered the mini pitas that we served with our tourtiere a week ago, and voila! Problem solved!
So here goes:
• Sweat a mock mirepoix of diced onion, celery and sweet potato in a pan on medium heat. Why sweet potato? Just because. And just because I had one left over.
• Chopped bell pepper is common in Sloppy Joes, but bell pepper messes with me. I used one chopped poblano, a couple of cherry peppers and some chopped peperoncini peppers.
• After the vegetables are softened add two finely diced garlic cloves.
• Add one pound of ground sirloin and about 1/2 pound of bacon that has been ground in a food processor.
• Add salt, pepper, some smoked paprika and several healthy splashes of worcestershire sauce. Turn the heat up to medium-high to brown the meat.
• When the meat is cooked through, add your house barbecue sauce (our house sauce follows). Start with adding about 1/2 cup, adding more as desired. Be careful to get the right saucy consistency to your meat mixture. If it is too runny or greasy, the sandwich will fall apart. If it's too dry, it just won't be a Sloppy Joe. Drain excess grease from the pan if necessary before adding any sauce.
• Adjust the seasoning. If you want to go a little more southwestern, add some cumin, chili powder and/ or your favorite hot sauce.
Spoon the mixture into warmed mini pita pocket halves. We mated these with pockets full of a tangy slaw that Cynthia grabbed from Epicurious. For a variation, try spoonful of both in each pocket. This slaw was quite vinegary; Cynthia recommends cutting back a little on the sherry vinegar and doubling the sugar.
Our house barbecue sauce:
• Pour a 16 oz bottle of pomegranate juice and the juice of one lemon in a pan and reduce to a thick syrup. You're basically making pomegranate molasses.
• Add a 14 oz bottle of ketchup. I love ketchup. I need to start making my own.
• Add 1 can of Coca-Cola. Or Root Beer. Or Dr. Pepper. A friend once inexplicably gave us 10 cases of Dr. Pepper. We had Dr. Pepper sauce for a year. And Dr. Pepper-glazed ham. And Dr. Pepper cherries jubilee...
• Add 1/2 cup of sour orange juice. I find this in the ethnic aisle of the supermarket next to the mojito mix. If you can't find it use 50/50 lime and orange juice.
• Add between 1/2 cup to 1 cup of bourbon.
Add anywhere from a teaspoon to two tablespoons each of:
• fresh ginger
• garlic salt
• onion salt
• sweet paprika
• smoked paprika
• ground coriander
• crushed thyme
• crushed oregano
• celery salt
• worcestershire sauce
• salt and black pepper.
Simmer for at least an hour.
After creating the base sauce you can adjust to your liking or to suit the dish by adding:
• honey, brown sugar and/or molasses
• apple, pineapple, or mango juice
• cider vinegar
• mustard
• ground chilies
• cumin
• tamarind paste
• cinnamon
• your hot sauce du jour...
The sky, as they say, is the limit.
Thanks Terry for this wonderful idea. Be sure to check out his other recipes at The Random Gourmet.
When I first started planning the tailgate series, I sent out invitations to many friends to participate and received many fine ideas in return. Like this one today from my buddy Terry. His blog site, The Random Gourmet, contains many fine recipes and interesting writings related to, well food and life. Although Terry has taken a temporary hiatus in his postings, we all wish him and Cynthia bright comings and kindled opportunities in the future.
This is Terry’s salute to tailgating and he sent it out on Sept 1st with a reference to “Party at Drick’s” – thank goodness only a few showed up.
Pita Pocket Sliders
I love football! Well, not really, but I love to tailgate...
Actually, I just love to eat...
Anyway, to me the secret of good tailgating food is food that can be eaten with one hand: one hand to hold the paper plate and one hand to bring the food to your mouth.
Better yet, one hand to hold the food and one hand to hold the beer.
We've been doing a lot of sliders at our house lately, partly for portion control but mainly to increase the ratio of filling to bread. To me, a normal-sized 1/4 to 1/3 pound burger fits best on a slider roll. But mostly, sliders are fun.
I love Sloppy Joes and thought that converting such a classic into a slider would be perfect tailgate food if it weren't so, well...sloppy. And keeping that saucy mess in a tiny bun would be the definitive futile exercise. Then I remembered the mini pitas that we served with our tourtiere a week ago, and voila! Problem solved!
So here goes:
• Sweat a mock mirepoix of diced onion, celery and sweet potato in a pan on medium heat. Why sweet potato? Just because. And just because I had one left over.
• Chopped bell pepper is common in Sloppy Joes, but bell pepper messes with me. I used one chopped poblano, a couple of cherry peppers and some chopped peperoncini peppers.
• After the vegetables are softened add two finely diced garlic cloves.
• Add one pound of ground sirloin and about 1/2 pound of bacon that has been ground in a food processor.
• Add salt, pepper, some smoked paprika and several healthy splashes of worcestershire sauce. Turn the heat up to medium-high to brown the meat.
• When the meat is cooked through, add your house barbecue sauce (our house sauce follows). Start with adding about 1/2 cup, adding more as desired. Be careful to get the right saucy consistency to your meat mixture. If it is too runny or greasy, the sandwich will fall apart. If it's too dry, it just won't be a Sloppy Joe. Drain excess grease from the pan if necessary before adding any sauce.
• Adjust the seasoning. If you want to go a little more southwestern, add some cumin, chili powder and/ or your favorite hot sauce.
Spoon the mixture into warmed mini pita pocket halves. We mated these with pockets full of a tangy slaw that Cynthia grabbed from Epicurious. For a variation, try spoonful of both in each pocket. This slaw was quite vinegary; Cynthia recommends cutting back a little on the sherry vinegar and doubling the sugar.
Our house barbecue sauce:
• Pour a 16 oz bottle of pomegranate juice and the juice of one lemon in a pan and reduce to a thick syrup. You're basically making pomegranate molasses.
• Add a 14 oz bottle of ketchup. I love ketchup. I need to start making my own.
• Add 1 can of Coca-Cola. Or Root Beer. Or Dr. Pepper. A friend once inexplicably gave us 10 cases of Dr. Pepper. We had Dr. Pepper sauce for a year. And Dr. Pepper-glazed ham. And Dr. Pepper cherries jubilee...
• Add 1/2 cup of sour orange juice. I find this in the ethnic aisle of the supermarket next to the mojito mix. If you can't find it use 50/50 lime and orange juice.
• Add between 1/2 cup to 1 cup of bourbon.
Add anywhere from a teaspoon to two tablespoons each of:
• fresh ginger
• garlic salt
• onion salt
• sweet paprika
• smoked paprika
• ground coriander
• crushed thyme
• crushed oregano
• celery salt
• worcestershire sauce
• salt and black pepper.
Simmer for at least an hour.
After creating the base sauce you can adjust to your liking or to suit the dish by adding:
• honey, brown sugar and/or molasses
• apple, pineapple, or mango juice
• cider vinegar
• mustard
• ground chilies
• cumin
• tamarind paste
• cinnamon
• your hot sauce du jour...
The sky, as they say, is the limit.
Thanks Terry for this wonderful idea. Be sure to check out his other recipes at The Random Gourmet.
Great tailgating dish. I especially like his point about holding the food in one hand and a beer in the other - essential football-watching technique.
ReplyDeleteThis looks so fantastic. What a perfect tailgating meal.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the posting and all the kind words!
ReplyDeleteThinngs are still hectic in the Random Gourmet kitchen but things are looking up. We don't have time to write yet, but we're starting to have time to cook... creating a backlog of future posts, so stay tuned!
Thanks again for the fellowship!
This looks scrumptious. A great tailgating dish.
ReplyDeleteLooks great...and messy! Love it!
ReplyDeleteHi Drick,
ReplyDeleteIf you are not to busy, I have a few awards for you on my site, I hope you'll visit and pick those up.
That's a new word I learned....tailgating dish...what an interesting name! Looks lovely & delicious
ReplyDeleteWow, these pockets look terrific. I just had dinner and still would eat them!
ReplyDeleteI made my 1st pita bread last week. It turned out beautifully!=) Yours are fabulous...you've to give me a treat lol! Thanks.
ReplyDelete