Ivan,
Kelly's dad is well-known for his cooking. He has won several awards
and has been featured on Lafayette KATC Channel 3's Good Morning
Acadiana for his chicken and dumplins recipe.
Gateau de Sirop (Syrup Cake)
Pork Chop Jambalaya
Ole Fashioned Buttermilk Pie
Catfish Courtbouillon
Seafood Gumbo
Pain Perdu
Chicken Fricasse'
Shrimp & Crab Dip
Spinach-Cheese Bread
Shrimp Tasso Pasta
Dad's Crawfish Etouffee
Chicken & Dumplins
Chicken & Sausage Gumbo
Red Beans and Rice
Pop Rouge Creme Glace
Dove Etouffee'
Stuffed Mirliton
Knock-You-Naked Margaritas
Coquille Gratinee' from Minnesota
Corn
Maque Choux
Louisiana
Pecan Pie
Hooty
Snooty Antipasto Platter
John's
VooDoo Shrimp
Crawfish
Corn Chowder
Meatball Stew
Easy King Cake
Roughneck Rolls
Try this cake warm with a scoop of ice cream or a cold glass of milk!
Gateau de Sirop (Syrup Cake)
1– Stick of Butter (no margarine, please)
1 – C Sugar
3– Large Eggs
1 – C (at least 2%) milk
2 – C Dark Cane Syrup
4 – C Flour
2 – tsp baking soda
1/2 – tsp nutmeg
1 – tsp cinnamon
1/2 – tsp ground cloves
Oven 350 degrees. Cream butter, add sugar, stirring well. Add eggs, continue mixing. Add remaining ingredients, mixing until well incorporated.
Pour batter into a large, well-greased cake pan lined with wax paper. Bake approximately one hour. Cool in pan. Dust with powdered sugar. Serve warm.
The perfect tailgating or party food.... Quick & easy jambalaya recipe from one of the best Cajun chefs around...Dad!
Pork Chop Jambalaya (jum-buh-lie-uh)
4 -- Pork chops
1 – Med. Onion
1 – Small Bell pepper
1 – Stalk Celery
2 – Cloves Garlic
4 – Cups Raw Rice (medium grain)
Trim most of the fat from the chops. Season well with Tony Chachere seasoning. Brown well in black iron pot in 3 tbls olive oil. Remove. Add chopped onion, bell pepper, celery and garlic.
Saute about 5 minutes. Add 2 tsp Tony Chachere liquid brown gravy maker. Saute 1 additional minute. Put chops back in pot. Add raw rice and 5 cups water. Stir well. Bring to rapid boil for 1 - minute. Stir completely 1 time. Turn heat down to very low. Secure lid very secure. Cook until rice is done.
French bread - Green salad - Chardonay
Um – um – Good…….
If you're looking for a lovely, easy-to-make, ole-fashioned pie, this is perfect for you.
Ole Fashioned Buttermilk Pie
2 -9" Frozen Pie Crusts
3 eggs
1/3 cup melted butter
1/4 cup lemon juice
1 cup buttermilk
1 cup sugar
2 Tbsp cornstarch
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp nutmeg
Mix together sugar, cornstarch, baking soda and salt. Beat eggs. Gradually, stir in sugar mixture until well incorporated. Add buttermilk and lemon juice, mixing well. Pour into crusts and sprinkle with nutmeg. Bake at 400 degrees for 10 minutes. Lower oven to 350 degrees and continue baking for 30 to 40 minutes until firm. Serve warm with fresh blackberries.
This recipe uses a "from scratch" roux. If you don't want to take the extra time, use a store bought medium roux.
Catfish Courtbouillon (Coo-bee-yon)
roux (see recipe below)
2 onions, chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped
1/4 cup chopped celery
3 cloves garlic, chopped
1- 8 oz can tomato sauce
1/2 tsp. sugar( cuts bitter taste from tomato)
4 lbs. catfish cut into steaks or 4 inch pieces
2 Tbsp. lemon juice
seasoning
1/8 cup green onions, chopped
1/8 cup parsley, chopped
Once roux is made, remove from heat. Add vegetables and tomato sauce, stirring until it quits sizzling. Return to heat for a few more minutes and then add water (about 3-4 cups) & lemon juice. Bring mixture to a boil. Lower heat and cook for 30-45 minutes, stirring occasionally. Season fish and add to the pot. Simmer for 15 minutes. Stir gently to avoid breaking up the fish (or pick up the handle and turn side-to side). Add green onions and parsley. Simmer for another 15 minutes. Serve with rice.
roux
1/4 cup flour
1/4 cup oil
In a small black iron Dutch oven, heat the oil. Gradually add flour, stirring constantly. Lower heat while continuing to stir. Flour will begin to darken. Do not leave pot unattended! Roux should be the color of milk chocolate.
We would like to thank Mr. David Sheffield for sharing his seafood gumbo. This is by-far the best seafood gumbo we have ever tasted!
David's Seafood Gumbo
1 stick butter
flour (for roux)
2 onions, chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped
1 banana pepper, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 lb bacon
6 fryer leg quarters
2 lbs shrimp, peeled & deveined
1 qt oysters with juice
1 lb scallops
1 lb claw crabmeat
salt and pepper to taste
Fry bacon in skillet. Remove bacon to plate for later use. Add butter to bacon grease. Once butter is melted, add flour and make a roux. Add vegetables and sauté. Move mixture to stock pot, and add chicken. Add about two quarts water. Simmer for approximately an hour. Remove chicken and de-bone. Return chicken to gumbo and add seafood and simmer for another 15 minutes. Season to taste. Serve with rice.
Recipe courtesy:
David Sheffield
Baudean's Seafood Restaurant
11185 Baudean Lane
Theodore , AL 36582
(251) 973-1323
Pain Perdu ("Lost Bread" or French Toast)
12 slices old dry white bread
3 eggs
1 cup milk
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1 tsp corn starch (optional)
1/2 tsp nutmeg
powdered sugar
Beat eggs, then slowly stir in granulated sugar until well blended. Add milk and nutmeg and corn starch and continue to mix. Dip bread in mixture and fry in skillet over a preheated medium hot skillet. Lightly brown on both sides. Serve warm, sprinkled with powdered sugar.
This is a favorite of the Pitre children. The reason it's called "lost" is because the bread used in this recipe is usually dry and hard (although it doesn't have to be) and not good for anything else.
Traditional Chicken Fricasse' (Stew)
1 hen or fryer (3-4 lbs), cut up
Dad's trinity (recipe below)
1 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce
1/2 c milk
3/4 c flour
seasoning
Season chicken. Batter chicken with milk first, then flour. Brown in margarine and remove. Saute vegetables until tender. Add chicken, worcestershire, and enough water to cover chicken. Cook over low heat until tender, or about 1 1/2 hours. Usually served with rice.
Dad's trinity
1/2 bell pepper
1 onion
1 lg stalk celery
Chop.
Uncle
Teddy's Tasty Shrimp and Crab Dip
1/2 pound shrimp
peeled and deveined
1/2 pound lump crabmeat
1 can of clams chopped
1 onion, chopped
1/2 bell pepper, chopped
1/2 cup celery, chopped
garlic
to your taste
2-3 T Worsterchire sauce
1 T lemon juice
1 1/2 blocks of cream cheese
1 stick butter
seasoning to your taste
Saute vegetables
in butter until onions are translucent. Add seafood and garlic,
cooking until shrimp are just pink. Add cream cheese, worsterchire
and lemon juice. Stir until cream cheese is melted. Add seasoning.
Serve with
crusty french bread slices or crackers.
Kelly’s
Spinach-Cheese Bread
1 loaf plain
French bread sliced in half lengthwise
1 box frozen chopped spinach semi drained
1 stick butter
½ onion chopped
velveeta
garlic to your taste
parmesan/romano cheese
sliced American/swiss for top
seasoning to your taste
Ok, if you
haven’t already noticed, I don’t go by recipes very much, so I have
a really hard time making one. Use your judgment. If you like less
butter, use less. Same goes for other ingredients.
Preheat oven
to 375. Saute onion until translucent in butter, add spinach. Season.
Cook until extra liquid is almost gone. Add garlic, stir. Add velveeta.
Heat until cheese is melted. Add parmesan cheese to thicken. Spread
mixture on bread. Top with sliced cheese and light seasoning. Bake
until cheese is melted. Slice and serve warm.
Kelly’s
Super Simple Super Tasty Shrimp Tasso Pasta
Approximately
3 lbs. (uncooked) rotini pasta, cooked
Velveeta
1 stick butter
2 pounds Shrimp, peeled and deveined and seasoned
½ pound smoked pork tasso, cut in 1 inch pieces
½ pound pork sausage, sliced
1 pound peeled Louisiana crawfish tails, seasoned (optional; it’s
not optional to use
Louisiana crawfish!)
3 onions, chopped
some celery, chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped
some garlic
bunch green onions
bunch parsley
cream or milk (your preference)
In a large stockpot, sauté vegetables except garlic, in butter.
When soft, throw in tasso and sausage. Cook for a while. Throw in
garlic, shrimp, crawfish and probably about 2 ½ lbs of velveeta.
Heat until cheese melts and shrimp are just pink (if your uncooked
shrimp were pink when you bought them, start over with new shrimp!).
It’s easy to overcook shrimp, so be careful. Throw in your pasta,
green onions and parsley and season some more. Add milk to thin
slightly. Serve with foot cheese (oops, I meant parmesan!). Be sure
to check your seasoning, because you add the pasta to the sauce,
I find I sometimes tend to be too light with the seasoning.
Ivan’s Crawfish Etouffee
2 - pounds
Crawfish Tails, with fat.
2 - large Heads of Onion , chopped
3 - stalks celery, chopped
1- yellow bell pepper , chopped
1 - red bell pepper, chopped
2 - large cloves garlic, chopped
1 - stick Butter
2 - cans cream of celery
1 - large can of Tomato Sauce
1 - bunch of Onion Tops, and parsley, chopped
Seasoning. (Use Tony Chachere, please)
Saute the vegetables
in the butter in a medium size stock pot, add cream of celery &
tomato sauce. Time for seasoning: add little, taste, add a little
more, taste. Cook on medium heat 30 minutes. Add the crawfish. Check
seasoning. Cook 10 minutes. Add onion tops & parsley. Serve on
a bed of fresh cooked rice with a piece of French bread and a glass
of Chardonnay.
NOW THAT’S LIVING...
Ivan's
Chicken and Dumplins (Like Mama Used to Make)
1
chicken
4 Tbsp. oil
4 quarts of water
1-10 oz can chicken gravy
5 cups Bisquick
2 cups milk
Tony Chachere's Creole Seasoning
Wash chicken well in cold water. Cut up chicken. Season well. Lightly
brown in a large pot. Add the water to pot and boil until tender
(app. 2o min.). Turn off heat and let stand in the broth.
While
chicken is cooking, mix Bisquick and milk (according to directions
on package). Mix well (add more Bisquick if needed). Dough should
be at stiff consistency. Separate dough in 4 equal parts. Roll out
each on a well-floured flat surface to 1/4" thickness (be generous
with flour). Cut into 2" squares. When all has ben cut, sprinkle
with flour.
Carefully
remove chicken to another pot and cover with lid. Return pot to
fast boil, add chicken gravy and stir. Dip 4 or 5 cups of the broth
from the pot and put in the pot with chicken. Drop dumplings in
broth - 1 at a time- stirring after every 3 or 4 dumplings (best
to get another person, one to drop and one to stir). Stir all the
way to bottom. Reduce heat to slow boil. Cook until dumplings are
tender (approx. 25-30 min.; liquid should be thick). Stirring occasionally,
all the way to the bottom. Serve in shallow bowl. Sprinkle with
fresh, coarse-ground black pepper.
EAT
- ENJOY
With
the start of football season, everyone in Cajunland begins craving
chicken and sausage gumbo. Here is Lance's favorite for Saturday
tailgating or just sitting at home jumping-up-and-down-yelling-at-the
tv LSU Tiger football games.
Lance's
"LSU Tiger" Chicken and Sausage Gumbo
1
(3 to 5 lb.) hen, cut into pieces
1 1/2 lbs pork sausage, cut into pieces
Your favorite seasoning such as Tony Chachere's
2 medium onions,chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped
4 cloves of garlic, minced
1 bunch of parsley, minced
1 bunch of onion tops, chopped
1 jar of your favorite roux, we use Savoie's or Richard's
3 quarts of water
oil for browning the hen
Season the hen. In a large stock pot, brown hen in oil. Add vegetables,
sausage and water. Add 3/4 cup of roux, stirring until dissolved.
Season lightly if necessary. Bring to a boil and simmer 2 1/2 hours
or until halftime and hen is tender. Skim fat. Serve over rice with
chopped onion tops and parsley, with potato salad and french bread
on the side.
GEAUX
TIGERS!
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Everyone in our family loves the tradional dish of red beans and rice. It's perfect for a busy day when I don't have time to watch the pot. We have to eat this dish at least once a week!
Red Beans and Rice
1 lb. red kidney beans
1 lb pork sausage, or use a piece of tasso, sliced
Your favorite seasoning such as Tony Chachere's
2 medium onions,chopped
1 bell pepper, chopped
4 cloves of garlic, minced
Rinse and sort beans. In a black pot, bring beans to a boil, and cook until tender, approximately 2 hours. Add water if necessary. Season, and add vegetables and sausage and simmer until desired thickness of sauce. The whole cooking process takes about 3 hours. Serve over hot rice with a side of cornbread and salad.
I haven't had a chance to try this strawberry ice cream, but got the recipe from a friend. It looks very easy and I'll have to give it a try this week for a nice summer treat!
Pop Rouge Creme Glace
2- 12 oz cans of evaporated milk
3- 20 oz bottles of strawberry soda pop
2- 14 oz cans of sweetened condensed milk
Alternate pouring ingredients as listed into a gallon-sized ice cream freezer. Then just follow manufacturer's directions for freezing. (I told you this one was easy!)
Lance gave me a beautiful 20 gauge shotgun last year for my birthday. Unfortunately, I haven't had the chance to use it yet. When I do, those birds better look out!
Dove Etouffee'
8-10 doves, cleaned
1 stick of butter
1 TBSP flour
2 onions
1/4 c celery
1 bell pepper
4 tsp minced garlic
1 c red wine
small can of mushrooms
green onions & parsley
seasoning
Chop vegetables. Season doves. Melt butter in black iron pot, being careful not to burn it. Brown doves, stirring constantly. Add vegetables, except green onions & parsley. Cook until tender. Add wine. Cover & simmer 2-3 hours until birds are tender. Add water if needed.
When birds are tender, remove from pot. Blend flour with juice from mushrooms. Add flour mixture, mushrooms, green onions & parsley. Heat until gravy thickens & season to taste. Yield 6-8 hungry Cajun servings. (Serve with hot rice.)
This recipe works nicely with squash or eggplant if you can't find mirlitons. Mirlitons are also known by their Spanish name "Chayote". To find out more about mirlitons, check out this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chayote
Stuffed Mirlitons
7 large mirlitons
1/2 c minced or finely chopped onion
1/4 c finely chopped bell pepper
2 finely chopped stems of celery
2 tsp minced garlic
1/4 c vegetable oil
1/2 lb lump crabmeat
1/2 lb peeled, cooked salad shrimp
buttered bread crumbs
green onions & parsley, finely chopped
seasoning
Parboil mirlitons until almost tender. Cut in half and scoop out pulp. Set aside. Saute' vegetables in skillet until transparent. Mash mirliton meat, mix with shrimp and crabmeat, green onions & parsley. Season to taste. Fill shells and cover mixture with buttered bread crumbs. Bake at 350, until crumbs are browned.
This recipe was given to us by a "soon-to-be-tamed" Texan, "Hairy" Bottoms during the recent Etouffee cook-off. It makes about a quart and is best served among friends!
Knock-You-Naked Margaritas
1 bottle of your favorite beer
1-12 oz can frozen limeade
1-12 oz can sprite (or diet)
1-12 oz can tequila
Mix all ingredients until well-blended. Serve over ice with a twist of lime.
I was given this recipe by a good friend from Minnesota. She said that last year, she used crawfish tails instead of the other seafood. The recipe does not call for a specific amount of seafood, she said, but that she uses what's on hand or whatever you can afford. She also added that chopped green onions and parsley go well in this dish.
Coquille Gratinee' from Minnesota
1 onion, chopped
1-8 oz can sliced mushrooms
12 Tbsp butter, divided
1 pint half-n-half
2 c milk
4-5 Tbsp cornstarch
1/4 c white wine
Juice of 1/2 lemon
Pinch of mace
cooked seafood (such as scallops, lobster pieces, shrimp, crab, crawfish or a combination)
green onions & parsley, finely chopped
crushed Ritz crackers
seasoning
Saute onion & mushrooms in 3 Tbsp of butter. Make a white sauce of 8 Tbsp butter and half-n-half, add milk mixed with cornstarch. Then add white wine & lemon. Add mace. Cook until sauce begins to thicken. Add seafood. Top with crumbs and drizzle with a bit of butter. Transfer to a large or individual casserole dishes and bake for 20 minutes or so at 350* until top is browned. Garnish with lemon slice and serve with garlic toast.
Fresh corn is the key to this simple, but wonderful summer Cajun dish.
Corn Maque Choux
4 c fresh corn, cut from the cob
1 medium onion, chopped
1/2 bell pepper, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 fresh tomatoes, chopped
4 Tbsp butter
green onions & parsley, finely chopped
seasoning to taste
Saute onion & bell pepper in butter. Saute until wilted. Add corn. Cook and stir over medium heat about 5-10 minutes. Add tomatoes and seasoning and garlic and green onions & parsley. Cover and simmer for about twenty minutes. Remove the cover often to stir. The natural sugars from the corn give it a tendency to stick to the bottom of the pot. Add water if mixture becomes too dry. Serve as a side to your favorite rice and gravy. (Lance likes this with a sauce piquante)
Louisiana
pecans are being harvested right now. Don't be afraid to pile
them up!
Louisiana
Pecan Pie
3
eggs
1 c sugar
1 c light corn syrup
1 c Louisiana pecan halves
1 tsp real vanilla
1/4 tsp salt
1 unbaked 9" deep dish pie shell
Beat
eggs in mixing bowl using fork. Gradually add other ingredients
until well mixed. Mixing by hand will do the job. Pour into pie
pan. Bake at 400 degrees for 10 minutes, then lower to 350 for
thirty minutes. Enjoy with fresh whipped cream.
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The
perfect appetizer dish to serve to your Hooty-Snootys. Modifications
follow.
Hooty
Snooty Antipasto Platter
1
jar pepperoncinis, drained
1 can garbanzo beans, rinsed & drained
2 c halved fresh mushrooms
2 c halved cherry tomatoes
1/2 lb. provolone cheese, cubed
1 can pitted ripe olives, drained
1 packaged sliced pepperoni
1 bottle Italian vinaigrette dressing
In large bowl, combine all ingredients. Toss gently & refrigerate
30 minutes or overnight.
I
also added 1 jar bean salad, cubed pepper jack cheese, and refrigerated
3 cheese tortelloni, and a jar of ripe green olives. I didn't
use a whole bottle of dressing and instead used part zesty italian
and part balsamic vinaigrette. Throw in the kitchen sink too,
it will taste great in this dish!
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This
recipe is provided by another friend from Minnesota, John
McNelly. We enjoyed crawfish in this recipe too.
John's
VooDoo Shrimp
8
oz pkg. Shrimp (45-50)
1 med onion sauteed in 1/2 stick butter
Add: Seasoning to taste
1/8 tsp. Oregano
1/4 tsp of Parsley
1/4 tsp. Herbs de Provence
1/8 tsp. Cumin
1 pinch Coriander
4 oz can mushrooms (chopped into small pieces)
1 - 15 oz can Chicken Broth
1/2 pt whipping cream
1/4 pt water
8 oz can shrimp
We serve over cooked vermicelli or fine spaghetti noodles...
For
our Etouffee Cook-off party, we all enjoyed this wonderful
chowder made by Dee Stuckmeyer. She made one and a half of
this recipe to fill her crockpot. Everyone loved it and wanted
the recipe!
Crawfish
Corn Chowder
1
pound cleaned Louisiana crawfish tails with fat
2 cans niblet corn, undrained
1 pint half and half cream
1 stick butter (not margarine)
2 cans cream of potato soup
1/2 pound sliced mushrooms
1 bunch chopped green onions
8 oz softened cream cheese
Saute onions & mushrooms in butter. Add softened cream cheese and blend. Add soup, corn and crawfish tails and blend. Finally, blend in cream. Season to taste with Tony Chachere's Seasoning. Heat until bubbly hot.
Lance's
cousin Tina follows her mama's recipe and cooks it just right.
This is truly as staple served regularly in a cajun home.
I'll
try to duplicate it here.
Meatball
Stew
2
pounds ground beef
1/2 c seasoned bread crumbs
1 pint dark roux
3 medium chopped yellow onion
1 chopped green bell
3 stems celery, chopped
5 cloves garlic, chopped
1 bunch chopped green onions
3 medium potatoes, chunked (peeled if you prefer)
6-8 boiled eggs, peeled
1 pound carrots, chunked (optional)
your favorite seasoning blend
In a medium sized (6-7 qt) dutch oven, add enough water to
fill it to about half way. Bring water to a boil & add
half the jar of roux. Stir until all roux is dissolved. Add
vegetables except eggs and green onions. Make meatballs with
seasoning and bread crumbs, the size of a half-palm. Add meatballs.
Stir occasionally. Cook approximately 2 hours. You will probably
need to add more roux, but this is to your taste. Add the
eggs and green onions the last 15 minutes of cooking time.
Don't forget to season your gravy. Serve over rice with a
side of cole slaw and potato salad.
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I
developed this recipe in response to the very involved recipes
that require kneading and rising dough. Make a lower fat
version with low fat crescent rolls and low fat cream cheese.
Tradition for the poorer Cajun families did not include
a "baby", but a penny or nickel hiding in the
cake for a "bonne annee'".
Easy
King Cake
2
cans crescent rolls
1/2 block of cream cheese (4 oz total)
2 Tbsp powdered sugar
1/2 tsp real vanilla
1 Tbsp butter
1/4 c light brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 c strawberry preserves (optional)
topping:
1 1/4 c powdered sugar
2 Tbsp cream cheese
1 Tbsp milk
1/2 tsp real vanilla
3/4 c granulated sugar
food coloring
clean penny or nickel
Pre-heat your oven to 350. Separate crescent rolls into
triangles and place fat side pointing to center of a round
baking sheet forming a ring. Pinch seams. Mix 1/2 block
of cream cheese, powdered sugar, and vanilla in a small
bowl. Spread over crescent rolls. In another bowl, mix butter,
brown sugar and cinnamon. Spread mixture over cream cheese.
Spread preserves over cinnamon. Fold triangle points to
center of ring and pinch seams together. Bake cake for 20-25
minutes or until golden brown. Remove cake and allow to
cool for 10 minutes. Once cool, don't forget to add your
penny or nickel! For icing, mix powdered sugar, cream cheese,
milk & vanilla. Spread icing over cooled cake. In three
separate bowls, add 1/4 c granulated sugar to each bowl.
Mix a few drops of red and a few drops of blue in one bowl
for purple. In the other bowls, add yellow food coloring
to one and green food coloring to the other. Sprinkle the
purple sugar over 1/3 of the cake, the yellow over the next
1/3, and the green over the final 1/3 of the cake. Let your
guests know to watch out for the surprise hiding in the
cake. Have a fun & safe mardi gras!
My dad worked in the oilfield for most of his life. This recipe is a tribute to him. Yields about a dozen rolls.
Roughnecck Rolls
1 pkg active dry yeast
1/2 c warm water
1/3 c sugar
1/2 c shortening
3 c white flour
3/4 tsp salt
Pre-heat your oven to 400. Add sugar and yeast to warm water and let it stand. Once yeast rises to top of water and becomes frothy, add the shortening. Add flour and salt, a little at a time, mixing well. Place dough in a greased bowl. Cover with a wet towel and let rise until dough is twice its size. Roll the dough onto a floured surface to about 3/4 inch in thickness. Cut the rolls and place in a greased 13x9 pan and let rise. Bake for 20 minutes and brush with melted butter. Serve warm.
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