Monday, April 4, 2011

Paella

Brooke's Recipe

Originally we were going to meet friends out for dinner to watch the Final Four.  After realizing that the only sport's bar close to my house would be packed, I decided to invite friends over to my house to watch the game and cook for them instead.  This was a last minute decision, so I had to make something quick, easy and lots of it. I decided to make Paella .  It was delicious and my friend Lindsay even asked if she could take the rest of hers home!

Ingredients:

3 hot Italian Sausages, chopped
1 ham steak, cubed
1 large yellow onion, chopped
1 red pepper, chopped
5 cloves garlic, minced
1 green pepper, chopped
1 package of yellow saffrom rice
1 box of chicken stock
1/2 stick butter
2 dozen medium shrimp, peeled and deveined
2 dozen mussels, cleaned

In a big pot over medium heat, brown your ham and sausage.  When done, remove and set aside.  Do not drain the grease.  In the same pot add the peppers, garlic and onion.  Cook until tender,  Add back the sausage and ham and cover with stock.  Add the rice, cover with lid and let simmer for 20 minutes. The rice should puff up and absorbe all the stock. 15 minutes before serving, add the shrimp.

While the shrimp are cooking, add the mussels to a saucepan over medium high heat with a little water. Cover and let steam for about 2 minutes.  The mussels should all open. If a mussel doesn't open give it a couple more minutes. If then it still doesn't open, throw it away.

Just before serving, add the mussels and their cooking liquid to the pot.  Then to finish add the butter and  give it a big stir making sure not to break the mussell shells.

I served mine with cornbread

.

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Croque Madame

Brooke's Recipe

The French make everything sound so exquisite. The English translation of Croque Madame is literally Mrs. Crunch. Definitely sounds a bit more refined in French, doesn't it?  It is simply a grilled ham and cheese sandwich with a fried egg on top. This dish is so popular in France, that you can order it at almost every restaurant all over the country for breakfast, lunch or dinner.  I served it this morning as breakfast with a side of hash browns, but you can serve it later in the day with a simple green salad. 

Ingredients:

4 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
2 pieces of white sandwich bread
2 pieces of thinly sliced ham
2 slices of Swiss cheese
1 egg


Cut the crusts off the bread and discard.  Assemble the sandwich by spreading 1 teaspoon of the mustard on each slice of bread.  Place the Swiss cheese on the bread, then ham, then Swiss again.  It is important that you have cheese touching both pieces of bread because it acts like the glue when you go to flip it.

Melt 1 tablespoon of butter in a pan over medium low heat.  Place the sandwich in the pan and cover with a lid.  Continue to cook the sandwich, turning once until golden brown on both sides and the cheese is completely melted.

Heat remaining tablespoon of butter in another nonstick skillet over moderate heat until foam subsides, then crack eggs into skillet and season with salt and pepper. Fry eggs, covered, until whites are just set and yolks are still runny, about 3 minutes. Top the sandwich with a fried egg and serve immediately.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Nutter Butter Banana Pudding



Brooke's Recipe

Every good Southern woman should know how to make banana pudding.  I remember watching my mother line her dish with vanilla wafers, then lay down those perfect yellow circles of ripe banana and finish by spooning on layer after layer of golden vanilla pudding.  Waiting for the pudding to come together in the refrigerator would torture my father. He would peek in at it every 10 minutes and ask "Is it time to eat it yet?"  I would always watch him take his first bite and smile.  The look on his face was pure bliss.

Fast forward 20 years and I am now making banana pudding for my own husband. He knows when the bananas and Nutter Butters come out of the grocery bag, that it's pudding time. He usually leaves me alone while I am assembling it, but just as I set the pudding in the fridge for its flavor incubation, I hear a whisper over my shoulder and I am 5 years old again standing in my mother's kitchen ...... "Is it time to eat it yet?"

Ingredients:

1 packages of Nutter Butters
1 box JELLO instant french vanilla pudding mix
3 cups cold milk
2 cups of whipped cream
8 oz cream cheese
4 large bananas (the ripest you can find. Don't even bother making this if you have unripe bananas)

Start by finding yourself a pretty bowl. Some people make it in a trifle dish but I just have a glass bowl.  You could make it in a flowerpot and it would still taste amazing, but seeing the layers through the glass makes the dessert look extra decadent.

Prepare the JELLO pudding according to the directions on the package.  Instant pudding takes less than 5 minutes to thicken. Then add the cream cheese and the whipped cream. Beat with a hand mixer on low until combined.

Slice your bananas into quarter inch circles.

Place a layer of Nutter Butters on the bottom of the bowl, then a layer of bananas and then spoon over a layer of the vanilla pudding. Continue going layer by layer until you reach just below the top of the bowl. Don't fill it all the way up.  The next step is to place plastic wrap over the top.  If you fill the bowl all the way up, the pudding will stick to the wrap. After you finish with the wrap, place the whole bowl in the refrigerator for at least 4 hours. Overnight is even better, but this has yet to happen in my house. Then top with additional whipped cream to serve.


Note***  During Girl Scout Cookie season, make this with TagAlongs.  This adds an another flavor layer of chocolate..

Monday, March 14, 2011

Shepherd's Pie

Brooke's Recipe

In honor of St. Patrick's Day I decided to make a Shepherd's Pie for Sunday dinner.  Thought to be originally from Ireland, a version of this pie exists in many countries including Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Chile, Argentina, and the Dominican Republic.  There is a good reason why so many people all over the world love to eat this dish. Meat, vegetables, and mashed potatoes all in one???  It is like an entire meal in one casserole.  Here is the Americanized version.

Ingredients:

2 lbs ground beef
2 tablespoons tomato paste
1/2 cup beef stock
2 cups corn (I used PictSweet frozen)
1/2 large yellow onion
2 carrots, pealed and julienned
3 cups of shredded cheddar cheese
2 tablespoons of olive oil
1 stick butter
1/2 cup cream
1 lb of white potatoes
1 tablespoon paprika
2 teaspoons Worcestershire


Boil potatoes in salted water until tender, about 12 minutes. You do not need to peel the potatoes. Drain potatoes and pour them into a bowl. Combine potatoes with butter and cream. Mash until potatoes are smooth. I always use a hand mixture, but if you want to mash them using a masher be my guest.

While potatoes boil, preheat a large skillet over medium high heat. Add 1 tablespoon of oil to hot pan.  Add your hamburger.  Crumble the meat and cook until brown.  Drain the grease.  Add the Worcestershire, tomato paste, and stock.  Stir until combined, and then pour into a bowl and set aside.

Using the same pan, add the other tablespoon of oil.   Add chopped carrot and onion. Cook veggies over medium heat until tender. Add the corn and stir. After about 1 minute, remove from heat. Set aside.

Preheat oven to 375. Fill a small rectangular casserole with the meat mixture. Then place half of the cheese over the meat. Then add vegetable mixture. Spoon potatoes over top evenly and smooth using the back of a spoon. Top potatoes the other half of the cheese and sprinkle with paprika. Bake for 30 minutes until top of the potatoes are brown and cheese is bubbling.


Oh but I'm not done...I won't tell anyone if you want to pour Mushroom Gravy over the top!

Ingredients:

2 cups of mushrooms  ( I used a mushroom mixture already chopped but you can use button)
1/2 yellow onion, minced
2 cups beef stock
3 tablespoons of flour
1 tablespoon olive oil
1/2 stick butter


In a saucepan over medium heat add olive oil and onions. Cook until the onions are tender. Then add mushrooms and saute mushrooms until brown.  Add the butter. When melted, add the flour and stir until it looks like a paste. Add the beef stock and turn down to low and stir until thick.  Season with salt and pepper.




Sunday, March 13, 2011

Greek Salsa

Brooke's Recipe

When the weather turns warm there's nothing more refreshing than a crisp Greek Salad.  My favorite version comes from The Tavern in Richmond. They serve big pieces of toasted pita bread on the side.  The most satisfying part of the meal is what is left at the bottom of the bowl.  I always use the pita bread to sop up the remaining dressing and any other little delicious tidbits that are left. That lead to this recipe.  I took everything except the lettuce, chopped it, mixed it and served it with pita chips.  Serve this at your next party with a couple shots of Ouzo and you'll have everyone screaming OPA!


Ingredients:

3/4 cup cucumbers, diced
1 cup tomatoes, seeded and diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 cup green onions
3 tablespoons bottled Greek dressing
1/2 cup feta
1/2 cup Kalamata olives, chopped
2 teaspoons red pepper flakes
1 bag pita chips



Dice and chop all your veggies.  To make it super easy you can use a food processor.  Mix all the veggies together, add the feta and Greek dressing and mix until combined.  Serve with the pita chips.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Eggs Benedict for Dummies

Brooke's Recipe

I LOVE Eggs Benedict.  It is my all time favorite breakfast.  However, I usually order it in a restaurant because I don't particularly feel like poaching eggs and making hollandaise sauce early on a Sunday morning.   Once we had a baby, it became more difficult to just roll out of bed and go grab breakfast so if I was ever going to enjoy it, I had to make it at home.  I cut some corners, and it turns out just as good. 


Ingredients:

This is for one serving:

2 eggs
2 pieces Canadian bacon
1 English muffin (or any hard bread, I used sourdough)
1 packet of hollandaise sauce (I used McCormick's)
1 cup water (for sauce)
1/2 stick butter (for sauce)
1 tablespoon of chives
salt and pepper to taste


You will need 2 sandwich bags. 

Bring water in a saucepan to almost boiling.  Then crack an egg into each sandwich bag.  The egg will settle into a corner.  Drop the corner with the egg into the water. 



Let boil for maybe 3 minutes. The whole point of Eggs Benedict is to have the white cooked but the yolk runny.  The eggs should stand up in the pot without getting any water in the bags.


Take the eggs out and set them aside.  Don't try to remove them from the bags yet.  Let them cool a bit while you make the sauce.  This will really help the whites harden around the runny yolk.

Meanwhile in another saucepan, make the hollandaise sauce according to the directions on the package. This is SO easy. Takes about 3 minutes for it to come together.

While the sauce is thickening, heat up your Canadian bacon.  Canadian bacon is already cooked. It comes in a package similar to ham, not bacon, so it only takes about 25 seconds in a microwave.
Toast your bread.  When done, get ready to assemble.

First, lay the bread down on a plate. Then place the Canadian bacon on top of the bread. Carefully turn the eggs out of the sandwich bags on top of the bacon. Be gentle, you don't want to break the yolks.  Then bring on the hollandaise.  Garnish with chives. 



Sunday, March 6, 2011

Beer Can Chicken

Brooke's Recipe

I don't know who invented Beer Can Chicken, but it had to have been a redneck. Shoving a beer in a chicken where the sun doesn't shine is just so wrong, but the taste is just so right. The chicken comes out so moist and so tender that you won't want to roast a chicken any other way.  YEEHAW!



Ingredients:

1 whole chicken, discard the giblets
1 40 oz beer (I used Yuengling)
5 cloves of garlic, smashed
3 tablespoons garlic powder
3 tablespoons onion powder
3 tablespoons paprika
1/4 cup olive oil
1 stick butter, melted

 Remove all the racks from your oven except the one on the very bottom. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.

Open the beer and discard half of it the proper way.  Then drop the garlic cloves, peels and all into the beer. Pour the butter into the can as well. Set aside

Pour the olive oil over the chicken and rub the garlic powder, onion powder, and the paprika all over the chicken using your hands. 

Set the beer on a baking tray and pick the chicken up and slide it onto the beer can.  The beer can should fit perfectly into the cavity. 






Carefully pick the tray up, and place it on the bottom rack of the oven. Bake for about an hour or until the juices run clear when you pierce it with a knife.

When the chicken is ready, get your cooking gloves on and grab a tong. While holding up the chicken, use the tongs to pull the beer can out. Discard the can, carve the chicken and serve!

Friday, March 4, 2011

Grandaddy's Chicken Eggrolls with Thai Peanut Dipping Sauce

Donna's Recipe

I got my love of cooking from my father.  He hardly ever used recipes, he always preferred to invent his own. When he had a craving for something, he would immediatly take to the kitchen.  30 minutes later, we would have the most amazing dishes.  This is how Daddy's eggrolls came to be.  I have been making them ever since. Of course, you may substitute the chicken with beef, pork, shrimp or fish.  Vegans like these with tofu.

Ingredients:

1/2 head cabbage, shredded
2 cups celery, chopped
1 cup of  onions, chopped
1 can water chestnuts, diced
2 cups chicken, cooked and chopped (for this recipe, 2 chicken breasts were oven baked)
1/2 cup sesame oil  (use more or less to taste)
1 package of egg roll wrappers (find these in the produce section)
1 egg beaten in separate bowl
1 quart of peanut oil


For the Peanut Sauce:

1/2 cup peanut butter
1 lime, juice and zest
2 1/4 teaspoons sesame oil
1 tablespoon of  rice wine vinegar
2 tablespoons of soy sauce
3 tablespoons honey
2 cloves of garlic
1 tablespoons of ginger, minced
1/2 cup cilantro, chopped
1/2 cup vegetable oil
1/4 teaspoon salt
1-2 teaspoons of Sriracha hot chili sauce (this is very very very hot)
2-4 tablespoons of water

Cook your chicken by either baking, broiling, or boil in chicken stock.

Stir fry vegetables except cabbage in a large skillet with small amount of vegetable oil and a couple of shakes of sesame oil, stirring until vegetables are cooked tender. Add the cabbage and chicken and more sesame oil. Cook until cabbage is tender. Set aside and wait until cool.

In another large skillet heat peanut oil to about 375 degrees F or medium high heat.

Meanwhile place all the ingredients for the peanut sauce in a food processor and blend until smooth.

Lay out one egg roll wrapper with a corner pointed toward you. Place about a 1/4 to 1/3 cup of the cabbage, carrot and chicken mixture in center of egg roll wrapper and fold corner up over the mixture. Fold left and right corners toward the center and continue to roll. Brush the ends with beaten egg to help seal the egg roll.  (Instructions for folding are included with the egg rolls.)  Make sure you seal the ends well so oil will not be trapped and make the whole thing greasy.  

Place egg rolls into heated oil and fry, turning occasionally, until golden brown.  They cook very fast.   Remove from oil and drain on paper towels or rack. Put on serving plate and serve with the peanut sauce.



Thursday, March 3, 2011

Beer Steamed Oysters with Spicy Cocktail Sauce

Donna's Recipe

Oysters have always been associated with love.  Aphrodite, the Greek Goddess of  love, gave birth on an oyster shell thus the word aphrodisiac was born. Oysters were also Casanova's favorite appetizer.  I don't know about your libido but I do know they are delicious and healthy.  A dozen oysters contains only 110 calories and they are packed with vitamins and minerals. You can eat them smoked, baked, broiled or fried, but I prefer mine steamed in a good beer.  Serve it with some lemon wedges and cocktail sauce and you may just "get lucky"....



Ingredients:

24 Oysters
3 cups of beer
2 lemons, cut into wedges

For cocktail sauce:

1 cup ketchup
2 tablespoons Horseradish or MORE to taste
1/2 teaspoon Worcestershire
1 tablespoon lemon juice


First you have to make sure your oysters are fresh.  It is best to buy the oysters the same day that you plan to eat them.  They should smell briny like the sea.  Oysters should be tightly closed but there will inevitably be a few in the pile that are slightly open -- for these, do the "tap test": upon tapping, any open shells should close. Throw out any oysters that fail the tap test. Keep the oysters on ice until right before you cook them. Do not  submerge them in water because they still require oxygen.


 
Add 2 cups of beer to a large pot and boil on high heat about 5 minutes or until the steam rolls out when the lid is opened slightly.

Add oysters and an additional cup of beer and cover, turn down to medium heat.

Steam oysters about 5-10 minutes, or all the oysters are open. Do not overcook. Some oysters may take longer than others.  Remove the opened oysters and continue to steam the others until they open as well.

Serve hot, with the lemon wedges and cocktail sauce and your favorite wine or beer .




Marco's Spaghetti Carbonara

Brooke's Recipe

In college at JMU, I had a very good friend from Italy named Marco Indelicato.  He was a fellow French major and he was also a very good cook.  During a study session one evening, he decided to see what was in the kitchen to make us a snack.  I was expecting Ramen noodles or cheese and crackers. But oh no..not from an Italian!  Instead I got a pasta dish that to this day is my absolute favorite.  So here is Marco's Spaghetti Carbonara...


Ingredients

8 strips of bacon, diced
1 whole egg
2 additional egg yolks
1/2 cup cream (or milk, but the cream makes it richer)
1 cup parmesan cheese
1 box of spaghetti noodles

In a large pot of boiling salted water, cook spaghetti until al dente. Drain well. Reserve a couple tablespoons of the cooking liquid to temper the eggs. 

Meanwhile in a large skillet, cook chopped bacon until slightly crisp; remove and drain onto paper towels. Reserve 2 tablespoons of bacon fat and put the pan back on the heat.

Beat the eggs and add the cream and Parmesan cheese.  Add a little of the cooking liquid at a time to the egg mixture to bring it up to temperature. You need to do this so that when you add the eggs to the pan, they do not scramble. 

Add cooked and drained spaghetti to the pan with the bacon fat. Toss to coat and heat through. Add the bacon. Add beaten eggs and cook, tossing constantly with tongs until eggs are barely set. Add salt and pepper to taste (remember that bacon and Parmesan are very salty).

Serve immediately with extra Parmesan cheese.

OK...now that you have read the recipe..don't balk at the eggs.  The heat of the pasta cooks them.  Just make sure the eggs are fresh.  Try it, I promise you will thank Marco! 

Marco, The Carbonara Master


Monday, February 21, 2011

Cream Cheese Grilled Corn and Pepper Salad

Brooke's Recipe

I decided to grill out on Saturday because it was so warm outside, and I have Spring fever.  I marinated a whole chicken in a spicy buttermilk marinade all day. The chicken came out great, but this side dish made the meal.  It really added something unexpected to an otherwise conventional cook out.

Ingredients

4 ears of white corn
1 red bell pepper
1 green bell pepper
1 yellow bell pepper
1 orange bell pepper
1 jalapeno
4 oz of cream cheese
2 oz of milk
1 cup cheddar cheese
1 tablespoon onion powder


Preheat your outdoor grill to high heat.

Remove husks and silks from corn. Sprinkle with salt and wrap the corn individually in aluminum foil. Set aside. 

Dice the yellow bell pepper into corn kernel size pieces. Dice half of the red pepper and seed and dice the jalapeno. You want all of the veggies to be about the same size. These are not going to be grilled. Reserve and set aside.

Cut up the rest of the peppers into large chunks.  Tightly wrap them together with a sprinkle of salt in aluminum foil. 

Place the foil wrapped corn and peppers on the grill.  Cook for approximately 30 minutes, turning occasionally, until tender.

Cut the corn kernels off the cob using a knife.  Then dice the grilled peppers. Mix all of the ingredients together in a grill-proof saucepan. Return to the grill and heat until the cream cheese and cheddar cheese are melted and bubbling.

The raw veggies add crunch on top of the soft grilled veggies.  The corn is sweet and the jalapeno's are hot.  All around the perfect mix.




Sunday, February 13, 2011

Poutine (cheese fries with gravy)

Brooke's recipe

Chuck's Day Off on the Cooking Channel is my favorite cooking show.  I couldn't believe my eyes when he took home made french fries and smothered them with cheese and gravy.  Turns out this is a classic dish served in Canada called Poutine.  It is traditionally served with cheese curd but I couldn't find any here so I used mozzarella.  My husband said this is one of the best things he has ever eaten. Here is my version of  Canada's favorite comfort food. 

Ingredients:

For Fries:
3 large Russet Potatoes
2 quarts of your favorite frying oil (I used canola)

For Gravy:

2 cups of chicken stock
2 oz of flour
2 oz of butter
1 shallot

2 8 oz balls of fresh mozzarella. Don't use the pre-shredded mozzarella in the package. I used Bel Gioioso for this recipe.

Wash and scrub your potatoes with cold water.  Cut them in half longways, then in half longways again. Then cut into 1 inch fries.  Place the cut fries into a bowl of cold water.  This removes a lot of the starch from the potatoes which is the first step to crispy fries.  While the potatoes are soaking, pour your oil into a deep pot.  Heat your oil to 350 degrees. 

Drain the potatoes but continue to run water over the fries until the water runs clear. Pat the fries dry.  Fry in batches for 3-4 minutes each. Do not let them brown. This is the second step to crispy fries. You have to fry them twice. Let the fries drain on a paper towel lined tray.  Once all of the potatoes are done, put them in the freezer for one hour.

After an hour reheat your oil again to 350.  Re-fry the fries until brown.  Again drain them on a paper towel lined tray. Hit them with some salt  and pepper while they are still hot.

Meanwhile make the gravy!  Mince the shallots.  Melt the butter in a pan over medium heat and saute the shallots for 5 minutes.   Turn the heat down to low and slowly add the flour until you have a thick roux.  Slowly stir the roux until it is a light brown color.  Turn the burner back up to medium and add the stock. Stir until thick and glossy.  If the gravy is too thick, add more stock.  Salt and pepper to taste.

Cut the mozzarella balls into one inch squares.  Remove the paper towels from underneath the fries and discard.  Sprinkle the mozzarella squares over top of the fries.  Put the tray under the broiler until the cheese is melted.

Transfer the cheese fries to a plate and ladle the gravy over the top. Dig in..

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Pastie (Cornish Meat Pie)

Brooke's Recipe

I was watching Anthony Bourdain's "No Reservations" on TV and he visited a cafe in Montana that served meat pies called Pasties.  My husband couldn't stop talking about how good they looked, so last night I decided to try and make him one. Basically it is a pastry shell stuffed with meat, onions, potatoes and spices, and then baked or fried and smothered in beef gravy. Tradition claims that the pastie was invented in Cornwall, England in 1749 as lunch for coal miners to eat under ground.  Here is my 21st century twist.... to eat above ground.

Ingredients:

1 can of Pillsbury Grands biscuits
1 lb of cubed stew beef
1 large yellow onion
1 package of refrigerated diced hashbrown potatoes
1 teaspoon of curry powder
1 teaspoon of nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon of cayenne
Salt and Pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil

For Brown Gravy:
1 can of beef stock
1 to 2 tablespoons of corn starch


Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Open the can of biscuits and combine them into one big ball of dough with your hands.  Divide into 4 equal balls.  Set Aside

Chop onions and cut steak into smaller 1 inch pieces.

In a large saucepan over medium heat add olive oil and saute onions. After 5 minutes add diced hashbrown potatoes and lower heat to medium low and cover.  When the potatoes are soft, add steak.  When steak is cooked to your liking, remove the pan and set aside.

Roll out each ball of dough into a large circle like a pizza.  Place about 2 tablespoons of the meat mixture in the center of each dough circle.  Fold the edge of the dough over the meat mixture until you have a half moon shape.  Then press a fork down on the edges to bind the dough together. Continue making the other pasties the same way.

Carefully transfer the pasties onto an ungreased baking sheet and bake until golden brown. 

Meanwhile prepare the gravy by heating 1 cup stock in a saucepan over medium heat. Combine the cornstarch with the other cup of stock until  incorporated, and then add it to the pan.  When it comes to a boil, it should thicken up. If you like it thicker, continue to add cornstarch to a small amount of water and then add to the gravy until you get your desired thickness.

Transfer the pastie to a plate and pour the gravy over top.

As a side note, the spices I used gave it a Moroccan flair.  You can use any spice you like.  Or none at all and it will still be just as good.

Seared Scallops with Bacon and Saffron Rice

So my friend Jean Marie also has a food blog (http://platedperfection.blogspot.com/) and she made some really tasty looking scallops last week. Granted she owns a catering company and I just cook for family and friends, but I decided to give it a try. Hers was also MUCH healthier than mine, but I just had to use bacon.


Ingredients:

1 package of saffron rice ( I love saffron but it is too expensive so I use packaged rice flavored with real saffron)
10 sea scallops
2 tablespoons of chives, chopped very fine
1 bunch of asparagus
5 pieces of bacon, crumbled
1 tablespoon of reserved bacon grease
1 tablespoons of olive oil
1 tablespoons of flour

Prepare the saffron rice according to the directions on the package. This takes about 20 minutes.

Meanwhile:

Cook the bacon in a pan.  Remove bacon from pan and allow to rest on a plate lined with paper towels. Reserve about one tablespoons of the grease.  When the bacon is cool enough to handle, crumble the bacon into small pieces.

Steam the asparagus for about 5 minutes. Chop it into 1/2 inch pieces and set aside.

 In a large skillet, heat the  olive oil and the bacon grease in a pan over medium high heat. Pat the scallops dry and sprinkle them with the flour. This will help them get really brown. Carefully add the scallops to the pan.  Cook for 5 minutes and then turn them over and cook an additional 2-3 minutes. Remove scallops and keep warm.

Stir the chives and the asparagus into the rice. 

To plate, divide the rice between the plates.  Place the scallops on top of the rice and sprinkle the crumbled bacon over the top.