Sunday, December 29, 2013

Rumaki

Rumaki

This is one of my favorite appetizers. I never got a chance to make it on Christmas, so I made it today.

Chicken livers
Whole water chestnuts
Thick sliced bacon
Teriyaki glaze
Toothpicks

Cut bacon slices in half, add a piece of chicken liver and one water chestnut to each. Roll up, using a toothpick to secure both ends of the bacon, passing through the chestnut and the liver. Things will fall apart if you don't get that toothpick through each ingredient.

Set them onto a shallow baking dish, I use a pizza pan (must have a lip). When you've rolled them all, drizzle with teriyaki glaze and put on top rack of oven, under broiler set to 450*.

Broil for ten minutes, remove from oven. At this time, they need turned over. I like to transfer them to a new pan, to get them out of the bacon grease. You may choose to just spoon off the grease. But one way or the other, they will crisp up easier without the liquid in the bottom of the pan.

Drizzle again with teriyaki. Put them back into the oven for another 5-10. Feel free to roll them fatty side up if you want the crispier. I do this after 5, giving another 5 minutes after that.


  Gather ingredients, cut bacon slices in half. Be sure to get thick bacon. Regular slices are too flimsy to toothpick together and stay. 

 This is a large piece of liver, it doesn't need to be that large. One piece of liver and one water chestnut in each roll-up.

 Toothpick must go through each thing in order to stay put during cooking. 

 Very large liver. I'll cut it up. 

 3 or 4 pieces out of that one, easy!

 After drizzling with teriyaki glaze, into the over for ten minutes. 

 While you have ten minutes, clean up. I can't remind my kids of this often enough. While food is cooking, you can be picking up after yourself. This makes final kitchen clean up much more fast and simple. 

 OK, ten minutes of cooking. I will flip them over, placing them onto another pizza pan. This get them up and out of the rendered fat from the bacon. 

 You can see I am putting them uncooked side up onto the clean pan. 

 Lots of bacon grease on the used pan. That's why you must use a pan with a lip. Otherwise that would all run onto the oven floor. 

 Drizzle again with Teriyaki glaze. 

 Back into the oven, close to heating elements, not touching, of course. And while these are back into the oven, I will be washing that other pan. I don't want a sink full of dishes waiting for me later. 

Finished product. YUM!! They will disappear quickly. And when folks ask you what is in these delicious bites, I won't blame you if you keep the secret of liver, until after the platter is empty! :) 

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