Monday, May 2, 2011

On a Gypsy’s Trail

Early this morning I walked a short distance behind a woman so beautiful I imagined she had wandered off a Hollywood movie set. Everything about her appearance was gorgeous and exotic. Not the type to approach women with a facile come on, I satisfied myself with drifting in her wake enjoying the wafting trails of a delicate fragrance, verbena I thought. Perhaps fortune smiles upon the patient man. In no time at all a sudden gust of wind tore a slip of paper from her hand and sent it spiraling toward me, requiring only a quick jump to the right with extended arm to snatch the paper from its backward flutter.


Hoping for a scribbled phone number, it turned out to be nothing more than an ordinary recipe of some kind. But the woman, flustered for a moment turned in a circle, eyes darting left to right for a glimpse of her wayward square of paper. Only fifteen feet behind, I held up the captured paper to show that it had landed in my hand. And in this way the door to an introduction opened.


I returned the slip of paper and for my leaping catch won a half hour of the woman’s company. I was right in imagining there was something exotic about her. In the most romantic of all possible scenarios, she turned out to be a gypsy girl from Romania with a name straight out of the Brothers Grimm. She called herself Florina. Who am I to doubt that mothers in Romania choose such fabulous names. In another odd twist I learned she was employed as an au pair by a family in Maitland, that they were weekending at the beach and she had been given the morning off. The recipe turned out to be a rather un-Romanian casserole that she found in an American magazine and wanted to attempt. In our unfortunately short time together I at least managed to get the recipe for what I shall call a “Gypsy Chicken Casserole.” Sadly, the story ends with me dining alone on the dish beautiful Florina plans to cook for her host family.


—A very American recipe I romantically call GYPSY CHICKEN CASSEROLE

Ingredients:

3 cups of cooked and cubed chicken breast

1 box of Uncle Ben’s Long Grain & Wild Rice, Original Recipe

1 can cream of celery soup

1 bag of frozen French style green beans

1 large onion chopped

1 cup of Hellmann’s Real mayonnaise

1 can of water chestnuts either diced or sliced

1 medium jar of sliced pimento

1 small package of slivered almonds

Salt & pepper

Penzeys Northwoods seasoning (optional)


Preparation:

Cook the rice either on the stove or in a rice cooker. Brown the chicken lightly, seasoned with salt and pepper and if on hand, a sprinkle of Penzeys Northwoods seasoning. At the same time cook the green beans with the chopped onion. In a large bowl mix the cream of celery soup with the mayonnaise, careful to mix it well. Combine the other ingredients and mix well. Fold in the soup/mayonnaise mix continuing to stir until all the ingredients are thoroughly blended. Wipe a 3 quart casserole dish with butter and pour the casserole mix in. Bake it uncovered in a 300° oven for twenty minutes. Remove the casserole, add the slivered almonds, dot the top with butter and return to the oven for ten minutes.


Maybe a green salad and some steamed summer squash or broccoli to fill out the menu.

3 comments:

  1. Gypsy Chicken Casserole sounds delicious but if that is a picture of Florina the beach girl gypsy then I am leaving immediately and will search all the homes in Maitland. Florida. If it's just a photo from your monthly "Gypsy Life" magazine, thanks are still in order.

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  2. The girl and the pictures of the food are all beautiful. Sorry you had to dine alone.

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  3. I don't want to be the "party pooper" but, it is for sure a photo from "Gypsy Life". Nice story, but the girl in not a gypsy. She is a famous 100% (not gypsy) roumanian actress and singer from Romania. Her name is Nicoleta Luciu. The picture was probably taken when she played in a telenovela called: "inima de tigan"(gypsy heart) as a gypsy girl. Nicoleta is a mother of 4 children, 3 of them triplets...wow, right, considering her perfect figure...the recipe not romanian, but looks delicious, thanks.

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