The name, vodka, comes from the Russian phrase zhiznennaia voda, or "water of life". It can be made from everything from potatoes to beets. It's considered to be fairly flavorless which makes it a great liquor for mixed drinks.
Provolone And Pesto Layered Cheese Torte
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- #108755

2-5 hrs
ingredients
Mixture
8 ounces provolone cheese, thinly sliced
2 packages (8 ounce size) cream cheese, room temperature
1/2 cup butter, at room temperature
2 teaspoons minced garlic
Layers
1 cup pesto, drained of excess oil
1/2 cup oil-packed, sun-dried tomatoes, well drained and chopped
1/4 cup pine nuts
baguettes or crackers
grapes, if desired
directions
Line an 8-inch-square pan* with plastic wrap, extending the ends of the wrap over the edges of the pan.
Line the pan with the provolone cheese (reserve a few slices for another layer of the torte), overlapping the slices a bit and pressing the edges together slightly. The cheese should extend over the edges of the pan enough that it can help encase the finished torte layers.
Using a food processor, mix together the cream cheese, butter and garlic.
Spread the ingredients in layers over the provolone in pan in the following order: one-third of the mixture, one-half of the pesto, a layer of provolone, sun-dried tomatoes, pine nuts, one-third of the mixture, the remaining pesto, and the remaining mixture.
Fold the sides of the cheese over the mixture to encase it, using another slice in the middle, if needed. Fold the edges of plastic wrap over the finished cheese torte, covering tightly. Refrigerate for several hours or overnight.
To serve, invert the mold onto a cutting board, remove the plastic wrap and cut the torte diagonally into halves or fourths. Serve with crackers or baguette slices.
Red and green grapes make a good accompaniment.
* This torte also may be made in two smaller molds (use 5x3x2-inch loaf pans), using half of the ingredients in each mold.
added by
ChocoBryan13
nutrition data
Nutritional data has not been calculated yet.This iconic whiskey is a "Jack of all trades" when it comes to cooking. Toss it in some pasta, as a savory dipping sauce, and even bake it into something sweet.
It may look like a sad little package shoved in the back of your freezer, but frozen spinach actually has a lot of culinary uses (and some may surprise you).

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