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).
Cold Orange Souffle
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- #77056
2-5 hrs
ingredients
1 cup cold water
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
8 eggs, separated
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cans (6 ounce size) frozen orange juice, thawed
1 cup sugar
1 cup whipping cream, whipped
orange sections (optional)
directions
Place water in the top of a double boiler and sprinkle the gelatin over the surface to soften. Beat egg yolks lightly and add them with the salt to the gelatin. Mix well.
Place over boiling water and cook, stirring constantly, until gelatin dissolves and the mixture thickens some, about 4 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in orange concentrate. Chill until mixture drops from a spoon into soft mounds.
Beat egg whites until stiff but not dry. Gradually beat in the sugar and continue beating until the egg whites are stiff. Fold the whites into the orange mixture. Fold in the whipped cream.
Arrange a collar of double waxed paper around a 2-1/2 quart souffle dish, 2 inches above the top of the dish. Fasten with tape. Pour mixture into dish and chill until firm. Remove collar and decorate with orange sections, if desired.
added by
crecipes
nutrition data
Nutritional data has not been calculated yet.Love the spinach dip at restaurants like TGIFriday's and the Olive Garden? Make it at home with these easy-to-follow copycat recipes.
Pumpkins aren't just for pies or Halloween decorations. These large, orange gourds - while naturally sweet - also work well in savory dishes. They pair well with poultry and pork (and especially bacon) and their creamy-when-cooked texture blends easily into soups.














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