Date I made this recipe:
August 13, 2015
Cooking for Kicks –
The Sport of Tailgating – Recipes of sport stars and fans by Dottie Dekko
Published by: Sprague
Publications
©1978
Purchased at Arc's Value Village
Thrift Stores
Recipe: Sausage and Cheese Dish – p. 91 – submitted
by Carl and Sue Nipp (part owners of the Minnesota
Kicks, a Minnesota
soccer team from 1976-1981)
Well so...hmm.... People, I don't know what to make of this
recipe and that's a first for me! It's a
sausage and cheese "dish" that is in the entree section and yet the
instructions say to eat it with corn chips.
Seems like that makes it an appetizer but what do I know?
But let's backtrack, shall we, on why this book? Simple...sort of. In order to talk about this book, we need to
discuss professional soccer in Minnesota . Ready?
From 1976-1981, Minnesota
had a professional soccer team, the Minnesota
Kicks, thus the title of the cookbook.
The Kicks played outdoors at
the old Metropolitan Stadium (Mall of America was built on that former
site). After they folded, they were
replaced by the Strikers and when
they folded, the Thunder and when they
folded, the Minnesota Stars FC
("football" club which is what everyone else in the world calls
soccer except for the U.S.
= dare to be different!). The Stars eventually changed its name to Minnesota United FC and that's where we
are today. If you knew all this
beforehand, give yourselves a large pat on the back because I didn't. I might have gone to a Kicks game after first
moving here...or not. Can't recall.
Okay, so, as with every single sports team in the country
and here in Minnesota ,
the Minnesota United FC needs its own
stadium. It's only fair, you know,
seeing as how all the other kids teams got a stadium. The Minnesota
Vikings are almost done with the monstrosity they are building down the
road from us so there's that (I am a Packers
Shareholder so 'nuff said) and then several years ago, the Minnesota Twins baseball team got a
stadium and this year the Saint Paul
Saints minor league baseball teams got a stadium and even the Minnesota Golden Gophers of the University of Minnesota got a new
stadium so now it's "We want a new stadium," from the soccer team - all
day, every day.
The problem, as you can imagine and as we will not discuss,
is funding. Okay white lie, let's have
a little discussion because I have a feeling, as with most of these stadiums,
that I am going to be the one partially funding this thing and that irks.
Nothing against soccer—excuse me, "football" (or, as the Brits say,
"footie") but I'm not much of a fan of any of the professional sports
teams playing in this state and so I have issues with paying for it, especially
when they are owned by much wealthier people than I, but I digress.
So with all the news swirling around soccer, I thought I
should pull out this cookbook – Cooking
for Kicks – and give a recipe a go.
Plus, I thought it would be a good time to acknowledge the
accomplishments of the U.S Women's Soccer Team about a month ago when they won
the World Cup. And then, don't you know,
in an incredible moment of timing, MY Green
Bay Packers played their first pre-season game against the New England Patriots (happily beat them)
on the same night I made this recipe. This
book is subtitled "The Sport of Tailgating" and wow, do the Packers have a lock and load on
tailgating or what? (Never mind last night's
game was played in New England ).
So all signs pointed to "yes" and I thought I had
a recipe all picked out just from the name alone – "Boom Boom Brown's
Tailgate Tacos" (p. 21) but then I looked and saw that this recipe was
submitted by Bill Brown, former Minnesota
Vikings running back. And since
making that dish would be tantamount to Packers
treason, I let it go and it's a shame because it sounded good but I could not
make a Vikings dish – retired Viking or no retired Viking – on a Packers game day. (Nothing personal,
Boom Boom.)
And so I flipped through the book, seconds before leaving
with my husband to head to the grocery store and decided to make this "dish"
instead. But as I said above, the
intended use of this "dish" is unclear and so while Andy ate it with
the suggested corn chips, I opted to cook some rigatoni and use it as a pasta
sauce. And that's because to my mind, it
was a pasta sauce rather than a dip. The
whole thing was so unclear, as is the answer to the question of "Who is
going to pay for a new soccer stadium?"
Here's the thing: if
this "dish" is a dip, then as dips go, this sort of fails. If you ask me, and you didn't, if you are
going to make a dip using sausage and cheese, then I suggest making an
"American favorite:" Velveeta + sausage + Rotele tomatoes. Now that is a cheese dip! And if this "dish" is more of a
pasta then leaving out the beef bouillon will make the dish less salty and more
authentic. (And speaking of the bouillon
cube, the recipe didn't say whether or not to add the cube as is or to add
water to it to make a broth and then add it to the dish. I added it "as is. As always, incomplete directions are my pet
peeve!) And if this "dish" is
something else entirely, then I give up!
The previous owner of this book starred a couple of recipes
that might also float your boat: "Cheese
Ball" – p. 33; French Dip Sandwich – p. 35; "Tossed Chinese Spinach
Salad – p. 37" or "Corned Beef Sandwiches" – p. 39, just to name
a few.
And so there it is, your soccer/football/tailgating recipe to
help you celebrate and embrace "your" team.
Sausage 'N Cheese Dish
– serves 6
1 lb. hot Italian sauce (bulk or links cut into bite size
pieces)
1 c. chopped onion
1/3 C. chopped green pepper
1 clove garlic, chopped
1 (16 oz.) can stewed tomatoes
1 c. tomato juice
4 oz. mushrooms
2 beef-flavored bouillon cubes
½ tsp. Italian seasoning
1 c. grated Parmesan cheese
Corn chips
In a large skillet, brown sausage, drain. Add onion, green pepper and garlic, cook and
stir until tender. Add tomatoes, juice,
mushrooms, bouillon and seasonings, mix well.
Simmer uncovered 30 minutes. Stir
in ½ c. cheese, heat through. Serve with
chips and remaining cheese.
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