We Love God!

God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)

The invisibility of God is a great problem. It was already a problem to God’s people in Old Testament days. Their pagan neighbors would taunt them, saying, “Where Is now your God?” Their gods were visible and tangible, but Israel’s God was neither. Today in our scientific culture young people are taught not to believe in anything which is not open to empirical investigation. How then has God solved the problem of His own invisibility? The first answer is of course “in Christ.” Jesus Christ is the visible image of the invisible God. John 1:18: “No one has ever seen God, but God the only Son has made him known.” “That’s wonderful,” people say, “but it was 2,000 years ago. Is there no way by which the invisible God makes Himself visible today?” There is. We return to 1 John 4:12: “No one has ever seen God.” It is precisely the same introductory statement. But instead of continuing with reference to the Son of God, it continues: “If we love one another, God dwells in us.” In other words, the invisible God, who once made Himself visible in Christ, now makes Himself visible in Christians, if we love one another. It is a breathtaking claim. The local church cannot evangelize, proclaiming the gospel of love, if it is not itself a community of love.
John Stott

Bay Scallops Bourguignonne

0
(0)

CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains Chicago Appetizers, Bobbie – no, Carrots, Grains, Main dishes 4 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 tb Butter
3 Shallots; peeled/thinlysliced
1 sm Carrot; peeled and diced
1 md Rib celery; diced
1 Bay leaf
1 Bottle pinot noir; (3 cups) preferably from Burgundy
1 c Veal stock
Salt and pepper to taste
1 c Cooked couscous
1/4 c Cooked lentils
4 Sprigs fresh thyme
4 Sprigs fresh tarragon
1 sm Bunch chives; cut into long pieces
24 Bay scallops
2 tb Butter
1/2 Leek; white part only, cut into diamond-shaped pieces
2 Black truffles or 4 shiitake mushrooms; stems removed, cut into fine julienne pieces

INSTRUCTIONS

FOR THE SAUCE
FOR THE GARNISH
FOR THE SCALLOPS
Chef Jacky Pluton of Carlos in Highland Park prepares this dish with
scallops in the shells, which are very difficult to obtain, and uses fried
onion slices and fried rice noodles as part of the garniture.
1. Prepare the sauce. In a medium saucepan, cook the shallots in 1
tablespoon butter until they become translucent. Add the carrots, celery
and bay leaf and cook an additional 2 minutes, stirring several times. Add
the wine, bring to a boil and cook until reduced by half. Add the stock and
continue to reduce until the sauce has a light syrup consistency. Strain
through a fine sieve and adjust seasoning with salt and pepper. Set aside.
2. While sauce is reducing, prepare couscous and lentils by package
directions. Combine and set aside. Recipe may be done ahead to this point.
3. Prepare scallops. Make a ring of the couscous-lentil mixture around the
interior edge of 4 heat-proof soup plates and place in a warming oven.
Reheat sauce. Add scallops to sauce and simmer until just firm, 2 to 3
minutes. Meanwhile, heat 2 tablespoons butter in a skillet and saut the
leek and truffles until the leeks are tender, about 2 minutes.
4. Make a bed of leek and truffles in the center of each plate. Arrange six
scallops atop each bed and spoon sauce over the scallops and the couscous
mixture. Garnish with thyme, tarragon and chives and serve at once with the
same wine used for the sauce. Yield: Four appetizer servings Copyright 1995
Chicago Tribune Date: Sunday, May 28, 1995 MC formatting by
bobbi744@sojourn.com
Recipe by: Chicago Tribune
Posted to MC-Recipe Digest by Roberta Banghart <bobbi744@sojourn.com> on
Apr 01, 1998

A Message from our Provider:

“Jesus: to know him is to love him”

How useful was this recipe?

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this recipe.

We are sorry that this recipe was not useful for you!

Let us improve this recipe!

Tell us how we can improve this recipe?