This is a recipe for Zombie Brain Pate, a creamy seafood pate, or dip, which you can put on crackers, vegetables, or bread wedges. You will need to get a brain mold, or some other kind of mold, to use to shape your pate. Makes a nice shrimp or crab-flavored dip, which can be spooky as long as you use a spooky mold.
I found the brain mold linked below for sale on Amazon. You can pick one up and do some additional Christmas shopping for the kids while you are at it.
The Zombie Brain Pate Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 can (about 10 oz) reduced-sodium, low-fat cream of mushroom soup
- 8 ounces of reduced-fat or low-fat cream cheese, softened
- 1 envelope of unflavored (and sugar-free) gelatin softened in 1/4 cup water
- 3 pounds cooked shrimp, coarsely chopped (or 1 pound crab meat)
- 1 cup lite, reduced-fat, or low-fat mayonnaise (or Miracle Whip)
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- Tabasco or creole seasoning to taste
- oil or Pam non-stick spray for the surface of the mold
Directions
If you have a food processor, you may want to grind your shrimp or crab meat up into more of a paste. This will give the zombie brain pate more of a smooth texture, all the better to resemble actual brain matter.
Be careful with your cream of mushroom soup, because most versions made with cream are high in fat.
- Heat the mushroom soup, undiluted, in a saucepan over medium heat.
- Stir occasionally to keep from burning or sticking to the pan.
- Mix the cream cheese with the soup.
- Stir in softened gelatin and blend well.
- Fold in the remaining ingredients and pour into your lightly oiled mold.
- Chill until firm and serve with your favorite crackers.
Once firm, you should be able to dump the pate out into a bowl or even onto a plate. The oil or non-stick spray is what allows us to dump it out. Don’t forget to lightly grease that mold!
How to Fold
When preparing a recipe, folding is a method of mixing better that is often demonstrated on cooking channels but not often practiced by those of us who are content eating tuna and chicken 4 times a day. Of course, I learned how to fold in Home Economics class back in high school, promptly forgot, and then relearned again a couple of years ago for some recipes I was trying out. I do enjoy cooking healthy protein-laced meals.
Because you may not know how to fold, I’ll give you a quick low-down. You want to take a flat spatula and turn the mixture over onto itself, rather than stirring with a spoon.
The author of the video I was going to use as a demo won’t let me embed the video outside of YouTube, so check out this link for instructions: on how to fold. I refuse to link to the video, but if you must view it, check it out here.
Healthy, Low Fat, High Protein Eating
As long as you use low-fat ingredients when possible, you will end up with a very tasty, moderately healthy dip for crackers, veggies, or bread wedges. The cream of mushroom soup can be found in a lower-fat version, I know because I found it.
I recommend shrimp instead of crab meat unless you purchase high-quality real crab meat. Don’t use that processed crab-meat-in-a-packet garbage. Bring to work in a small bowl with whole grain or whole wheat crackers for a healthy snack. Serve at a Halloween party with low-fat chips or crackers, and surprise your guests with a tasty, but spooky, healthy food dip!
Nutrition
I really can’t give a nutrient profile on this because of all the variables. It depends on what kind of cream cheese, soup, mayo, and seafood you use. You are going to end up with something that has a moderate amount of protein, fat, and carbs. I have no idea about the total calories. This is more of a Zone Diet 30/30/40 type of meal.
Tags: brains, food, halloween, healthy food, recipe, Recipes
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