Monster Panini
by Holly • February 16, 2011 • Cheese, Domestic Tips, Meat/Poultry • 0 Comments
If you entertain a lot its good to have some tricks up your sleeve to feed the masses. Paninis are comforting and filling but making individual ones for guests can get cumbersome. I was ready to take this task on, that’s how bad my hankering for a panini was, but when I went to the corner store to get some bread I saw some focaccia and a lightbulb turned on. What about a monster panini, one that takes up the entire surface of my cast iron! This would allow me to spend less time in the kitchen and more time chatting with my guests and listening to tunes, i was sold.
Monster Chicken Sausage Panini
4 links chicken sausage, butterflied and pan crisped on both sides
pesto (homemade our your favorite purchased variety)
combo of mozz and grated parmesan cheese
3-4 artichoke hearts, chopped
olive oil spray (trader joe’s makes a good extra virgin kind)
Focaccia
salt, pepper and red pepper flakes to taste
Last year I acquired a cast iron pan with grates and a panini press (score!) but prior too that I constructed my own*. Heat up the pan with the top panini press while you assemble the monster panini. Cut the foccacia in half, spread a layer of pesto, then a layer of cheese, then the chicken sausage, artichoke hearts, and the final layer of cheese. Season with salt, pepper and red pepper flakes if desired. Spray the bottom of the pan with ev olive oil spray, put the sammy in and spray the top with olive oil before putting the press on. Keep the heat at low-med for about 10-15 minutes until the cheese is fully melted. Slice up like a pizza and serve to hungry guests!
You can always swap out the pesto for marinara and the chicken sausage for some veggies such as baby spinach or roasted red pepper. The possibilities are endless, the thing that counts here is that it’s monster-sized.
*This is how you construct a make shift panini press: heat olive oil in a large skillet, add your sandwich, spray the top of the sandwich with olive oil spray, place a layer of aluminum foil over the panini then top that with a smaller skillet. To weigh it all down and achieve the “press” put a tea kettle full of water on the top skillet. The set up is not visually appealing but it does the job!
