Homemade from scratch!
INGREDIENTS:
Butter, 2 Tablespoons
Olive Oil, 2 Tablespoons
Onions, 2 large chopped
Shallots, 3 chopped
Honey, 1 Tablespoon
Green Onions, 6 diced
Dry White Wine, 1/4 Cup
Sour Cream, 1 Cup
Cream Cheese, 8 Ounces
Tabasco, a few shakes
Worcestershire, 1 teaspoon
Cayenne pepper, a pinch
Garlic, 3 cloves crushed
Pepper, fresh ground liberal amount
Sea Salt, 1 teaspoon
DIRECTIONS:
Drizzle olive oil and butter in a large skillet and add the onions. Cook on medium heat until they become beautifully brown and caramelized, it takes about 25 minutes. Add the remaining ingredients in any order, stir together and serve.
This was really good…a whole lot more difficult than opening up the packet and adding sour cream…but if you want to really do it from scratch yourself…this is definitely great.
If you want to bring out the big tastes to impress your guests, you’ve got to try this one! For years and years, I served onion dip by opening up a jar, or if I was going to get really fancy, I would combine a packet with some sour cream. Today I wanted to see if making it from scratch was that much better. The results came in with a definite yes…it is that much better. And really, it takes such a little time to make…so I believe it’s well worth the effort.
And the end result is a dip you will remember…creamy, sweet from the caramelized onions, packed with a huge amount of flavor and perfect to serve with vegetable sticks, chips or crackers, and it tastes amazing on a piece of crusty bread.
2 large onions and 3 shallots diced
The onions and shallots, cooked in the butter and olive oil are perfect…I could eat a spoonful just as it is. But it gets even better, so keep going.
To the caramelized onions, add one tablespoon of honey and two garlic cloves crushed.
6 green onions diced and one 8 ounce package of cream cheese.
The recipe called for dry white wine, but I only had this little bottle of champagne…so that is what I used. I love red wine and if the recipe called for that, I totally would have had it covered…but I need to learn to keep white wine on hand.
Add the cup of sour cream, teaspoon of Worcestershire and Cayenne pepper.
This is good served warm and served chilled. If you are making it ahead and it becomes to thick after setting all night, just add a little milk to thin it out.
The “guys” in the house really liked it..but to be honest, they probably would have liked the can version or the packet where you just add sour cream just as well. I could definitely tell the difference, and I will go to the trouble to make it again…because it was really better.