Saturday, January 20, 2007
Cream tacos
Chicken breasts, thinly sliced
2 Tbsp flour, plus more for dredging
Chicken broth
1 can chicken and mushroom soup
1 can diced green chilis
1 cup half-and-half
Shredded jack and cheddar cheese
Corn tortillas
Mix salt and pepper into dredging flour and coat the chicken pieces. Saute in olive oil just till browned.
Add 2 Tbsp flour to oil in pan, stir to brown flour, add chicken broth to deglaze pan, stir to thicken.
Mix soup, chilis, half-and-half. Tear tortillas into 4 or 5 pieces each.
Layer in pan: Soup mixture, tortillas, cheese, tortillas, soup, chicken, gravy, cheese, tortillas, soup, cheese, tortillas, soup, cheese.
Bake covered at 325 for 1 hour. Uncover and allow to brown on top.
Saturday, January 13, 2007
Week: Tortellini soup, chicken piccata, lemon stirfry
Cost: $3.25 per meal -- pretty good.
Labor: Not too bad, call it 3 hours over 2 nights. (More if you toss in breakfast tacos)
Flavor: All tasty (see note below)
Ingredients plus eggs, sausage and tortillas cost about $60; estimate $52 for 16 dinners (4 piccata, 6 soup, 5 stirfry, plus extra tortellini and popcorn chicken) = $3.25 per meal, pretty good.
I found myself not looking forward to the soup (same as with King Ranch Chicken -- I felt like, oh well, I made this so I better eat it, but when I did I enjoyed it). Try a real Italian sausage, and maybe the onion, next time -- and remember that it actually tastes better after a day in the fridge.
Day Zero: Shopping
Fancy store: 1/2 tsp basil, 1/2 tsp oregano, 1 lb. Italian sausage
Regular store: cheese tortellini, thin chicken breasts, flank steak, 4-cup box beef broth, 2 cups diced tomatoes, 8 oz tomato sauce, angel hair pasta, lemon, garlic, ginger, snow peas, green pepper. (Add eggs, sausage and flour tortillas if doing breakfast tacos.)
Have on hand: butter, oil, flour, capers, chicken broth, 1/2 cup dry red wine
Day 1: (est 1 hr 30)
Reserve 2 cups tortellini and cook the rest (1 meal). Make and divide the angel-hair pasta for piccata.
Slice 2 garlic cloves, then mince some more for stirfry.
(Cook eggs and sausage now if making breakfasts.)
Brown and drain the sausage. Saute sliced garlic in drippings.
Put in big pot: sausage, garlic, tomatoes, tomato sauce, basil, oregano, beef broth, 1/2 cup water, 1/2 cup wine.
Bring to a boil; simmer uncovered 30 min.
Meanwhile: Clean and chop the snow peas. Dice green pepper. Slice flank steak and marinate in fridge.
After pot has simmered 30 min, skim off fat. Add tortellini and green pepper; simmer another 30 min.
Day 2: (est 1 hr 15)
Get beef out of fridge. Put rice in to cook.
Grate ginger and lemon zest for stirfry; add to ginger. Make stirfry sauce mix.
Put in a cup: lemon juice, 1/2 cup chicken broth and capers.
Stirfry the snow peas. Stirfry beef, then aromatics, then return beef to pan with sauce mix, turning to coat and heat. Serve over rice and snow peas.
Flour the chicken; brown in 2 Tbsp butter plus 3 Tbsp oil. Pull chicken out, lower heat and add lemon/broth mix. Bring to boil; add chicken and simmer 5 min.
Put the chicken atop the pasta. Add 2 Tbsp. butter to the pan and whisk. Pour sauce over chicken and serve.
Orange Stirfry Beef
Good with brown rice and snow peas (stir-fried quickly till they turn bright green).
1 lb flank steak
1 Tbsp cornstarch
2 tsp sugar
2 tsp black soy
1.5 tsp sweet or ground bean sauce (CAREFUL with the type of bean sauce.)
2 tsp rice wine
Slice the steak into thin pieces across the grain and marinate up to overnight.
AROMATICS:
Zest of 1 or 2 oranges or lemons
1 tsp minced ginger
2 tsp minced garlic
3 diced green onions
RESERVE:
2 tsp rice wine
SAUCE:
2 tsp sugar
0.5 tsp cornstarch
1 tsp black soy
1 or 2 tsp orange or lemon juice
Take your marinated beef out of the fridge. (Make rice and snow peas now.) Stir-fry beef quick and hot (you're almost searing the beef into little caramelized steaklets). Pull beef out into plate or bowl. Put aromatics in pan and sizzle 'em around a little bit. Return the beef to the pan with 2 tsp rice wine, then add the sauce mixture and stir-fry till it thickens up.
Green Beans with Slivered Almonds
Garlic salt
Slivered almonds
Olive oil
Wash and trim the green beans; toss with a little garlic salt. Stirfry them quick and hot, till they turn bright green (and I actually like to push it until they start to wrinkle and brown). Pull the beans out, toss the almonds into the pan and stir them until they barely toast (this time, don't push it).
Top the green beans with the almonds and perhaps a little more garlic salt. I find they reheat quite well.
Chicken Fried Steak
This is my method incorporating tips from Stephan Pyles who based his on the Hill Top Cafe.
1 to 1.5 lb. good chuck steak (better than the traditional round steak, Pyles says)
milk
cup or two of flour
salt
black pepper
oil
(Make the corn and potatoes first.)
Trim the meat to within an inch of its life.* Pound the bejabbers out of it till it's pretty flat; soak it in milk overnight in the fridge.
Mix salt and pepper into the flour; coat the meat. Get at least a half-inch of oil pretty hot in the pan (else the meat won't be tender). You might want to try a small piece first to make sure it's good and hot. Fry the pieces a minute or two each side till golden-brown and crispy, then pull them out onto a plate and keep frying more pieces. A fork is actually best for flipping the pieces as it disturbs the flour coating less than tongs, etc. Also the fork can be used to defend your steak pieces from passing family members.
* Unusual tradition in my family is to trim the meat very carefully, resulting in lots of smaller weird-shaped pieces. Looks strange, but also actually allows a lot of control in the frying (and allows for the second tradition, which is family members swooping by and snitching a piece before the whole batch is done; my dad and I are quick with a stealthily wielded fork and can manage a whole meal before Mom even has it all on the table).
Spaghetti and homemade meatballs
(To simplify even further, I'm toying with the idea of making the meatballs out of Owen's Sage Sausage, but I haven't tried it yet to see how that would taste. I like mine a whole lot anyway. They're a simplified version of my mom's; she makes hers with eggs the real way.)
1 lb ground beef
Italian bread crumbs
As much ground fennel as you can stand to grind
Garlic salt
Combine, form into tiny meatballs and brown in olive oil. Cook pasta, top with Newman's Garlic & Basil, sprinkle with tiny meatballs. Yay!
Monday, January 08, 2007
2 weeks of breakfasts
eaters who can't manage to eat breakfast in the house before they
leave for work, but do have access to a microwave, a vending machine
that sells milk and a water fountain at work and aren't glared at if
they eat at their desk. i.e. me.
You do have to remember to grab one out of the fridge as you're
leaving each morning, though!
* Breakfast Tacos with Salsa
* Bowl of Peaches with sugar
* Vanilla Yogurt and Blueberries
* Bowl of Oatmeal, plus a Banana for Later
Keep on hand: sugar packets, tupperware, oatmeal, lunch sacks.
Grocery list:
thin flour tortillas
1 lb sausage
Jar of salsa
Packet of 4 active vanilla yogurts
3-5 eggs
Blueberries
Bananas
Jar of peaches
5 min:
Whatever day you're cooking dinners anyway, use the pan briefly to
scramble the eggs and cook up the sausage. Store in fridge.
20 min:
Measure .75 cups oatmeal each into 4 plastic bowls. Store with a
sugar packet.
Make 8 breakfast tacos and store 2 to a container, each with a Saran-
wrap pouch of salsa.
Measure 4 portions blueberries into baggies and store with the yogurt.
Measure 5-6 peach slices each into 4 containers and store with a
sugar packet.
For the next 16 days, rotate between the four meals. Need to record:
actual assembly time; cost; and whether I really eat all these dang
things.
Possible future (or lazy) additions: Waldorf salad (only keeps 2 days
though); Small bowl with milk + baggie of healthy cereal; Snausages +
a paper towel (not the dog food, but rather our name for those
sausage-biscuit frozen sandwiches); Cheese n' apples (drizzled with a
tsp of lemon juice?); ham n' mustard rolls?; fruit cups with mandarin
oranges?
To try: Simple Salmon Croquettes a la Amy
into kids' diet. I (of course) modified her healthy recipe, subbing
store-bought garlic breadcrumbs for the plain crumbs, herbs and
spices she included, but I did leave her wheat germ in so I don't
think I'm being too evil. Now if I only knew where to buy wheat germ
(leaping feet-first into health isn't easy!)
She also says Spanish olive oil is healthier than others, I'm
guessing something to do with the way it's produced.
14.75 oz canned salmon
4 Tbsp wheat germ
1/2 cup garlic breadcrumbs
1 Tbsp oil
2 eggs
Mash all ingredients up with a fork. Form into patties or small
balls. Cook over medium heat 5-7 min (depending on size), or bake at
425 for 8-15 min.
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
Black-Eyed Peas: Texas Caviar
this from a great recipe on Allrecipes: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/
Texas-Caviar-I/Detail.aspx
1/2 onion, chopped
1 green bell pepper, chopped
1 bunch green onions, chopped
2 jalapeño peppers, chopped
1 Tbsp minced garlic
1 pint cherry tomatoes, quartered
8-oz zesty Italian dressing
15-oz can black beans, drained
15-oz can black-eyed peas, drained
1/2 tsp ground coriander
1 bunch chopped fresh cilantro
Toss all but the cilantro together; chill in fridge 2 hours. Toss
with cilantro to serve.
Tuesday, January 02, 2007
Chicken Piccata
No fooling around, though: Don't mess with the whole complex butter, oil, butter, oil instructions or you won't get good sauce. Do it like it says (and it is possible to overdo the lemon.)
2 chicken breasts, sliced thin
brown rice or angel hair pasta
flour
6 Tbsp butter, divided
5 Tbsp olive oil, divided
1/3 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup chicken stock
1/4 cup capers
Make the pasta or rice.
Flour the chicken; brown half the chicken in 2 Tbsp butter plus 3 Tbsp oil, then add 2 Tbsp butter plus 2 Tbsp oil and brown the other half.
Remove chicken, lower heat and add lemon juice, stock and capers. Bring to boil; add chicken and simmer 5 min.
Put the chicken atop the pasta or rice. Add the rest of the butter to the pan and whisk. Pour sauce over chicken and serve.
To try: Amy's Waldorf Salad
1 red Delicious apple, coarsely chopped
1 yellow Delicious apple, coarsely chopped
1/4 cup seedless grapes, red or green
1/8 cup raisins
1/4 cup walnuts, coarsely chopped
1/4 cup Miracle Whip
1 1/3 Tbsp milk
1/2 tsp melted butter
1 Tbsp sugar
Mix the last 4 ingredients; toss with the fruit and nuts.
Full recipe (serves 8 to 10):
4 red Delicious apples, coarsely chopped
4 yellow Delicious apples, coarsely chopped
1 cup seedless grapes, red or green
1/2 cup raisins
1 cup walnuts, coarsely chopped
1 cup Miracle Whip
1/3 cup half and half
3 Tbsp sugar
Mix the last 3 ingredients; toss with the fruit and nuts.
Wednesday, December 20, 2006
To try: Braciole
Alton advises on how to flatten flank steak, how to wrap n' roll and how to pitch a tinfoil tent here.
I loooove Alton, but after all that, Rachael's looks so much simpler it's probably what I'll try first!
1 1/2 pounds ground beef, pork and veal mix from the butcher's counter (meatloaf mix)
(or
(3 cups tomato or spaghetti sauce plus
(1 pound flank steak: get butcher to butterfly it, then pound it 1/4-inch thick)
For braciole mix:
Salt and pepper
1/2 cup Italian bread crumbs
1 egg
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/4 small white onion, grated
2 tablespoons golden or dark raisins, chopped
3 tablespoons pine nuts, chopped
3 tablespoons grated cheese, Parmigiano or Romano
2 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley (rosemary, oregano)
For layering (skip for steak):
1 cup arugula leaves or baby spinach
6 slices prosciutto di Parma
6 slices deli sliced provolone
For drizzling:
Extra-virgin olive oil
Meatloaf version:
---Preheat oven to 450. Mix meat and next 10 ingredients. Flatten meat out on a waxed paper lined cookie sheet into a thin layer: 1/2-inch thick, 12 inches long by 6 to 8 inches wide.
---Layer on spinach, prosciutto and cheese, then roll the meat, using the waxed paper to help roll up into a large log, rolling up the short side to get a 12-inch long log.
---Drizzle the log with olive oil to coat lightly. Roast meatroll 20 minutes. Cut into 1-inch slices, 3 pieces per portion, and serve.
Thin steak version:
---Preheat oven to 350.
---Pound steak flat under plastic. Mix next 10 ingredients into a paste.
---Brush steak with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Spread the filling evenly over the meat. Roll tightly and tie with butcher's twine.
---Put spaghetti sauce in 9-by-13 baking dish and place in the oven to heat. Make a tinfoil tent for the dish that won't touch the meatroll once placed inside.
---In a large saute pan, sear all sides of the rolled meat.
---Put meatroll in the sauce; cover with tinfoil tent so that the foil is not touching the meat. Braise for 35 minutes or up to 3 hours. (Reviewers say 35-45 min results in very rare beef and an hour ten or an hour 25 is more like it.)
To try: Sopapilla Cheese Cake
3 8 oz. cream cheese
2 cups of sugar
1 1/2 tsp. Vanilla
2 cans of small crescent rolls
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 stick of butter
Set oven at 350 degrees. Grease bottom of pan (13x9). Mix cream cheese and only 1 1/2 cups of sugar, add vanilla, mix until creamy. Unroll 1 can of the crescent rolls and lay on bottom of greased pan. Spread cream mix on top. Top with the other can of crescent rolls. Melt butter and pour over top. Mix 1/2 cup of sugar with 1 tsp. cinnamon and sprinkle on top. Bake at 350 degrees for 35-40 mins.
To try: Italian Sausage & Tortellini Soup
1 lb. Italian sausage
1 c. coarsely chopped onions
2 garlic cloves, sliced
5 c. beef broth (3 cans)
1/2 c.water
1/2 c. dry red wine
2 c. (4 med) chopped, seeded, peeled tomatoes
1 c. thinly sliced carrots
1/2 tsp. basil leaves
1/2 tsp. oregano leaves
8 oz. can tomato sauce
11/2 c. sliced zucchini
8 oz. (weight) or (or two cups) meat or cheese tortellini
3 tbsp. chopped fresh parsley
1 med. green pepper cut into 1/2 in. squares
Grated Parmesan cheese
Remove casings from sausage if present. In 5 qt. Dutch oven brown sausage, reserving 1 tbsp drippings in oven. Saute onions and garlic in reserved drippings until onions are tender. Add beef broth, water, wine, tomatoes, carrots, basil, oregano, tomato sauce and sausage. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer uncovered for 30 min. Skim fat from soup. Stir in zucchini, tortellini, parsley and green pepper. Simmer covered an additional 30 min. or until tortellini are tender. Sprinkle Parmesan cheese over each serving. Yields eight 1½ c. servings.
'Tis the season: Saline solution
1 teaspoon table salt
1 pinch baking soda
1 quart tap water
Stir in a microwavable container (a glass quart jar works well). Boil for 5 minutes in the microwave. Let cool until warm to the touch.
Fill a bulb syringe with saline solution (about 10 cc), put the tip of the syringe in one nostril, aiming straight back. Lean over sink, and slowly squeeze until syringe is emptied. Repeat in other nostril. Store unused solution covered in refrigerator and warm before using.
Sunday, December 03, 2006
Ginger Pork Potstickers
Potsticker wrappers
3/4 lb pork, trimmed into little cubes
6-10 spinach leaves
6-8 cloves garlic
1 tbsp grated ginger
1-2 tbsp soy sauce
1 tsp rice wine
1/2 tsp sesame oil
2 or 3 cans chicken broth
Cube up the pork, mince the spinach leaves and garlic, grate the ginger. Stir up with the soy, rice wine and sesame oil. Let mixture marinate up to 1 day.
Lay out 6 potsticker wrappers, paint a thin circle of water around the rim of each, scoop a small spoonful of pork mix into center, fold in half and pinch-pleat the edge shut. Repeat till you have a small army of little potstickers awaiting your command.
Fry each dumpling a little bit on each side and bottom to crisp up the wrapper. I put several in a pan at once and fry one side, then flip, then stand 'em all up to fry the bottoms. Tongs are great for this.
With all the potstickers you can fit in a pan standing upright on their bottoms, pour in enough chicken broth to mostly cover the little guys. Simmer until most of the broth cooks away (maybe 20-30 minutes). Start eating.
For dipping sauce, mix soy with a bit of rice wine and sesame oil (plus a little garlic salt).
A nice presentation is to stir-fry some snow peas (just until they are bright green), layer those on a dish and place the potstickers on top.
Makes about 30, depending on how much you fill each wrapper (the wrappers are available at Asian or chi-chi groceries). I have yet to figure out a good healthy side dish for this because I simply start wolfing them down until I'm not hungry anymore, but the snow peas are a start!
Pecan Chicken
The area where it needs refinement is that the breading did not stay evenly on the chicken pieces. I may find the trick to this eventually, but for now it's only a cosmetic flaw -- i.e. I will readily eat this myself, but not make it for company till I get the breading worked out!
2 cups or more crushed pecans
3 or more chicken breasts
Garlic salad dressing
Dredge chicken in dressing, then in pecans. Bake in 9x13 pan at 400 for 25 min.
Quick chicken: Lemon-herb, pecan, popcorn
Difficulty: Low. Flavor: High. Yield: 8 entrees, all with sides. (Because difficulty was so low, I actually made the sides!)
http://www.blogger.com/img/gl.italic.gif
Trim chicken. Cut about 4/5 into fairly regular medallion-size pieces (for even frying and to increase coating area). Trim the last 1/5 into smaller chunks and toss in bag with Italian breadcrumbs.
Take half the medallions and coat with garlic salad dressing and pecans for Pecan Chicken. Bake in 9x13 pan at 400 for 25 min.
While that's baking, fry the Italian breadcrumb pieces in olive oil (this is Popcorn Chicken).
Rinse out pan and make Lemon Chicken with Carrots.
While lemon chicken is simmering, make the rice, cook some corn and make some small salads.
Nicole's Bread Pudding
Might also travel well to brunches, etc. (It bakes up pretty, especially with the raisins -- I left them out, but if you want them, sprinkle some in when you layer the toast pieces.)
12 slices white bread
1 stick melted butter
Toast and tear the bread. Arrange pieces in 9x13 baking dish. Pour butter over.
4 cups milk
8 eggs
1.5 cups sugar
cinnamon
vanilla extract
Beat together and pour over toast pieces. Bake at 350 for 1 hour.
Friday, December 01, 2006
Sausage-Egg Casserole
1 pound Owens sage sausage
4 garlic cloves, minced
1/2 cup chopped drained oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes or roasted peppers
5 large eggs
3 large egg yolks
1 pint half and half
2 cups grated mozzarella
1/2 teaspoon salt
Cook and crumble the sausage. Drain and place in 9x13 baking dish. Saute the garlic 3 min, then add tomatoes and stir 1 min. Add garlic and tomatoes to baking dish and mix up with the sausage. (Can do this part up to 1 day ahead and store in fridge, or, possibly, freeze for a week but I did not test this. Shallots, parsley added in
original.)
Combine eggs, egg yolks, half-and-half, 1.5 cups of the cheese and salt in a bowl; pour over sausage mix. Sprinkle the rest of the cheese on top. Bake at 375 about 30 min till top is golden-brown and knife inserted in center comes out clean. (Note: Sausage and tomatoes magically bubble up and distribute themselves evenly!)
Let it rest 5 min before serving.
Time: about 40 min. prep plus 30 min. baking and 5 min rest.
Difficulty: Very easy! Serves: probably 6-8, or reheats well for
second day serving 4 : )