Pumpkin Pancakes
Yesterday Gracie and I had pancakes for dinner. But not just any pancakes, they were PUMPKIN. And I'm not taking about the mix you can buy pre-made. I did that last year. Total waste and they weren't even that good. Thanks to my good friends at Macaroni Kid, I am going to keep this easy recipe around for a long time.
Spider Pizza!
We hosted a little Halloween party for some little people today. There wasn't much Halloween going on so I ampted it up with some super scary spider pizza! Again, Macaroni Kid came through for me on this one!
I love to try new recipes with Real Food... preferably local and organic. As I make my way through recipes, I will share the good and the bad here! As I search for recipes one of the main criteria is that we already have most of the ingredients in the house... and it shouldn't be too complicated!
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Sausage and Apple Kebabs
What a perfect treat for the seasons! Super easy to make. Super fun to eat and super tasty - especially for kids!
I got this recipe out of a recent edition of Real Simple. It's a great way to use up all of those apples you have sitting around, too. (I know you went to the farm and picked too many! We all do. It's too much fun.)
I'm not sure what kind of apples we had but they worked fine. And I don't have maple syrup in the house but I do have Aunt Jemima Reduced Sugar syrup which also worked just fine. We made the 'taters and peas, too. Except I don't use milk and butter, just some of the cooking water and salt and pepper (much to the dismay of the rest of my family).
I do wish I had made a nice salad to go on the side. It needed a little something else....
I got this recipe out of a recent edition of Real Simple. It's a great way to use up all of those apples you have sitting around, too. (I know you went to the farm and picked too many! We all do. It's too much fun.)
I'm not sure what kind of apples we had but they worked fine. And I don't have maple syrup in the house but I do have Aunt Jemima Reduced Sugar syrup which also worked just fine. We made the 'taters and peas, too. Except I don't use milk and butter, just some of the cooking water and salt and pepper (much to the dismay of the rest of my family).
I do wish I had made a nice salad to go on the side. It needed a little something else....
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Slow Cooker Barbeque Pork Sandwiches
I am a big fan of pulled pork. It's so easy to make in the slow cooker and often comes out moist and delicious, plus there are extras for the freezer!
I have a go-to recipe called Slow Cooker Dr. Pepper BBQ Pork (comment if you want the recipe) but I decided to try something different last night. It was GREAT! Such nice flavoring and the perfect amount of sauce. (Read: not too drippy.)
It was super easy and because I wasn't home for dinner, my husband and toddler had a nice meal without me. That, of course, also means I didn't get a good picture of it. But I think you all know what pulled pork looks like.
I opted to not make the slaw that is also in the recipe and instead served it with a side of locally grown, organic broccoli that I steamed for just a few minutes in the microwave. (I like my veggies to have a little crunch left in them. No need to cook out all of the nutrients!)
I also totally regret not serving this with pickles. It would have been delicious!
Here is the fabulous recipe from Real Simple.
I have a go-to recipe called Slow Cooker Dr. Pepper BBQ Pork (comment if you want the recipe) but I decided to try something different last night. It was GREAT! Such nice flavoring and the perfect amount of sauce. (Read: not too drippy.)
It was super easy and because I wasn't home for dinner, my husband and toddler had a nice meal without me. That, of course, also means I didn't get a good picture of it. But I think you all know what pulled pork looks like.
I opted to not make the slaw that is also in the recipe and instead served it with a side of locally grown, organic broccoli that I steamed for just a few minutes in the microwave. (I like my veggies to have a little crunch left in them. No need to cook out all of the nutrients!)
I also totally regret not serving this with pickles. It would have been delicious!
Here is the fabulous recipe from Real Simple.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Squash Lasagna and Salmon
Squash Lasagna
Sorry for the double post here, you guys. I forgot to take pics of dinner from last night. (what?!) Such a fail!
Anyway, the Squash Lasagna has amazing potential and was over all quite good. I'd do it a little differently next time, though. It calls for frozen squash puree. I didn't buy this because I have a whole peck of frozen squash and zucchini in the freezer. I figured I would thaw that, throw them in the blender and puree them myself. Well, my blender stinks (just bought a new one yesterday, thank you very much!) so I had some puree and some big solid chunks. I figured this wouldn't matter but the large pieces ended up being quite bitter. I don't know why. I'll definitely make this again but with puree all the way... or fresh vegetables.
What may surprise you is that it is a slow cooker recipe and a really easy one at that. Thank you Real Simple for making it delicious! Here is a link to the recipe.
Salmon
Tonight's salmon turned into tilapia. We eat a lot of salmon and talapia in this house and the main recipe is interchangeable. We usually do it on the grill but tonight I put it all in a baking dish and tested that out. For the grill you would make foil packets for individual servings. I like it better this way because you get more juices which is fabulous when you serve it over rice!
Here is what our dinner entailed of tonight. You can do this with any fish and any vegetables. That's how we roll! It is such a healthy dish and an easy way to add fish into your diet. It's also great it you have a lot of vegetables in the house you need to use before they go bad!
Ingredients:
2 tilapia fillets
1 green pepper
1 red pepper
broccoli
cauliflower
cabbage
Old Bay Seasoning
Mrs. Dash Sun Dried Tomato seasons
brown rice
Preheat over to 400
Spray baking dish with cooking spray and put fish in the bottom
Cover with vegetables
Season (make sure some gets on the fish, too!)
Cook for 15 minutes or until the fish is flaky
Serve over rice and enjoy!
Sorry for the double post here, you guys. I forgot to take pics of dinner from last night. (what?!) Such a fail!
Anyway, the Squash Lasagna has amazing potential and was over all quite good. I'd do it a little differently next time, though. It calls for frozen squash puree. I didn't buy this because I have a whole peck of frozen squash and zucchini in the freezer. I figured I would thaw that, throw them in the blender and puree them myself. Well, my blender stinks (just bought a new one yesterday, thank you very much!) so I had some puree and some big solid chunks. I figured this wouldn't matter but the large pieces ended up being quite bitter. I don't know why. I'll definitely make this again but with puree all the way... or fresh vegetables.
What may surprise you is that it is a slow cooker recipe and a really easy one at that. Thank you Real Simple for making it delicious! Here is a link to the recipe.
Salmon
Tonight's salmon turned into tilapia. We eat a lot of salmon and talapia in this house and the main recipe is interchangeable. We usually do it on the grill but tonight I put it all in a baking dish and tested that out. For the grill you would make foil packets for individual servings. I like it better this way because you get more juices which is fabulous when you serve it over rice!
Here is what our dinner entailed of tonight. You can do this with any fish and any vegetables. That's how we roll! It is such a healthy dish and an easy way to add fish into your diet. It's also great it you have a lot of vegetables in the house you need to use before they go bad!
Ingredients:
2 tilapia fillets
1 green pepper
1 red pepper
broccoli
cauliflower
cabbage
Old Bay Seasoning
Mrs. Dash Sun Dried Tomato seasons
brown rice
Preheat over to 400
Spray baking dish with cooking spray and put fish in the bottom
Cover with vegetables
Season (make sure some gets on the fish, too!)
Cook for 15 minutes or until the fish is flaky
Serve over rice and enjoy!
Sunday, October 24, 2010
This week's menu
Translation:
M - squash lasagna
T - salmon
W - sausage and apple kabobs with maple syrup
Th - BBQ pork sandwiches
F - pumpkin pancakes
S - Louisiana red beans and rice
Su - wild rice, mushroom and chicken soup
Pumpkin Seeds (and Gumbo for Soup'r Sunday)
Everyone should be able to roast pumpkin seeds, right? Easy as can be! Why even look it up? Well, I learned last year that you can't just do it. All of that time and labor freeing the seeds from the pulp just to get roasted seeds that weren't edible. YUCK!
I learned a trick this year and maybe all of you know it but, I must share.... when you are getting the guts out of the pumpkin, put it into a bowl of water. THAT, my friends, is the trick. It keeps the pulp from drying onto the seeds and helps separate the seeds from the dreaded sticky stuff
After you have a bowl of just (mostly) seeds, put them in a colander and run the seeds under warm water. Get your hands in there to make sure all of the pulp is really out of there.
Spray a baking sheet with cooking spray (or drizzle with olive oil), spread the seeds in a single layer. Spray some more (or stir the seeds around the cover in olive oil) and then add some salt.
Cook at 350 for 25 minutes. VOILA! Perfectly roasted pumpkin seeds!
And as for what we are having tonight... check out this supercrazy easy Gumbo recipe from Cooking Light. They use all frozen and pre-chopped vegetables and pre-cooked meats which makes for a very easy and fast meal.
Because I had most things fresh in the house, I baked the chicken and boiled the sausage (local and organic!) and cut my own vegetables (some local/organic, some not). I doubled the recipe (for freezing, as always) and added half a pound of shrimp.
I learned a trick this year and maybe all of you know it but, I must share.... when you are getting the guts out of the pumpkin, put it into a bowl of water. THAT, my friends, is the trick. It keeps the pulp from drying onto the seeds and helps separate the seeds from the dreaded sticky stuff
After you have a bowl of just (mostly) seeds, put them in a colander and run the seeds under warm water. Get your hands in there to make sure all of the pulp is really out of there.
Spray a baking sheet with cooking spray (or drizzle with olive oil), spread the seeds in a single layer. Spray some more (or stir the seeds around the cover in olive oil) and then add some salt.
Cook at 350 for 25 minutes. VOILA! Perfectly roasted pumpkin seeds!
And as for what we are having tonight... check out this supercrazy easy Gumbo recipe from Cooking Light. They use all frozen and pre-chopped vegetables and pre-cooked meats which makes for a very easy and fast meal.
Because I had most things fresh in the house, I baked the chicken and boiled the sausage (local and organic!) and cut my own vegetables (some local/organic, some not). I doubled the recipe (for freezing, as always) and added half a pound of shrimp.
| Yumminess! |
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Roasted Butternut Squash Risotto with Sugared Walnuts
Guess what we had for dinner tonight? Squash!
More squash? What? Well, we get a lot of it in our CSA delivery and we need to make the most of it! Tonight I used this great recipe from Cooking Light called Roasted Butternut Squash with Sugared Walnuts. (I was tempted to not sugar the walnuts to cut out some fat and sugar but I am so glad I did. YUM!)
I made the squash and walnuts earlier in the day. It was a real time saver!
And then, after much risotto stirring, we ended up with this truly delicious dish!
More squash? What? Well, we get a lot of it in our CSA delivery and we need to make the most of it! Tonight I used this great recipe from Cooking Light called Roasted Butternut Squash with Sugared Walnuts. (I was tempted to not sugar the walnuts to cut out some fat and sugar but I am so glad I did. YUM!)
I made the squash and walnuts earlier in the day. It was a real time saver!
| Getting ready! |
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Soup'r Sundays
On Sundays we make soup.
That is what we decided when Fall descended upon us a few weeks ago. Today I am making one of go-to slow cooker recipes. I love this soup. Not only is it super easy, relatively healthy and soul warming, but it also looks gourmet. Mmmmmm... just thinking about it is making my mouth water.
(I'm doubling the recipe for the first time in hopes of freezing some of it. Should go fine! I'll let you know if it doesn't.)
The gourmet-ness of it comes from the mushrooms that are used: portabello and shiitake. Also, it is mostly broth-based. You add just enough whipping cream at the end to fool your eyes and pallet to think it is full-on creamy goodness. So, without further ado, I present to you:
Slow Cooker Cream of Mushroom Soup
Ingredients:
1 tablespoon butter
2 stalks celery, thinly sliced
1 white onion, chopped
2 portobello mushrooms, stemmed and sliced
1/4 pound shiitake mushrooms
1 teaspoon garlic, minced
3 cups vegetable broth
3/4 cup frozen corn
3/4 cup wild rice (I use brown rice because we always have it in the house)
coarse coarse salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
1 cup whipping cream
1/4 cup slivered almonds, toasted (optional)
[1] In a medium saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add celery and onion and cook until almost tender, 4 minutes. Add mushrooms and garlic and cook for 2 minutes.
[2] in a slow cooker, combine mushroom mixture with broth, corn, rice, salt and pepper.
[3] Cover and cook on low until rice is tender, 6 hours.
[4] Just before serving, stir in cream. Garnish with toasted almond slivers.
I acquired this recipe while I was a subscriber to Relish, a superawesome meal planning service. Check it out!
That is what we decided when Fall descended upon us a few weeks ago. Today I am making one of go-to slow cooker recipes. I love this soup. Not only is it super easy, relatively healthy and soul warming, but it also looks gourmet. Mmmmmm... just thinking about it is making my mouth water.
(I'm doubling the recipe for the first time in hopes of freezing some of it. Should go fine! I'll let you know if it doesn't.)
The gourmet-ness of it comes from the mushrooms that are used: portabello and shiitake. Also, it is mostly broth-based. You add just enough whipping cream at the end to fool your eyes and pallet to think it is full-on creamy goodness. So, without further ado, I present to you:
Slow Cooker Cream of Mushroom Soup
Ingredients:
1 tablespoon butter
2 stalks celery, thinly sliced
1 white onion, chopped
2 portobello mushrooms, stemmed and sliced
1/4 pound shiitake mushrooms
1 teaspoon garlic, minced
3 cups vegetable broth
3/4 cup frozen corn
3/4 cup wild rice (I use brown rice because we always have it in the house)
coarse coarse salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
1 cup whipping cream
1/4 cup slivered almonds, toasted (optional)
[1] In a medium saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Add celery and onion and cook until almost tender, 4 minutes. Add mushrooms and garlic and cook for 2 minutes.
[2] in a slow cooker, combine mushroom mixture with broth, corn, rice, salt and pepper.
[3] Cover and cook on low until rice is tender, 6 hours.
[4] Just before serving, stir in cream. Garnish with toasted almond slivers.
I acquired this recipe while I was a subscriber to Relish, a superawesome meal planning service. Check it out!
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Stuffed Sweet Dumpling Squash
This dish is amazing! Not only is it easy to make but it is delicious and beautiful! I had to take a picture of the stuffing half-way through because it was so pretty! (This dish makes me use lots of exclamation points!)
I should note that I didn't have any spinach so I used swiss chard, and I didn't have any currants so I used raisins. The worked great!
Also, the ingredient list does not have meat on it. I am sure (positive) it would be delicious without meat but I added ground beef (a pound). There was more than enough stuffing for the 6 halves. We also topped it with a sprinkle of asiago cheese which was a delightful addition.
The recipe says it serves 6. This was our main (only) dish with no sides so the adults each ate 2 halves and the kiddo ate 1. I recommend this to everyone. This has been added to my favorites list! I also think I will add it to our Thanksgiving menu. Sans meat it will make an excellent side dish.
Here is the original recipe as found on Inspired Bites.
| Veggies and rice pre-meat - GORGEOUS! |
I should note that I didn't have any spinach so I used swiss chard, and I didn't have any currants so I used raisins. The worked great!
Also, the ingredient list does not have meat on it. I am sure (positive) it would be delicious without meat but I added ground beef (a pound). There was more than enough stuffing for the 6 halves. We also topped it with a sprinkle of asiago cheese which was a delightful addition.
The recipe says it serves 6. This was our main (only) dish with no sides so the adults each ate 2 halves and the kiddo ate 1. I recommend this to everyone. This has been added to my favorites list! I also think I will add it to our Thanksgiving menu. Sans meat it will make an excellent side dish.
| The final product |
Here is the original recipe as found on Inspired Bites.
Thursday, October 7, 2010
The Jenny Special
I've been making the Jenny Special for as long as I can remember. It is different every time but always the same thing: a stir fry-type dish of whatever is left in the house. It usually looks a lot like stir fry with salad-ish vegetables and some shrimp or chicken. But tonight's was different! And it was so good I have to share! It was so basic but the flavors were amazing. Also, the majority of the vegetables were from our CSA which means local and organic! Here is what it looked like:
Ingredients:
cooking oil
1/4 - 1/2 white onion
1 small butternut squash
1 sweet potato
1 small eggplant
1 small purple bell pepper
cabbage
dried thyme (also from CSA)
mild curry powder
salt & pepper to taste
whole wheat couscous
My process:
Cook couscous according to directions on the box
Heat skillet and add cooking oil
Add onion and saute until soft. Just a few minutes.
Add squash and sweet potato, thyme, salt & pepper and saute until squash begins to become tender. (This took a good 10 minutes for me, I think. I kept a lid on the pot and stirred frequently.)
Add eggplant, bell pepper and cabbage. Mix together well. Add curry powder (as much as you want!) and mix mix mix.
Continue to cook until it is how you like it!
Serve on top of couscous
YUM!!
Ingredients:
cooking oil
1/4 - 1/2 white onion
1 small butternut squash
1 sweet potato
1 small eggplant
1 small purple bell pepper
cabbage
dried thyme (also from CSA)
mild curry powder
salt & pepper to taste
whole wheat couscous
My process:
Cook couscous according to directions on the box
Heat skillet and add cooking oil
Add onion and saute until soft. Just a few minutes.
Add squash and sweet potato, thyme, salt & pepper and saute until squash begins to become tender. (This took a good 10 minutes for me, I think. I kept a lid on the pot and stirred frequently.)
Add eggplant, bell pepper and cabbage. Mix together well. Add curry powder (as much as you want!) and mix mix mix.
Continue to cook until it is how you like it!
Serve on top of couscous
YUM!!
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Squash-Apple Turnovers
It is my plan to post about the current week's menu but, with crazy weeks at our house coming up, our menu board is looking a little sad! But, I've tried some great recipes recently that I will share for now!
The first being Cooking Lights' Squash-Apple Turnover.
You know winter is coming when the winter squash starts showing up in the CSA delivery. Part of me is sad to see the summer go but another part of me is so excited for winter squash! Oh, the possibilities! And what also comes the same time of year in mass quantities? APPLES. Here is a way to use them both! (And I made a bunch and froze some of them. So easy!)
The first being Cooking Lights' Squash-Apple Turnover.
You know winter is coming when the winter squash starts showing up in the CSA delivery. Part of me is sad to see the summer go but another part of me is so excited for winter squash! Oh, the possibilities! And what also comes the same time of year in mass quantities? APPLES. Here is a way to use them both! (And I made a bunch and froze some of them. So easy!)
This would make a great appetizer. We ate it as a side-dish with big bowls of soup.
I didn't make them into pretty circles. I used the pre-cut Pillsbury dinner rolls. One on top and one on bottom. Cute little triangles. Super easy. And I used whatever apples we had on hand.
I didn't make them into pretty circles. I used the pre-cut Pillsbury dinner rolls. One on top and one on bottom. Cute little triangles. Super easy. And I used whatever apples we had on hand.
In the beginning....
Every Sunday I start with this....
...a blank slate of what the week holds for my family's stomachs at dinner time.
Some weeks are boring and some are an adventure. I try and keep things simple but also mix things up. I do my best to use real organic food that is preferably local. But, of course, this isn't always possible.
I hope to share all of the excitement here! The good and the bad... the successes and the complete failures. Rarely will a recipe be an original. I cook from lots of different sources and I will share them all with you.
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