Monday, November 26, 2012

Shepard's Pie

Shopping List
1 lb ground beef
1 can cream of mushroom soup
1 can corn
1 can green beans
Mashed potatoes (great way to use Thanksgiving leftovers!)
1 bag grated cheese (I like montery jack or sharp cheddar)
Seasoned salt
Italian seasoning

If the mashed potatoes are already made, start about 45 mins before you want to eat. Brown the ground beef. You brown ground beef by putting it in a frying pan over medium heat. As it cooks, break it up and move it around the pan, making sure to scrape the meat off the bottom of the pan so it doesn't burn. I find a fork to be the easiest thing to do this with. You don't have to stir it constantly, but you do need to do so about every 2-3 minutes. Once you can't see any more pink, the ground beef is cooked. Drain the grease.

Add the can of cream of mushroom soup, 1-2 tsp (teaspoons) of seasoned salt and 1 tsp Italian seasoning. Stir to combine. Dump ground beef into an 8x8 casserole dish and spread around evenly. Open the can of corn, drain it, and dump it on top of the ground beef spreading it around evenly. Drain the can of green beans and dump it on top of the corn, again spreading it around evenly. Top with the mashed potatoes. Spread the grated cheese (about half the bag) over the top.

If you want, you can put a few squares of butter on the top - it helps the cheese to brown.

Bake at 350* for 30 mins.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Shredded Beef Enchiladas

My husband requested that I type up this recipe. He has decided it is now one of my "signature" dishes. I've only made it twice, but apparently it's his very favorite recipe ever :) It is also one of the easiest recipes I make :)

Shopping List
Beef roast (about 2 lbs)
1 large can enchilada sauce (I use Old El Paso Mild, but you can pick a spicier one if you like heat)
1 can beef broth
1 bag shredded cheese (I like sharp cheddar or a Mexican blend)
8 tortillas (I use flour, but you could use corn if you prefer)

Start about 8 hours before you want to eat (you're using the crockpot - it takes a while). Put the roast in the crockpot. It's ok if it's frozen (if it's frozen, I sometimes need to put it in the sink and run hot water over it long enough to get the paper mat thingy off the bottom). Dump the can of enchilada sauce on top. Add the can of beef broth. Plug in the crockpot (if you forget this step, it doesn't work very well. It also makes you mad when you've been looking forward to the meal all day and it's still uncooked). Cook on low for 6+ hours (if you cook it longer, that's fine too).

Scoop the roast out and put it in a bowl. Cut it up/shred it (by this time it's tender enough that a butter knife and fork can easily cut it). Add a couple of scoops of the sauce from the crockpot. This will be the filling for your enchiladas, so add sauce until it's as saucy as you want. My kids don't like it horribly saucy, so I only add a few scoops. Stir in half the shredded cheese.

Spray the bottom of a 8x8 casserole dish with pam (not necessary, it just makes serving and clean up easier). Preheat oven to 350*. Grab your tortillas and put a good sized scoop of the beef and cheese mixture (about 1/8 of it - you can add less filling and make more enchiladas if you like more tortillas and less meat in your enchiladas) in a line down the middle of one. Roll it up and put it in the casserole dish (if you turn it so the ends are down, it will be more likely to stay rolled up). Repeat with the rest of the meat and tortillas.

When you're done rolling the enchiladas and your casserole dish is full, top them with sauce from the crockpot. You can put just a little or you can smother them in it - depends on how much sauce you like :) Top with the rest of the shredded cheese. Bake for about 20 mins or until the cheese is melted.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

How to Roast a Turkey

Shopping List
Frozen turkey (about 1 lb per person, plus a few extra)
Turkey-sized baking bag
Seasoned salt
Pepper
Garlic powder
Butter
Lemon Juice
1 Tablespoon flour
Roasting pan (they sell disposable ones if you don't have room to store one)

(also ingredients for stuffing if you're planning on stuffing it - see previous post for stuffing info)

Start 24 hours before you need to cook the turkey as you will need to thaw it. To thaw the turkey, put it in your sink and cover it with cold water. Leave it overnight. Yes, you can thaw it in the fridge, but that takes several days and I've never had very good results trying to thaw them in the fridge. One year my turkey was still so frozen, even after 4 days in the fridge, that we had to use a hair dryer and hot water to try and thaw it enough to get the neck and giblets out of the cavity . . . makes for a great story, but a stressful holiday :) So use the cold water method. Leave it in the packaging while thawing it. Don't leave it in the water for more than 24 hours though - stick it in the fridge if you end up not cooking it the next day. And make sure it stays covered with cold water.

Drain the sink and cut off the packaging (leave the turkey in the sink while doing this). Pull out the neck and giblet bag (a paper bag that will either be in the large cavity or in the fold of skin at the other end). Throw away the neck (unless you are planning on using it to make turkey stock or something) and the giblets (unless you want to eat them or have pets you want to feed them to - in that case, set them aside).

Go over the turkey and pull off any feathers that were missed. Pat it dry with a paper towel.

Remove all but one tray from the oven. Move the last tray to the lowest position in the oven. Preheat the oven to 350*. Take out one of the turkey-sized baking bags. Put 1 T (tablespoon) of flour in it, hold the top shut, and shake it around until the inside of the bag is covered. Put the bag on it's side in the roasting pan. Have someone else hold it open while you put the turkey in the bag (or vice versa).

Spoon the stuffing into the turkey (if you're stuffing it - if not, skip this step). Once the turkey is full, shake seasoning salt, pepper, and garlic powder all over the skin. I don't measure this, so I don't know how much I use. I'd guess 2-3 tablespoons of seasoned salt, 1 tablespoon ground pepper, and 2-3 tablespoons of garlic powder. Squirt a couple squirts of lemon juice on the turkey. Cut up a stick of butter into slices and place on the turkey. Close the bag with the tie provided (usually inside the cooking directions in the bag).

Put the turkey into the oven and figure out how long to cook it for by weight - the directions inside the baking bag box will tell you how many mins per pound - note that the times are different if you stuff the turkey.

After the turkey is done, take it out and let it sit for about 15 mins. in the bag. This will allow the juices to drain to the bottom of the bag. Put a medium sized pot in the sink and have someone help you hold the turkey up using the handles on the pan (the bag isn't strong enough to hold the turkey on it's own). Angle the pan so one corner of the bag is down lower than everything else and the juices can drain into it. Position that corner over the pan and carefully cut a hole in the corner so the juices drain into the pan. Watch out because the liquid is HOT!

You can use the juices to make gravy. Add about 1/3 cup of flour to the juices and whisk until smooth. Heat over medium heat, whisking almost constantly, until it thickens. It will get thicker as it cools, so take it off the heat just before it is as thick as you want it. If you like thicker gravy, add more flour before cooking; if you like thinner gravy, add less.

After you're done draining it, set the pan back on the counter, cut open the bag, and scoop out the stuffing. Slice the turkey and serve it.

Tastes Like Homemade Stuffing

Shopping List
2 boxes stovetop turkey (or chicken) flavored stuffing
1 lb ground breakfast sausage
1 onion
1 head celery
Craisins
Butter

Takes about 20-30 mins to prepare. If you're cooking it outside of a turkey, it will take another 20 mins to cook. If you're going to stuff a turkey with this, you can either make it right before you put the turkey in the oven or you can make it a day or two in advance. If you make it in advance, store it in the fridge - DO NOT stuff the turkey with it until right before you cook it! Leaving stuffing inside a raw turkey leads to salmonella poisoning.

Start by boiling enough water that you have enough to add the amount of water the directions on the stuffing calls for.

While the water is boiling, brown the sausage over medium heat. You brown sausage by putting it in a frying pan over medium heat. As it cooks, break it up and move it around the pan, making sure to scrape the meat off the bottom of the pan so it doesn't burn. I find a fork to be the easiest thing to do this with. You don't have to stir it constantly, but you do need to do so about every 2-3 minutes. Once you can't see any more pink, the sausage is cooked. I find the easiest way to drain it is to put two paper towels on a plate, then just empty the sausage (and grease) onto the paper towels. Then when I'm ready to use the sausage, I scoop it off, leaving the grease in the paper towels, which I can just throw away.

Cut up the onion and several stalks of celery into smallish pieces.

Melt 1 stick of butter in a saute pan over medium heat. Add the onion and celery and cook for about 5 mins, stirring occasionally. Add the craisins and cook for another 2 mins. Remove from the hot burner.

Dump the stuffing mix into a large bowl. Add the amount of water the directions call for (use the boiling water you heated in the first step). Stir until all the dry mix is wet. Stir in the sausage and the onion/celery/craisin mix.

If you are baking it inside a turkey or chicken, spoon it into the bird right before cooking. If you are cooking it on it's own, put in a casserole dish, cover (if the dish doesn't have a cover, tin foil works), and bake at 350* for 20 mins.


Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Peach Melba Dump Cake

This is a super easy dessert recipe. You can change it up by picking different pie fillings and fruit. My two favorite combinations are the one listed below (peach-raspberry) and the flavors used in the original recipe from Paula Deen, which are blueberry pie filling and crushed canned pineapple.

Shopping List
1 box cake mix (I like yellow or butter cake mixes for this recipe)
1 can peach pie filling
1 bag frozen raspberries
2 sticks butter
crushed pecans (optional)

Start about 60 mins before you want to eat dessert (or you can cook it and save it for later, but I like it best warm).

Preheat the oven to 350*.

Spray a 9x13 casserole dish with cooking spray (like pam). Dump in the can of peach pie filling, and spread it around sort of evenly. Dump the bag of raspberries on top of the pie filling and again spread it around evenly. Spread the dry cake mix over the top of the fruit. Melt the butter, then pour it over the top (try and cover as much of it as you can as the melted butter is what makes it brown and crunchy on top instead of powdery). If you want nuts on top, spread them over the top at this point. If you don't like nuts or don't have them, don't worry about it; it will still taste wonderful :)

Bake at 350* for 45 mins.

It tastes really good with vanilla ice cream :) Or with whipped cream :) Or alone :)

*Adapted from Paula Deen's recipe on Foodnetwork.com

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Super Easy Lasagna

This takes less than 15 minutes to put together (maybe slightly more if you use sausage because you have to cook it first) and tastes amazing.

Shopping List
1 box lasagna noodles (any kind you want. I like the regular ones with the squiggles on the sides of each noodle)
2 jars or large cans of tomato sauce (so much of the flavor comes from this ingredient that you might want to splurge and get good tomato sauce. My favorites for this dish are Bertolli's marinara or tomato and basil or Newman's Own marinara or tomato and basil, none of which are horribly expensive. If you want to go with canned, my favorite is Hunt's)
2 bags Italian blend shredded cheese (or mozzarella if you prefer. The blend just adds more flavor)
1 lb ground Italian sausage (optional. I usually get mild Italian sausage for this recipe, but either sweet or hot will work as well. Don't get sausage-shaped sausages as it makes more work for you in this recipe. If you happen to have sausage-shapes sausages and want to use them, cut open the outside of each one and squish out the middle, then throw the outside away. If you don't like sausage, you could also just use hamburger. Or sliced zucchini for a vegetarian option)
Parmesan cheese (you'll need about a cup)
1 stick butter
Pam (non-stick spray)
Aluminum foil
Garlic Bread or Italian bread (for serving with it)
You will also need a 9x13 casserole dish or pan, so get one if you don't have one.

Start about an hour and a half before you want to eat

If you are using sausage (or hamburger), brown it first. You brown sausage by putting it in a frying pan over medium heat. As it cooks, break it up and move it around the pan, making sure to scrape the meat off the bottom of the pan so it doesn't burn. I find a fork to be the easiest thing to do this with. You don't have to stir it constantly, but you do need to do so about every 2-3 minutes. Once you can't see any more pink, the sausage is cooked. I find the easiest way to drain it is to put two paper towels on a plate, then just empty the sausage (and grease) onto the paper towels. Then when I'm ready to use the sausage, I scoop it off, leaving the grease in the paper towels, which I can just throw away.

Spray your casserole dish with pam. Put about 1/3 of a jar of spaghetti sauce in the bottom of your casserole dish and spread it around so the whole surface is sort of covered. Lay enough lasagna noodles (uncooked) out to cover the bottom of the pan. Usually I find that I need to lay out about 4 in straight lines (like this llll), then I need to break part of one off so it will fit and lay it across the top going the other way. It's ok if they overlap a little. Pour most of the rest of the jar of tomato sauce across the top and spread it around so the noodles are covered (try not to move the noodles, or if you do, move them back). Sprinkle about 2/3 bag of shredded cheese over the sauce.

Put another layer of noodles over the cheese. If I've put one across the top of the last layer, I try to alternate so the extra noodle is across the bottom of this layer, but it will taste fine either way :) Put the rest of the first jar of sauce and about 1/2 of the second jar of sauce over this layer of noodles. Spread it around pretty evenly. Put your sausage (or hamburger, zucchini, whatever) on top of the sauce (just skip this if you don't want to add anything). Top with the rest of the first bag of cheese and 1/3 of the second bag.

Put another layer of noodles on top. Cover with the remaining sauce. Top with the rest of the shredded cheese. Try and make sure it's pretty even and covers the whole top. Gently pour 1 cup water over the lasagna (I find it easiest to pour it along the sides so it doesn't wash off the sauce). This extra water will help compensate for not having cooked the noodles first. Sprinkle parmesan cheese over the whole top.

Take your stick of butter and slice it into about 12 slices. Arrange them pretty evenly over the top of the lasagna (the reason we do this is to help prevent the cheese from burning. It also makes the cheese brown more evenly. Plus, I'm with Paula Deen; everything's better with butter!). Cover with tin foil.

Turn your oven on to 350*. Put the lasagna in the oven in about the middle. Set your timer for 45 mins.

When the timer goes off, take the tin foil off the lasagna (leaving the lasagna in the oven and the oven at 350*) and set the timer for 15 mins.

When the timer goes off, take the lasagna out of the oven and let it sit for about 5 mins before serving. Salad and garlic bread are perfect sides for this dish :)

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Homemade Chicken Noodle Soup

Seriously this is one of the easiest things to make ever. And it tastes so much better homemade!

Shopping List
2 boxes chicken broth
1 lb boneless skinless chicken (either breasts or thighs, either frozen or thawed - breasts are white meat and more expensive, thighs are dark meat and cheaper. Some people only like one type of meat or the other. I usually cook with dark meat as we buy organic meat, which is already more expensive, so I try to cut costs by buying the cheaper meat)
1 lb carrots
1 bunch celery
1 onion
1 lb pasta (any kind you want, but usually the smaller kinds work better than spaghetti noodles or other long pastas. I like farfalle, which is bow tie shaped pasta, or little star shaped pasta, or egg noodles. Traditional chicken noodle soup uses egg noodles.)
Salt and Pepper

Start cooking about 60 mins before you want to eat

Dump the chicken broth into a large pot with a lid. Cover and cook over med-high heat. Dump in chicken (if it's frozen, don't bother thawing it first). Set timer for 20 mins.

While the chicken is cooking, wash about 5 carrots. Pull 5 stalks of celery off the bunch and wash them. Cut the tops and bottoms off both the celery and and carrots, then cut them into slices. They will not change size as they cook, so cut them into the size you want them to be when you eat the soup. Cut up your onion as well. The easiest way to do this is to cut off the top and bottom of the onion, then cut it in half longways (from top to bottom). Then pull off the top two layers and put each half cut-side down on the cutting board. Slice each half like an apple, then cut each slice into chunks.

When your timer goes off, use tongs to pull the chicken out of the soup and put it on a plate. Dump the vegetables into the soup and put the cover back on.

Cut up the cooked chicken (it's ok if it's not completely cooked as you're putting it back in the soup and it will finish cooking - it's just easier to cut up cooked chicken than raw chicken). Cut it into medium sized strips, then cut each strip into chunks. When you're done, dump the chicken back into the pot. Add the pasta at this point as well. Make sure to stir it every few minutes so the pasta doesn't stick together.

How long you need to cook it after adding the pasta depends on the kind of pasta you're using. Check the package to see how long it's supposed to cook for, then set your timer for that amount of time.

When the timer goes off, turn the stove off and taste a bit of the soup (careful - it will be very hot!) to see if you think it needs salt or pepper. If you decide it does, add it a little bit at a time. You can always add more, but you can't take it out if you add too much :) The easiest way to do this is to dump it into your palm so you can see how much you're adding.

That's it; you're done :)