Posts Tagged ‘cooking’

Hash Browns: Take 2

Monday, March 8th, 2010

After all the helpful comments from my first attempt at hash browns, I really wanted to try again. So, following most suggestions (I didn’t buy a bag of hash browns and cheat, and I wasn’t able to find a cheap food processor yet), here is my journey yet again, from beginning to end (sorry some of these pictures stink; I didn’t notice how bad they were till they were on the computer).

The beginning:

The chosen potato

And this time I peeled it

Next I shredded it into cold water

I will now note how things started to go wrong, as they always do. If you look closely at the peeled potato, you may notice some discoloration. That is because the entire center of this particular potato was bad. There was a big brown tunnel that I had to chop and shred around, which made the shredding even more difficult. But it was also clear this potato needed to be used.

Next I salted and drained in the sink

I let them drain for at least ten minutes, but I was awfully hungry, so I also squeezed them with paper towels again. I then got out my skillet and tried not to overdo the oil this time.

Cooking the hash browns

I also put a little butter on the top side.

Flipped, and finished

They still started to burn a little (I think I get too impatient and turn the heat up), but instead of drowning them in oil I just stirred them up, which of course is not the ideal way to cook them. Anyway, they were not greasy this time, but I think I should have cooked them a little longer. The center wasn’t quite done and the outsides could have been crispier. Still, a definite improvement! And I am no longer scared to make them. They are a bit more time consuming than just microwaving a baked potato, but I think they will be a welcome addition to our home menu.

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Pineapple Challenge!

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

Welcome to my pantry! Many months ago, Lloyd got on a pineapple kick where he was constantly buying fresh pineapples and occasionally actually eating them, but more often than not, they would rot on our counter. So he came up with the brilliant plan of buying a great big can of pineapple from Sam’s Club . . . which was never opened. In fact, it made the long haul from Texas to Nebraska, and still remains untouched.

I’ve decided that needs to change. So I am entering a Pineapple Challenge. The Challenge is to use up all this pineapple before it goes bad, and I will, of course, blog about it! I will open the big can some time next week, I think, after Lloyd has left (he just arrived today, so if I am remiss in posting in the next 6 days, you’ll know why). And I would LOVE some suggestions. Know of any good recipes using pineapple? Simple ones? Ones you’d just like to see me try? Please let me know, and I’ll try as many as I can. And we’ll see if my family can handle over 6  1/2 pounds of pineapple! Oy.

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Hash Browns

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Ever made hash browns before? I hadn’t. But when made well, I know that I really like them, so I thought I ought to learn how. At the basic root, they seem pretty simple—it’s just fried shredded potatoes, but I will definitely need to work on my technique. I started with two potatoes, but only got around to cooking up one of them; the process was ickier than I had anticipated.

I took my one, washed potato and skipped the peeling stage (after all, the skin is good, too, right?) and proceeded to use my cheese grater on it. I then began to understand why peeling the potato probably would have been a smart move. Not only was I pretty much just making a juicy mess of potato shards, but the bits kept clumping together and the skin didn’t seem to want to be shredded. And I neglected to mention that I really hate shredding things. I have this horrible image in my head with every stroke that I’m going to slip and run my hand down the grater and end up shredding myself in a big, bloody mess. Pleasant, huh?

Well, I carried on through the shredding process, moving from the small side to the larger-holed grating, and I think that side worked a little better. By the time I got through the first potato, I was finished with the cheese grater. Next was drying out the potato bits. I had read that a potato ricer was the best tool for this, but my kitchen’s pretty sparse for nifty gadgets, so I squeezed the water out with paper towels. Went through quite a few paper towels! Also, another advantage to peeling the potato would be aesthetics. Because of the peel, my pile of grated potato was reddish-brown and did not look very appetizing.

Last step was cooking. I didn’t want them to be soggy and greasy so I didn’t pour a ton of oil in my skillet, but part-way through cooking it really started to smoke, so I added more oil. Of course I added too much. The good news is that they were not soggy; quite crunchy and not all-together awful. The bad news is that they were very greasy. But I did consume them. And so did Emma.

So ends another mediocre kitchen experience. I think it was fun to try, and I really want to try again. To recap: DO peel your potato, DO use the large side of grater (or find cool gadget that does not invoke fear of finger shredding), DO squeeze liquid out of potato bits, and DO NOT use as much oil! Anyone else have any good hash brown-making tips?

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Supercook

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Have you been to supercook.com? I found it a little while ago as I was searching for a recipe to make with things I had on hand. Usually I use the ingredient search on allrecipes.com, but it was broken that night, and I stumbled across this website. Boy, am I thankful I did! It’s much better than anything else I’ve used.

I entered the ingredients I had, and it immediately started narrowing down a list of recipes I could make with the things I had.  It pulls from number of different cooking websites (including my much-used allrecipes), and even breaks the results down into the subcategories of Starters, Entrées, and Desserts. You can also choose ingredients to exclude, or pull  more ingredients in from their suggestion box. The results show recipes you have all the ingredients for first, and then begins listing the recipes while telling you what ingredients you still need.

There are a number of other features on this site that make it quite awesome, so you should definitely check it out! And if you’d like to save the recipes you’re trying, you can sign up for a free account and keep track of all the recipes you find. I’m really excited about this site, and thankful to have found it. Enjoy. :)

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Back to the Beans

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Well, it’s been a while since I’ve made any new bean attempts, and today I was in need of some distraction and purpose, so I thought I’d cook up some pinto beans and see what I could make. Of course, after becoming adjusted my gas stove, I’m still working out this electric stove, and so the beans took longer to cook than I anticipated. I was hoping to get them nice and mushy so I could have some refried beans to mix with some ground beef for burritos. Since I knew I had some time while they cooked, and I realized I only had 2 tortillas left and no desire to go shopping (remember, sick kids), I thought I’d make my own tortillas.

I looked for the simplest recipe I could find to make whole wheat tortillas, and decided to go for it. I was determined to let no crying child stop me, and in fact, did part of the tortilla-making with III standing, clinging on to my legs, crying. But I persevered. So, here’s what I used:

2 cups whole wheat flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
2 Tbsp olive oil
1/2 cup warm water

First, I mixed together my dry ingredients (of course Emma helped), and then added the olive oil and mixed it in as best I could. Then, I added in the water one tablespoon at a time, although I used the entire 1/2 cup and another 4 tablespoons after that, so I’d say you don’t have to measure out the first 1/2 cup in tablespoon increments. Anyway, I added water until all the flour became sticky and I had a little ball of dough.

Just sticky enough

Just sticky enough

Next, knead the dough 15-20 times on a floured surface, and then let it rest there for 15 minutes. After the 15 minutes, divide your dough into the number of tortillas you are going to make. I divided mine into 16 because I wanted to make small ones, but it would probably make about 10-12 of the larger tortillas. Once you’ve divided, roll each part into a ball.

My little balls of dough

Next, roll each ball out into your tortillas, making sure to keep the surface well-floured, or it will stick. As we’ve seen in the past, I’m terrible on thickness measurements, so just roll it until it seems almost too thin. Next, heat up an ungreased skillet to medium-high heat and cook each side of the tortilla about 30 seconds. It will get all puffy, and will burn if you cook it too long. Use your own eyesight and judgement when cooking.

Bubbles are good

A pile of whole wheat tortillas

So, tortillas are pretty easy. I didn’t cook all of mine up (due to screaming child and not needing 16 for dinner), so I refrigerated the second half, and I’m hoping the dough keeps. They really didn’t take terribly long to make and I’m wondering if I could actually just freeze the little balls of dough, in which case I could make a monster batch and then just pull out the frozen dough whenever I need more. I’m sure that would work. I’ll let you know when I try.

Now back to the beans. I think I needed more water and to have cooked them longer. They were edible, but I was hoping to sort of fry them with the meat as I was browning it, hoping they would turn into a paste, but they stayed kind of chunky. I still have plenty left, so I think I will cook them more and try for refried beans later this week. They at least were not noticeable to the discerning eyes of my three-year-old, who did “not want the little peas.” I don’t know why she thinks every bean is a pea, and as such, inedible, but she started crying at the thought of having to eat them, so I had to trick her somehow. Once they were sort of mushed in with the beef and cheese, and wrapped in a tortilla, she gobbled it all right up. And even asked for seconds. (Oh, and III ate a whole one by himself, too!)

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Zuppa Toscana!

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Today I am sharing with you a fabulous recipe; one that has been tested on real live subjects two times, and passed with flying colors both times! The first time I made it was just for Lloyd, and he enjoyed it so much that I made it again over the holidays for all of our family.

As usual, I tweaked this recipe because I liked so many things about a few different recipes. Also, as usual, I sort of guessed on some of the amounts, so I apologize about that, but I think it’s pretty easy to recreate without exact measurements.

Ingredients:
1 pound Italian sausage
1 1/4 tsp crushed red pepper flakes
4 slices bacon, cut into 1/2 inch pieces
1 large onion, diced
1 T minced garlic
approx 32 oz chicken broth
4-6 potatoes, thinly sliced
1 cup heavy cream, or milk
1 pkg tortellini

Cook the sausage and red pepper flakes until browned, and then drain and set aside. (I used my biggest pot; the original recipe calls for a dutch oven, which I don’t own, but the pot worked fine). Cook the bacon until crisp (this part seemed to take the longest, and I also used more than 4 slices of bacon the second time I made it—after all, I was feeding 5 grown men!). Drain the bacon, but leave a little bit of the drippings in the bottom with the bacon. And it’s also fine if a little bit of the sausage is still in there; you don’t have to be really picky because everything is ending up in this pot eventually anyway.

Next, add in the onions and garlic, cooking them until the onions are translucent, or about 5 minutes. Then add your chicken broth. You’re trying to make a thick soup here, but keep in mind that you will be adding potatoes and pasta, so there needs to be plenty of liquid to soak up. The original recipe called for over 60 oz of chicken broth, which seemed like a lot to me. I used one of the large boxes of broth, which I think was around 32 oz. Feel free to experiment with that part; I guess it depends how soupy you like it, too. I bought lots of broth, but when I was pouring it in, it just seemed like too much.

Bring it to boil over high heat, and then add the potatoes and continue to boil until the potatoes are tender (about 20 minutes). About 10 minutes into the boiling, add the tortellini as well. I’m sorry I can’t remember the actual size of the package, but it was probably around 12 oz. (I got the multi-colored kind for Emma.)

Reduce the heat to medium and add the heavy cream or milk (I used milk because I forgot to buy the heavy cream and it turned out just fine). Also add the cooked sausage and heat the whole thing through. Then serve it with a smile, and maybe some salad or something.

This recipe is very heavy, but really delicious. Emma even liked it when I used mild sausage. The second time I used hot sausage, though, and it was too spicy for her. There were no leftovers, and even Lloyd’s dad ate quite a bit, which I took to mean the recipe was a keeper, as he typically only eats raw foods. So if you’re looking for another way to serve good ol’ meat and potatoes, here it is!

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The Mostly-Successful Bean!

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

Well, I think I can finally just use beans to cook, rather than focusing on them as the most difficult part of the meal. My latest attempt used red beans, and the beans themselves turned out just right–neither too mushy nor too dry. The whole meal was not quite as rewarding.

As usual, I chose the quick-soak method, even though I had been putting this meal off for three days and could have easily done the overnight method. I’m just not sure I can think that far in advance! So, around 11 in the morning I rinsed and sorted my beans and then put them on for a quick boil. I then let them sit for over an hour, because I desperately wanted III to be sleeping while I worked. After much screaming, he did pass out for a little nap. So I ventured into my melee of recipes, all begging to be chosen, but as I did not have all the ingredients for any single recipe, I sort of took parts from all of them (perhaps this is why my food never turns out right). By the way, I was trying to make red beans and rice—Cajun style.

Well, I had the beans, some Italian sausage, and some brown rice, so I knew we wouldn’t starve. All the recipes called for long cooking times, so I was prepared to start early (I’m not much for slow cookers; I know many laud the simplicity of dumping something in in the morning, and having dinner be ready that night, but I really prefer making a big mess right before I eat). So I pulled out my little crock pot. And I do mean little. It really should be considered a fondue pot, I think. I poured 8 cups of water in, which was 2 cups less than what was called for, and then started adding the beans.

And then, as the water started to overflow out of little crock pot, I scooped some beans and water back out. I was left with about half of my pound of beans and maybe 6 to 7 cups of water. I moved on to the sausage. As I knew space was limited, I only used 3 of the 5 links, figuring I could make another batch with the rest. After cooking those up, and slicing them, I added them to the bean water and proceeded to cut up an onion and garlic. Here’s where I learned something new! Now, this is slightly embarrassing, but I figure you’d like to know: a head of garlic is the whole big bunch with all the flaky skin hiding all the little bits, which are the cloves. So when a recipe calls for 4 cloves of garlic, it just means the little pieces, not the whole stinkin’ thing.

Fortunately, I only had one head of garlic, so I didn’t put 4 whole heads in, but I did go through and cut up every single clove. I think there were at least 10. And while the rest of the recipe was halved by force, I didn’t even think about that as I was chopping my onion and garlic, or I might have halved those, too! (On the other hand, I pretty much had no other spices that any of the recipes called for—no Cajun seasoning, no cayenne pepper, not even a green pepper.) I added a little dried red pepper, some dried bay leaves, a little sage, and regular old black pepper.

I put the pot on high and left it alone (this was around 2 p.m.). It smelled awfully garlic-y to me in the house. As Emma had slept less than 8 hours the night before, this was when I planned to give her a nap and take one myself, but instead, Crabby Pants woke up and Emma started melting down, and I lost my will to fight, so I fed him, and let her play computer games. Can’t really remember what happened after that.

We went somewhere (this was only 2 days ago, and I really can’t recall where; I just remember walking back in the house), and when we got back the whole house smelled like cooked garlic and onion, which really wasn’t a bad smell—even Emma said it smelled good! But, true-to-form, the beans didn’t seem quite done, and I needed to cook the rice.  We were supposed to go to our friends’ house to watch House after eating, but instead we decided to just take it with us and let it cook a little more. I was afraid little crock pot would spill, so I clumsily poured it all into a bigger pot (nearly dropped it all too!), and we were on our way. (I mostly cooked the rice, and added it to the pot as well.)

Lloyd put the pot on the stove for me, but had put the burner on high, and when I asked him to turn it down, he instead turned a different burner on, so a few minutes into House, we smelled smoke…

At this point I decided we just better eat it. As I said at the beginning, the beans were fine, but the whole thing—not exactly a masterpiece. Not even really Cajun. And the sausage seemed to have no flavor at all. Not even meaty. Lloyd added about a pound of salt to his bowl and said it awesome after that. And I’m still tasting garlic, two days later.

Ha! Just remembered—we went out for a playdate for Emma. Here’s what we were doing.

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Posted in Wanderlust Wednesdays |

The Semi-Successful Bean

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

This post comes as an addition to The Unsuccessful Bean. It has moved beyond mediocrity and into my wanderlust for beans. Now, before I begin explaining the highly captivating process of cooking beans, I would like to take a little detour in the naming of beans.

When Emma and I went shopping for beans, we bought the following: black beans, red beans, pinto beans, and navy beans. The black beans were black, the red beans were red, the pinto beans were pinto, but the navy beans were white. What’s up with that? Of course, around here they are referred to as “white beans” because, well, they’re white. Not navy. So, in case you care, I decided to do a little digging (it took very little digging, in fact), and discovered that navy beans are so called because they became a staple food for the U.S. Navy in the early 20th century. Guess that makes sense, but why not just call them white beans?

Well, anyway, this second attempt at cooking beans turned out much better. I did the same thing with washing and sorting them, and once again did the quick-soak method with boiling and letting them sit. Then, instead of putting them on low heat to simmer, I put them back on high to bring them to a quick boil before bringing it down to a simmer.

Of course, I forgot about them. I eventually remembered (the bean smell helped), and put them on low. It definitely did the trick, because they were ready to eat after almost two hours, which was two hours before I planned on having dinner. This time it wasn’t a big deal, as I had decided to put them in stew, but I didn’t really think through that either.

I added a bunch of leftover chicken that we had roasted the night before, a bunch of chicken broth (I say a bunch because I’m terrible at measuring. It was about half of one of those big containers–at least 2 cups?), a bag of frozen stew vegetables (which were enormous chunks! There were maybe 5 carrots pieces, 4 potatoes and 6 pearl onions; I was hoping for smaller chopped pieces. Guess that’s what I get for not just chopping up fresh stuff myself.), and more water, until it looked like stew. By 4:30 it looked and smelled perfect!

By 5:30 it looked a little less like stew, and a little more like paste. Bean paste with chunks of chicken and vegetables. You see, beans continually soak up liquid, and those beans did what they were supposed to. By the time we ate, it was difficult to see any individual beans, and it certainly wasn’t soupy. Fortunately, they weren’t burned, so I thought it still tasted fine. Lloyd added enough salt and pepper to make it edible for him, and Emma went on a food strike for the next 2 days.

Third time’s a charm, right? Stay tuned for more beans…

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Posted in Wanderlust Wednesdays |

Éclair Cake (the easy way)

Monday, September 14th, 2009

Today’s mediocrity is a recipe. A very tasty recipe, but I feel the need to call it mediocre because I doubt the origins of éclairs used instant pudding mix. Also, don’t expect this to contain anything good for you. We made it this weekend because my dad came to visit, and this is what he wanted for his birthday cake.

You will need:
1 cup water
1/2 cup butter
1 cup flour
4 eggs
2 1/2 cups milk (2% or whole is best)
1 large box instant vanilla pudding
8 oz cream cheese, softened
8 oz Cool Whip
chocolate syrup

9×13 pan, greased
2 mixing bowls
1 saucepan
Mixer (well, I’m sure you can do it by hand)

First, you make the crust. Boil the water with the butter. Then, add the flour. Stir, and remove from heat. Add your eggs, one at a time. It will start to get pretty stiff and stuck together. Spread it into your pan. Here’s ours:

You can see it's pretty stiff

You can see it's pretty stiff

Ready for the oven!

Ready for the oven!

Bake it at 400° for 20 minutes, then let it cool in the oven for another 30 minutes. During the 50 minutes, do NOT open the oven…I didn’t open the oven during cooking, so I’m not sure what will happen if you do, but I’m guessing it doesn’t get all puffy or something. Just sounds so ominous. I really wanted to open the oven just to see if it would make a difference. Anyway…

It gets nice and puffy in the oven

It gets nice and puffy in the oven

Because I was also making dinner, I waited a while to do this next part, and let the crust get nice and cool out of the oven as well.

In one large mixing bowl, mix the milk with the pudding. In another bowl, mix the cream cheese with the Cool Whip; then add that to the pudding and mix it all together.

Mixing it up

Mixing it up

And once your crust is cooled (and not quite so puffy),

Cooling down

Cooling down

spread the pudding mixture on top and drizzle with chocolate syrup.

All done and (sort of) pretty

All done and (sort of) pretty

I’m sure you could try experimenting a little and use a different flavor of pudding, and it would still be good, too. Personally, I think the crust is the best part; it’s pretty similar to an actual pastry puff. But, beware, it will get a little soggy after a day, so you better just eat it all right away. ;)

Emma insisted we write on Papa's birthday cake!

Emma insisted we write on Papa's birthday cake!

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Posted in Mediocre Mondays |

The Unsuccessful Bean

Monday, August 31st, 2009

Today’s mediocrity lies in a failed attempt. Well, failing is a little too strong; it was more of an unsuccess. As our credit card bills grow greater and greater and there isn’t an equal amount of growth in our bank account, I’ve been trying to re-budget different areas of our life to save a little more. So I decided that I would learn how to cook with beans. After all, they are extremely healthy and cheap.

For 81¢ I can buy a pound of dry beans. Emma and I picked out a few different types of beans, and I came home proud of my savings. As we live in Texas, I decided the best starter bean would be the black bean, and I could do some sort of Tex-Mex something (lots of good recipes here). So about an hour before I wanted to have dinner, I pulled out the beans. First mistake. Beans must be soaked, and you need more than one hour before dinner. Ok, so we’ll have beans the next night.

The next afternoon (I meant to do the overnight soaking of the beans, but forgot, so I tried the quick-soak method), around 2:30, I began by rinsing and sorting my beans. Then I covered them with water and put them on to quickly boil. No problems here. I let them sit for a couple hours, and then started cooking them for real.

I wish I had taken a picture, as I was amazed at how very black the water became. It was sort of creepy looking. But then I felt lame about taking a picture of bean water and being so mesmerized, so I showed Emma instead. Anyway, I decided not to be too risky, and to just make plain ol’ black beans and season them as I used them in meals. So I just let them cook.

One set of directions said to bring them to a boil and then simmer, and another said to just simmer. I think I made the wrong choice. I had them simmer, but since the heat was so low, I think I wasted my first cooking hour just waiting for the water to heat up. By the time my husband came home, they smelled all nice and bean-y (and I really do like the smell!), and I was sure that dinner would be ready within the hour.

So I cooked everything else up (this was only about a week ago, and for the life of me, I can’t remember what “everything else” was; all I can remember is the beans!), and kept checking the beans, but they were still a little crunchy. So we ate dinner and were going to have the beans as a little after-meal side dish. My husband decided to take the kids for a walk, and I went back in my room to get a little work done. There was still so much water in the beans I figured I still had some time before they’d be ready.

And that assumption was my next mistake. I came back to the kitchen as my family returned, and I heard, “Umm…I think your beans are done.” Yup. They were. In about 20 minutes they went from being almost ready to almost burned. All the liquid was gone, and they were sticking to the pot, and instead of having that nice, juicy, soft bean taste, they had that old, dry bean taste. A little mozzarella helped, but they were not the triumphal meat-replacing element I was hoping for (although somewhere in there I did add a bunch of spices, so they had a little flavor).

We ate them, more out of determination than enjoyment, but beggars can’t be choosers, right? So not quite a failure. More of a mediocre success. I haven’t tried any other beans yet. Waiting for my ego to bounce back. My friend says I should just buy canned, but I feel like that must be cheating. Plus, we also used some dry beans to make a rattle for the baby–can’t do that with canned!

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