- Apple-Spice Country Ribs Crockpot
- Pasta with pumpkin sage cream sauce
- Portabella and feta pizza
- Linguine with Asparagus, Parmesan and Bacon
It’s a short week for us, so only 4 meals. Check out the recipe section and grab some more if needed.
The food our family eats
It’s a short week for us, so only 4 meals. Check out the recipe section and grab some more if needed.
This recipe from Smitten Kitchen was really good. Even though I cut the butter in the dough recipe by half (the full 1/2 cup seemed a bit too decadent), with the sour cream it turned out wonderfully. I also skipped freezing the flour and it was probably only in the fridge for 30 minutes. The only problem with the recipe is that our family of 4 finished it all off with no leftovers for lunch–make 2 next time!
We were running low on flour this morning, so I was looking for a cornmeal recipe that didn’t use much wheat flour. I stumbled across this at southern.food.com, and thought it looked like a good start. Here’s our breakfast version with some blueberries for good measure:
Rustic Oatmeal Blueberry Cornbread (adapted from Susie D @ southern.food.com)
Preheat oven to 450˚.
Mix dry ingredients together. Put about 2 Tbs of butter in a cast iron skillet and put in the heated oven to get the pan nice and hot. Add the melted butter, eggs, cream, 1/2 cup milk and blueberries to the dry ingredients and mix. The batter should be wet enough to pour, if it seems too dry, add some more milk. Take the pan out of the oven, tilt to spread the melter butter around, and pour in the batter.
Cook 15-20 minutes until golden brown and cooked through. Slice and enjoy!
Pink Parsley had this yummy sounding recipe with peanuts, to which our son is allergic. So we substituted SunButter in the recipe. I also had imagined this more like a stir fry than a salad, so we stir fried the veggies a bit and added the dressing and put it on top of soba noodles. It turned out great!
Spicy Sunflower Seed Noodles with Veggies and Chicken
adapted from Pink Parsley, adapted from Pinch of Yum, originally from Food Nouveau
For the dressing:
For the stir fry (or don’t cook it and make it a salad…)
Mix all the dressing ingredients. Stir fry the veggies. Add the dressing and serve on top of the soba noodles.
These Portabella and Halloumi “Burgers” looked really good, but I wasn’t able to find Halloumi cheese, which is apparently a cheese that can be grilled on its own…Plus I had a craving for some focaccia. I made the focaccia recipe many years ago when it came out in Fine Cooking, and it is really good…though I had forgotten how long it takes. I was able to squeeze it into a day in the fridge, and one evening after work letting it warm up, rest a bit and cook, but it probably could have used more time to rest (the recipe calls for about 5hrs between taking it out of the fridge and cooking it!). But, it was still really good.
Bee-Bim-Bop, Bip Bim Bap, Bibimbap…Maybe there is a difference, but they all seem to be a tasty mix of veggies, especially cabbage, meat and eggs. I had originally planned on using this which more a guideline than a recipe, but we also had the recipe from the Bee-Bim Bop book our youngest read in class. We also couldn’t find any safe Hoisin sauce, so we made something with soy sauce, molasses, sugar and corn starch…
As we tend to do, we made a bit of a mashup and came up with a yummy meal.
In a large bowl mix the ingredients from garlic through vinegar. Grill the steak a few minutes on each side until cooked as desired. Slice across the grain into bite sized pieces. Add the steak to the sauce in the bowl while it is still warm and set aside.
Add 1 Tbs oil to a pan and heat over medium heat. Cook the egg like an omelet. When it’s cooked through remove from the pan and slice into strips.
Add the other Tbs oil to a pan and heat over med-high heat. Add the green onions and then cabbage and stir fry. Add the carrots and cook for a bit. Add the bean sprouts and cook stirring. Add the meat with the sauce and cook until the sauce has thickened a bit.
Serve over rice with sriracha sauce.
Oh my…Anne’s recipe for butternut squash and bacon quiche was great! I just had the last remaining piece for lunch and it is yummy goodness. It did take a while to prepare and cook, but it is worth the wait.
For future reference and those without a scale the 180g of flour was about 1 cup each. The crust was great even though I made it in the morning and left it in the fridge all day…took some work to roll out…We only used about half of the feta and parmesan that the recipe called for, it didn’t seem like the full amount would fit in the pie pan we used.
This recipe from Cooking 4 the Week was delicious and not that hard to make. One thing I might do in the future is cook the chard a bit before putting it in the torta–it ended up a little wet on the inside, so I think cooking off some of the moisture would help. But a great recipe. We also added about 1/2 cup of sun-dried tomatoes.