Showing posts with label menu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label menu. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Tiny Spicy Chicken


Do you have family favorites that sometimes fall by the side, forgotten? This recipe had been forgotten until my husband recently requested it for his birthday dinner. I was happy to oblige, and made a small little tweak to keep the spicy factor down for our daughter.

Tiny Spicy Chicken

2 lbs chicken, chopped into bite-sized pieces (boneless, skinless thighs are my favorite)
Cornstarch and flour, about 2 TB each, to coat

Toss the chicken in equal parts cornstarch and flour, then pan fry in a neutral oil until starting to brown. Remove from pan and place on paper towel-lined plate. Then place in a 9x13 baking dish.

Sauce
1 C sugar
3/4 C ketchup
5 TB brown sugar
3 TB soy sauce
3/4 C white vinegar
3/4 C chicken broth
1 1/2 TB sriracha sauce
1 1/2 TB cornstarch

Whisk all ingredients together, making sure cornstarch is well dissolved, and pour over chicken in baking dish. Bake at 350° for 35-45 minutes, until sauce is thickened and bubbly.


Family Friendly Adaptation

Basically this requires you to use two pans and add the sriracha to only part of the sauce.

Divide chicken into two portions (depending on desired spicy/mild ratio) and place in oven safe dishes. Omit sriracha from sauce and pour enough sauce over mild chicken to coat. Then add sriracha to remaing sauce (using less sriracha, based on how much sauce is remaining), then pour over chicken for the spicy servings.

We serve it with fluffy white rice and sesame sauteed green beans.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Five Friday Finds :: Great Canning Resources

If you would like to start canning, but don't know where to start, here are five excellent places to look for inspiration. Before long, you might be hooked and preserving all the bounty you can get!

  1. A friend who cans. Canners love to share their knowledge, and having someone walk you through your first recipe can bolster your confidence enough to venture out on your own. Ask around and see if you have a friend who would be willing to help you get started or loan you some of their equipment.
  2. Ball Blue Book Guide to Preserving (a great first step) or  Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving (for more info, recipes and methods). After a friend initiated me into the ways of canning on my own, without my mom, this was the next step. These books will show you the ropes, help define different terms—headspace? When to start timing a water bath processing? Fingertip tight? Adjusting for altitude? These books have you covered. And once you have the terminology mastered, canning is just like following any other recipe.
  3. Your local Cooperative Extension office. A fantastic resource for what's going on locally and most offer pressure canner testing, to put your mind at ease before venturing into pressure canning by making sure you're equipment is working well.
  4. Fresh Preserving. Another canning primer, a vast recipe database (searchable by all sort of different factors), troubleshooting, pectin calculator and more. 
  5. Food in Jars. Especially Beginning Water Bath Canning and Canning 101, which has answers to all sorts of questions. Marisa includes lots of new, unique and fresh ideas when it comes to canning recipes and products.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Make Yourself a Dang Quesadilla

Hey Nik,

Have you ever had a really good quesadilla? Like at a restaurant? Now I generally don't go for quesadillas (it's one of the suggestions my husband often makes when I'm out of ideas or didn't meal plan and he almost always gets shot down). But, back when I was interning in DC there was a Tex Mex place, Tortilla Coast, that had a special place in my heart. My roommate and friends frequented it. Tortilla Coast made a dang good spinach and mushroom quesadilla I got hooked on during Lent. One of our friends, an observant Catholic, didn't eat meat during Lent, so he was pretty limited on his selections for those 40 days.

Anyway, all this to say, I've just been converted to the homemade quesadilla. Armed with some knowledge of how to make a good quesadilla, inspired by these zucchini, corn and black bean quesadillas (pinned here) and with a big ol' yellow summer squash in the fridge I made some of the best quesadillas in my life. We fed the missionaries that night, and when 19-21 year old boys start asking about the recipe, you know you have a winner!

Okay, here's how to make a  really good, restaurant quality quesadilla (hint: it's the same way restaurants make everything taste better, more fat and more salt):

 Turn on your pan to medium heat. I usually turn ours to just above medium heat and use a cast iron skillet. You want it warm enough to brown, but not too hot that it burns the tortilla before your cheese melts. And don't get so impatient (ahem, self) that you turn it way up at first because then your skillet will get too hot and you'll end up grateful your husband likes things extra toasty.


Oil your tortilla on one side. I use olive oil.


Spread the oil with a pastry brush. You should have just enough oil to get a fine layer across the whole tortilla.


Sprinkle the oiled tortilla with salt. I use kosher, and probably about 1/8 of a teaspoon, if that.


Put the tortilla, oiled side down, on to the hot skillet.


Oil the top of the tortilla (this was a little too much oil and I ended up rubbing the next tortilla on this to share the heavy-handed dose) and again, sprinkle with salt.


Flip tortilla when it is golden brown on the bottom.


Add fillings on half of tortilla. I prefer to put my cheese on first so it starts melting and then adding my warm filling on top of the cheese.


Fold tortilla in half over filling, browning both sides of the tortilla.


Ooey, gooey cheese and delicious filling


Serve the finished product with a dollop of sour cream and guacamole, if you happen to have it on hand.

As for the filling, here's my squash, mushroom and black bean version:
  • 2 cups diced yellow squash or zucchini
  • 3/4 cup diced sweet onion
  • 4 large white mushrooms, diced
  • 2-3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 can black beans, drained and rinsed
  • grated cheese, I used a mix of Colby Jack and pepper jack
  • cumin, coriander, chili powder, cayenne pepper, Sriracha hot sauce, salt and pepper
Saute mushrooms until they have released their liquid. Remove from pan, add a little olive oil and sautee squash and onion. Add garlic in when squash is nearly soft and continue sauteeing. Add in black beans and season with spices and seasonings, to taste (I'm really good at dumping and then realizing: Wow! this is a little hotter than I expected. But good!) And we happened to have a chicken breast in the fridge, so I diced that up and added it too, but it's not needed. Say, if you're observing Lent, or something. :)

Assemble quesadilla as shown above.

Okay, I think I can stop raving about these quesadillas now that I have them written down for posterity.






But seriously, they were so good.

Deid


PS- Did you say "cay-sa-dill-a" in your head every time I wrote quesadilla, or was that just me? Thanks Napoleon Dynomite.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Menu

 Hey Nik,


Not much to say about this week's menu, other than: It's hot here in the mid-west! I'm glad to have the freezer stocked with previously made muffins, waffles and bread. The goal this week is to stay cool and hydrated. Eating might be secondary.

Linked up to Meal Plan Monday.

Enjoy!
Deid

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Steve-O's Chicken Salad

Hey Nik,

We're having to mix it up with the variety of salads we eat around here. Lucky for me, the husband is a big fan of "girlie salads" (his words, not mine).

We had a Steve-O's chicken salad the other day for dinner. Since we're not close enough to get a fix at the restaurant, we have to improvise and make our own.


A bed of crunchy romaine, topped with grilled chicken, sliced olives, thinly slice red onion, cucumbers, carrots, homemade croutons and our version of their dressing. Since the husband is a tomato-hater, I don't buy tomatoes very often. I'm waiting for the 9 plants outside to start producing ripe ones. Otherwise, there would be tomato, too.

The croutons were just little rounds of multi-grain bread from the grocery (pre-sliced, like for bruschetta). I cut them to bite size, tossed them with olive oil, some Lawry's seasoning salt, fresh ground pepper, some garlic and onion powder and some dried herbs. I broke my summer rule about turning on the oven and baked them at 400° until they were good and crunchy.

The piece de resistance of this salad is the dressing. Store bought ranch gets a healthy dose of red wine vinegar and dried dill. Then be generous with it. I figure that the vinegar thins it out and makes it healthier, so I can use more of it.

With the left-over croutons we've also been able to have chicken Caesar salads/wraps. Mmm. The crouton making was totally worth it. Any one want to contribute more salad ideas? I'm hard up for some! (We had a heat advisory warning yesterday with the heat index somewhere between 105°-110°. Humidity is evil.)

Love, Deid

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Menu

Hey Nik,

click to enlarge

Thought I'd get this posted today earlier than usual. We've got a busy day ahead of us. We're picking blueberries this morning and then hitting the beach of Lake Michigan this afternoon! Both brand new experiences for me. I have high hopes for both of them.

This week we've got a couple cook outs to attend, so that makes meal planning easier. I just have to come up with a side dish to take to both of them. They will include several of the same people, so I probably should come up with two options. The husband says Okie Caviar is a 4th of July tradition (I had no idea he felt this way!), so that will be our offering at one of the parties. Our recipe varies a little from that one, but you can't go too wrong. Any suggestion for another side?

One of my favorite Fourth of July traditions is a patriotic breakfast. Remember growing up how that was the only day of the year that all six of us would get on bikes and we'd ride to the neighbor's breakfast? I love that memory. We usually host the breakfast now, so no bike riding for us. But it must be eaten al fresco and must contain lots of berries! Speaking of berries, I better go get ready to pick!

Have a great day!
Deid

PS- I like the link up. Again, I'm linking up here.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

This Week's Menu

Hey Nik,

You asked a little while ago about our menu plan. On Monday the husband and I take the time to plan out every meal for the next week, so we plan Tuesday to Monday (that's what the squiggle between Monday and Tuesday represents, below). We make it part of our opening for Family Home Evening, which works well since Baby Girl sleeps right through it, but we'll probably have to adjust that method as time goes on. I make the husband participate because it's so much easier to come up with a variety of ideas with two of us working on it. And we use it as a mini-planning session. (You'll note the husband has scouts on Wednesday, so I marked that down so I'd realize we needed to have something quicker that night.)

click to enlarge

I am such a meal planning convert! We make our plan as realistic as possible. Lunch is usually left-overs or sandwiches. I know there are menus out there that plan just for dinner or they plan something different for each meal. Those don't work in real life! It would work if we only ate one meal a day, but we prefer three around these parts.This meal plan is as real as it gets, even where I decided we couldn't have burritos for dinner and breakfast burritos the next morning, so I swapped things.

People love menus because it helps them save money and use what they have, but I plan out our week because it helps the husband know what to expect. That way, if I'm busy doing something else, he can look at the menu and get a meal started. Before he would be paralyzed wondering something like, "Is she saving this green pepper for something else, or can I make fajitas?" Not that I ever got frustrated with my planned, but not articulated, ideas for food for the next few days.... It also helps us in the other ways, too. About a month ago I was wondering why we were eating out so often. Well, duh! We hadn't planned out that week and when dinner time rolled around, I was lost.

Would you want to have our menu each week? We plan it anyway, so if you'd like to see it, let me know!

Yours in eating,
Deid

PS- I'm linking it up here on Menu Plan Monday.