Unfortunately, I didn't have time to take pictures of anything because of Shabbat. Here was our Friday night dinner:
Brisket - always delicious (cooked with onion soup mix). Cooked for 5 hours, but even after cooking a while, I still had problems cutting it. It came out more shredded like for BBQ brisket (which sounds good for leftovers!)
Winter Chicken Stew (not sure of exact name) - recipe came from one of the Betty Crocker cookbooks. It has chicken breasts, prunes, dried apricots, carrots, onions, garlic, and apple juice. The chicken was kind of dry, even though it was in all that liquid. This was because (following the recipe), I browned the chicken on the outside in a frying pan w/ olive oil. Also, the dried prunes and apricots reconstituted themselves into their original sizes in all that liquid, so it was like eating massive pieces of fruit with somewhat dry chicken. Sigh...
Chicken Wings - made a massive bag of wings, using a recipe I found somewhere on line. Basically, it's flour and lots of spices in a gallon baggie, and you do a shake 'n bake thing. These came out really good! Aaron and I ate all the leftover wings (probably 20!) Saturday night.
Matzah Ball Soup - added kosher Lipton Noodle Soup and fresh carrots - soup came out great. For some reason, one of the guests took all of the broth, so I am left with 6 or 7 matzah balls in a container w/o broth. I'll have to make more soup to go with the matzah balls. No biggie - just want guests to be happy :)
Potato Kugel - also found the recipe online. I had to grate the potatoes by hand, but after the second potato, I was a pro! This came out really good, but I think I forgot to use Pam spray. This one got gobbled up well - just a small container of leftovers.
Fresh green beans - of course, the most simple item to cook, and I sliced deep into my thumb while cutting the ends off the green beans. Still healing 4 days later. Finally able to take off the band-aid. Needed it on to keep my finger together.
Other foods - challah from Blumkin Home (yum!), pareve brownies from Bagel Bin (much better than they look), and a large variety of candies and snacks.
Everyone had a great time, and everyone ate quite a bit (though we have a ton of leftovers - need to freeze some tonight).
Cookbook Travels
This blog is dedicating to forcing myself to use cookbooks more so that I am not making the same dozen or so meals over and over again. All recipes that I cook will be kosher, though I am not restricting myself to kosher cookbooks, of course. If there is a recipe that I can use with slight alterations to make it kosher, that's what I will do. This really doesn't match up with my wanting to lose that 6 lbs. I gained a month ago on vacation, but WTH....
Monday, March 11, 2013
Friday, February 15, 2013
Larnygitis!
Yep, I've got laryngitis and now getting a cough to go with it. I won't be making anything out of the ordinary for the next couple of days (though I'm going to Costco to get salmon today - it's a staple in our house!). Hope to be back cooking and baking soon!
Sunday, February 10, 2013
Pancakes
In my quest to make an even larger dent in my flour, I made the kids pancakes for lunch - yep, from scratch. They do taste better than the box mix (any variation), but not so much so that I would abandon box mix forever (like I have vowed to do with those pizza dough disks/Frisbees). I put some canned blueberries on some of them because Joshua loves that, and Aaron likes it too. Per usual, one of my kids won't eat it - in this case, Isaac.
To be honest, I also tried to make a cocoa version of these by taking some of the batter and adding Hershey's cocoa powder and some additional sugar. It basically created a whole wheat-tasting pancake but without the nutritional value add. I put a chocolate gelt on to show it was chocolate, which Aaron said looked stupid. He's right. It does...
To be honest, I also tried to make a cocoa version of these by taking some of the batter and adding Hershey's cocoa powder and some additional sugar. It basically created a whole wheat-tasting pancake but without the nutritional value add. I put a chocolate gelt on to show it was chocolate, which Aaron said looked stupid. He's right. It does...
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
No cooking today...
I had some of the lentil soup for lunch, and I had fish tacos (out) for dinner. Not even the effort to make toast today...
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Vegetarian Lentil Soup
So here it is: my own recipe (and healthy!) that I make 2 or 3 times a year.
Directions:
Heat oil in a large pot (I used a 4-quart pot). When the oil is just hot, add the carrots. Sauté (occasionally stirring) for 3 or 4 minutes. Add the onions and stir together. Add the garlic, but do not stir right away (because garlic will burn quicker that the other ingredients). Cover and let cook over medium-high heat for 3 or 4 minutes. Take the cover off, mix all ingredients, and cover again.
After another 3 or 4 minutes (the onions should look translucent but not brown), add the tomatoes (juice and all), salt, lentils, water, and bay leaves. Stir all ingredients together. Simmer for an hour and 15 minutes.
You can eat it after that, but it really is one of those things that tastes better the next day (and the day after that!). The ingredients need time to really interlock their flavors together. I also add a bit more salt to my own bowl because the nature of lentils is that they need it. So here it is - a healthy recipe - and my very own (which really doesn't align with my mission of using cookbook recipes, but I needed to make something hot and healthy!).
- 1 pound carrots - peeled and diced
- 1 medium to large onion - peeled and diced
- 1 head of garlic - peeled and diced
- 1/2 cup light olive oil
- 2 15-ounce cans diced tomatoes (or one 29-ounce can) - undrained
- 1 tablespoon salt
- 1 pound dry lentils - cleaned in a strainer
- 8 cups hot water
- 2 medium bay leaves
Directions:
Heat oil in a large pot (I used a 4-quart pot). When the oil is just hot, add the carrots. Sauté (occasionally stirring) for 3 or 4 minutes. Add the onions and stir together. Add the garlic, but do not stir right away (because garlic will burn quicker that the other ingredients). Cover and let cook over medium-high heat for 3 or 4 minutes. Take the cover off, mix all ingredients, and cover again.
After another 3 or 4 minutes (the onions should look translucent but not brown), add the tomatoes (juice and all), salt, lentils, water, and bay leaves. Stir all ingredients together. Simmer for an hour and 15 minutes.
You can eat it after that, but it really is one of those things that tastes better the next day (and the day after that!). The ingredients need time to really interlock their flavors together. I also add a bit more salt to my own bowl because the nature of lentils is that they need it. So here it is - a healthy recipe - and my very own (which really doesn't align with my mission of using cookbook recipes, but I needed to make something hot and healthy!).
- Prep time: 45 minutes (yes, it takes that long to peel and dice the vegetables and then clean the lentils)
- Cook time: 90 minutes (this includes the hour and 15 minutes that the pot is simmering)
Monday, February 4, 2013
Basic Waffles
OK, I know I said I would make something healthy today, and I did, but it is still simmering, so here are the waffles I also made today (because my super picky younger kids won't eat my (yes, MY recipe) lentil soup).
To tell the truth, I've made these waffles several times before, so I knew what the result would be and that my kids would like them. The recipe specifies unsalted butter, and that's what I use. I also says 1/2 cup to 2 sticks of butter, and I have always used 1 stick of butter in the batter itself (although I drizzle a bit of regular, salted butter on top after they are cooked). The recipe says that it will make 12 6-inch waffles, but my waffle iron isn't 6" x 6" (which is what I think they mean), and I only get 8 waffles out of it. Many times that I have made this recipe, I have doubled the recipe and the froze the waffles in baggies of 2. They heat really well in the oven at about 200 to 250 degrees F. for about 5 minutes. Totally don't recommend microwaving. I've never done it, but I imagine "yuck."
The kids, as usual, love these waffles. Aaron and Joshua wanted blueberry syrup, but Isaac goes for the regular "alleged" maple syrup :)
To tell the truth, I've made these waffles several times before, so I knew what the result would be and that my kids would like them. The recipe specifies unsalted butter, and that's what I use. I also says 1/2 cup to 2 sticks of butter, and I have always used 1 stick of butter in the batter itself (although I drizzle a bit of regular, salted butter on top after they are cooked). The recipe says that it will make 12 6-inch waffles, but my waffle iron isn't 6" x 6" (which is what I think they mean), and I only get 8 waffles out of it. Many times that I have made this recipe, I have doubled the recipe and the froze the waffles in baggies of 2. They heat really well in the oven at about 200 to 250 degrees F. for about 5 minutes. Totally don't recommend microwaving. I've never done it, but I imagine "yuck."
The kids, as usual, love these waffles. Aaron and Joshua wanted blueberry syrup, but Isaac goes for the regular "alleged" maple syrup :)
- Prep time: 20 minutes
- Cook time: 8 minutes (about) per batch, depending on your waffle iron
- The All New All Purpose Joy of Cooking 1997, 1996, pg. 801
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Leftovers...
Been using up the cookies, macaroons, rice, and other misc. foods in my fridge and freezer. Promise to move on to a new recipe tomorrow! I am really (really!) going to make something healthy this time!
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Hershey's Perfect White Chip Chocolate Cookies
I wanted to use up the Hershey's white (what we generally call "white chocolate" - love them!) chips that I had opened a week ago to decorate the Philadelphia Indulgence Chocolate Mousse Cheesecake, so tonight I am making Hershey's Perfect White Chip Chocolate Cookies. The recipe is on the back of the bag, so pretty convenient.
Clearly, I am not using cookbooks as much as I had planned, but this is how I roll in the couple of months before Passover - use up what I can when I can.
I had a whole bag minus the 1/2 cup or so I had previously used, so I added a cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips too. The cookies came out fantastic!! I used real butter, and I think that made a big difference in flavor quality. I'm not a huge chocolate cookie fan, but these are really good - not working towards my effort of losing the NY weight I gained, so I had cooked cabbage with some margarine and salt for dinner (yum!).
Clearly, I am not using cookbooks as much as I had planned, but this is how I roll in the couple of months before Passover - use up what I can when I can.
I had a whole bag minus the 1/2 cup or so I had previously used, so I added a cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips too. The cookies came out fantastic!! I used real butter, and I think that made a big difference in flavor quality. I'm not a huge chocolate cookie fan, but these are really good - not working towards my effort of losing the NY weight I gained, so I had cooked cabbage with some margarine and salt for dinner (yum!).
Macaroons...one day later
Further comment on the macaroons...my 17-year-old son (who is not a "foodie") is addicted to the macaroons! He says they are "amazing." I think he likes the ones with the chocolate on the bottoms best, but he loves them all!
For anyone considering making them, they definitely taste even better the next day! The coconut and almond extract flavors really have time to meld together :)
For anyone considering making them, they definitely taste even better the next day! The coconut and almond extract flavors really have time to meld together :)
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Baker's One Bowl Coconut Macaroons
I looked in my baking supply cabinet tonight to see what I might be able to use up in some recipe (realizing that I am definitely doing more baking than cooking for this blog...whatever...). I was really looking for a bag of chocolate or butterscotch chips, but I saw a nice, fresh bag of coconut that I bought only 2 months ago, so that's the winner! Anyway, it's a nice change from cheesecake (though there are plenty more of those to come, I'm sure).
The Baker's One Bowl Coconut Macaroons recipe was right on the back of the bag, and they are baking right now - love the smell of almond extract!
Here's how they came out - very delicious, actually! The browner parts have that yummy toasted coconut flavor, and the centers are nice and chewy.
I dipped half of them in melted chocolate chips, but they now have to stay in the fridge to keep the chocolate from getting too melty to the touch. Both kinds are good, but I think I prefer the plain ones best - sometimes simpler is best!
The Baker's One Bowl Coconut Macaroons recipe was right on the back of the bag, and they are baking right now - love the smell of almond extract!
Here's how they came out - very delicious, actually! The browner parts have that yummy toasted coconut flavor, and the centers are nice and chewy.
I dipped half of them in melted chocolate chips, but they now have to stay in the fridge to keep the chocolate from getting too melty to the touch. Both kinds are good, but I think I prefer the plain ones best - sometimes simpler is best!
- Prep time: 15 minutes (maybe a bit less)
- Cook time: 25 minutes (the recipe says 20 minutes, but given the size of the macaroons, it really needs the extra 5 minutes)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)