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Shakshuka

27 Thursday Sep 2018

Posted by Ciao in Uncategorized

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I know we have been slacking when it comes to the blog but we are here and ready to start to back up. This weekend I made something that I think you will all would enjoy.  Shakshuka.  I of course switched up the original recipe and made it a Palestinian/Mexican dish.

Shakshuka

Here is a link to the recipe I read and then changed up a bit.  The NYT photo is much better than mine…..

https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1014721-shakshuka-with-feta

This is my recipe, just slightly different.

  • 1 onion- sliced thin
  • 4 jalapenos- I just cut off the top and slice in rounds
  • 2 cloves of garlic- minced
  • 1 can whole tomatoes
  • 1 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp sweet paprika
  • 6 eggs
  • Olive oil I used 2 Tablespoons.
  • Salt and pepper

In a pan that you can put in the oven, saute in olive oil the onion and peppers until very soft.  Add garlic for a few minutes.  Add spices and cook until fragrant.  Add tomatoes with juice and mash with potato masher.  Let cook until sauce reduces and thickens.  Break 6 eggs in the sauce gently and salt and pepper them.   I will attach a photo.  I added some shredded Colby cheese when I took them out of the oven.

Bake at 375 for 12 minutes for “jammy” poached type eggs.  Less if you like them runny or more if you like them hard.  We had this with toast and ate every single bite.

Homemade Applesauce

11 Monday Sep 2017

Posted by Hola in Uncategorized

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Is there anything better than Homemade Applesauce? Well, yes, if it is super easy that is better! I used apples straight from a local orchard. This time of year you can find them everywhere and they are so good. Whip this up before the game tonight. I served with sausage and fried cabbage. (Super easy also)

Easy Homemade Applesauce

6 large apples, peeled, cored chopped into chunks
¼ C. orange juice
½ lemon squeezed
½ C. brown sugar
2 T. butter
½ t. salt
Pinch of cloves, cinnamon, and nutmeg

Using a microwave safe bowl combine all of the above ingredients. Cover and cook on high for 10 min. Let sit for 5 minutes. Stir well and using a potato masher, mash until you reach the consistency you prefer. Serve warm or refrigerate. It is delicious either way.

Maize Souffle

06 Wednesday Sep 2017

Posted by Ciao in Uncategorized

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maizesouffle

I will start this post with an honest statement.  I do not like corn casserole.  Yep, I said it.  Do not like it.

But as you know if you love your family, you make what they like, not always what you like.  Hola and Ciao both LOVE this stuff.  I tweaked the recipe and  it received  rave reviews this weekend.

Hope you try it and like it.  Enjoy!

Ingredients:
  • 1/2 can sweetened condensed milk
  • 1 can sweet cream style corn
  • 1 can whole kernel corn, drained
  • 1 box jiffy corn muffin mix
  • 1 stick butter, melted
  • 1 cup of shredded Mexican cheese
  • 1 jalapeño, chopped
  • 2 eggs
Directions:
Preheat oven to 375. Mix all of the above ingredients together in a large bowl. Dump everything into a greased 8×8 glass baking dish and pop in the oven for about 45 minutes. If you can stick a fork in the casserole and it comes out clean, it is done. It also should not jiggle.

Party Potato Salad

06 Wednesday Sep 2017

Posted by Ciao in Uncategorized

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Potato Salad

Are you wondering if this blog is really just an electronic version of a family cookbook?  Me too….

Potato salad, I believe, is like sauce or meatloaf.  I think it is family specific.  My family prefers spicy.

I make this all summer and even fall, winter and spring.  You may think 5lbs of potatoes are too much.  It is not.  When I make this it is gone within 2 days.  I love hot Hungarian paprika.  Buy it and try it.

​

Ingredients:
  • 5 pounds, peeled and cubed, gold potatoes
  • 1 T Salt (in the water)
  • 1 large white onion, grated
  • 1 cup plus 1 T of Hellman’s Mayonnaise
  • 2 T Yellow Mustard
  • 1.5 t Hot paprika
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 2 T Chives, chopped
  • 1 t Dill
Directions:
Put potatoes in cold water, with a tablespoon of salt, and bring to a boil. Once the potatoes come to a boil, cook for about 20 minutes, until they are just shy of fork tender. Drain potatoes in a colander, then dump on a cookie sheet to cool (about 30 minutes, or else the potatoes will fall apart). Meanwhile, in a large bowl, mix together the rest of the ingredients. Fold in the potatoes. Chill covered for at least one hour.  Serve in a pretty bowl.  I like to add a little hot paprika on top to give it some color.

Better Than Chris’ Baked Beans

06 Wednesday Sep 2017

Posted by Bonjour in Uncategorized

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Baked Beans

My stepson Chris used to be a chef in Disney and we frequently have cooking competitions on Sunday (as well as whatever Guy Fieri’s cocktail of the day is). Baked beans quickly became the star of our competition for an entire summer, hence the name of the recipe. Now would be the appropriate time to let you know that I am, in fact, the reigning champion.
Ingredients:
  • 1 large onion, peeled and chopped
  • 3 jalapeños, chopped (seeds included)
  • 4 strips of bacon, chopped
  • 1 pound of chorizo, casing removed
  • 1/4 cup maple syrup
  • 1/3 cup brown sugar
  • 1 chipotle in adobo sauce , chopped
  • 2 cans Bushes baked beans (whatever flavor strikes your fancy–we used bourbon brown sugar)
Directions:
Preheat oven to 350°. Throw cold bacon and chorizo in skillet and brown over medium high heat. No need to add oil, as the greases from the bacon and chorizo will suffice. Meanwhile empty your beans, maple syrup, chipotle pepper, and brown sugar into a large mixing bowl. Remove cooked meat with a slotted spoon and add to the bowl with beans, leaving the grease in the pan. Add onions and peppers to the greased pan, season with salt and pepper, and sauté until translucent. Add peppers and onions to the bean mixture, and thoroughly combine. Empty mixture into a greased 9×13 glass baking dish and pop in the oven for 30 minutes, or until heated through and bubbling.

Tarte au Boeuf

09 Thursday Feb 2017

Posted by Bonjour in Uncategorized

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tarte-au-boeuf

Okay, not really…  My mother laments that I make “fancy” food.  What I actually do is make up French names for easy everyday food.  So, this is a very easy Hamburger Pot Pie.  I remember my grandmother making this, she put biscuits on top.  I love the puff pastry instead, kind of makes it French…

Ingredients:       

  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 onion diced
  • 1 T. olive oil
  • 1 Tsp minced garlic
  • ¾ bag of frozen mixed vegetables
  • ½ can evaporated milk
  • 2 T. flour
  • 2 T. butter
  • Salt and Pepper
  • 1 Sheet of puff pastry, thawed for about 20 minutes
  • 1 egg beaten

 

Directions:

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Spray 11×7 casserole dish with cooking spray.  Use a large sauté pan over med heat and soften onion in 1 T. olive oil, add garlic for a quick stir, add the ground beef, salt and pepper, break up and brown the beef.  Add frozen vegetables and cook while stirring for a few minutes. Add butter to pan and let melt. Sprinkle the flour over beef and cook for about 2 minutes (like you would for gravy) now add the milk slowly while stirring constantly.  This will thicken pretty quickly.  Taste for seasoning and add s & p if needed. Pour this mixture into prepared casserole.  Roll the puff pastry to fit over casserole, beat one egg in a bowl and brush on top of pastry.  Cut a few slits in the top of pastry to vent.  Bake at 400 for about 30 minutes.  When the pastry is golden brown it is done.  Let it rest for at least 10 minutes before cutting into.

Enjoy!

Pasta Milanese

01 Wednesday Feb 2017

Posted by Bonjour in Uncategorized

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img_20170129_123511

I love New Orleans!  My husband and I have spent the week after Christmas there 3 times and New Year’s Eve was awesome.  I do not think I want to go for Mardi Gras, but who knows.  With the celebration approaching, I was in the mood to try a recipe from John Besh’s My New Orleans: The Cookbook.  A bit time consuming, so maybe save for the weekend.  Make the creole spice and mudrica before you start on the sauce to save frustration.  Be sure to follow all the steps, it is worth it!

Enjoy.

Pasta Milanese

    • ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
    • 1 bulb fennel, diced
    • 2 onions, diced
    • 4 anchovy filets ( I omitted this as I didn’t have any)
    • 3 12-ounce cans diced tomatoes
    • 1 tablespoon sugar
    • ¼ cup tomato paste
    • 1 teaspoon fennel seeds, toasted and ground
    • Leaves from 4 large sprigs fresh basil, chopped
    • Leaves from 2 large sprigs fresh oregano, chopped (I used 1 tsp dried oregano)
    • 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes
    • 1 tablespoon Basic Creole Spices*
    • 1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
    • Salt

 

  • 2 pounds Basic Homemade Pasta or dried fettuccine (I used 1 lb of pasta that my stepdaughter sent from Italy) this is the best pasta I have ever had and I threw away the box! ☹)

 

  • 1 recipe Mudrica**

(I added freshly grated parmesan cheese to the finished dish)

Directions:

  1. Heat a large saucepan over moderate heat. Add the olive oil, then the fresh fennel and onions, and cook, stirring occasionally, until browned and caramelized, 10 – 15 minutes. Add the garlic and cook very briefly, then stir in the anchovies. Add the diced tomatoes, sugar, tomato paste, ground fennel, basil, oregano, pepper flakes, Creole Spices, and black pepper to the pan. Simmer the sauce for 1 hour, stirring occasionally.
  2. Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil over high heat. Add the pasta and cook until just tender. Drain the pasta. Serve the pasta in a serving dish with the tomato sauce ladled on top. Sprinkle the Mudrica over the sauce.

Notes:

*Basic Creole Spice Recipe

1 tablespoon each of sweet paprika, coarse sea salt, freshly ground black pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder / 2 tablespoons of celery salt / 2 teaspoons of cayenne pepper / and ½ teaspoon of allspice.

**Mudrica Recipe (don’t skip this)

½ cup white bread crumbs from day-old bread, ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil, 3 tablespoons freshly grated Parmesan cheese, 2 tablespoons toasted pine nuts, 2 tablespoons dried currants, 1 teaspoon crushed red pepper flakes, ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon, 1 pinch chopped fresh oregano leaves, 1 pinch of salt.

Put all the ingredients into the work bowl of a food processor and pulse 4 or 5 times or until the mixture is well combined. Serve over pasta.

Snow Day Chicken N’ Noodle Stew

30 Monday Jan 2017

Posted by Ciao in Uncategorized

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Tags

chicken, noodles, Soup, stew

unnamed
Tracie’s daughter Erica here!  I’m a teacher, and let me tell you, there is nothing better than a snow day on a Monday!  Especially if you didn’t manage to get anything done over the weekend, except binge on Netflix.  Today was wonderful!  After spending about 30 minutes warming up and cleaning off my car, I happily went to the grocery store bright and early.  There was barely anyone but employees there–it was great.  I knew I wanted to make some chicken noodle soup, as well as get the ingredients for a pot of Mom’s “Sunday Gravy” (recipe on here somewhere).  I ended up getting all that, plus stuff to make meatballs.  Came home, started a pot of coffee, and unpacked all the groceries.  Now I don’t know if it was the whole pot of coffee or just my normal, once-in-awhile symptoms of mania, but I decided I was going to make all three recipes and store them in the fridge for the rest of the week.  You see, my husband plows snow in the winter and I never know when he is or is not going to be home, so if everything is already portioned out into tupperware all he has to do is reheat.  When I am not as ambitious (which is 90% of the time), I buy a bag of frozen chicken tenders and some frozen pizzas, toss em in the freezer and make him fend for himself.  Don’t judge.  I’m tired during the week!  Anyway, what ended up happening out of all those plans and ingredients is the recipe below, as well as a pot of sauce, and a meatloaf (the meatballs seemed like too much hassle). ¡Buen Provecho!

Materials:
Large saucepan or Dutch Oven
Large cutting board
Your favorite wooden spoon
Your favorite chef knife
Veggie peeler
Bowl for scraps/trash
Two cup measuring cup
A couple spoons (for mixing roux, and tasting)

Beginning:
2 Tb (give or take) olive oil
1 medium yellow onion, diced
1 cup celery, diced
2 whole peeled carrots, sliced
1 garlic clove, minced
Salt and pepper
Herbs de Provence
Sriracha sauce

Middle:
1 lb rotisserie chicken meat (lazily) shredded
*mine came from Heinen’s in separate packages already off the bone (.5 lb. light meat, .5 lb. dark meat)
1 Tb of your favorite poultry seasoning (I used Cajun)
1.5 (32 oz) cartons of Chicken Stock
1 (1.5 oz) chicken stock reduction (jelly consistency) (NOT THE CUBES!)
*the brand I used was More Than Gourmet (Glace de Poulet)
couple cups of water as needed

End:
bag of kluski egg noodles
.5 cup of water
3 Tb. flour
splash of half and half cream
few teaspoons of hot stock (to temper)
fresh chopped parsley for garnish (optional)

Recipe
Heat olive oil over medium high heat until shimmering.  Add the onion, celery, and carrots.  Sauté until onions and celery are soft, or near translucent.  Throw in the garlic and stir until fragrant (about one minute).  Salt and pepper everything.  Sprinkle in some Herbs de Provence.  Drizzle in some sriracha, like you would decorate a dessert plate with chocolate sauce (of course that’s the first thing I think of, ugh!).  Now stir all that stuff up!

Season all your chicken with your favorite mixture (I used Cajun because it was literally right in my face when I opened the cupboard and it sounded good).  Toss the chicken into the pan.  Stir in one full carton of your chicken stock and bring the mixture to a gentle boil.  Once boiling, pop in that bouillon/jelly stuff and do your best to whisk it around and break it up.  It should essentially dissolve.  Here is where you can decide to add in the rest of the chicken stock and/or some water.  I did both!  Turn the heat down to a simmer and let cook for at least an hour.

After an hour, and when you feel like the soup is tasting good, mix in the bag of egg noodles.  Turn the heat up to medium low, stirring occasionally for at least ten minutes.  Now you can stop here and have a delicious chicken noodle soup, OR, you can make a roux to thicken it up and have a good ol’ comforting pot of chicken noodle stew.  If you choose to take the stew route, all you need to do now is take a half cup of water and mix in flour and cream.  Add some of your hot stock to the mixture to temper.  Finally, turn your soup/stew back down to a simmer and stir in your roux!  Let that cook for an additional ten minutes, then serve garnished with parsley!

Note:
I personally like to quickly clean my kitchen and lay out all my materials and ingredients before I begin any cooking adventure; hence the reason I added a “materials” section above.  After my kitchen is clean, I prep everything into prep bowls or designated areas on the counter.  Before I even turn on the burners, I throw away all the trash/scraps (always have a scrap bowl next to you for easy clean up) and wipe down the counters.  Then, while I’m waiting for my olive oil to heat up I unload (or start) the dishwasher.  I find that doing this creates a much more peaceful cooking experience.  My mother on the other hand literally destroys her kitchen, which makes me crazy, and is probably the reason I am so compulsive.  Sorry Mom, it’s true!

Homegrown Tomato Soup

18 Friday Sep 2015

Posted by Hola in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

tomato soup

This year our small garden has produced some very tasty tomatoes, zucchini, and tons of hot delicious peppers.  My husband planted many kinds of peppers but they all ended up hot. He enjoyed the experiment and plans to save the seeds from his crazy hot peppers to replant next year.

I love homegrown tomatoes and especially love making homemade roasted tomato soup.  I have used roma and grape tomatoes before and they work fine.  The secret is to roast all the veggies first.  This deepens the flavor and is so delicious.  I hope you give this a try.  Serve this with grilled cheese sandwiches and your family will be thrilled.

Homemade Roasted Tomato Soup

Homegrown tomato soup

  • 3 lbs of tomatoes – cleaned – wash and cut out center and stems and any spots – quartered
  • 2 carrots – peeled and chopped up
  • 1 onion – peeled and quartered
  • 4 peppers – seeded and sliced
  • 2 cloves of garlic – peeled
  • Olive oil
  • Salt and Pepper
  • Sugar – 1 T. or to taste
  • Heavy cream- to taste, I use about ½ cup

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Put all the cleaned, quartered tomatoes, carrots, peppers, onions, and garlic on a large sheet pan. Toss with olive oil, salt and pepper.  Roast in oven for about 45 minutes until starting to char.  Feel  free to toss around carefully half way through.

tomato soup roasted vegetables

Remove from oven and put in your dutch oven on the stovetop over low heat.  Puree with an immersion blender until as smooth as you prefer.  I add about 1 tablespoon of sugar at this point and check the salt and pepper.  Add if needed.  Now stir in the cream and heat through.  Enjoy!

tomato soup recipe

Valentine’s Day Peanut Butter Cookies

16 Monday Feb 2015

Posted by Hola in Uncategorized

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Tags

Betty Crocker, Cookies, Heart Cookies, Peanut Butter Cookies, Valentines Day

So, this recipe is really my rendition of Betty Crocker’s Chocolate Heart Peanut Butter Cookies that I found on Pinterest. These cookies are super cute and I made them to give to my boyfriend for Valentines Day. They are simple, cheap and very tasty; what else could you ask for in a cookie!

Valentines Day Cookie

Ingredients

  • 1 Pouch (1 lb 1.5 oz) Betty Crocker™ Peanut Butter Cookie Mix
  • 3 Tablespoons Vegetable Oil
  • 1 Tablespoon Water
  • 1 Egg
  • 2 Tablespoons Sugar
  • 18 Hershey’s Milk Chocolate Hearts

I got a Kitchen Aid mixer for Christmas and I have been looking for every excuse to use it, so even though I used it for this recipe, it was not necessary.

First, preheat your oven to 375 degrees. Now, empty the contents of Betty Crocker mix into your medium sized mixing bowl. Add the vegetable oil, water, egg and mix together. Keep mixing until a dough forms, it may seem a little greasy but that is what you want.

Next, take your sugar and pour into a small bowl, I used a soup bowl. Then, roll your dough into small little balls and then roll them in the sugar. The original recipe says to make 36 dough balls but I only made 18.

Once you have all your balls rolled in the sugar, your going to want to place them on a ungreased cookie sheet about 1 inch apart. Bake them for 8-10 minutes and remove from the oven as soon as they are golden brown.

While your cookies are in the oven, I suggest unwrapping your chocolate hearts because once you take your cookies out the oven, you will need to press the hearts into the cookies as soon as possible.

Transfer your cookies from the cookie sheet onto wire cooling racks. The cookies will need about an hour or so for the chocolate to harden before you can place them in air-tight storage containers.

I hope you enjoy making these cookies as much as I did. Let us know in the comment section below if you have any questions about the recipe or let us know about your experience with these cookies!

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