Category Archives: Recipes

The resulting soup

“Today I took the cold stock and removed the fat, and added a 28 oz. can of tomatoes and their juice, 2 stalks celery and a couple of carrots, sliced, 2 15 oz. cans white beans (drained and rinsed), chopped romaine lettuce and some partially cooked egg noodles. It’s still kind of bland so I’m simmering it a while before I add more salt and pepper. I did put in some dried marjoram and basil. Will let you know how it turns out.”  This is from a comment from the prior post.

Now, I let it simmer for another 45 minutes and reduce by a cup or two.  Then I added salt and pepper.  Jim went back for seconds, in the large lion’s head bowl!  Now the kitchen smells like tomato and I’d prefer for it to smell like chicken broth, but it was good and we’ve at least 12 cups of soup left in the frig.  More frugal food, yea!  No, the broth didn’t get to be Zoe accoutrements to her dog food.  More about that later.  I cleaned out a beef stock box that I don’t really like for her food the other day.  She loved the boiled chicken off the bone today in the after-stock cache, however.

We enjoyed the soup with BJ’s sausage from East TX and frozen french fries.  Jim had ketchup, of course.  Cheers!  Dee

Chicken Stock/Broth

Yesterday I cooked a 5# chicken with stuffing.  Oh, it was so good.  Today I cut up come celery, carrot and onion and added a couple of fresh-frozen bay leaves from the freezer.  I added the carcass of yesterday’s chicken, plus half the meat and all the bones for stock.

The rest of the meat was hand-shredded and tossed with fresh lime juice and cayenne and tabasco, plus salt and pepper and marinated for a couple of hours.

First I sauteed onions and peppers, while in a dry skillet I toasted the flour tortillas. They went along with pico di gallo, sharp cheddar cheese, homemade guacamole, lime wedges, and a bit of sour cream.  A good meal.

It was a great dinner.  Hope yours was as good.  Talk more tomorrow.  Cheers!  Dee

Cornish Game Hen

Tonight we’re splitting a Cornish game hen, with loaded baked potatoes, cucumber salad (recipe on site) and sliced tomatoes. I’ve marinated the hen in 1 c orange juice, 1/3 c soy sauce, two sliced scallions, two sliced cloves garlic, a splash of tabasco and pepper. Before roasting it in a 400 degree oven with the potatoes next door, I’ll add a bit of honey to the marinade and boil it down into a glaze, discard the solids and paint it on in the last few minutes of roasting. I’ll let you know how it turns out. Oh, I forgot that I also added about 1/2 tsp sesame oil to the marinade and could finish with a few sesame seeds on top, which I keep in the freezer.

Tomorrow I’ll tweak this somewhat for you, if it’s any good at all. I know the ingredients are good, and work together, so will hope for the best. If I give you a recipe for peanut butter, liver and mango on date-nut bread you’ll know I’m kidding, right? Actually there was a vegetarian sandwich I used to love at this little restaurant down the street. Romaine, perfectly ripe Brie, sliced mushrooms, sprouts and avocado (tomato?) on 12-grain bread. Fantastic. Hope you cooked today and were happy with the results.

Butternut Squash/Carrot Soup

I had a huge butternut squash, gift from a friend (thanks, Trish) and added three large carrots and roasted them in the oven, after salt and pepper and olive oil to coat. Four hundred degrees for under an hour and everything seemed done. While they cooled I minced a large onion and sweated it in butter.

In two batches, I processed it with enough chicken broth to facilitate a good mix. It made a lot of puree. I added two cups of half-and-half and one cup chicken broth then cooked it down a bit because the carrots were still in tiny pieces (they should have been roasted longer or cut smaller) and needed not to be crunchy but I’m not a fan of a homogeneous mass. I added salt and pepper and a pinch of cayenne.

Jim has a cold and craves tea and warm food, so he loved it. Even left his chicken on the plate for me to put up in the frig. I added a purchased whole wheat baguette and would have made a salad but he was full after a lot of soup. The chicken is another story.

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To the regular suspects, Tuffy The Nanny Goat is still holding out, and is viewed morning and night by Goatherd Margie awaiting the birth of a new kid/kids. We’ll let you know. Hopefully we’ll have pics. Nanny came to the farm today and held the current five day-old babies, who are both doing well. Hopefully the male has a name now, the female is Madeleine after a red-headed cousin and she got extra attention because she almost died at birth and wouldn’t nurse.

Margie came up with a great naming mechanism, one initial a year for the females, this year it’s M. Then through the grands and cousins et al with a different letter per year’s litters.

Lazy Chicken

As I recall, this is a Romanian recipe. My family has been making it for at least thirty years so here’s my spin on it. Oh, my brother, a great cook, asked me why it’s “lazy.” There are few ingredients and they’re all cooked together for amazing results! He must have been in college at the time and couldn’t afford both carrots and onions.

Let’s say you want to serve four, or two with lots of leftovers. Take four half chicken breasts on the bone, with skin. A bunch of carrots, scrubbed. One or two onions, cut into eight wedges each. Place tightly in a roasting pan, with onions and carrots sticking up. Dot with butter. Salt, pepper and thyme, whole branches if you grow it. A splash of chicken broth, another of dry white wine and place in a 450 degree oven for about an hour until everything smells fantastic and is browned and delicious. Check on it halfway and add more liquid if it’s dry. You want it to roast, not steam.

That’s it. One of the banes of my existence is timing. In my Thanksgiving cooking lesson, I taught my students to work back from dinner time. If dinner is at seven, the garlic mashed potatoes go on the fire at 6:30. The roast chicken is at 20 minutes per pound unstuffed and weighs X and needs an extra fifteen minutes to rest. If it’s simple I just do it by rote, if a dinner party I usually jot it down just to make sure I have hors d’oeuvres and other items out.

As you prepare for the holidays, please remember yourself. Don’t choose a meal that enslaves you to the kitchen with lots of last-minute fuss. This time is what roasts are for. Place some potatoes around that prime rib! Add carrots, rutabagas, whatever tickles your fancy. Place the roast out to rest and listen to the oohs and aahs. An open kitchen is what you want, with stools on the opposite side so you can talk with your guests and yet keep them out of your way.

Stick with me, kiddos. I’ll have you shopping the perimeter of the grocery store in the blink of an eye! Dee

Mincemeat

My brother sent an email today. He lives in Manhattan, The Big Apple, and went to Zabars to find Crosse and Blackwell mincemeat to bring to Dad’s for Christmas. Apparently Dad is supposed to make the mincemeat tarts. Zabars didn’t have it. He went home and looked up mincemeat online.

First, the Crosse and Blackwell site pointed him to Hackensack NJ for the nearest jar of this fruit and sometimes meat mixture that is all apples and raisins and rum and brandy and all kinds of good stuff to put in a short crust and bake.

That didn’t work. So he went further and what did he find? My blog. That’ll teach him for not reading me from time to time!

It may be better that Mom is gone to find that her beloved Crosse and Blackwell label is now owned by Smuckers. But with Kevin in dire straits I was ready to send him my sole jar of mincemeat.

At the last moment, I found it on the Smuckers’ site under “specialty” items and Kevin ordered three jars to be sent directly to Dad pre-Christmas so he can make the tartlets. Mom always had a special Marie Antoinette champagne glass to cut the bottom piece, a precise “Mom” measurement of mincemeat, then used a champagne flute for the “hat.”

Let’s hope Dad figures that out. In the meantime I always remember Mom’s pastry recipe:

1.5 cups flour
1.5 sticks butter, chilled and cubed (3/4 cup)
1 teaspoon salt
3T ice water (maximum, depending upon consistency of the dough, weather, everything)

Pulse the flour, butter and salt in a food processor until it looks like peas or lentils. Add 2T water and pulse. If it comes together right away, it’s done. It shouldn’t look like a solid mass but should pull together if you grab a tablespoon full with your hand and it comes together. If it doesn’t, add a few more drops of ice water until it does so.

Hey, I’m not the pastry lady! My hands melt the stuff. DO NOT overwork the dough as you will enhance the gluten (which you want in bread but not in pastry) and make the resulting dough tough. Place the dough on a clean flat surface and make it into a small round. Wrap it in plastic and let it rest in the frig for at least 20 minutes. This allows the dough to relax and the gluten strands to stop forming.

Roll out and use your preferred cutters. I wish I’d asked for Mom’s. Mincemeat tarts were always a family staple from Thanksgiving through Christmas and while the glasses she used to cut the pastry were not valuable to any collector, I actually think Kevin should have them for offering mincemeat this year.

So, Dad, here’s how to make Mom’s mincemeat tarts, except for the year that she and A.L. made their own, with meat! I told you this already – they went back to C&B that is now owned by Smuckers.

There’s no getting near the post office today, the busiest day of the year for shipping. And USPS site is down is well and holding postage funds that it won’t allow me to print. Happy holidays to you, too, Uncle Sam!

It is going to be a new year and we can only hope to have a better economy and our troops home from Iraq. Wishing you the best this holiday season – Dee

Ladies and Steak

Today I bought a 3/4″ thick T-bone steak from the butcher.  I grilled it indoors on a grill pan with the fan on and one in a window.  Olive oil, salt and pepper.  Baked potatoes with a bit of butter, salt and pepper, topped with sour cream, chopped chives and chopped bacon.

After the steak cooled for a few moments, I carved the NY Strip for him, the filet for me.  Even though this cut is expensive, you can use one steak for two and carve it as I did or carve all of it and place it on a platter so you can pick and choose your cut.

Comments are open but I don’t want to hear any from my own peanut gallery, Jim and Zoe!  Cheers, Dee

Dinner Chez Ms. J

We went to a friend’s Tuesday evening for a lovely meal.  I brought along a bottle of Sangiovese and two hors d’oeuvres.

Jim is highly allergic to fish and I made a smoked salmon mousse that I piped onto endive spears.  Then I made a version of boursin (on this blog), a cream cheese spread for crackers to which I added a few spinach leaves to make it stand out from the fishy spread and to get some healthy spinach into my favorite meat eater!

It worked!  He liked it!  Our hostess made chicken sausages with vegetable sauce, and roasted potatoes.  The aroma was fantastic as I approached her door.  Her cool cat was at the door ready to greet guests, meowing and wanting to be picked up.  I swear if I live to be a hundred, this is the only fur “stole” I’ll ever wear!  He loves to drape himself over your shoulder or around your neck.  PETA can’t object to a live fur stole that wants to be there.

I’ve been owned by very strange cats in my life, but this one takes the cake.  And the fish mousse….  Dee

Stew Season

The cool air is coming our way. Tonight we have two windows all the way open and no A/C. Yea!!! While I love the smell of beef stew cooking, I don’t like it when cooking odors linger for days or weeks due to constant air conditioning so we used a fan to blow out air and now just have the windows open for a cool breeze to make it good sleeping weather.

This afternoon I put together a version of beef carbonnade, a mixture of beef, onions, bacon and beer. Ingredients needed include the above plus salt and pepper, and thyme. I made it in a covered casserole and took the cover off for the last hour so that it could reduce a bit (probably used a bit much liquid). I like to serve it over egg noodles but if you prefer rice, go for it.

I only made enough for two. Crazy, I know, but Jim’s not much for leftovers and when I make a large pot roast, after 2-3 days in the frig I either give it to the dog or if it’s a weekend, shred it and make hot sandwiches (that way it doesn’t look like leftovers). If I were smart I should have made double and froze a batch, but the freezer is quite full. Dog food and constantly breaking ice maker, I know.

So for two:
1 pound (I did about 18 oz) chuck steak, cut into even bite-sized cubes about 1″x1″
2 medium onions, halved, peeled and thinly sliced
4 slices good bacon (I used applewood smoked from the butcher), cut in 1/4″ sticks
1 bottle of brown ale (thereabouts, I used too much, saving two T to taste
salt, pepper, thyme
1/2 c flour

I started by putting a heavy skillet on the stove and starting the bacon to brown with just a tsp or two of neutral oil. Prep the onions, adding as the bacon has given off its fat and is just beginning to brown. Add salt and pepper, about 1 tsp of dried thyme. Stir, letting everything get cooked and soft while you work on the meat.

Toss the beef cubes with the flour and if you’ve too much flour, shake out into a sieve. Remove the cooked onions and bacon to a colander over a bowl. Add oil to the pan and start browning the beef on all sides (salt, pepper and a pinch of thyme). Add up to 2 tsp bacon fat from the bowl for flavor. When the beef is browned, turn down the skillet a bit and add enough beer to almost cover. Stir to get the good browned stuff off the bottom of the pan.

At this time you can cover the pan and simmer for at least 90 minutes until beef cubes nearly fall apart. What happens to me with an electric stove is that if I put it at 2 it boils, at 1 it doesn’t do anything so I decided what the heck, I’ll do it in the oven!

I took a 2 qt Pyrex covered casserole, added the stew, covered it and placed it in a 325 degree oven. Twenty minutes later it wasn’t simmering so I turned it to 350, then 325, then 300. I cooked it for nearly 2.5 hours and it was melt-in-your-mouth tender. The best in perhaps fifty tries.

This recipe is different every time I make it but, trust me, it was the best, even though I used (and washed) a lot of dishes.

As to the beer, I don’t think Bud would do. Newcastle Brown Ale is something you might find in a larger bottle in a higher-end grocery. Today I used Saint Arnold’s, from Texas’ first microbrewery. Cooking for two, it took less than one bottle and I could have probably gotten away with using 2/3 or 3/4 bottle but it’s always nice to sop up extra gravy with a slice of fresh French bread!

Try it and let me know what you think! I love summer cooking but seasonal cooking is what awakens our taste buds and lets us know the leaves are turning, well, not here but somewhere, and that there is comfort food around the corner. Cheers! Dee

Chicken Fajitas

We had my fajitas this evening. I marinated two whole chicken breasts, skinned and boned and sliced into strips. I marinated them in a couple of limes worth of juice, salt and pepper, and cayenne. This was done last after I used the knife and board to do all the veggies for sanitation purposes.

Started with one red and one orange pepper, seeded and cut into strips. One large yellow onion, halved, peeled and sliced into similarly sized strips. After the chicken had marinated an hour or so, I sauteed them for 20 minutes or so with salt and pepper until caramelized and soft.

I made guacamole with two soft Haas avocados, mashed with juice of 1/2 lime with a fork in a bowl, add salt and pepper and some pico de gallo (make your own or look in the refrigerator section). Place in a small bowl, embed one of the pits on top and place plastic wrap directly on the surface to keep from getting brown.

Small flour tortillas, ten for the two of us. I saute these in a dry hot pan until they puff and soften and keep between two plates to keep warm while dinner is cooking.

Add drained chicken strips to the veggies and stir-fry until cooked through. Serve with tortillas, guacamole, sour cream, shredded cheese, pico de gallo or salsa of choice, and wedges of lime.

Jim will only order beef fajitas in restaurants and isn’t a fan of chicken but he loves this recipe! p.s. my sister puts a bit of tequila in the chicken marinade for flavor. Enjoy! Dee