Archive for the ‘Main Dishes’ Category

Grilling Out: Yummy Honey Chicken Kabobs

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Continuing with our season of grilling recipes, I wanted to try another variation on our chicken kabobs. I have to say that the Rosemary Ranch Chicken Kabobs are my new favorite around here, but as much as I like those, my husband likes these yummy honey chicken kabobs. This marinade can be prepared up to a day before and makes a deliciously sweet (but not too sweet) meat. The flavors remind me a little bit of those port-a-pit chickens that are sold for fundraisers… just as messy, but not half as greasy.

We were nearing our grocery day so I wasn’t able to marinate any fresh veggies, but this marinade would work perfectly with whatever you might have in your crisper. With a little fresh fruit and some brown rice, it is a healthy and fun dinner for the whole family.

Keep a few napkins on hand for those sticky fingers!

Yummy Honey Chicken Kabobs (Adapted from AllRecipes)

1/4 cup canola oil
1/3 cup honey
1/3 cup soy sauce
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
8 skinless, boneless chicken breast halves – cut into 1 inch cubes (I used one bag thawed frozen chicken breasts)
2 cloves garlic
5 small onions, cut into 2 inch pieces
2 red bell peppers, cut into 2 inch pieces
Skewers
In a large bowl, whisk together oil, honey, soy sauce, and pepper. Before adding chicken, reserve a small amount of marinade to brush onto kabobs while cooking. Place the chicken, garlic, onions and peppers in the bowl, and marinate in the refrigerator at least 2 hours (the longer the better). Preheat the grill for high heat. Drain marinade from the chicken and vegetables, and discard marinade. Thread chicken and vegetables alternately onto the skewers. Lightly oil the grill grate. Place the skewers on the grill. Cook for 12 to 15 minutes, until chicken juices run clear. Turn and brush with reserved marinade frequently.
If you actually have any meat leftover (which is debatable in our house), I love to put these on top of a salad the next day. The chicken is still surprisingly juicy even after being zapped in the microwave and it has been a wonderful way to spice up my daily salads for lunch!

Looking for more great recipes? Visit our Food page, Recipes page, or The Aldi Queen for more great dinner ideas! Don’t forget to jot your menu down with our free menu planner worksheet.

Grilling Out: Rosemary Ranch Chicken Kabobs

Monday, May 10th, 2010

Kabobs are my new favorite food this summer and I have been trying a few new recipes out on our family, as we kick off another season of great grilling. The marinated shrimp kabobs are my kid’s new favorite seafood dish, but these Rosemary Ranch Chicken Kabobs are my new favorite summer dish and I can’t wait to make them again.

The rosemary and ranch add such a wonderful depth of flavor to the chicken and these come off the grill so juicy! For this dish, I not only marinated some chicken in a container, but I also marinated some red peppers in a separate container so that I could do a few vegetable kabobs as a side dish. Could you marinate them together safely? A lot of people do, but I wanted my vegetables nice and crisp and I wanted my chicken to be fully cooked so I opted for two separate kabobs instead of pairing them together. The red peppers were ready to come off the grill in six minutes, while the chicken still needed another six to be fully cooked so it seemed like a good idea to separate them!

I have become a huge fan of those disposable containers for marinating foods because they are so easy to transport out to our grill and are easy to stack, especially if you are headed out for a picnic. It may also be because I have had  a few too many leaky bags in my fridge so I find these to be a great option for me!  These freezer containers plus our handy dandy meat thermometer have made grilling out practically foolproof and have streamlined our grilling effortlessly.

I love to stick these, marinade and all, in the freezer and prep a few different marinades in one afternoon. Most marinades have similar base ingredients (dressings, olive oil, vinegars, salt, pepper, seasonings, Worcestershire sauce, etc..) and it is so much easier to do this all at once rather than getting them out each time. What a time saver!

If you actually have any meat leftover (which is debatable in our house), I love to put these on top of a salad the next day. The chicken is still surprisingly juicy even after being zapped in the microwave and it has been a wonderful way to spice up my daily salads for lunch!

Rosemary Ranch Chicken Kabobs (Courtesy of AllRecipes)

1/2 cup olive oil
1/2 cup ranch dressing
3 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
1 tablespoon minced fresh rosemary (If you haven’t planted rosemary yet like me, 1 teaspoon of the dried stuff works great!)
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon white vinegar
1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper, or to taste
1 tablespoon white sugar, or to taste (optional)
5 skinless, boneless chicken breast halves – cut into 1 inch cubes

In a medium bowl, stir together the olive oil, ranch dressing, Worcestershire sauce, rosemary, salt, lemon juice, white vinegar, pepper, and sugar. Let stand for 5 minutes. Place chicken in the bowl, and stir to coat with the marinade. Cover and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Preheat the grill for medium-high heat. Thread chicken onto skewers and discard marinade. Lightly oil the grill grate. Grill skewers for 8 to 12 minutes, or until the chicken is no longer pink in the center, and the juices run clear.

For an easy way to get the grill and patio equipment ready for summer, be sure to visit our Gearing Up for Summer article!

Do you freeze marinades or have a time-saving strategy for grilling? Please share here!

Perfectly Pulled Pork Sandwiches With Root Beer Floats

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

The slow cooker is an appliance that typically gets a lot of use in the fall and winter months for delicious soups, stews, roasts, and hearty slow cooked dinners. In our family, we do a lot of slow cooking in the winter, but I have to say that when the grill isn’t humming at our house in the summer, the slow cooker is humming in the kitchen.

Slow cookers can keep your house nice and cool and are a perfect alternative for a fast weeknight meal when you would rather spend the day at the beach or park with your kids and don’t want to fuss with meat preparation. There is nothing like a lazy day poolside and getting to come home to a meal that is fully cooked and ready when you walk through the door.

We decided to try a new Pulled Pork Sandwich recipe that will now be going into our regular meal rotation. The original recipe called for using a pork tenderloin, but after a long talk with the great guy at the meat counter, I was informed that a Boston  Butt would work just perfectly…To which my daughter burst into a fit of giggles and swung her head out of her little grocery cart/car and said, “Ewww, mommy.  He said to eat butt.” Ah, the mouths of babes!

What makes this pulled pork recipe special  is the slow cooking of the pork in a  little hot tub bath of root beer. After a quick drain and the easiest meat shredding of your life, the meat is tossed with your favorite barbecue sauce and served on a crusty roll.

I decided to buy a 2-liter of soda and let the kid’s have a special dinner treat- super yummy root beer floats. Sometimes it is the simplest pleasures in life that bring us the most joy.  Sipping on these was definitely a joyful moment and the sandwiches were absolute perfection. I highly recommend adding this recipe to your summertime meal rotation.

Remember that we offer free printable menu planners and 30 Days With Your Slow Cooker filled with ideas for making meal planning easier in these warmer weather days!

Perfectly Pulled Pork Sandwiches (Adapted from All Recipes)

1 (4 pound) Boston butt (or pork shoulder)
1 (12 fluid ounce) can or bottle root beer
1 (18 ounce) bottle your favorite barbecue sauce
8 hamburger buns, split and lightly toasted

Place the pork meat  in a slow cooker; pour the root beer over the meat. Cover and cook on low until well cooked and the pork shreds easily (I cooked for eight hours).  Shred the meat and drain the root beer from the slow cooker. Stir in barbecue sauce and toss gently. Serve over hamburger buns with root beer floats.

Do you use your slow cooker in the summer? What is your favorite summertime slow cooker recipe?

Marinated Grilled Shrimp With Perfect Margaritas

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Grilling season is upon us and I am so excited to try out some new grilling recipes for the summer. One thing I have had yet to try was throwing some shrimp on our grill for a weeknight meal. Shrimp is not something that my son is very fond of, but I keep trying new shrimp recipes, hoping that one recipe will finally convert him.

Thanks to this little recipe, I can finally say that my entire family loves shrimp. There was not a single bite of shrimp left on the plates and, in my husband’s words,  “You have always cooked really good, but this takes your cooking to whole new levels!”  Embarrassingly enough, this required little work other peeling the shrimp, mixing of ingredients for a marinade, and skewering the  shrimp for grilling. I will gladly accept compliments and kisses for all of my “hard work.”

Buying the shrimp at Aldi made it a very affordable weeknight meal. A one pound bag of uncooked medium easy peel shrimp only costs $3.99. I served it with our favorite baked brown rice (switching the water for chicken broth and adding in the zest of one lemon to make it a better accompaniment for seafood), and a bag of frozen baby peas.

This shrimp tastes exactly like something you would eat at a fancy restaurant and it is bursting with flavor. It is unbelievable how these simple pantry ingredients can make the shrimp taste so good, but I doubt I will ever make another shrimp recipe again!

It is the perfect dish to entertain with since it can be served hot or cold. The marinade adds so much flavor that there is no need for any special sauce accompaniment. You have to love anything that only requires four or five minutes on the grill and is still wildly impressive to your dinner guests.

I hope you will enjoy this as much as we have and I am sure this recipe will be served weekly during the summer months!

Marinated Grilled Shrimp (Adapted from AllRecipes)

3 cloves garlic, minced
1/4  cup olive oil
1/4 cup tomato sauce
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons chopped fresh basil (I omitted because we did not have any on hand)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 pound fresh shrimp, peeled and deveined
Skewers

In a large bowl, stir together the garlic, olive oil, tomato sauce, and red wine vinegar. Season with basil, salt, and cayenne pepper. Add shrimp to the bowl, and stir until evenly coated. Cover, and refrigerate for 1-2 hours, stirring once or twice. Preheat grill for medium heat. Thread shrimp onto skewers, piercing once near the tail and once near the head. Discard marinade. Lightly oil grill grate. Cook shrimp on preheated grill for 2 to 3 minutes per side, or until opaque.

Side Note: Don’t forget to soak your wooden skewers for ten to fifteen minutes in a container of water to prevent them from burning, before you thread your shrimp!

And in honor of Cinco de Mayo, next week, I would highly recommend serving up some tortilla chips with salsa and a pitcher of these perfect margaritas. This was a recipe that I have adapted over the years since discovering it on jane’s apron. Each time I serve these, someone asks me for the recipe or what mix I bought to make them. These are so incredibly easy and can be adapted to your personal taste…and alcoholic strength.

Perfect Margarita

1 can of frozen limeade
1 can of water (the empty can from your limeade is what you are using)
1/2 can of tequila
1 bottle or can of your favorite beer (I love Michelob Ultra or a Carona in this one!)

Mix the ingredients in a pretty pitcher and watch your friend’s eyes light up at how delicious these are! One pitcher makes roughly four servings.

What is your favorite thing to throw on the grill in the summertime? Recipes and ideas are all welcome here!

Deliciously Frugal: Salmon Patties & Perfect Baked Potatoes

Monday, April 12th, 2010

One of my fondest memories growing up was the night my grandmother came to our house and cooked for us. Her specialty for those nights was a big batch of salmon patties, created with canned salmon and saltine crackers from the pantry, with a side of her fried potatoes. My mom always served it with a little mayo for dipping and we always left the table clutching our bellies.

While catching up on my DVR recordings, I caught an episode of  Ten Dollar Dinners that featured the almighty salmon patty. I loved the uniqueness of the recipe and amazingly had everything already in my pantry to make this dish.

What made this recipe such a standout for me happened to be the  unique ingredients that were added in. The use of lemon zest within the patty and a baked potato to stretch the salmon made it one of those recipes I just had to try. The breadcrumb coating made with Italian breadcrumbs and grated Parmesan made this taste like something served at a fancy seafood restaurant and a little squirt of fresh lemon juice turned this can of salmon into something spectacular, barely resembling its formerly boring canned self!

To get the kids on board, we deemed the evening, “Crabby Patty Night,”  as any night with Sponge Bob Squarepants made it a little bit cooler. The kids devoured their patties, paired with my favorite baked brown rice, and roasted green beans on the side. My husband couldn’t stop eating them and I couldn’t believe that one can of salmon could be stretched that far for four people. We even had one patty leftover, which will go on top of my salad for a yummy weekday lunch.

I have modified the recipe because the patties were a little too wet for proper patties, I increased the lemon zest, prefer the taste of Italian breadcrumbs over the regular version, omitted bacon and onion in the patty, switched the cooking oil, decreased the mayo, and mixed in a little breadcrumbs to help hold them together and also to add some texture. Basically, I made my own version that was a little bit lighter and held together a little easier, but made a patty that was just as flavorful!  I will include the link to the original recipe, if you don’t want to try my version, but I recommend these adaptions for a great patty success story!

Salmon Cakes (Adapted from Food Network)

1 egg
1/4  cup mayonnaise
1/4 cup Italian breadcrumbs (mixed into the patty mixture)
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1 lemon, zested
1 (14-ounce) can wild salmon, checked for large bones
1 baked or boiled russet potato, peeled, and fluffed with a fork (please see my notes below for a great baked potato)
1/4 cup Italian bread crumbs
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup canola oil

Mix the egg, mayonnaise, mustard, sugar, and lemon zest in a bowl. Add the salmon, potato, and 1/4 cup Italian breadcrumbs,  mixing gently after each addition. Form the mixture into 12 small patties using an ice cream scoop for even patties.  In a shallow dish, combine the bread crumbs, Parmesan, and pepper, to taste. Coat the patties in the bread crumb topping. Heat 1/4 cup of the canola oil in a large saute pan over medium heat, and cook the salmon cakes in batches until golden, about 3 to 4 minutes per side. Add more oil, as necessary. Arrange on a serving platter and serve.

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I love, love, love eating baked potatoes for a yummy summertime lunched paired with a big salad and a cold-brewed iced coffee. Baked potatoes wrapped in tin foil are a big no-no for me. I like mine drizzled with a tiny bit of olive oil and sprinkled liberally with a little coarse salt. Bake these at 400 for one hour and you will have the perfect potato every single time.

The bonus is that after you rub these potatoes with the olive oil and salt, you can give your hands a salty scrub before you rinse them off!

The Perfect Baked Potato

Baking potatoes
Olive oil
Coarse Salt

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Wash baked potatoes thoroughly and prick eight to twelve times with a fork. Drizzle olive oil and sprinkle salt over the potatoes. Rub, rub, rub.  Bake the potatoes uncovered on a cookie sheet for one hour  or until the skin feels crisp and the skin is soft.

Try to make a few extra baked potatoes whenever you bake any. These are great to pop into lunches or can be diced and fried up for perfectly fried potatoes to go along with your breakfast or for a cheap side dish.

What is your favorite frugal pantry item you like to keep on hand? Feel free to share any recipes or ideas for saving with pantry ingredients!

How to Save Time, Money, & Make the Perfect Pizza

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

About five years ago, I decided to stop buying pizzas and started making my own at home. We eat pizza every Friday and the kids look forward to it all week long. As I was preparing the dough this past week, I started thinking about the amount of money I have saved for our family on just this simple and lovely tradition of preparing the family pizza.

If you think about it, it is safe to say that we would spend $15 on a pizza for our family of four. If you multiply that number by four, I am saving us $60 each month on this tiny gesture of savings. If you calculate that over the course of a year, it is $720! Then when I think about  the five years that I have been doing this, I realize that I have saved my family, $3,600 on a little moment of effort.

Maybe you have never made pizza before and are a little intimidated by the process- that is okay! I promise that once you find the perfect recipe that creating pizza at home will be easier than you think! The  process takes practice and a little patience, but once you find the best recipe for your family, you will be sailing through the process in no time at all!

Let’s start with some tips to get you started!

It’s All About the Stone– One of the best investments I ever made in my  kitchen was to buy a pizza stone. I have two of them that I use to make our pizza and the other is used for an additional pizza or cheese bread. Mine came from Pampered Chef, which I absolutely love, but there are many examples of stones you can find on Amazon. On occasion, I have also seen them at discount places like TJ Maxx or Marshall’s in the housewares section.

The stone is the only real investment that I have ever had to make in this process. The only other major tool that is nice to have on hand is a bread machine, stand mixer, or food processor for mixing the dough. Extra tools that can be of use are a  pastry brush, a rolling pin (unless you are good at shaping and throwing dough without a rolling pin), a dough scraper, and a pizza cutter are also great tools to have for pizza night.

Buy Your Baking Supplies in Bulk- I don’t use my wholesale club membership very often except for our family’s eye care needs and for the occasional party. I won’t ever let my membership lapse though because with one trip to buy my baking supplies, my wholesale club membership has earned its space in my wallet. I make a trip twice a year to buy all of the necessary supplies for my baking and pizza-making needs.

Don’t believe me? Here is the current prices from my local Sam’s Club:

25 Pounds Bread Flour- $6.59 (needed depending upon the recipe)

25 Pounds All-Purpose Flour- $6.68 (needed depending upon the recipe)

2 Pounds of Yeast- $4.16

Cheese (5 pounds for $10.43) , pepperoni (5 pounds for $11.88), and crushed tomatoes (102 ounces for $2.68) can also be bought at a fraction of the price, but in the past I have lacked the capacity and ambition of storage for all of the ingredients.

Food storage for my baking ingredients though  is easy because I just store the two containers of flour in under-the-bed storage containers and use coffee mugs for scooping into my flour container. I also keep the yeast in a mason jar in the fridge for quick grabbing on pizza day.

As a side note, if you do own a membership to Sam’s Club, they have a wonderful Click ‘N Pull service that you can utilize for your shopping day and they can pull the ingredients right to the front and email you when your order is ready to pick up. This is a fantastic free service for moms with small children or who are short on time!

Bag it Up– Half of the battle for me is getting all of the ingredients out and assembling them for our pizza night. Instead of doing this process once a week, I started bagging four bags of  ingredients at a time and storing them until our pizza nights roll around. Add a label to the front with what liquid ingredients need to be added, and then enjoy a month of Fridays with minimal effort.

To save a little extra money, hang on to those bags and refill them again with a fresh set of dry ingredients instead of discarding them. Not only will this save you a little green, but the effort is an environmentally conscious one too! Other great options for storage could be a reusable container or, depending on the quantity, a large mason jar.

Hit the Salad Bar– If you don’t want to waste money and only need a handful of vegetables for your pizza, consider visiting the salad bar at your grocery store for the toppings. Salad bars are a great place to visit for a colorful splash to your pizza or to make a supreme pizza without making the grocery investment of buying several vegetables that may not get eaten.

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Over the years, I have tried dozens of pizza dough recipes depending on what we had on hand, how many mouths I needed to feed, and just to add a little variation into our routine. I hope that these recipes will give you some ideas for ways to incorporate a homemade pizza night into your routine. Choose your recipe (based on your cooking equipment) and then jump down to the Friday Night Pizza Routine for cooking directions. It is as easy as that!

Basic Pizza Dough For Beginners (Courtesy of America’s Test Kitchen Baking Book)

4- 4 1/4 cups bread flour

1 envelope (2 1/4 teaspoons) instant or rapid-rise yeast

1 1/2 teaspoons salt

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 1/2 cups warm water

To make this dough in the food processor: Pulse 4 cups of the flour, yeast, and salt together in a food process (fitted with a dough blade if possible) to combine. With the processor running, pour the oil, then water through the feed tube and process until a rough ball forms, 30-40 seconds. Let the dough rest for two minutes then process for 30 seconds longer. If after 20 seconds the dough is sticky and clings to the blade, add the remaining 1/4 cup flour one tablespoon at a time as needed.

Turn the dough out onto a lightly floured counter and form it into a smooth, round ball. Place the dough in a large, lightly oiled bowl and cover tightly with greased plastic wrap. Let rise in a warm place until doubled in size, 1 to 1 /2 hours before using.

To make this dough with the bread machine: Add ingredients as follows- warm water, olive oil, flour, salt, and then add yeast at the top. Turn machine on and select the dough setting. When the machine beeps, you can roll out the dough onto your pizza stone/pan.

Now follow the Friday Night Pizza routine below.

Add a side of cheese bread:

Because of the amount of dough this makes, I am able to make one large pizza and an order of cheese bread on the side. To make the cheese bread, just roll out the dough and then brush with olive oil and then sprinkle garlic salt and Italian cheese blend or mozzarella cheese on top. I bake this at 450 degrees for twelve minutes or until the cheese and dough is a nice golden color. Serve with an extra side of sauce, highlighted in the pizza routine below.

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Basic Pizza Dough (courtesy of “How to Cook Everything,” by Mark Bittman)

1 teaspoon instant or rapid-rise yeast
3 cups all-purpose or bread flour, plus more as needed
2 teaspoons coarse kosher or sea slat, plus extra for sprinkling
1 to 1 1/4 cups water
2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon olive oil

Combine the yeast, flour, and 2 teaspoons salt in the container of a food processor. Turn the machine on and add 1 cup water and the 2 tablespoons of oil through the feed tube. Process for 30 seconds, adding more water, a little at a time, until the mixture forms a ball and is slightly sticky to the touch. If it is dry, add another tablespoon or two of water and process for another 10 seconds. Turn the dough onto a floured work surface and knead by hand a few seconds to form a smooth, round dough ball. Grease a bowl with the remaining olive oil, and place the dough in it. Cover with plastic wrap or a damp cloth and let it rise in a warm draft-free area until the dough doubles in size, 1 to 2 hours. You can cu this rising time short if you are in a hurry or you can let the dough rise more slowly in the refrigerator for six to eight hours.

To make this dough by hand: Combine half the flour with the salt and yeast and stir to blend. Add 1 cup water and the 2 tablespoons olive oil; stir with a wooden spoon until smooth. Add remaining flour a bit at a time; when the mixture becomes too stiff to stir with a spoon, begin kneading, adding as little flour as possible- just enough to keep the dough from being a sticky mess. Knead until smooth but still quite moist, about ten minutes. Proceed as above.

To make this dough with a standing mixer: The machine must be fairly powerful or it will stall. Combine half the flour with the salt, yeast, 2 tablespoons olive oil, and 1 cup water; blend with the machines paddle. With the machine on slow speed, add flour a little at a time until the mix has become a sticky ball that pulls away from the sides of the bowl (switch to the dough hook if necessary). Knead for a minute by hand, adding as little flour as possible, then proceed as above.

To make this dough with the bread machine: Add ingredients as follows- warm water, olive oil, flour, salt, and then add yeast at the top. Turn machine on and select the dough setting. When the machine beeps, you can roll out the dough onto your pizza stone/pan.

Now follow the Friday Night Pizza routine below.

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Pizza Hut Style Pizza Dough

1 1/3 cups water
2 tsp sugar
1 1/4 tsp salt
2 Tbsp olive oil
2 Tbsp cornmeal
3 1/4 cups flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1/4 tsp onion powder
1 1/2 tsp yeast

To make this with the bread machine: Add ingredients to bread machine, according to manufacturer’s settings, and run dough setting. After the machine beeps, roll out the dough. You can roll the dough into two 9×13″ pizzas,  two medium pizzas, or a large pizza and one order of breadsticks.

Now follow the Friday Night Pizza routine below.

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Now that you have the dough, it is time to make some pizza. Regardless of the dough, my approach towards making the pizza is always the same.

Amy’s Friday Night Pizza Routine

1 ball of pizza dough
1 1/2 cups mozzarella cheese
1/2 cup 5 or 4 cheese blend
Toppings of your choice
1 can crushed tomatoes
1 teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 450 degrees. While the oven is preheating, cook the crushed tomatoes, sugar, and salt in a pot over low heat for fifteen minutes. Bake the crust only for eight to ten minutes. Pull the crust out and then top with the crushed tomatoes, mozzarella cheese, 5-cheese blend, and toppings of your choice. Put pizza back in and cook for ten to twelve minutes or until the cheese is bubbly and the crust is nicely browned.

Do you make pizza at home? What is your routine and recipes for making this family night favorite?

Chicken, Broccoli, & Fusilli in Garlic Cream Sauce

Monday, March 8th, 2010

We had much to celebrate this weekend because my husband’s 31st birthday is this week. We wanted to have a little dinner party with his family for this special day. After all, you only turn 31 once!  His mom brought the cake and I set to work on a special birthday dinner to celebrate my hubby and all that he does for us.

I have had this dish in my recipes forever and thought it would be the perfect choice for our birthday dinner. Over the years, I have changed different ingredients in it, lightened the dish, and added my own spin to the recipe. I paired this with homemade breadsticks, dipping sauce (using my pizza sauce recipe listed in my pizza routine), tossed salad, and pink lemonade.

The garlic cream sauce is light and lovely and just the perfect balance of garlic. Don’t be scared of the amount of garlic that goes into this because as it cooks it just gets sweeter and more delicious. The bits of chicken mixed with the pasta and cheese makes for a yummy combination that is just like something you would eat in any fancy Italian restaurant.

The dish though is surprisingly affordable and I was able to find all of the ingredients at Aldi Supermarket. The only splurge is the cup of wine in the dish, but I just measured some out of the box of wine we keep in the fridge. You could also substitute this with an additional cup of chicken broth, if you would like!


It was a wonderful celebration and the food was a hit… especially with the birthday boy! I hope you can add this to your menu one day- I promise that it won’t disappoint!

Chicken, Broccoli & Fusilli in Garlic Cream Sauce
Adapted from Epicurious.com

5 cups broccoli florets (from about 1 large bunch)
1 pound fusilli or other corkscrew pasta (you could also do a whole wheat rotini)
2 tablespoons olive oil
3 tablespoons chopped garlic (about 8 cloves or 3 tablespoons of jarred minced garlic)
3 large skinless boneless chicken breast halves, cut into 1/2″ strips (see alternate cooking instructions below)
1 cup dry white wine
1 cup canned low-salt chicken broth
1 cup half & half
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese

Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add the fusilli pasta to the water. Cook as directed, but in the last four minutes throw in the broccoli florets to cook with the pasta for the last four minutes. Meanwhile, heat oil in heavy large skillet over high heat. Add garlic and chicken and sauté until chicken is just cooked through, about 3 minutes. Remove the chicken. To the same pan, add wine, broth and half & half to skillet and boil until sauce thickens slightly, about 8 minutes. Add pasta, broccoli, chicken and cheese to sauce and toss until mixture is heated through and coated evenly with sauce.

Quick Note About Cooking Chicken in Bulk

I don’t keep a lot of fresh chicken around and prefer to buy the frozen chicken breasts instead. There is money to be saved in buying and preparing whole chickens, but my family only likes white meat  so for convenience sake (and to get them to eat it), we stick to the chicken breasts.

I buy the 3 pound bag of chicken from Aldi and cook and dice all of the chicken for the week. The chicken is then ready to go to be made into wrap sandwiches, fast paninis, a protein addition to my salads for lunch, and it helps me save a step for our dinners for the week.

It is a matter of preference how you like to cook your chicken, but I will share my favorite way that I do weekly!

Roasted Chicken Breasts for Bulk Cooking

Preheat the oven for 375 degrees. Spread the frozen chicken breasts out over one or two cookie sheets. Drizzle a little olive oil over the chicken breasts and then sprinkle with kosher salt and fresh black pepper. Bake for 45-50 minutes or until the chicken is cooked through. Allow the chicken to rest ten to fifteen minutes (to allow the juices to redistribute within the meat). Dice or shred for your recipes for the week.

Do you cook any of your meat in bulk for your recipes? Feel free to share your techniques for bulk cooking here!

Simply Delicious Apple Pork Chops

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Have you ever had a recipe in your to-be-tried pile for years and finally get around to it and wonder, “Why the heck didn’t we eat this sooner?” This recipe has been gathering dust in my house and I decided to finally shake the dust off and try a new pork chop dish for a new weeknight meal.

The skeptics in my house were not impressed with my enthusiasm of pairing apples with pork chops and it took a lot of coaxing to take them over to the dark side of this deliciously sweet pork combination. Before the end of the dinner though, I had sold everyone on the idea of pairing these ingredients and decided that this would be a great meal to add to our rotation.

It is a satisfyingly sweet and savory dish that pairs ingredients that I typically have around our house. The brown sugar and cinnamon sauce adds a delicious glaze to this perfectly cooked pork.  Baking the pork helps it to achieve the perfect temperature and my husband couldn’t believe how tender these chops were.

The best part for me about this dish though is the timing of other dishes and being able to cook an entire meal at the same temperature.  Paired with my roasted green beans and a side of baked brown rice, dinner was all baking along together and I was enjoy a magazine reading before the dinner chaos. I love when everything can bake at the same time so I don’t have to stand over the stove!

Simply Delicious Apple Pork Chops (Adapted from Recipezaar)

1 tablespoon olive oil
4 pork chops (1/2-inch thick)
1/2 teaspoon salt
ground black pepper
2 apples, peeled cored, and sliced (I used Granny Smith apples)
3 tablespoons brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
3/4 cup apple juice

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Heat oil in large skillet. Brown the pork chops on both sides in oil. Place chops in a baking dish just large enough so they do not overlap and sprinkle them with salt and pepper. In a small bowl, combine the brown sugar, cinnamon, apple juice, and and apples. Give them a toss together. Pour the mixture over the chops.
Pour over the chops. Cover and bake in the preheated oven for 30 to 45 minutes. (My chops took about 35 minutes, but it will depend on the thickness of the chops).

Comfort Food: Italian Meatloaf With Smashed Red Potatoes

Monday, February 15th, 2010

The weather has been so cold and the snow has been never ending. I won’t complain too loudly though because compared to my friends on the East Coast, I might as well be living in Hawaii.

On cold days like this, there is nothing like a little comfort food to warm your belly.  My go-to comfort food has always been meatloaf, mashed potatoes, and a little cornbread. Even as a little girl, it was my top request for my birthday meal every year. There is just something about those flavors that makes me happy.

Over the years my recipe for meatloaf varies depending on what is on sale and what flavor combination sounds good at the time.  This time I had red potatoes leftover from buying a big bag of them for our fancy steak dinner with rosemary potatoes, and I wanted to incorporate the potatoes in another recipe.  The Italian turkey sausage was on sale and I mixed that in with the ground beef (that was not on sale) to create this delicious combination.

Touching meat seriously grosses me out. I have a gag reflex watching people putting their hands in the bowls to mix ingredients when I watch Food Network. I find my pastry cutter to be a useful tool when mixing meat. This one from Pampered Chef has an extra long  handle and it works beautifully to mix things quickly. I guess I will never be a Food Network star because of this, but I am okay with it!

I hate to keep bringing up a recipe, but there is just no better accompaniment to a meatloaf dinner than a big batch of pumpkin cornbread muffins! If I make a batch of these, I can get my family to eat just about anything because they are so distracted by the bread.  This pretty picture also cancels out that icky picture of meat. I am so sorry about that!

Enjoy a little comfort food tonight and kick your feet up one evening by using your extra meatloaf from the freezer! Give yourself a night off and revel in the deliciousness of great comfort food and all that is warm!

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Italian Turkey Meatloaf (This will yield two meatloaves- one to eat, one to freeze)

2 pounds ground beef
2 pounds Italian turkey sausage, removed from the casings
1 cup seasoned bread crumbs
1 cup Parmesan cheese, grated
3- 8 oz can tomato sauce
2 eggs

In a large mixing bowl, lightly mix turkey, bread crumbs, cheese, 1 can of tomato sauce, and egg. Shape into two loaves in shallow baking dishes. Pour a can of tomato sauce over each of the meatloaves. Sprinkle top with garlic salt.  Bake one loaf uncovered at 350 for 1 1/4 hours. Baste several times while cooking. Freeze the other loaf (uncooked) for another meal later this month.

Side Note: I do not have a big problem with grease with the ground turkey, but grease can be a problem if you buy higher fat content ground beef.  If you are trying to cut back on the fat there is a very easy way to do it. Before patting the meatloaf into the pan, lay down two pieces of bread to soak up the drippings. Pat the ground turkey mixture in, over the bread, and the bread will catch the fat at the bottom. It will also help to keep the shape of the loaf.

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Smashed Red Potatoes (Courtesy of Allrecipes Dinner Tonight Cookbook)

2 pounds small red potatoes, scrubbed and quartered
1/2 cup butter
1/2 cup milk
1/4 cup sour cream
Salt and ground black pepper to taste

Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Add potatoes, cook until tender but still firm, about ten minutes. Drain and set aside. Add butter, milk, sour cream, and alt and pepper to taste to potatoes. Mash together until smooth.

Disclosure: The cookbook link is an affiliate link and is provided so you can locate the book quickly and easily. Feel free to order a book, but we encourage utilizing the library system and buying me a latte instead.  Wouldn’t that just be so much more lovely?

What is your go-to comfort food? Feel free to share your recipes and links!

The Best Steakhouse Dining Experience on a Poor House Budget

Monday, February 8th, 2010

About seven years ago, we lost the ability to run out and have dinner out whenever we wanted to. It began with a change in income… or a complete lack of income coming into our house. The decision to eat fancy dinners at home was solidified with the birth of our son and later our daughter.

As I became more acquainted with the kitchen though, we soon realized that dinners out just lacked that pizazz that we could easily get from home. The food was a bit better, (if the house was relatively tidy) the atmosphere was better, and we could spend a whole heck of a lot less and get a whole heck of a lot more.

It is funny, now even when we have help to watch our kids, we still gravitate towards eating at home. I remember having a gift card for a fancy restaurant in town and we ended up spending $75 on dinner. I looked across the table at my husband and he said, “It was good, but…I like your tilapia better.” Yeah, the tilapia that I buy for $4.99 a bag and prepare at home tasted better than the $25 of one fillet of tilapia plated in front of my hubby… sickening, isn’t it?

Pictured above is the dinner that my husband and I shared with no children on New Year’s Eve. For these fancy dinners at home, I break out our wedding china (of which we only own four place settings), get out the fine wedding stemware, and I splurge a little at the supermarket on ingredients I wouldn’t normally treat myself to.

As I was picking out our steaks behind the butcher counter, the lady that was weighing them for me told me that she was planning to buy a couple of them herself.

“Yes, we try to avoid dining out on NYE because the crowds are so bad, ” I shared with her as she packaged the meat.

She looked up at me smugly and said, “You know what we call going out to eat on NYE? My husband and I call it amateur night. Who would ever do that?”

We both giggled and I will now refer to NYE and Valentine’s Day dining out as that because it is so not fun to go out on those nights.

Don’t get stuck on amateur night, my friends, but do make it fun for yourself. Play with new ingredients, buy something pre-packaged that wouldn’t normally fit in your grocery budget, try a recipe that you wouldn’t normally “waste” your ingredients or time on, and throw on some good music to cook to.

Don’t make it the same old dinner that you usually do, but make it a delicious experience that you can treasure. I think having great ingredients and new recipes to indulge in makes cooking feel like fun instead of the same old dinner routine that I have to perform.

I am sharing our delicious menu that was absolute perfection for us that I hope will inspire a deliciously wonderful date night with your spouse! My husband said it was one of my finer moments in the kitchen and we still talk about how special that night was for both of us!  This dinner cost about $30 in ingredients (an entire bottle of fancy wine included), but we had enough leftover for two meals. You couldn’t get a dinner like this out for that price!

Steakhouse Steak Marinade (adapted from Recipezaar)

2 steaks (whatever is on sale and looks good)

2 tablespoon olive oil
2 garlic cloves, minced
2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce
2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar or white vinegar
2 teaspoons yellow mustard
2 tablespoon soy sauce
Freshly ground pepper

Mix all ingredients together and place steaks into freezer bag with marinade overnight. This makes enough marinade for two large steaks.

Below is an approximate timetable for how long to cook your steaks for a medium steak. I opt for a little shorter cooking time and prefer my meat to be medium rare. If you are unsure, a meat thermometer is the best gauge for the perfect steak!

Grilling Steak Timetable

Filet: 13-18 minutes

Ribeye, Boneless: 6-8 minutes

Ribeye, Bone-In: 9-12 minutes

T-Bone /Porterhouse: 14-16 minutes

Top Sirloin: 13-16 minutes

Strip, Boneless: 10-12 minutes

Cooking steak, to me, is not easy. I know it is not easy to a lot of other people too because I often get asked how to cook the perfect steak. Use the above timetable for steak as a loose guideline for how long to cook it. The best gauge for cooking will always be the scientific approach… a handy meat thermometer.

(Quick temperature guidelines: Rare is 120 degrees, Medium is 125 degrees, and Medium is 130 degrees)

More important than the degrees though is letting your meat rest. Don’t cut into it to check it when you pull it out of the pan. Give it plenty of time to let everything redistribute itself and then slice into it. That is the real secret to a deliciously juicy steak.

I love steak cooked out on the grill, but refuse to venture out there in the cold. Pictured above is my favorite tool for cooking steak and I got it at Goodwill! It is a cast iron grill pan that had rusted and been poorly cared for. I loved it up and got it in much better condition, and this is my favorite tool for cooking a beautiful steak without getting cold. I found one similar to it on Amazon, should you also be in the market for staying warm, and it costs less than $20!

Bella’s Rosemary Red Potatoes (adapted from Allrecipes Dinner Tonight Cookbook)

2 tablespoons butter, melted

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

8 small red potatoes, scrubbed and cut into wedges

1 tablespoon chopped rosemary

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon pepper

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Mix together melted butter and oil; pour into a 9×13″ baking dish. Place the potatoes into the dish and stir until coated. Sprinkle with rosemary, salt, and pepper. Cover with aluminum foil. Bake in the preheated oven for 30 minutes or until the potatoes are tender. Stir potatoes to ensure even cooking. Yields four servings.

Pan-Fried Asparagus (adapted from Allrecipes Dinner Tonight Cookbook)

1/4 cup butter

1 tablespoon olive oil

1/2 teaspoon coarse salt

1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper

3 cloves garlic, minced

1/2 pound fresh asparagus spears, trimmed

Melt butter in a skillet over medium-high heat. Stir in the olive oil, salt, and pepper. Cook garlic in butter for one minute, but do not brown. Add asparagus and cook for five to ten minutes or until crisp-tender, turning asparagus to ensure even cooking. Yields two servings.

This dinner was served with a loaf of french bread (on sale), festive bakery cupcakes (on sale), and a bottle of red wine (guess what? ON SALE!!)

Looking for more ways to celebrate Valentine’s Day on a budget? Be sure to read our article on enjoying a frugal Valentine’s Day this year!

Do you dine at home for special occasion or dine out? What recipes do you like to prepare on special occasion nights? Please share!