Archive for the ‘Food & Recipes’ Category

Skillet Penne and Sausage Supper

Monday, February 1st, 2010

You know when you have one of those moments that you know what you are planning to serve your family is going to to totally bomb at the dinner table, but you want to just make it for yourself anyway. This dish, I thought, would completely bomb at our house. It has spinach, sun-dried tomatoes, penne pasta instead of spaghetti, and white sauce instead of red. In short, it had vegetables and it wasn’t spaghetti.

The thing was, it didn’t bomb… in fact, everyone happily munched away. It might have been the right day for introducing new foods, it might have been that it was later than it usually was and everyone was starving, or it might have been because this dinner is so darn delicious.

Whatever the reason, it reminded me that many times my own fears about how my kids will feel about foods inhibits my cooking style.  I am often holding my own self back from introducing them to new foods because the stress of them not eating or rejecting what I am offering influences how I cook. It offered a reminder to me to keep on introducing those new foods, those new vegetables, those delicious nutrients and stop worrying so much!

The next night when I served sugared snap peas instead of the edamame that I had planned for our dinner hour because of a mix-up in the supermarket freezer section, my son found a new favorite food. My daughter still happily pulled the peas out and didn’t eat the skins, but it was a new food that they were willing to try.

Now that you know that this dish was a hit with my kids, I hope you might give it a try at your house. It is a recipe adapted from The America’s Test Kitchen Cookbook and what drew me to the recipe was the fact that it was a skillet supper.

Skillet suppers rock and are one of my favorite weeknight meals because it is a one pot dish which cuts down on clean-up and leaves me more time to read or watch a little American Idol this winter. The Skillet Ziti with Chicken and Broccoli and Cheeseburger Pasta both make fun weeknight skillet dinners minus those packages of Hamburger Helper. Secretly though, I just love Hamburger Helper… I hope that I won’t be rejected completely from the foodie community with that admission, but I believe it must be said!

Tonight enjoy a night free from a sink full of dishes and be proud to introduce your kids to new fun foods that embrace just a hint of vegetable-packed deliciousness!

Easy Skillet Penne and Sausage Supper (adapted from The America’s Test Kitchen Cookbook)
Serves Six

1 tablespoon olive oil
3 cloves garlic minced (I do buy the bottled variety at Aldi)
1 pound Sweet Italian Turkey Sausage Links (remove from the casing)
1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, chopped fine (I buy the packaged variety over by the potatoes in the produce section of Walmart, next to the garlic)
1/2 pound penne pasta
2 cups chicken broth – low-sodium
1 cup milk
1/2 cups grated Parmesan cheese
6 ounces baby spinach

Heat the oil in 12-inch nonstick skillet over medium heat until shimmering. Stir in the garlic and sausage and cook, breaking up the meat with a wooden spoon, until no longer pink, about 4 minutes. Sprinkle the penne evenly over the sausage. Pour the broth and milk over the pasta. Bring to a simmer, then reduce the heat to medium-low and cover. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the pasta is tender, about 10 minutes (it took mine around 15 minutes). Stir in the spinach a handful at a time, and cook until wilted, about 2 minutes. Stir in the Parmesan and sun dried tomatoes. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

Note: Italian pork sausage can be used here, however, you may need to spoon off some of the fat before adding the pasta. When you are adding the spinach, it may seem like a lot at first, but it wilts down substantially. Be sure to at least have a 12-inch wide skillet here– this recipe fills it nearly to the rim.

What are your kid’s favorite vegetables or favorite vegetable-packed dishes that you love to serve? Have you ever found yourself inhibited to serve things because you aren’t sure if they will like them? Feel free to share links to your favorite dishes!

Notebook Experiment: Tuscan Tomato Soup

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

The Tuscan Tomato Soup that was featured in the 01.13.10 notebook entry was, perhaps, one of the best bowls of soup I have ever eaten. I prepared it as was instructed except that I used half-and-half instead of the heavy cream that was listed in the ingredients. I noticed that the comments also recommended trying evaporated milk as a substitute for the cream. If you did that, the soup would be made entirely from pantry ingredients. You know that I adore a good pantry dish!

The ingredient that takes this soup to the next level is the addition of the pesto. It makes it so flavorful that you will have a hard time eating just one bowl.

We paired the soup with grilled cheese for dipping and my soup-hating family loved it. This is going into our meal rotation as a fun way to fancy up a good bowl of soup. Lucky for me, there was some leftover to pair with spinach salads for lunch!

Want to make the recipe? You can find the recipe over at this week for dinner!

Have you tried anything recently from the notebook? Please feel free to share links or feedback here!

Classic Orange Chiffon Cake

Monday, January 18th, 2010

We had some celebrating to do last week and celebrated my mother-in-law’s birthday. Some people have big ol’ pain in the butt mother-in-laws. Me? I think I might have scored the lottery on mine!  My husband’s family helps us so much with our kids and I try to throw her a little dinner each year to show her just what she means to me.

Wrapped beneath the tree this year, from my in-law’s, were two of my cookbook requests, “The Cake Doctor,” & “Chocolate from the Cake Doctor.” These are two books from the library that I had checked out so frequently that I felt that the library should charge me a fine for making them look so raggedy. I couldn’t wait to put these cookbooks to work and nothings says, “I love my Christmas present,” more than putting a present to good use.

I ran across a recipe for an Orange Chiffon Cake that sounded like a perfectly light ending to our delicious dinner. Chiffon cakes are deliciously moist and tender and their lightness comes from the beaten egg whites. It bakes high in the pan and, since you invert it, the flaws all are magically flipped to the bottom and are ready for a generous glazing.

The best part about this one though is that it uses a cake mix so it makes pulling a beautiful cake together a complete and utter breeze. A homemade glaze made from orange juice and confectioner’s sugar gives it all of the handmade beauty with another burst of orange flavor.

The fresh orange zest is what makes this cake a showstopper and the oranges are just beautiful this time of year. So beautiful, in fact, that I took pictures of them for a good twenty minutes and almost burned my cake. Whoops!

Classic Orange Chiffon Cake (Courtesy of The Cake Doctor)

5 large egg whites

1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar

1 package yellow cake mix

3 large egg yolks

3/4 cup orange juice

1/2 cup vegetable oil such as canola, corn, safflower, soybean, or sunflower (I used canola oil)

1/4 cup thawed frozen orange juice concentrate

1 teaspoon grated orange zest

Glaze:

2 cups confectioners’ sugar, sifted

3 tablespoons orange juice (I had to use 5 so you may need to increase this)

Place a rack in the center of the oven and preheat oven to 325 degrees. Set aside an ungreased 10″ tube pan. Place the egg whites and cream of tartar in a medium mixing bowl. Beat with an electric mixer on high speed until stiff peaks form. Set the bowl aside. Place the cake mix, egg yolks, orange juice concentrate, oil, and orange zest in a large mixing bowl, and with the same beaters used to beat the egg whites, blend with the electric mixer on low speed for one minute. Stop the machine and scrape down the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula. Increase the mixer to medium and beat for two more minutes, scraping the sides again if needed. The batter should look well blended.

Turn the beaten egg whites out on top of the batter and with the spatula, fold the egg whites into the batter until the mixture is light but well combined. Pour into the pan and place int he oven.

Bake until it is golden brown and springs back when pressed with your finger for 48-52 minutes (Mine took 48 minutes).  Remove the pan and immediately turn it upside down over the neck of a glass bottle to cool for one hour. Run a knife around the edge and invert it onto a rack and then invert it again on a serving platter so it is right side up.

For the glaze, place the confectioners’ sugar and orange juice in a medium mixing bowl. Blend with an electric mixer on low speed for one minute. Spread the glaze over the top and side of the cake. Let the glaze set for 20 minutes and then serve.

Side Note- After you measure out 1/4 cup of the thawed orange juice concentrate, prepare orange juice with the remaining concentrate by adding half as much water as the package directs. Use this orange juice in your cake batter and glaze.

What did everyone think about the cake? Sometimes pictures speak so much louder than words! Emily had her mouth open like this over the cake our entire dinner.  “Can we have cake now? How about now?”  We all dug into the cake after huge plates filled with Pot Roast Italiano, Orzo Pasta, & Roasted Green Beans.

It truly was the perfect ending to our celebration and will be going into my recipe rotation for years to come.

What cake is your favorite celebration cake? Please feel free to share your recipes or links to your showstopper cakes!

Shrimp Linguine Alfredo

Monday, January 11th, 2010

I decided to step out of my usual box this month and bought two packages of frozen shrimp to work into our menu plans this month.

My husband and I both really love shrimp, but it was a new food for the kids and I figured the best way to get them to eat it would be incorporating it into two new pasta dishes. Choosing pasta to work our  shrimp in also extended the amount of servings we could get from it. With this one dish,  we  had six large helpings helping to carry us through a couple of lunches too!

I decided to tweak the recipe a bit and added lemon zest into the sauce to give it a little kick. Adding this little extra in, a few slices of lemon to garnish on top, and the fresh parsley, brightened up the dish a lot and added to the fresh taste.

I choose the frozen, uncooked, peeled, and deveined shrimp for our dish from our supermarket (40 count bag was roughly $5. 84 at Walmart). Living in the Midwest, the fish doesn’t taste very fresh to me, and keeping it in the freezer kept a great dish on hand that would be worthy of a night of entertaining guests in your home.

As for the kids, we got two thumbs up from my daughter and one thumb down from my son. My son wasn’t a fan of the texture, but still ate the pasta. In my husband’s words, “That means there is just more for me!” Emily, on the other hand, loved this fun new food. One out of two isn’t too bad and I am happy to have a fresh new dish to add to the menu plans!

Shrimp Linguine Alfredo (Adapted from AllRecipes Dinner Tonight)

1 (12 ounce) package linguine pasta
1/4 cup butter, melted
1/4 cup diced onion (we omitted because we are not fans!)
1 tablespoon minced garlic
40 small, uncooked shrimp, peeled and deveined
1 cup half-and-half
Zest from two lemons
2 teaspoons ground black pepper
6 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
Garnishes: Fresh parsley, sprigs, lemon slices (use the lemons that you zested)

Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Add pasta and cook in boiling water for eight to ten minutes; drain. Meanwhile melt butter in a large saucepan. Saute the onion and garlic over medium heat until tender. Add shrimp; saute over high heat for one minute, stirring constantly. Remove shrimp into a bowl and set aside. Stir in half and half and add the zest of two lemons. Cook stirring constantly until your sauce thickens. Add shrimp back in and turn off heat. Place pasta in a serving bowl and cover with shrimp sauce. Sprinkle with black pepper and Parmesan Cheese. Toss to incorporate. Garnish if desired.

Does your family have a favorite seafood dish? Please share it here!

A Gingerbread Kind of Day

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Each year I make our family a giant batch of gingerbread waffles as soon as December hits. Much like our pumpkin waffles, these are a treat that our family looks forward to each year. It is a recipe worth doubling or tripling and enjoying with a mug of cocoa to warm your belly before beginning your busy day.

This year I decided a perfect pairing would be a gingerbread house making day. To be honest, I had never made a gingerbread house growing up. What a fun and special tradition to start in our house and the kids couldn’t wait to attempt decorating their houses for the first year as a family.


These houses were the miniature size and were perfect for my little helpers. I found them for $8.99 each on Amazon although I did see them for comparable prices at the craft store. Once again though, I used the Swagbucks to put towards these and saved them until we drew our gingerbread house day from our Advent Calendar.

Although I haven’t been completing official Notebook Experiments, we have still been doing a lot out of the Notebooks each week. The idea to use hot glue to hold the gingerbread houses together from The Idea Room was perhaps one of the most brilliant ideas ever. Although it wouldn’t fly in a Food Network competition, it worked perfectly for two impatient children who were ready to decorate their houses as soon as they were pulled from the box.





I had saved a sturdy deli tray from a sandwich order that we had place for party and used that to display our gingerbread house. A little shake of confectioner’s sugar over the top and the addition of our $1.99 lighted tree from The Christmas Tree Shoppe and it looked like an adorable little snow village on our thrifty budget. The kids admired their handiwork and I took a picture with the year on it so we could see how our houses evolve over the years.


Once we were done decorating it was time to mix up a big batch of our gingerbread waffles. There are few things I love during the holidays more than a giant gingerbread waffle. I found this recipe from Rachael Ray about four years ago and it has been a family tradition every year since then.

It incorporates all of the holiday flavors I love- molasses, ginger, cinnamon, brown sugar, pumpkin, and nutmeg. What more can I say?

The only downfall to this recipe… you can’t eat just one! I hope this recipe can grace your holiday table and be a family tradition for you too. Happy Holidays, everyone!

Gingerbread Waffles (courtesy of 30 Minute Meals)

3 cups all-purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1/2 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg, eyeball it
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 l
arge eggs
2/3 cup packed dark brown sugar
1 cup canned pumpkin puree
1 1/4 cups milk
1/2 cup molasses
1/2 cup (1 stick) melted butter, plus some to butter the iron
Syrup, whipped cream or fresh fruits for topping, to pass at table

Preheat waffles iron. In a large bowl combine flour, baking powder, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg and salt. In a medium bowl, beat eggs and brown sugar until fluffy, then beat in pumpkin, milk, molasses and melted butter. Stir the wet into dry until just moist. Do not overstir the waffle batter. Brush the iron with a little melted butter and cook 4 waffles, 4 sections each. Serve with toppings of choice.

Slow Cooker Beef Stew

Monday, November 23rd, 2009


Sometimes you just need something warm and satisfying and after an entire day of “playing” in the leaves, I knew that our family was up for just that kind of food!

As a nod to how far my culinary abilities have come, I love to share with people that I had no idea that beef stew was something you could make and was not something that came out of a can. Dinty Moore was what we had always ate growing up and it was served with a can of biscuits as a quick weeknight meal.

Imagine my surprise when one day I was watching Food Network and watched as someone made this dish out of common pantry items. To me, it was completely mind-blowing! I always think of that day as a turning point for me in the kitchen. It was that year that I made some of my greatest culinary discoveries and the year that I suffered through some of my biggest culinary failures.

Over the years, I have prepared this beef stew for our family hundreds of times. This beef stew is one of my favorite fall dishes to share around the dinner table after a busy day. It can be created in your slow cooker and cooked until you need it or it can be prepared in a pot and ready to go within an hour of cooking. Either way, it is a satisfying meal that will warm you up on the coldest day!

We serve our beef stew with a big batch of pumpkin cornbread muffins and cups of cider.

I hope you can indulge in this delicious dish one night in your house and be sure to check out our One Month of Slow Cooking for other great slow cooker dishes to prepare!

Slow Cooker Beef Stew

2 pounds beef stew meat – cubed
2.5 cups carrots
2.5 cups potatoes
1 cup celery
1 can diced tomatoes – with the juice poured in
1 can beef broth
1 cup water
1 tsp ground mustard
3 sprigs rosemary

Put beef in a zipper bag with a 1/4 cup of flour and toss to coat. Brown the meat in a skillet and place on the bottom of the crock pot. Coarsely chop vegetables and place on top of the meat. Pour in the can of diced tomatoes with juice, can of beef broth, water, and ground mustard. Place sprigs of rosemary on top and cook on high for four hours or on low for six to eight hours.

Oven-Version: Follow directions above, but fill the pot with the chopped vegetables after browning the meat. Pour in all of the additional ingredients and cook on low heat for one hour, stirring occasionally.

Easy Make-Ahead Recipes for Thanksgiving Day

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Over the years, I have shared many ideas that can be incorporated into your Thanksgiving planning. Today I just wanted to recap some of the best ideas and recipes that have been shared in one spot for your planning needs.


I had found a recipe for mashed potatoes that not only freeze beautifully, but they also can be reheated on low in the slow cooker. Both of these qualities make them a winner because I can keep the oven freed up for the other dishes and I can make them early.

Here is my recipe, adapted to our personal taste, perfect for any holiday get together! These are creamy and have a hint of tang to them from the sour cream. Sprinkle with a little paprika, if you so desire, and enjoy the convenience of pulling these out of your freezer for this holiday season.


Make-Ahead Mashed Potatoes
Serves 15

5 pounds of potatoes
1 block (8 oz) of low-fat cream cheese, softened
3/4 cup low fat sour cream
4 tablespoons butter
3/4 cup milk (or more if desired)
1 1/2 teaspoons salt

Peel potatoes and cut into small cubes. Throw the potatoes in a large pot filled with cold water. Cook for 25 minutes or until fork-tender. Drain the potatoes and put them back into the hot pot. Add cream cheese, butter, milk, and salt. Mash with a potato masher or use a hand mixer to whip the potatoes. Spoon mixture into a freezer-safe container and label.

Thanksgiving Day: Put potatoes in the fridge 1-2 days before to allow them to completely thaw. Spray slow cooker with cooking spray and put potatoes in the slow cooker. Brush the top of the potatoes with a tablespoon of butter and sprinkle with paprika. Cook on low for two to four hours.

If you would rather bake these, bake the potatoes at 350 degrees for thirty to forty minutes or until completely hot.

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I have roasted a lot of vegetables during my lifetime, but I can honestly say that I had never roasted green beans before. I saw a recipe for roasting green beans and knew I would have to try it. I decided to use what I had in my produce drawer and pantry to make this great little side dish that I know you will absolutely love.

The original recipe did call for fresh green beans, but I had a bag of the fancy frozen ones from Aldi in my freezer that I wanted to use. I added an extra ten-fifteen minutes cooking time for these and they were perfect for our taste. You can roast them longer, if you like, but this amount of time seemed to fit well for me.

While these can’t be made ahead, necessarily, they are quick cooking and could be thrown in the oven while you are carving the turkey. Within just a short time, you have an elegant side dish that will be elegantly plated with your turkey and mashed potatoes this year.

Roasted Green Beans

2 pounds fresh green beans (or a bag of frozen fancy green beans)
1-2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons minced garlic (I use the bottled garlic to save a little time)
Salt & Pepper
Zest from one lemon (save the juice for later)

Preheat your oven to 400 degrees. Grab a jelly roll pan and dump green beans on the pan. Sprinkle seasonings, lemon zest, and garlic over the green beans. Drizzle the olive oil over the green beans and then toss with your hands until they are all coated with the seasonings and zest. Spread out in a single layer and slide your cookie sheet into the oven. Roast fresh green beans for 20-25 minutes and roast frozen green beans for an additional 10-15 minutes. When they are done, pull from the oven and put them on a serving platter. Squeeze the lemon juice over the top (from the lemon you zested) and serve.

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This spread is unbelievably addictive and so festive on your holiday table. Just try and eat one cracker and don’t be surprised if you are scraping the bottom of the bowl by the end of the day. This was a hit with everyone in our family and a nice change from the traditional cheese ball.

Cranberry Spread

16 oz. cream cheese, softened
1 cup dried cranberries
1/4 c. orange juice

Do-Ahead: Mix all of the ingredients together and mold into a ball or leave loose as a spread. Wrap in plastic wrap, then wrap in foil, and store in a freezer bag. Make sure to label your bag so that you can find it again.

Thanksgiving Day: Let the spread thaw in the refrigerator 1-2 days before Thanksgiving. Place dip in a bowl (or on a platter if it has been molded into a ball) and serve with gingersnaps or crackers.

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This was my appetizer dish for a New Year’s Eve bash that my husband & I attended. My husband absolutely hates spinach so I wasn’t sure how well these would go over. If you can believe it, he really loved them so even if you aren’t a spinach lover these are definitely worth a try. The chicken flavored stuffing throws you off from the spinach and because the spinach is fully cooked, the texture of these is so great.

I love any appetizer that you can pop into your mouth gracefully. The spinach between the teeth though…well, you may still have that problem. I am planning to make these often for future nights of board game fun because they are portable and come together in a flash. To save yourself from cooking on the day of an event, make these ahead and keep them in the freezer.

Spinach Balls

2- 10 oz packages frozen spinach
1 package chicken-flavored stuffing mix
1 cup grated Parmesan cheese
6 eggs, lightly beaten
3/4 cup butter, melted
Salt & pepper to taste

Do-Ahead: Cook spinach according to instructions, drain in a sieve, use back of a wooden spoon to press the spinach against the sieve to get as much moi
sture as possible out In a bowl combine the spinach, stuffing mix,cheese, eggs, butter, salt& pepper Mix thoroughly& roll into small balls 3/4 to 1″ size. Place on a cookie sheet and freeze.

Thanksgiving Day: To serve place frozen balls on a cookie sheet and bake at 350F 10-15 minutes or until lightly browned If you are doing them fresh or thawed only bake for 7-10 minutes. Serve hot.

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I have prepared this recipe two ways for you! The first is the traditional way stuffed with cranberry deliciousness. The second version is as a muffin and minus the cranberries for the cranberry-haters. We have one of those in our family so I made the second batch just for him…To which my husband pronounced, “Perfection,” and then he swiftly ate three!

Because these are better the second day, this is just another example of something you can make in advance so you can kick your feet up while the turkey is cooking!

Pumpkin Cranberry Cornbread

1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup cornmeal
2/3 cup light brown sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 cup canned pumpkin puree
3/4 cup buttermilk (I substituted with regular milk and a teaspoon of vinegar to sour)
1/4 cup butter, melted
2 eggs, room
2 tablespoons honey
1 cup dried cranberries

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease a 8″ x 8″ baking pan or a 9-inch pie pan. In a bowl, toss together flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon. In another mixing bowl, mix with a wooden spoon, the pumpkin puree, sour cream or buttermilk , butter, eggs and honey, until well combined. Add the pumpkin mixture to the flour mixture just until combined. Mix in the cranberries. Transfer to a prepared baking dish. Bake for about 40 minutes, or until edges just begin to color. Cool to room temperature.



Pumpkin-y Cornbread Muffins (For the Cranberry Haters)

1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup cornmeal
2/3 cup light brown sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 cup canned pumpkin puree
3/4 cup buttermilk (I substituted with regular milk and a teaspoon of vinegar to sour)
1/4 cup butter, melted
2 eggs, room
2 tablespoons honey
Sugar for sprinkling (I used the raw sugar)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a muffin tin with muffin liners. In a bowl, toss together flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon. In another mixing bowl, mix with a wooden spoon, the pumpkin puree, sour cream or buttermilk , butter, eggs and honey, until well combined. Add the pumpkin mixture to the flour mixture just until combined. Transfer to the prepared muffin tin. Sprinkle with a little sugar (I used raw sugar) on top. Bake for about 20-25 minutes, or until edges just begin to color. Cool to room temperature. Makes approximately 12-13 muffins.

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I am still the biggest fan of my bread machine. I do realize that they aren’t for everyone. Some people love to knead dough and use their stand mixer to do the heavy duty mixing or even to do the process by hand. Not me! The bread machine is the way to go at this stage in my life and it is worth every inch of space that it takes up, residing on the top of the refrigerator.

This bread recipe is a no-fail bread machine recipe that I have used for years. The ingredients are so simple and it makes the perfect loaf of bread every single time.

Throw the ingredients in the bread machine on Thanksgiving morning or take advantage of that delay timer on your bread machine to wake up to the smell of freshly baked bread. This recipe is a tried-and-true in our family!


Portuguese White Bread

1 cup water
3 tablespoons margarine
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
3 cups white flour
1 1/2 teaspoons bread machine yeast

Add all ingredients in order listed into your bread machine. Choose the”basic” cycle and wait for the perfect loaf of white bread to appear! Yes, it is that simple!

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No celebration would be complete in our house without a big bowl of holiday punch. This is a cost-effective and elegant way to keep everyone hydrated without breaking the bank! I can’t imagine hosting any holiday celebration anymore without my holiday punch and I hope you can try this fantastic recipe in your house!

Amy’s Holiday Punch

1 (2 liter) bottle cherry 7-Up soda
1 liter (half a bottle) raspberry flavored soda (I found this at Walmart)
1 (12 ounce) can frozen lemonade concentrate
1 (12 ounce) can frozen pink lemonade concentrate
1 (1 liter) can pineapple juice

Mix all the ingredients together for the punch. This will fill one large punch bowl or two smaller ones.

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A Word About Leftovers (if there is such a thing)


Last year, I saved all of my yogurt, sour cream, and whipped topping containers for our Thanksgiving feast. I found a bunch of them in my fridge with a scoop of this and a dab of that in them.

These were run through the dishwasher and are now waiting for all of those Thanksgiving leftovers. I am sure our guests will want to take home some of the leftovers from our feast so I am making sure we are prepared this year. No one likes the burden of returning a dish so these will make the perfect containers to send home all of the goodies without the hassle. Best of all, we are putting these containers to good use rather than adding them to the recycle bin.

If you were feeling ambitious, you could cover them with scrapbook paper. I, however, feel hosting Thanksgiving dinner is ambitious enough and I hope our guests will appreciate the thoughtful gesture of having these containers to enjoy a little of the feasting in their own home.

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What is your favorite Thanksgiving recipe, tradition, or time-saving strategy in your family? I would love your ideas!

Spunky Spinach Dip

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

I am an appetizer kind of girl. When we go out to eat, I would be satisfied with three or four different kinds of appetizers so I could dip and gorge myself to my heart’s delight. My top favorites? Fried mushrooms, spinach dip, chips & salsa, cheesy dip with french fries, and mozzarella sticks.

This recipe combines two of my favorites into one combination- my salsa dip and my spinach dip. The cream cheese adds a creamy consistency to the dip and the cheese adds the cheesiness that I can’t resist.

The recipe originally stated to just microwave it until it is hot, but I prefer my dip baked in the oven so I am including the directions for that too. I doubled this recipe for a party and doubled the cooking time (40-45 minutes) and it still was absolute perfection. I do love reheating it though for a great little afternoon snack in the microwave with a stack of tortilla chips.

Serve this with your favorite dipper. I love a sturdy bagel chip, tortilla chips, or even fresh cut veggies. Keep the dish light with fat-free cream cheese and low-fat cheeses and you still get the dipping extravaganza without the guilt!

Spunky Spinach Dip (courtesy of Gooseberry Patch Cookbook)

2 cups salsa (approximately one standard size jar)
2 cups Monterey Jack cheese
8 oz low-fat or fat-free cream cheese, softened and cubed
10 oz frozen chopped spinach (thawed and drained)

Mix ingredients together in a mixing bowl. Stir well. Place in a microwave-safe bowl and heat until cooked through. If baking, cook at 350 for 20-25 minutes (double your cooking time for a double batch) in an oven-safe bowl (covered). Serve with your favorite dipper!

Taste of Fall: Pumpkin Cranberry Cornbread

Monday, October 26th, 2009

Ah, the sweet smell of Fall is in the air and I am loving the vivid colors in the trees. Nothing says fall to me though like pumpkins and cranberries. When I happened upon this recipe for cornbread that incorporated my two favorite flavors of the season, I could not delay making it.

This recipe is so unbelievably fantastic! Perfectly moist and even better the second day, it is a cornbread that you can feel confident serving with a big pot of chili for tailgating or just enjoying a cozy night at home with your family.

I have prepared this recipe two ways for you! The first is the traditional way stuffed with cranberry deliciousness. The second version is as a muffin and minus the cranberries for the cranberry-haters. We have one of those in our family so I made the second batch just for him…To which my husband pronounced, “Perfection,” and then he swiftly ate three!

Yes, this is a recipe for everyone and is the perfect way to use up the last of that pumpkin after preparing a pie, or pumpkin pancakes, or pumpkin pasta, or pumpkin spice latte, or pumpkin waffles.

Just consider me a resource for all-things-pumpkin this year!

Pumpkin Cranberry Cornbread

1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup cornmeal
2/3 cup light brown sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 cup canned pumpkin puree
3/4 cup buttermilk (I substituted with regular milk and a teaspoon of vinegar to sour)
1/4 cup butter, melted
2 eggs, room
2 tablespoons honey
1 cup dried cranberries

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly grease a 8″ x 8″ baking pan or a 9-inch pie pan. In a bowl, toss together flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon. In another mixing bowl, mix with a wooden spoon, the pumpkin puree, sour cream or buttermilk , butter, eggs and honey, until well combined. Add the pumpkin mixture to the flour mixture just until combined. Mix in the cranberries. Transfer to a prepared baking dish. Bake for about 40 minutes, or until edges just begin to color. Cool to room temperature.



Pumpkin-y Cornbread Muffins (For the Cranberry Haters)

1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup cornmeal
2/3 cup light brown sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 cup canned pumpkin puree
3/4 cup buttermilk (I substituted with regular milk and a teaspoon of vinegar to sour)
1/4 cup butter, melted
2 eggs, room
2 tablespoons honey
Sugar for sprinkling (I used the raw sugar)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a muffin tin with muffin liners. In a bowl, toss together flour, cornmeal, sugar, baking powder, salt, nutmeg and cinnamon. In another mixing bowl, mix with a wooden spoon, the pumpkin puree, sour cream or buttermilk , butter, eggs and honey, until well combined. Add the pumpkin mixture to the flour mixture just until combined. Transfer to the prepared muffin tin. Sprinkle with a little sugar (I used raw sugar) on top. Bake for about 20-25 minutes, or until edges just begin to color. Cool to room temperature. Makes approximately 12-13 muffins.

Foolproof Bread Machine Recipe: Portuguese White Bread

Monday, October 19th, 2009

I am still the biggest fan of my bread machine. I do realize that they aren’t for everyone. Some people love to knead dough and use their stand mixer to do the heavy duty mixing or even to do the process by hand. Not me! The bread machine is the way to go at this stage in my life and it is worth every inch of space that it takes up, residing on the top of the refrigerator.

We haven’t given up buying sandwich bread, but the bread machine is essential to me for easy entertaining and for our weekly pizza night traditions. It has saved me many a trip to the store for hamburger buns. For the holidays, I love to crank out a batch of fancy rolls with a little spread or dip. For the ultimate in special Saturday morning traditions, a little indulgence in monkey bread or fancy cinnamon rolls is a special family treat. Making these treats myself, I am assured that I am giving my kids those fun food memories, but am controlling the quality of the ingredients that are going into them.

This bread recipe is a no-fail bread machine recipe that I have used for years. The ingredients are so simple and it makes the perfect loaf of bread every single time.


Portuguese White Bread

1 cup water
3 tablespoons margarine
1 tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
3 cups white flour
1 1/2 teaspoons bread machine yeast

Add all ingredients in order listed into your bread machine. Choose the”basic” cycle and wait for the perfect loaf of white bread to appear! Yes, it is that simple!

Do you have a bread machine? What is your favorite recipe to make with this appliance?