Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Bean and Ham Soup




This soup came to fruition through a happy mistake. I hosted a holiday pot luck get together for my girlfriends. As the host, I decided to make a ham and have everyone bring sides. We decided to have this dinner on a weeknight, as to not conflict with anyones previously planned family parties. All was fine and good until I went and got hired for a full time job. I wasn't going to be home from work with enough time to make my ham. After researching a few recipes, I decided to put my ham in the crock pot while I was working.

I will never do a ham in the crock pot again! All my ladies said it didn't taste bad, but I was completely disappointed! My ham turned black after sitting in the crock pot all day. I had used a can of pineapples and honestly I forget what else to flavor the ham while it cooked. My sister's theory is the sugar from the pineapples turned the ham dark. I don't know if I am buying it. All I know is I will never do a ham in a crock pot ever again. If any of you that are reading this have managed a successful crock pot ham, could you comment and let me know how you did it?

As much as I was disappointed in that ham, I could not let it go to waste. My friends and their kiddos did eat some and noone complained about the flavor, but I think they were just trying to be nice. I was left with a large portion of ham as leftovers. I saved it, along with some leftover corn, to make a bean soup. As much as I did not like the ham, I didn't want to waste it. So back into the crock pot went the ham.

To transform this ham from dull dark brown mess to delicious soup, I added:
  • 2 cans pinto beans, rinsed and drained
  • 1 can chick peas, rinsed and drained
  • 1 can kidney beans, rinsed and drained
  • about 2 cups corn (leftovers)
  • 3 cloves of garlic, minced
  • 4 cups vegetable broth
  • 3 carrots, diced
  • 1 onion, diced
  • 1 bay leaf
After I stirred all the ingredients together, I set that baby on low and let it cook about 8 hours.

This soup is very hearty and filling. I am normally a big eater, but a small bowl of this soup along with some spinach salad stuffed me. I have not tried to give this to Sophia yet, as I have been packed it for lunch at work, two days in a row. My sister took sample, so hopefully soon I will see what she thinks.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Veggie Pizza



Ive been getting a bit bored with the "experimental" vegetarian dishes. Plus, the holidays exhausted me so much, I wanted to do a Meatless Monday recipe that was pretty simple. When I originally decided on doing a veggie pizza, the plan was to buy one of those premade crusts from the store and going from there. As everyone can tell by now, I don't like to take those premade short-cuts very often. As I researched pizza crust recipes, I found one that could be made using all ingredients I had at home already. Score! This recipe is one of the few that I found not using yeast. I believe this makes the crust gluten free, though I am not sure how the all purpose flour works into that category. If you are allergic to wheat, please do not take my word on the fact that this pizza is gluten free. Anyone who is allergic would obviously know what to look for better than myself, but just to be safe....please do not trust my judgement!! I also do not know if any of my toppings could be considered gluten free either. It is not a subject I am well versed on, since I do not know anyone who is affected by a wheat allergy (knock on wood).

  • 2 1/4 cup flour
  • 2 3/4 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 cup water
Mix dry ingredients. Add water and oil. Stir until it forms a ball. If dough is stiff, add a little more water. Kneed for 3-4 minutes on a well floured surface. Spread thin on a pizza baking sheet. Bake on 400 for 5 minutes. Top crust with preferred toppings and bake for an additional 15-20 minutes.


OK....big oops!! I completely forgot the oil when I made this last night and didn't realize until I was copying the recipe that I had done so. Though my big oops could really be a little oops since the pizza came out fabulous and no one thought there was anything missing. Maybe I will leave out the oil from now on to cut some calories. I will probably try it at least once with the oil to see if there is much of a difference, but this blunder was really no biggie!

Spreading the dough out thin took alot of patience. My kitchen is lacking in some supplies and I do not know what I need until the very moment that I need it. Last night I realized I need a rolling pin and a pizza cutter. I kneaded the dough thin by starting in the middle and working my way out in a circular fashion. This would have been way more fun if I had the skills of a professional pizza tosser. Sadly, I do not so I was reprimanding my dough anytime it would tear even in the slightest.

Once the dough is baked for its preliminary 5 minutes, it is ready to be topped! You can top a pizza with just about anything under the stars, as I am sure you already know! With such a simple crust recipe made from kitchen staples, this would be a great meal to make when you have not planned anything or for those days when you desperately need to go food shopping and just don't have the motivation. No sauce handy? Use some garlic and oil to make a white pizza! No cheese? Tomato pie! Add any combination of meats and/or veggies that will tickle your taste buds. I probably have never been so excited over eating pizza. The take-out menu places just can't compare to my fresh pizza made in my own oven.

This was a great meal to have Sophia get involved in. Since I did plan ahead, we decided what toppings we wanted and went to the market to pick them up. Sophia decided she needed spinach. For such a picky eater, I seem to have the only child in the world who hates french fries but loves spinach. Not complaining, but I can not figure that one out! I wanted a bit more on my portion of the pizza. This pizza wound up being LOADED with fresh veggies and cheese! I had spinach, olives (not the canned kind, the good ones!!!), sliced grape tomatoes, and mushrooms. Yum! This reminded me of a fancy bistro style pizza. Definately not the greasy mess you can have delivered.

We invited my friend Krystle to come over and make pizza with us, so she managed to get some great pictures of our evening! They got all jumbled out of chronological order, which bugs my eyeballs, but you get the idea. I am not necessarily the most tech savvy person out there.










Monday, December 26, 2011

Baked Eggs with Tomato and Green Pepper



Have you ever baked an egg? I have not. I have scrambled, fried, and baked USING an egg, but I have not actually ever baked an egg. Who would ever think of putting an egg in the oven as a main ingredient to a dish? Surely not I! Until now!

This was the first Christmas that Sophia and I did not live at my parents house. I cannot imagine what Christmas morning with just my parents and younger brother was like at their house. My mom had asked me if they could come here to see Sophia open her presents and while I completely understand wanting to experience that joy and magic of Christmas morning through a child's eyes, I did not allow it. I was excited to have a special morning with my baby, plus I didn't think it would be fair to make Sophia wait until guests arrived to open the gifts. Since I was little, the first child awake would wake the whole house and the gift opening would happen immediately. However, I did make Sophia wait for me to brush my teeth and make a cup of coffee before beginning. Lucky for her, we have a Keurig which takes about 30 seconds to brew. I invited my parents to join us for a Christmas breakfast so we could have some quality time together before we all headed over to my sister's house for dinner.

I knew I wanted to make my apple-cinnamon pancakes and serve pork bacon. The apple-cinnamon pancakes are made by adding my homemade applesauce to the pancake batter, easy peasy! I very rarely buy pork bacon. For health reasons and taste preferences; if I cook bacon, it is always turkey bacon. My mother is not a big fan of the turkey variety, so I wanted to treat her to some pork. Then I stumbled upon baked eggs while browsing Pinterest. Every recipe I found told me to crack an egg into a muffin pan over top of some diced up veggies. The pictures with the recipe show the final product looking like a sunny side up egg. I like to eat eggs over medium, but my mother will not eat anything runny at all. This recipe seemed so convenient, since I could cook them in the oven while concentrating on the food I had going on the stove. I decided I would beat the eggs so they would bake scrambled or omelet style. I used 10 eggs and added diced green peppers, diced tomatoes, and half a very finely diced onion. I sauteed the veggies before I added them to the egg to enhance the flavor and so they were not too crunchy. I poured the mixture into a muffin pan and let it bake on 350 for 20 minutes. If you are doing these scrambled styled, like I did, you can check for doneness the same way you would a cake. A butter knife will pull out clean if cooked completely.

These eggs were a hit! The 10 eggs filled up 12 muffin cups, so each little egg circle came to a little over one egg. I'm guessing you could make fewer eggs stretch if you beef them up more diced veggies or maybe even some bacon or sausage. They are like mini omelette's without the tricky flipping (or fattening oil) involved. Double bonus: I had leftovers to eat for lunch for today's Meatless Monday!!


My brother, Mother, and me in my kitchen Christmas morning.


Just a little Christmas funny. This cracked me up when I read it.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Onion Soup


I have crossed over to the dark side. I finally found a job after searching for 8 months!!! Yay, for me! Now, my story continues as a full time working mother. Meals will still need to be planned on the cheap and "waste not, want not" will always be my motto! I have figured out my New Years resolution this week as well. Though I already am a bit nuts about recycling, I plan to reuse more of the products that come into my home. An environmental science teacher told me once that reduce, reuse, recycle is stated in the order of appropriate actions. Reduce the amount of products you use and consume, reuse whatever you can at all times, and recycle anything that is left. It is a dream of mine to own a home with a garden outside and a compost pile to use all the scraps that are not able to be tossed into a "broth bag". I'm a green thumb with big dreams! I always feel my supply of Tupperware is completely lacking, so I decided my first step in this reuse process will be to save glass and plastic jars. They can be washed after original use and be used to portion out my homemade vegetable broth, which will then be frozen. I will also use them for single serving lunch portions to bring to work and to freeze leftover soups or sauces. Here I go, getting off track, when I haven't even jumped onto the track of intended conversation....my onion soup.

As my first day of real work in a long time, I was nervous that I would not be able to provide a nice meal for Sophia and I. Plus the added pressure of Meatless Monday (as much as I love it, Mondays take a lot of planning and prepping to go meatless), I needed to figure out what I could toss into my crock pot. In order to save myself a trip to the food store, I had to work with what I had. The main vegetable I had on stock was onions. I had a whole bag of onions for some unknown reason. Most likely I needed just one for a recipe, but buying a while bag was more cost efficient. Onions will never go to waste, especially when they can be frozen for broth. As much as I love it, I knew I was not going to be able to do french onion soup, because I don't have bowls heat resistant enough to put under the broiler, but I researched french onion soup recipes to gather some ideas of how I should do this.

Even though I was looking for the simplest directions possible for crock pot onion soup, every single recipe I found instructed me to caramelize sliced onions before cooking them in soup. So there I was this morning, awake extra early and cutting onions to caramelize onions in a skillet. I sliced up 5 onions and cooked them over medium heat with half a stick of butter. All the recipes I read also told me to be patient with the caramelizing process. It took about 20 minutes. Part of me wished I had thought to slice and caramelize the onions before I went to bed, but oh well....maybe next time I will think ahead. I let the onions cook as I got dressed and brushed my teeth. I also sliced up two carrots to throw into the crock pot once the onions were ready. So I did just that. I loaded up the crock pot with the cooked onions, the raw carrots, 3 cups of vegetable broth, some Worcestershire sauce, a bay leaf, and some rosemary. Three cups of broth seemed to be enough to cover the onions with liquid, but not by much as to not make the soup to liquidy. The recipes said to use beef broth, but I had my vegetable broth in the freezer. Plus it is Meatless Monday, so the beef broth could be frowned upon. (Mind you if I only had beef or chicken broth in my freezer, that is what I would use. I love the idea of Meatless Monday and I try my best to stick to the rules, but I am not going to run out and buy vegetable broth if I have a homemade substitute in my freezer.) After adding about 3 Tbsp of Worcestershire sauce and the other seasonings I've mentioned, I set the crock pot to low and went on my merry way.

The soup turned out to be just what I wanted. I probably added too much butter in the process of cooking which didn't seem to add much buttery flavor anyway. Next time I try onion soup, I will try to leave the butter out for healthy, skinny momma reasons. Served along with grilled cheese, I guess I did have all the elements of my favorite french onion soup, just as separate components. Maybe I didn't need that cheese either, but a girl has to eat! Sophia is a huge fan of dipping grilled cheese into any sort of soup I serve it with. She did eat some of the soup alone, but stuck mostly with the dipping of her sandwich. For a picky eater, she surprises me when she will eat onions. She will not eat them raw (who does? yuck!), but she definitely does not turn her nose up to a cooked onion. It is like a little ray of hope concerning my child's tastes.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

White Trash


I have not made Christmas cookies since I was a little girl. This year I wanted to do them so I had some deliciousness to hand out to people and so we had something homemade and fresh to leave out for Santa. Not that Santa needs any cookies in her belly this year, but its all about the memories for Soph. She was not very interested in helping with the cookie process, but she definitely likes being my taste tester! This year I made 4 types of cookies: Russian Teacakes, Oatmeal, Potato-chocolate chip, and White Trash. I had white trash only one time before now, when a co-workers wife made them for the holiday party. My supervisor was raving about it before they came in, so I needed to try them. As a salty/sweet kind of girl, I fell in love. Forget the other cookies, this was all I needed! Ive had the same reaction with my batch of white trash. Everyone loves it, plus they get a kick out of the name!

  • 9 cups non-sweetened cereal
  • 2 cups pretzel sticks, broken into halves
  • 3 cups peanuts
  • 2 - 12oz packages of white chocolate chips
Melt the white chocolate chips in the microwave for 1 minute. Continue to cook in 10 second increments until melted smooth. Mix cereal, pretzels, and peanuts in a large bowl. Gently fold white chocolate into the mixture. Once the mixture is evenly coated, spread onto a wax paper covered surface and let dry. Break into bite sized pieces.

This was so simple to make, especially since there is no baking involved. I used a mixture of Chex and Cheerios for my cereal. The hardest part was folding the chocolate into the mixture.
Once it was dry, I used a spatula to separate and then break into pieces. While I may mix my cookie variety from year to year, I have a feeling white trash will become a yearly tradition coming from my kitchen.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Spaghetti and Clams



This dish is literally the only dish I will eat with clams. Frankly, clams disgust me. I don't know exactly what it is. I'd like to think it is the texture, but I love mussels so that cant be it. I grew up with my mother making this dish. The few times I have tried it before tonight; I never followed a recipe. I thought it was basically olive oil, canned clams, and minced garlic that made this dish. Boy was I surprised when I got curious enough to search for a recipe and found one with 7 ingredients.

  • 1/2 lb spaghetti, cooked
  • 1/4 cup butter
  • 1/2 cup chopped onion
  • 3 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 - 8oz cans clams, drained with juices reserved
  • 1/4 cup parsley
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil
Melt butter in a large skillet over medium-low heat. Stir in onion and garlic. Cook 5 minutes. Add clams and stir for 3 minutes. Add water to the reserved clam juice to make 2 cups of liquid. Stir in parsley, olive oil, and clam juice mixture. Increase heat to boil, then reduce to a simmer. Cook covered for 15 minutes. Toss with spaghetti.


I was very pleased with how this turned out. There was definitely more flavor than my old way of making this dish. This proves every old comforting dish can be experimented with and even tweaked into a new favorite! I loved how easy this dish was. It seems as if there were alot of steps involved, but really it was not bad. I made the sauce as I boiled water and cooked the pasta. It took less than a half hour to complete!

I did not attempt to feed this to Sophia. My sister and her boys came over tonight for some traditional holiday fun, so we fed the kids some pizza. Both my sister and I did have seconds. She justified her seconds, because my bowl was bigger than hers. I justified my seconds, purely because she went for seconds.

Each year we get together to decorate gingerbread houses and trees. We plan for it to be a fun activity for the kids, however we usually wind up taking control and not letting the kids have much say in the decorating. They like to run around together. Whenever they pop their heads up to the table, they wind up shaking the table and eating the candy. It is nice to have tradition. One thing that has become tradition is each year on gingerbread night, we wind up with a Christmas catastrope. Our first year, Santa came to visit and the kids were petrified. He rang the bell and as they peeked out the window they ran screaming their heads off into another room. Last year, my sister was devastated because the kids wound up knocking her tree over and shattering most of her glass ornaments that she had been collecting since she was a teenager. This year our meltdown came for Sophia. We have an elf on the shelf in our household. His name is Scott. The one rule of all elves on the shelves is there is no touching allowed. Touching means the elf will lose his magic and cannot report back to Santa. My 3 year old nephew, Collin has an elf of his own but does not buy into the story. He touched his own elf yesterday and tonight he touched Scott. Sophia was heartbroken! We wrote a letter to Santa to ask for Scott to have his magic back since she was not the one that touched him. Luckily Santa is fair and allowed Scott to come back with his magic in tow. I don't know what I would have done if Scott could not be in our household at Christmas time. We love that little guy!


Swedish Baked Potato


This is the first recipe I have tried that I found on Pinterest. It was so simple to do. The flavor is pretty much like a regular baked potato, but I feel like it took less time to cook. Also, I like that I didn't have to use tin foil to wrap the potato. Less waste is best in my book!

To prepare the potato, simply slice the potato all most all the way through. You want to leave a little bit on the bottom uncut so the slices don't come apart. The recipe I had suggested slicing a garlic clove and putting the slices in between the potato slices. I didn't try this, but next time I may. You can top the potato with butter or oil and some salt and pepper before baking. I sprayed mine with some oil. Bake at 220 for about 40 minutes. The potato skin will get nice and crispy while the flesh becomes soft. You can eat it just as it comes out of the oven or top it with anything you would top a normal baked potato. This was not much more work than a traditionally baked potato and it looks so much prettier!

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Crock Pot BBQ Ribs


Ribs are not something I make often. I have actually only ever cooked boneless ribs before in my pressure cooker. Once I obtain a grill, I would like to do more with ribs. There is also a skinny and saucy crock pot recipe I would like to try for ribs. Next time they are on sale!!

I didn't follow a recipe for this, just kinda went on a whim. First I broiled my ribs for 15 minutes to brown them. I do not own a broiler pan, so I lined one of my Pyrex dishes with aluminum foil and hoped for the best. No problems, thank goodness! I mixed some Worcestershire sauce with half a bottle of BBQ sauce and then brushed it on the ribs. Next, I plopped my meat into my crock pot and poured the remaining BBQ sauce mixture on top. I let them cook for 4 hours on high. They came out pretty good. Maybe not as tender as I would want, but definitely not tough at all.

Sophia loves ribs. I didn't let her eat them right off the bone because I didn't want her to make too much of a mess. I really think I need to work with BBQ and (especially honey BBQ) more often. She always loves anything BBQ that I have made. I will need to look into seeing if I can find a recipe for a healthier homemade option as opposed to what comes in a jar.

The only complaint I had with these ribs is some of the BBQ sauce burnt onto the side of my crock pot. It was so hard to get the black burn marks off the pot, but I was determined. My crock pot is white (DO NOT buy a white one!). I like to use it to entertain or to bring meals over to a family members house on occasion. Since I am not the only person that will see this essential tool, I want it to stay as nice and shiny as possible. I have not even been using this crock pot for a whole year and it is already showing stains. After soaking over night and scrubbing with a Brillo pad for a good 15 minutes, my burn marks finally came off. I started considering filling my pot with water and letting it simmer on low overnight in an attempt to soften up the burn marks. Maybe a smaller crock pot would have suited my ribs better. Maybe one day, when I have money, I will be able to afford crock pots of all different sizes. I think when that day comes, I will throw a crock pot party where everything I cook will come out of one of my variously sized crock pots!

A girl can dream, cant she??

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Stuffed Tomato


Oh boy! I am a slacker! I am so behind on recipes right now! I have been blaming my holiday "schedule", but really I think the blame needs to go to Pinterest. Check it out, though you have been officially warned. It is highly addicting. You can browse the site for different stuff people have pinned or you can pin any sort of website you like to the page. I have been looking for recipes and craft ideas on there. Hopefully as I pin my blog entries, I will get a little more traffic. So, HI to anyone new that has found their way here through Pinterest!

Ive been getting bored with some of the vegetarian recipes I have on hand, so I went searching for some new ones. I decided upon this one because I had just about everything I needed on hand, all I needed to pick up was mushrooms. Since my family is so small, I cut the recipe in half to suit our needs, but I will share the full sized recipe with you.

  • 6 large tomatoes
  • 2 Tbsp oil
  • 1 1/2 cup sliced mushrooms
  • 1 cup chopped onion
  • 1 - 10 oz package frozen spinach, thawed and drained
  • 2 tsp minced garlic
  • 1 tsp dried basil leaves, crushed
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/4 tsp pepper
  • 1/2 cup quick cooking rice
  • 1/4 cup and 2 Tbsp Parmesan cheese
Preheat oven to 400.
Slice tops off tomatoes and use a spoon to remove pulp. Leave the shell to be 1/4 inch thick. Chop pulp and set aside. Heat oil over high heat in a skillet. Add mushrooms and onions. Cook and stir until tender, about 10 minutes. Add spinach, tomato pulp, garlic, basil, salt, and pepper. Cook over low heat, stirring occasionally, for about 10 minutes. Stir in rice. Remove from heat, cover, and let stand 5 minutes. Stir in 1/4 cup Parmesan cheese. Place tomato shells in a baking dish and spoon in mixture. Sprinkle Parmesan cheese on top. Bake 15 minutes.

I served this over a bed of white corn kernels. Pairing white corn with cooked tomato is absolutely to die for, especially when looking for tasty light flavors. I decided not to stir the Parmesan into the mix, since I am trying to lose a few lbs. The extra calories were not missed! This was absolutely delicious. Sophia loves spinach so she gobbled it right up. I tried chopping the mushrooms on her plate to tiny bits to get her to eat them. She was not fooled at all! They had to go! I am definitely going to serve this again. It seems like it could be more of a summer meal though.

One little tip: if you are big on presentation, be majorly careful transferring your tomato from the baking dish to a plate. The tomato becomes so soft that it will fall right apart. I managed to get one for my mom transferred nicely, but I had to use my hands instead of a spoon. Not the most hygienic during flu season, but I swear I did wash them first!!!


Since I am so behind (well only two days behind actually, but Ive spent lots of time in the kitchen these past two days), I am able to give you a sneak peak of what is coming up next. I have not posted my Sunday dinner yet, which consisted of Crock Pot BBQ ribs and Swedish baked potatoes. Also, I spent most of my day yesterday baking Christmas cookies. I now need to get them out of my house! I have Potato-chocolate chip (which has already been posted), oatmeal, Russian tea cakes, and white trash. As soon as possible, I will share all the delicious goodies with you!

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Vegetable Broth Fail

I attempted to make my first batch of vegetable broth using the scraps I had been hoarding saving in my freezer. I was so excited to do this and even more excited to make more room in my freezer. That Ziploc got pretty big once it was packed! My excitement stepped up to another level when I realized one full Ziploc bag held the exact right amount of veggies I needed to fill the crock pot. I did not need to add anything else to the pot. I only added 3 ribs of celery I had in my fridge as to not let them go to waste. I probably should have added a bay leave or two though it really didn't matter. My broth turned out horrible. It smelled wonderful, but tasted way too acidic. My mistake was clear to me as soon as I tasted it.

I figured vegetable broth really could be "grown from the earth" broth. Figuring they would just add some sweet flavor and some extra nutrients, I tossed apple cores and lemon wedges into the bag along with celery, onion, pepper, leek, and garlic scraps. The apple cores were not the problem. I have used them successfully in both vegetable and chicken broth. It was the lemons. I completely underestimated the powerful flavor held in a citrus rind. I also lost track of the amount of lemon I had popped in the bag. Not until I was separating the vegetables from the broth did I realize there was probably two whole lemons in the mix. The lemon completely overpowered every other flavor and killed it. I would maybe suggest doing one half quarter of a lemon for a whole batch of broth. Who knows if I will ever try lemon again. It was a sad moment indeed as I poured a whole batch of broth down my drain. Good thing this was made from all leftover scraps, so I was not pouring any extra money down that drain. Luckily I have another Ziploc bag almost full in the freezer, so I won't have to wait too long to be able to make another batch.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Mushroom Roast


This roast happened by mistake. It was a "plan b" using ingredients I happened to have in my cabinet. I originally wanted to make a two can cola roast, which is possibly my favorite meat recipe using the pressure cooker. After spending a good 15 minutes making a list, I went food shopping Sunday morning to get the odds and ends that I needed to prepare my meal. Naturally I forgot my list! So from memory, I had to get everything I needed. This is a dangerous practice, because I always wind up buying much more than I am supposed to. Since my household is a non-soda drinking environment (with the exception of parties) I completely forgot I needed the two cans of cola. I never even walk down that aisle at the store! So not until I was home and completely involved in productiveness (a very rare occasion for me) did I realize that I forgot it. I did not feel like heading out again, so the only option was to work with what I had. I decided to use a pork chop recipe I had for my crock pot. I still followed the time and temperature directions for the pressure cooker, but used the ingredients for the sauce.

  • 2-3 lb pork roast
  • can cream of mushroom soup
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 1 pack onion soup mix
Place the onion in the bottom of the pressure cooker. Put the roast in over the onions and top with the sauce. Mix one can of water with the onion soup mix and pour in. Cook on high for 40 minutes. Let the pressure release naturally for 10 minutes and then perform a quick release.



This sauce is actually my sisters favorite recipe to use on her pork chops, so I knew it would turn out pretty good. I added the can of water because a pressure cooker usually calls for more liquid to cook. I wonder if the soup would actually be enough liquid. One day I'll test that. If any gravy you make comes out too thin in a pressure cooker, a simple fix is to add some cornstarch and set the pot to brown with the lid off and the meat removed. Some of the liquid will burn off as it boils down.

I think I like the two can cola roast better. It is more flavorful and sweet, but this recipe was definitely delicious.

Bacon Wrapped Green Beans


So I am playing a little bit of catch up. This recipe was from a dinner I cooked for my mom and brother Sunday evening. I knew I wanted to serve corn and mashed potatoes, but wanted something with a little more nutrition value. Also, the roast I was making was a bit on the smaller side so I wanted more meat.

  • One package of frozen whole green beans
  • 3 Tbsp olive oil
  • Italian seasonings
  • Bacon slices
Pour oil into a large bowl and sprinkle seasonings into it. Put green beans in oil and toss. Grab a bundle of about 5 beans and wrap with the uncooked bacon. Place into a baking dish. Roast in the oven on 350 for approximately 30 minutes.

I used some turkey bacon I had left from a breakfast earlier this week. Whatever green beans I had leftover, after wrapping the beans with bacon, I poured into the dish over the wrapped bundles. I was very happy with how these turned out and Sophia was excited to have bacon at dinner. This child loves bacon way more than I ever did!

Monday, December 5, 2011

Mushroom Veggie Burgers


I was the most nervous about how this meal would turn out than I have been for just about any of the recipes I have created for and posted in this blog. First, I have only ever had one veggie burger in my life and that was from a restaurant. Second, it is Meatless Monday and I had no Plan B in case this didn't work out. Third, I had two girlfriends over for dinner tonight and I always strive to please guests.

  • 3 Tbsp olive oil
  • 16 ounces small portobellos, sliced
  • 1/4 cup onion, diced
  • 1 can black beans, rinsed and drained
  • 2 cups quick cooking oats
  • 1 packet vegetable soup/dip mix
  • 1 egg
Heat 2 Tbsp oil over medium heat. Add mushrooms and onions. Cook and stir until soft, about 5-8 minutes. Transfer to a food processor and pulse until coarsely chopped. Transfer to a large bowl and stir in 1/4 cup water and the soup mix. Let stand 15 minutes. Place beans in food processor. Pulse until coarsely chopped. Transfer to bowl. Add oats and egg, mix well. Form mixture into 4 patties. Cover and refrigerate 30 minutes. Heat 1 Tbsp in a skillet over medium heat. Add patties to skillet and cook 3-4 minutes per side, until browned.



I was definitely nervous. First, my blender is crap. It spins and chops whatever food is in the middle of the pitcher and tosses it to the sides, where it stays. I had to battle processing the mushrooms and the beans. Once I get a new blender I will have to resist the powerful urge to not toss my junk one right out the window. Once I had everything properly chopped and the patties formed, I was even more discouraged. They felt so mushy. Gross. They did get a little more solid once they sat in the fridge for a half hour though. Cooking them was not easy. The patties did not seem to want to hold together completely. They didn't crumble but they were splitting in half.

The final product was not bad at all. I was so relieved that they were even edible! My girlfriends enjoyed them, which made me even happier. I topped mine with some sour cream and tomatoes. The others added some cheddar cheese as well. Soph wasn't the hugest fan of the burger but she did eat about half of it, so not a complete fail.

Another successful Meatless Monday in the books!

Christmas Soup


I had originally set out to make some plain old vegetable soup, until I realized that each of the ingredients I used were festive colors. Unto us, Christmas soup was born!!

  • Half a head of cauliflower, chopped
  • 3 ribs celery, chopped
  • 1 onion, diced
  • 1 can diced tomato
  • 4 cups vegetable soup
  • 1 package french cut green beans
  • 1 bay leaf
Combine all ingredients in crock pot. Cook on low 5-6 hours.


Vegetable soup is one of the easiest things to make. Just toss whatever veggies you like in the crock pot with some broth and seasonings to have a nice healthy meal. Most of the vegetables I used were ones that I needed to get use before they spoiled. This as an appetizer for a big Sunday dinner I made for my mother, with the added benefit that it can be enjoyed as leftovers on Monday! 

I've been slacking a bit on this blog, basically since I have been all wrapped up in preparing for the holidays. For my Sunday dinner, I prepared a Mushroom roast with mashed potatoes, corn, and bacon wrapped green beans. Hopefully I will have some time today or tomorrow to share the roast and green bean recipes!


Saturday, December 3, 2011

Chocolate-Potato Chip Cookies


  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 1/2 cup crushed potato chips
  • 1/3 cup chocolate chips
  • 2 1/2 cup flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 2 sticks butter, softened
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
Preheat oven to 350.
Mix sugar and butter until it becomes creamy. Fold in vanilla extract, chocolate chips, and potato chips. Finally mix in flour until it becomes a crumbly texture. Using your hands, form into balls about the size of walnuts. Flatten between palms. Bake for approximately 18 minutes. Cool 5 minutes on baking sheet and then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
Yeilds about 2 dozen cookies.

Tonight was actually my second attempt at these cookies. The first attempt was Tuesday night. Soph and I had to head up the Poconos, because I had a meeting Wednesday morning. We spent the night at my parents house up there and these cookies were meant to be a nice cozy activity for the two of us before bed. They were a disaster. I followed the recipe, but I managed to use too much butter. I had to trash the entire batch. I don't know if I can actually call what I made a "batch". They all melted into one giant rectangle that filled the cookie sheet. When I saw this, I thought I could save them by letting it cool and cutting it up to make cookie bars. No such luck. They were so melty and soft that they just crumbled. Definitely too much butter. It was a stupid mistake on my part. I was scared to attempt these again, but I have been so excited over this recipe and what I plan to do with it. So I proceeded to round 2 with low expectations.

The cookies are pretty good! I do think I crushed the potato chips too small though. As this was a test run for the big cookie blowout I am planning, the next batch will have larger and possibly more chip chunks to make the salty potato flavor stand out a bit more boldly. While I don't particularly like foods too salty, I am a huge fan of salty combined with sweet. Not many people would think of mixing potato chips with chocolate. A lot probably wouldn't even try it. I never heard of the combination until a family trip to Hawaii. We visited a chocolate factory and there I found chocolate bars filled with crumbles of potato chips. I fell in love right then and there. I also fell in love with chocolate covered pineapple while in Hawaii, at the Dole Plantation. I spent years with my eye out for any sort of chocolate-potato chip mixture with no luck. It wasn't until this past spring, when Soph and I moved into our own apartment, that I thought about combining the two myself. I made a huge batch of chocolate drizzled potato chips. They are a little bit of a pain to make, but so worth it!

I am not sure if I have shared this yet, but currently I am out of work. I have been working part-time to try to make ends meet while I look for a full time career to support me and my child. Anyone out there hiring?? Obviously money has been tight this year. I usually buy presents for all my grandparents, aunts, uncles, and Sophia's teachers. Not something huge, but something. I decided it would be more from the heart and definitely more frugal to do homemade presents this year. Homemade presents usually look just as they sound, homemade. AKA: crap. I am not really into handing someone something I made if it isn't something that can actually be used. Needing something somewhat simple, I searched the internet and found gold! Gifts-in-a-jar! There are so many recipes and ideas that can be put in a jar or mug. I even found this potato-chocolate chip cookie recipe on that site. Perfect for me. It shares my love of cooking with my loved ones, while helping them experience such a crazy good combination of flavors! Plus, I can manage to keep some of my funds intact. I plan on sharing a more in depth post about these jars when I actually make them. The basic idea is to layer the dry ingredients in the jar and tag it with instructions on how to finish the recipe.



Just an idea of what my finished product will look like.


Thursday, December 1, 2011

Meatloaf and Mashed Cauliflower

I consider meatloaf to be the soup of meat. You can put just about anything into it for it to be delicious. I have never followed a recipe for meatloaf and of all the countless times I have made it, I only remember disliking it once. I stick with a few simple rules: always add an egg, use some sort of breadcrumb type substance, and top it with something.

I have been told an egg is not always needed. I am pretty sure the egg adds moisture, so you can substitute with mayo or something. I'd rather not have mayo in my meat, so I stick with the egg. The breadcrumbs help to hold the ground meat together. If you don't have breadcrumbs on hand, use crushed up crackers, goldfish, cheese its, pretzels, chips...whatever really. Don't take my word for it on the chips, though. It seemed to sound good after pretzels, but try it and let me know! And last, I do not like a naked meatloaf. The topping doesn't add much flavor to the meat, but it is pretty and I like it. If you are preparing a gravy to pour on top, then that can be considered the topping. I have mostly used some ketchup and brown mustard, but on occasion I mix it up. I have used spaghetti sauce, cheese, and crushed crackers. The options are limitless; try BBQ sauce, salsa, herbs, bacon...whatever floats your loaf! Just about anything you put on top of your meatloaf can also go inside.

My standard meatloaf consists of ketchup, brown mustard, herbs (oregano, basil, parsley), egg, breadcrumbs, and garlic powder. Sometimes I feel adventurous and start grabbing things in my fridge and throwing them in. Tonight's meatloaf consisted of the usual egg, (pretzel) breadcrumbs, and brown mustard; but then things got interesting. First I added a chopped rib of celery. Every time I buy celery it goes bad before I can use it all, so I try to get creative with it. Then I added some spaghetti sauce, Worcestershire sauce, some onion dressing I have, shredded cheddar cheese, and parsley. I topped it with some more spaghetti sauce and cheddar. Covered it with foil and baked it on 375 for about 45 minutes. During the last 10 minutes, I remove the foil so the edges get a little crispy.

I served this with some corn and mashed cauliflower. Mashed cauliflower is supposed to be a healthier replacement for mashed potatoes, so I figured I'd give them a shot. I boiled the cauliflower florets with one clove of garlic, then mashed them with a tiny bit of milk, some margarine, and some of the water it boiled in. They actually kind of smelled like potatoes while cooking! The consistency didn't come out as I would have hoped for, but this is something I would like to keep working on until I get it right. I saw some recipes that suggest adding in a potato or two to get it closer to the desired texture. I may just do that next time.

Soph didn't eat any of this meal. She was at my sisters eating pizza. I don't think I can serve her mashed cauliflower until I get it just right. Her absolute favorite food is mashed potatoes with corn. I can never completely take real mashed potatoes away from her, but it would be nice to have a healthy alternative sometimes.