Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Saturday, April 12, 2014

The Way to a Man's Heart- Oven Baked Fajitas #goodeats #recipes

 ~The Way to a Man's ♥~
 Oven Baked Fajitas

This is actually a recipe that I got off Facebook- and usually, under normal circumstances, those kinds of recipes are usually an epic fail for me. Not this one. This one is awesomesauce, even if the kids aren't fond of it. I did have to make some cooking time adjustments for it, but now that I have it down it's good to go.

Oven Baked Fajitas

Ingredients:
1 pound boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into strips
2 TBSP vegetable oil
2 teaspoons chili powder
1 1/2 teaspoons cumin
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
1/4 teaspoon seasoned salt
1 (15 oz) can diced tomatoes with green chiles (Rotel- I have to use 2- 10 oz cans because I don't think they make a 15 oz can of it- I use one can original, one can hot for a very spicy fajita)
1 medium onion, sliced
1/2 red bell pepper, cut into strips
1/2 green bell pepper, cut into strips
(I have been known to use yellow and orange ones as well and quite often the entire pepper sliced up rather than just 1/2)

Instructions:

  1. Preheat oven to 400º. Spray a 13X9 baking dish with cooking spray.
  2. Place raw chicken strips in a large bowl.
  3. In a small bowl, combine oil, chili powder, cumin, garlic powder, dried oregano and salt and stir until well blended.
  4. Pour over chicken and stir until chicken is well coated
  5. Next, mix in the Rotel, peppers and onion to the bowl, stir until well mixed and then transfer to greased baking dish.
  6. Bake uncovered for 25 minutes, remove from oven and stir (chicken will not be done)
  7. Return to oven and bake another 25 minutes or longer- Until chicken is cooked all the way through and the veggies are tender.
 Serve in warmed fajita shells with your favorite Mexican extras (refried beans, sour cream, rice)
 

Saturday, September 14, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Sausage Cream Cheese Crescents #recipe #goodeats

~The Way to a Man's ♥~
Sausage Cream Cheese Crescents

This is a fairly simple recipe that works great for breakfast or supper. It's a family favorite on Christmas Eve at the in-laws and a favorite here at home when we have breakfast for supper.

1 lb tube sausage (I use Tennessee Pride Sage)
1 8 oz package Cream Cheese
2 cans Crescent rolls

White Country Gravy (optional)
  1. Brown the sausage in pan until done.
  2. Drain off excess grease and melt in cream cheese until thorough coated.
  3. Open crescent rolls but leave each pairing of 2 crescents together and pinch perforated lines to seal them together.
  4. line up on a large cookie sheet.
  5. Scoop out even amounts of sausage & cream cheese mixture onto the pastry (there will be 8)
  6. Fold ends and pinch them together and then fold sides up to make "canoes."
  7. Bake for recommended temperature and time listed on your canned crescents.
We serve this with country gravy over it and often have scrambled eggs and hashbrowns to go along with it.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Baked Fried Chicken #recipe #goodeats

The Way to a Man's ♥~
Baked Fried Chicken

This simple recipe for Baked Fried Chicken frees up your time so you don't have to spend an hour standing over a hot greasy pan or deep fryer-

Ingredients-
Chicken
Milk

1/2 tsp. Salt
1 TBSP Season All
3/4 tsp Pepper
1 cup Flour
2 tsp Paprika

Mix dry ingredients in a Gallon size Ziploc bag or a large bowl.

Preheat oven to 400º. Melt 1/2 a stick of butter in a 9x13 dish in oven after it's preheated.

Make sure bottom of dish is thoroughly coated in melted butter (if not, use some cooking spray to cover it)

Dredge chicken through milk and then into flour mixture then place in dish.

Cook 20 minutes and then turn each piece over and continue cooking for another 20 minutes more, until cooked through.


Saturday, August 10, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Grandma's Biscuits #goodeats #recipes

The Way to a Man's ♥
Grandma's Biscuits
This was originally posted on Potluck with Judy but figure I'll basically "reblog" it here today and share the back story of where this recipe comes from and the fact that these were always the way to my grandpa and uncles heart. My grandma's biscuits were the bomb.

When I was a kid growing up, my grandparents lived in the country and we spent nearly every Saturday at their house for as long as I can remember. I wandered around the junkyard my grandpa and uncles ran as a business or spent time around the animals my grandfather owned, but when my grandma fixed a batch of biscuits from scratch, I was always at her elbow.


Most of those Saturday afternoons would find me in the kitchen, sitting on my knees in one of the mismatched kitchen chairs (some were wooden with upholstered seats and backs, others chrome and vinyl to match the table) watching my grandma make biscuits that would make your mouth water. She knew the recipe by heart, as she did with most recipes she ever made, I believe. After cleaning off the surface of one end of the now-retro yellow Formica and chrome dining table, she sifted the flour with the old crank-handled sifter until she had a mountain of soft white.

Then she would hollow it out and fill the hole with lard and fresh cow’s milk one of my uncles brought home from his milk route. It wasn’t the store-bought pasteurized stuff. Nope, we had the good kind that had cream on the top and it was so rich, filling and good with cookies. She mixed and kneaded until she had the dough the right consistency, something she’d done for years long before I existed and I’m 99.9% certain that she could “feel” when the dough had the proper measurement of love added to it.

I waited impatiently for her to use the old aluminum can to cut out the biscuits and place them on a cookie sheet. She also had, what I assume was, a donut hole cutter that she would also cut out tiny biscuits, just especially for me and my sister to have. Then came my favorite part- the leftover bits, if there were any, she would give me a small portion of raw dough to eat as a treat while waiting for the biscuits to bake. In the summertime, the wait nearly killed me until I could slather a hot biscuit with butter or throw a slice of tomato or cucumber on it with a dash of salt. I could have, and probably did, eat enough to make myself sick. It’s one thing I really missed once she was gone.

My mom swears it took her years to get it right and even now, she still doesn’t think hers can compare to her mom’s biscuits. When I first became a wife and mother, making my grandma’s and my mom’s biscuits became quite the obsession. I couldn’t get them right for the world. I used shortening and it just wasn’t working. I wanted tall, flaky, airy, fluffy biscuits. These were not it. My biscuits were hard as a rock, flat, usually inedible, and in no way, shape, or form did they come close to either of my predecessors. If worse came to worst, I could’ve used them for weapons because I know they could have knocked a decent knot on someone’s head.

Being I don’t live close to my parents anymore though, I knew I had to do something about it. I bought a bucket of lard, intent on getting it right, even if it killed me. It’s taken time, and a lot of practice, especially when there was never a written recipe to go by, but I’ve started making progress in the past couple of years. That’s when I learned the secret. How I didn’t see it before I’ll never know—It’s LOVE.

I was always in a hurry when I tried making them, growing up in a generation that rushes through things, but that’s part of the secret- you can’t hurry through it, you can’t rush “love”- not in life and not in food. You have to take it slow and think with your heart, not your head. That’s how my grandma knew it all those years ago, how my mom does it without a second thought nowadays, and how I’ve learned the secret they knew- they were cooking by heart. Of course, they’ll never be my grandma’s, or even my mom’s, but they’re close enough to perfect for me. I make them for sausage gravy, to go with chicken, and they taste pretty darn good with a slice of tomato or cucumber, too.

This is basically my grandma's recipe, an eyeball/know it by heart kind of recipe, based loosely on my grandmother's and my mom’s instruction, though my grandma didn't use butter, just lard- I used the following—

Ingredients-

approximately 4-5 Cups Self-Rising Flour, sifted
approximately 1/2 stick butter
3 Heaping Tbsp. Lard
1/2 cup to a Cup Milk (definitely an eyeball measurement)

Optional: a squirt of honey makes them sweeter and lighter.

       1.      Sift flour into large bowl. Make "volcano" in center. Put in butter and lard. Begin working flour/butter/lard with one hand until it begins to come together, then start working in a little milk at a time until it reaches a wet, pasty consistency.

2.      Putting the milk aside, begin sifting extra flour over the wet dough and start working it in until the dough takes on a dry, but elastic texture that "breaths."

3.      Turn it out onto a clean counter top covered in flour and continue to work and knead dough. Roll it out to about a 1/2 inch to 3/4 inch thick and use round biscuit cutter (I use an old cleaned vegetable can with both ends cut out just as my grandmother had.)

4.      Place biscuits on foil lined cookie sheet, sides touching and bake in 400º oven. I bake it on the bottom rack for 10 minutes and check the bottoms at the 10-minute mark. If they are lightly golden, I move the cookie sheet to the top rack (placed at the center) and bake for another 10 minutes or until golden on tops.

Saturday, July 27, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Aunt Mary Lee's Yeast #Rolls #goodeats #recipes

 The Way to a Man's ♥~
Aunt Mary Lee's Yeast Rolls
This recipe comes from the kitchen of one my my great aunts. Though no longer with us, I think of her every time I make these. Finding the way to a man's heart is often through his stomach and a hearty buttery rolls can often do the trip. This is a recipe that does take time and is done in "parts."
 
Part 1: Mix together in cup and let set-
1 package yeast
1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/4 cup water
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Part 2: Bring to boil and set aside to mix with dry ingredients
1/2 stick butter
1/2 cup water
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Part 3: Mix these ingredients-
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Part 4:
  1. Mix boiled water & butter with dry ingredients
  2. Add 1/2 cup COLD water
  3. Add yeast water mixture
  4. Mix well
  5. Add 1 egg at end 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Once all ingredients are mixed, COVER (I usually use a warm damp kitchen towel that I've wetted and wrung out)
Let sit for 1 HOUR (it should double in size)
Place on floured surface and knead
Shape into sizes you like- be that folded/rounded rolls or, like me, I tend to make the cloverleaf pattern (cut well kneaded dough into even amounts of 3 small balls each and portion them out into lightly buttered/oiled muffin tins)
Cover again and let sit for 1-2 additional hours (I set mine inside the oven on the racks- though not with the oven on)
When ready to prepare
Set rolls aside (or take them out of oven if that's where the dough has been resting)
Preheat oven to 425º
Brush tops with melted butter
Bake for up to 30 minutes or so.

(It usually only takes about 12 minutes for my oven, so when attempting these the first time, you might want to bake in 10 minute increments until golden brown and done)

The longer they sit, the lighter and airier they should be. :)

Enjoy!
(especially good with beef stew or pot roast)

Saturday, June 15, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart- Sausage Green Pepper Mastaccioli Penne #Pasta #recipe #goodeats

 The Way to a Man's ♥-
Sausage and Green Pepper Mastaccioli Penne Pasta
 

Ingredients-
1 lb pork sausage (you can substitute turkey sausage or other breakfast style)
1 Box Mastaccioli Penne Pasta (16 oz I believe)
1 or 2 Green Peppers
1 Jar Spaghetti Sauce (of your choice- we like Classico Fire Roasted Tomato & Garlic)
1 8 oz Italian Blend Shredded Cheese

Directions-
  1. Pre-heat oven to 350º
  2. Brown and crumble sausage in skillet, drain off any grease
  3. Add sliced green pepper chunks and cook until green peppers are tender to your liking
  4. Add sauce and let simmer
  5. Meanwhile, boil pasta until al dente, drain water
  6. Mix pasta and meat sauce together
  7. Pour into 13X9 casserole dish, sprayed with a bit of cooking spray
  8. Sprinkle top with entire bag of Shredded Cheese
  9. Bake for approximately 30 minutes or until cheese is melted and dish is bubbly

Serves well with salad and Italian dressing and/or garlic bread sticks.


Saturday, June 8, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Momma's Sugar #Cookies #recipe #sweetsforthesweet

The Way to a Man's ♥-
Momma's Sugar Cookies

Ingredients
3/4 cup part butter, part shortening- softened
1 Cup sugar
2 Eggs
1- teaspoon Vanilla
2 1/2 Cups of Flour (self-rising)
 
  1. Pre-heat oven to 400º
  2. Mix all ingredients, adding vanilla last
  3. Chill in refrigerator for 1 hour
  4. Flour countertop, roll out and cut with favorite cookie cutters (mine happen to be butterflies)
  5. Bake for 6-8 minutes, keeping a close eye on them as they brown QUICKLY
Frosting options-
BEFORE BAKING- Brush with egg whites and sprinkle with colored sugar or favorite sprinkles
~OR~
Forgo egg white wash and sugar and use Powered Sugar Icing recipe AFTER baking the cookies, recipe listed below—

POWDERED SUGAR ICING

1-2 Tablespoons Milk
2 Tablespoons Butter
Powdered Sugar until desired consistency is achieved.




Saturday, May 25, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Broccoli & Cauliflower Slaw #recipe

The Way to a Man's Heart ♥


Broccoli & Cauliflower Slaw
Ingredients-
1 head of Cauliflower
1 head of Broccoli
½ red onion
Five Bacon slices (or you can use a few Tablespoons of Bacon Bits)
1 Cup Shredded Cheddar
1 Cup Miracle Whip
½ cup Sugar
2 Tablespoons Red Wine Vinegar

Directions-
Chop up cauliflower, broccoli florets and onion, set aside in large bowl
Mix together Miracle Whip, Sugar and Red Wine Vinegar and then combine all ingredients until well blended and chill in covered container in fridge for a few hours before serving to let the flavors marry.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Chicken Dressing Casserole #recipe

The Way to a Man's Heart ♥


Chicken Dressing Casserole
Ingredients-
2-3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
Water or Chicken Broth
1 (10.75 oz) can Cream of Chicken Soup
1 (10.75 oz) can Cream of Celery Soup
1 (10.75 oz) Can of milk (fill up one empty can above with regular milk)
1 ½ cups of chicken broth (from cooked chicken)
1 6 oz box seasoned stuffing mix (your favorite)
Salt, pepper
Cooking spray

Directions-
Place chicken in a Dutch oven with water enough to cover (or you can use store bought chicken broth to simmer it in) with a few tablespoons of butter & pepper, light on the salt. Simmer for a few hours
Preheat oven to 350º
Remove from pan, reserving the broth. Spray bottom of 9X13 casserole dish with cooking spray
Cut chicken into bite size pieces and place in bottom of dish
In medium bowl, mix together soups and then fill one empty can with milk and mix it into the soups.
Pour mixture over chicken
In a small bowl, combine stuff and broth, and then spoon over casserole
Bake for 45 minutes.
Makes approximately 12 servings

Saturday, May 4, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Applesauce Cake & Caramel Drizzle #recipe



Applesauce Cake & Caramel Drizzle

Happy Derby Day! I'm running late again this weekend as I seem to be doing a LOT here lately in all aspects of my daily routines. Today, here in Kentucky it's the Run for the Roses, wonderfully big and beautiful hats and sipping mint juleps at the racetrack.

I've never attended the Derby and this year will mark the first time ever in my life I won't get to watch it because our switch from satellite to using just a converter box cut us off from having an NBC station we can pull in (plus hubby and I are going to see Iron Man 3~ SQUEE!)— but today I will leave you with something sweet and decadent to enjoy- a double recipe- cake AND topping!

It's not a mint julep, but it's some good southern style decadence in it's own right. ENJOY!


Ingredients-
½ cup butter
1 cup white sugar
1 cup chilled applesauce
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
¼ teaspoon ground cloves
½ cup raisins
½ cup chopped walnuts

Directions-

  1. Cream butter or margarine with sugar.
  2. Add applesauce and beat well.
  3. Stir in flour, baking soda, and spices.
  4. Add nuts and raisins.

Pour the batter into a greased and floured 8 inch square pan. Back at 350º for 40 minutes or until done. Serve warm with Brown Sugar/Caramel Icing (recipe follows)

***

Brown Sugar Icing (aka Caramel Icing)
Ingredients-
Stick butter
1 cup packed Brown Sugar
2 cups Powdered Sugar
¼ cup Milk
1 teaspoon Vanilla


  1. Melt butter in saucepan
  2. Add Brown Sugar, boil for 2 minutes
  3. Add Milk and bring back to a boil
  4. Remove from heat and cool until lukewarm
  5. Beat in Powdered Sugar and Vanilla
  6. Drizzle over cake (poke small holes in cake if you wish)

(this icing is also good over nutty cakes or yellow cake)

Saturday, April 20, 2013

The Way to a Man's Heart~ Swiss Steak #recipe

The Way to a Man's ♥

 
Swiss Steak

This recipe is so simple, it might as well not even be a recipe, but it tastes so good that I just have to include it. 

Ingredients-
2 cans tomatoes
Onion
Green Pepper
Round Steak (or cube steak, whichever you prefer)
Salt & Pepper
Flour or Breading

Directions-

  1. Brown Breaded Steak
  2. Drain Grease
  3. Add veggies and simmer on low for an hour or so with lid on.