That's pretty much all you need to know.
Soooo tasty.
Showing posts with label main dish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label main dish. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Friday, November 7, 2008
spicy shredded pork
This is one of our favorite recipes to make. Plus, we do the pork in the Crock-Pot = super easy. Favorite toppings: lime juice, lettuce, tomatoes, avocado, sour cream
Spicy Shredded Pork
Spicy Shredded Pork
Thursday, October 23, 2008
southwestern stuffed acorn squash
Best recipe I've eaten recently. Reid and Grayce made this for us last weekend; I want to make it soon.
Southwestern Stuffed Acorn Squash
Southwestern Stuffed Acorn Squash
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
curry chicken salad
- boneless, skinless chicken breast
- curry powder
- cardamom
- salt
- mayonnaise
- green onion
- additions...see suggestions at end of recipe
- pita
recipe by erin
It has chicken and tortillas and stuff
- Mexican dip; could use chopped white onion instead of green onions as an option
- boneless, skinless chicken breasts
- cream of chicken soup
- sour cream
- 8"-10" tortillas
recipe by erin
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Portobello pita
• pita bread
• portobello mushrooms, sliced and sauteed in olive oil
• feta cheese, lowfat if you so wish
• sundried tomato paste (I guess you can make your own, but I buy it in a jar near the jarred minced garlic at Dillon's)
Combine all inside a pita half. Toast. Mmm.
recipe by erin
• portobello mushrooms, sliced and sauteed in olive oil
• feta cheese, lowfat if you so wish
• sundried tomato paste (I guess you can make your own, but I buy it in a jar near the jarred minced garlic at Dillon's)
Combine all inside a pita half. Toast. Mmm.
recipe by erin
Saturday, October 27, 2007
not a recipe

This is not a recipe at all...but is in fact a pantry staple of mine.
The Talin Market in Albuquerque has about 20 different varieties of this little Indian-in-a-box meal. Most are vegetarian or vegan...all are simply heat and serve. Honestly, 1 minute in the microwave and voila. You have some pretty good din-din. A native of Agra probably wouldn't dig this as much as I do, but I'm a white chick from Kansas. What do I know about Indian food, right?
Cook up some rice, you got yourself a complete meal. Plus, it's a perfect size to serve two people comfortably (three people if you make a dessert, or one person if you are hormonal or want leftovers).
Another plus...average price:$1.75. Yep. ONE dollar and 75 cents. Can't beat that. If you want to have company over, just cook up four or five different ones and pretend you are back at the Passage buffet...
Bonus #3 - as of yet, this has not proven to have the same "green curry haze" effect as the Passage buffet.
Most of them are pretty hot. I think a lot of mislabeling goes on. I purchased a sweet and sour pineapple curry labeled "mild" that took the skin off the roof of my mouth. I also purchased a lentil blend labeled with two chili's (international symbol for "medium spicy") that was as mellow as a split-pea soup. I would not recommend these for anyone who is not tolerant of zingy spices (i.e. Ber), because although some are very mild and mellow, others are sweat-inducing, and apparently you can't trust the chili pepper scale. To be safe, I usually put a blob of cottage cheese on my plate, so I can cut the spiciness down between bites if I need to. And I always keep tortillas handy for the same reason. It's the closest I can get to naan down here in NM.
If you don't see these dinners in your local grocery store, I would suggest trying a local Asian or international market. If you can't find them anywhere in your town, try ishopindian.com.
Disclaimer: I haven't actually tried this website, but it does carry a lot of the meals that I have purchased. I can't speak for the site, but the food is delish.
--shorthill
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Three (or Four) Cheese Manicotti
This will be a bit difficult to relate because I have never measured anything for this recipe...but it always turns out ok.
Ingredients:
whatever pasta sauce you like
8 Manicotti shells (or you can use the giant sea-shell pasta)
one small tub Ricotta cheese
one 2 c. bag shredded parmesan
one 2c. bag shredded mozzarella
(optional: one 2c. bag shredded asiago....this one smells a bit like old socks, so some folks don't like it...but it's the 4th cheese if you want to go whole hog)
2 eggs
Minced Garlic - however much you like (I put in a LOT!!!, but one clove would probably do it)
Basil, Oregano, Parsley...whatever you have on hand, about a good tsp. of each, or none, whatever floats your boat.
Sometimes I add some crushed chile pequins...for a southwest zing
The secret ingredient here is...anything else you want to add. This is an easy recipe to modify. Want sausage? Ok, brown up some bulk sausage and add it to your cheese mix. Want a veggie dish? Toss in a little chopped spinach. Mushrooms are good too. I recommend trying the plain cheese first and then figuring out what else you'd like to add.
To start with....preheat oven to 425.
get a large pot of water boiling. When it's rolling, gently GENTLY put your shells in. They tend to break if you bounce 'em around too much.
While the shells are cooking, mix in a large bowl:
All the ricotta
most of the parm, mozz, and asiago. Save about a handful of each of the "dry" cheeses for topping.
Lightly beat the eggs and thoroughly stir them into the cheese mix. (You don't want eggy deposits in the finished product.)
Add your spices
Find your baking pan. I recommend the old standby, a 9X13 pyrex...
Spread a thin layer of pasta sauce on the bottom.
When the pasta is just barely al dente, pull it out of the pot and let it cool. In my experience, the best cooling place is a foil-lined cookie sheet that has been lightly sprayed with oil. When it's cool enough to handle, fill the pasta. There are myriad ways to do this. The gourmet way: use a pastry bag (or a gallon-size ziplock bag...cut a hole in a bottom corner) and squeeze the cheese mix into the shells. Or, (this is freakishly easy) slit the manicotti tubes all the way up one side so they lay out in a flat sheet. Then spoon some filling into the middle, roll it up burrito-style, and lay it seam-side down in your pan.
When the shells are filled, line them up in the pan. Top them with more sauce, then all that cheese you reserved earlier. Pop into the oven until the sauce is bubbling and the cheese is golden-brown on top. This takes my oven somewhere around 30 minutes. Yours might be different. Just keep an eye on it. There's no real way to ruin this dish...except burning the bejeepers out of it.
enjoy - Sarah
Ingredients:
whatever pasta sauce you like
8 Manicotti shells (or you can use the giant sea-shell pasta)
one small tub Ricotta cheese
one 2 c. bag shredded parmesan
one 2c. bag shredded mozzarella
(optional: one 2c. bag shredded asiago....this one smells a bit like old socks, so some folks don't like it...but it's the 4th cheese if you want to go whole hog)
2 eggs
Minced Garlic - however much you like (I put in a LOT!!!, but one clove would probably do it)
Basil, Oregano, Parsley...whatever you have on hand, about a good tsp. of each, or none, whatever floats your boat.
Sometimes I add some crushed chile pequins...for a southwest zing
The secret ingredient here is...anything else you want to add. This is an easy recipe to modify. Want sausage? Ok, brown up some bulk sausage and add it to your cheese mix. Want a veggie dish? Toss in a little chopped spinach. Mushrooms are good too. I recommend trying the plain cheese first and then figuring out what else you'd like to add.
To start with....preheat oven to 425.
get a large pot of water boiling. When it's rolling, gently GENTLY put your shells in. They tend to break if you bounce 'em around too much.
While the shells are cooking, mix in a large bowl:
All the ricotta
most of the parm, mozz, and asiago. Save about a handful of each of the "dry" cheeses for topping.
Lightly beat the eggs and thoroughly stir them into the cheese mix. (You don't want eggy deposits in the finished product.)
Add your spices
Find your baking pan. I recommend the old standby, a 9X13 pyrex...
Spread a thin layer of pasta sauce on the bottom.
When the pasta is just barely al dente, pull it out of the pot and let it cool. In my experience, the best cooling place is a foil-lined cookie sheet that has been lightly sprayed with oil. When it's cool enough to handle, fill the pasta. There are myriad ways to do this. The gourmet way: use a pastry bag (or a gallon-size ziplock bag...cut a hole in a bottom corner) and squeeze the cheese mix into the shells. Or, (this is freakishly easy) slit the manicotti tubes all the way up one side so they lay out in a flat sheet. Then spoon some filling into the middle, roll it up burrito-style, and lay it seam-side down in your pan.
When the shells are filled, line them up in the pan. Top them with more sauce, then all that cheese you reserved earlier. Pop into the oven until the sauce is bubbling and the cheese is golden-brown on top. This takes my oven somewhere around 30 minutes. Yours might be different. Just keep an eye on it. There's no real way to ruin this dish...except burning the bejeepers out of it.
enjoy - Sarah
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Turkey pizza
I recently learned how much ground turkey tastes like ground beef. It tastes more like ground beef than ground pork, I think. Stellar.
Sauce
- sm. can tomato sauce
- salt (if sauce is no sodium)
- 1/2? 1? t. brown sugar (I never measure)
- minced garlic
- basil
- oregano
- 1 T. sundried tomato paste (optional)
Other
- Pizza crust of your choosing (make your own, pre-made, get it from a can)
- 1/2 lb. ground turkey
- minced garlic
- basil
- oregano
- cheese of choice (mozzarella, feta, Parmesan, we used something called "Menonita" (Mennonite in Spanish...))
- fresh vegetables of choice (I like onions and mushroom and can do green pepper too)
recipe by erin
Chicken and lentils in peanut sauce
- 1 pkg. boneless, skinless chicken breast
- 1 pkg. frozen snow peas
- minced garlic
- prepare 1 c. dry lentils according to package
- peanut sauce
Cut chicken into cubes. Brown in olive oil. Add garlic and snow peas and cook until soft. Add cooked lentils and peanut sauce to taste. Warm. Serve over rice.
recipe by erin
10.24.07 Update
We made this last night and it was pretty good. We served it over Jasmine rice. The peanut sauce we bought bottled at Dillon's.
Green chile chicken (aka Chicken Debbie)
Recipe below is not how I made it, but how I would modify the recipe were I to make it again.
- 1 pkg. boneless, skinless chicken breast
- 1/2 can cream of chicken soup
- 1 sm. can green chiles
- 3/8 c. shredded cheese (Mexican style, cheddar, Monterrey Jack, your choice)
- 1/2 - 3/4 t. chili powder
- 1/2 - 3/4 t. cumin
Place chicken in Crockpot. Sprinkle with chili powder and cumin. Layer cheese, soup, and green chiles. Cook on low 4-5 hours. Serve on tortilla chips with salsa and sour cream.
recipe by erin, named by tine
Chicken with sundried tomatoes and feta
- 1 pkg. boneless, skinless chicken breast
- 1/2 jar sundried tomatoes, drained
- 1/3 c. feta cheese
- basil
- oregano
- minced garlic
Place chicken in Crockpot. Sprinkle with basil and oregano. Add all other ingredients on top. Cook on low 4-5 hours.
recipe by erin
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