These are cobbled together from a bunch of places. Hope you like them.
Sweat about
1/2 cup of onion in butter
Set aside until it cools then add it to:
1/2 lb chuck
1/2 lb ground pork
3/4th cup of dry stuffing mix (or toasted bread broken up or bread crumbs)
2 eggs
salt and pepper to taste
1/2 tsp nutmeg and allspice
Mix together with onion.
Make meatballs of about 1 oz each
Fry on all sides in the same pan you cooked the onion. Pop them in the oven when done to keep them warm.
Lower the heat in the pan. (add a little butter if you need to)
add 2 tbs flour
whisk until lightly brown. (about a min. and a half)
slowly add in 2 cups beef broth and whisk until the flour is blended in.
slowly add in 1/4 cup heavy cream until the gravy is a bit thick
add in 2 tbs of sour cream. Whisk slowly until the gravy is as thick as you like.
(add more broth to thin if needed.)
Serve over extra wide egg noodles.
....they are yummy, and my kid loves them so that's a bonus!
Servings
Musings on food, and photography.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Menu
I know this is a bit slap-dash, but this is the menu this week:
biscuts and gravy and fruit salad
biscuts and gravy and fruit salad
ham + everything. - Wednesday (Christmas Day. My mother sent the ham. Fantastic!)
http://suziethefoodie. blogspot.com/2011/03/bitchin- kitchens-fettuccine-rose-with. html and maranara (for the picky eater), green beans with garlic and bread.
http://morefruitplease. wordpress.com/2012/04/23/ tomato-basil-and-cheddar-soup/ and grilled cheese sammiches
Tacos/taco salad
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ok, 2 Mexican meals, but we really like Mexican food around these parts.
Here is the Biscuits and Gravy video.
Labels:
biscuts and gravy,
menu for the week,
menu planning,
mexican food,
soup
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Food Quotes
“The only real stumbling block is fear of failure. In cooking you've got to have a what-the-hell attitude.”
― Julia Child
― Julia Child
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Tasting Astronaut Food: Inside NASA's Space Food Systems Laboratory
Yummy?
Monday, September 23, 2013
Ham and Lentil Soup
Brown 1/2 lb of diced ham in oil in a large pot. (I use a ham steak and just a bit of olive oil)
Take that out of the pot and put it aside.
Next you need these:
1 cup of diced onion
1/2 cup of diced celery
1/2 cup of diced carrot
2-3 cloves of garlic, minced.
Take all that stuff and put it in the pot. Reduce heat to medium and sweat until the onions are translucent.
Next you need these:
1/2 lb brown lentils (or which ever you like)
1/4 cup dry sherry
Deglaze the pot with the sherry. (Deglaze just means push it around the pot with the other stuff, kind of scraping as you go so the brown tasty bits get off the bottom of the pot.) When it's nearly evaporated add:
Ham
5 cups chicken or veg broth
2 cups diced tomato
2tsp thyme
Bring it all to a boil then reduce to med-low. Simmer for 30ish min. or until the lentils are tender.
When it is almost ready to serve add:
2 cups chopped fresh spinach and
Salt and pepper to taste
Finish the soup with about 1 tbs of red wine vinegar to brighten the flavors.
I like to put a little parm or goat cheese on top.
Yum.
Take that out of the pot and put it aside.
Next you need these:
1 cup of diced onion
1/2 cup of diced celery
1/2 cup of diced carrot
2-3 cloves of garlic, minced.
Take all that stuff and put it in the pot. Reduce heat to medium and sweat until the onions are translucent.
Next you need these:
1/2 lb brown lentils (or which ever you like)
1/4 cup dry sherry
Deglaze the pot with the sherry. (Deglaze just means push it around the pot with the other stuff, kind of scraping as you go so the brown tasty bits get off the bottom of the pot.) When it's nearly evaporated add:
Ham
5 cups chicken or veg broth
2 cups diced tomato
2tsp thyme
Bring it all to a boil then reduce to med-low. Simmer for 30ish min. or until the lentils are tender.
When it is almost ready to serve add:
2 cups chopped fresh spinach and
Salt and pepper to taste
Finish the soup with about 1 tbs of red wine vinegar to brighten the flavors.
I like to put a little parm or goat cheese on top.
Yum.
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
One pot pasta premivera
Sharing this from my friend Judy who swears by it.
I use 6 T (Tablespoons) of liquid (water or broth - broth is yummy!) per one weighed ounce of dry pasta (any kind) per serving. Put everything in a pot - the veggies, herbs and seasonings you want, along with the dry pasta, liquid, and a teaspoon of olive oil per serving. Bring to a boil while gently stirring (or gently tossing if spaghetti-type noodles) so they don't stick together. Change to med/low heat and simmer, uncovered while stirring occasionally until liquid is absorbed (about 8 - 10 minutes). Don't overcook! If you want any meat and/or cheese, add it in at the end (cook the meat separately).
I modified it from this recipe: http://www.marthastewart.com/ 978784/one-pan-pasta
I've tried it with different kinds of pasta, different veggies, different seasonings - it doesn't matter. The thing I found about the Martha Stewart recipe is that it calls for 12 oz of pasta for four servings which cooks up to a _huge_ (HUGE! 3 oz of uncooked pasta each!) portion per person. Two ounces of dry pasta cooked up with veggies was a really big serving that I could hardly finish (and it's not like I'm a dainty eater). Since then I've been doing one ounce with loads of veggies per serving and that's plenty. I figure if I'm still hungry after that I can have another helping. An 8 oz package of dry pasta will make 3 big (2 2/3 oz each) servings or 6 moderate ones (1 1/2 oz each).
Conversions:
1/4 cup = 4 T = 2 fluid oz;
1 T = 3 t = 0.5 fluid oz;
1 cup = 8 fluid oz = 1/2 pint.
I use 6 T (Tablespoons) of liquid (water or broth - broth is yummy!) per one weighed ounce of dry pasta (any kind) per serving. Put everything in a pot - the veggies, herbs and seasonings you want, along with the dry pasta, liquid, and a teaspoon of olive oil per serving. Bring to a boil while gently stirring (or gently tossing if spaghetti-type noodles) so they don't stick together. Change to med/low heat and simmer, uncovered while stirring occasionally until liquid is absorbed (about 8 - 10 minutes). Don't overcook! If you want any meat and/or cheese, add it in at the end (cook the meat separately).
I modified it from this recipe: http://www.marthastewart.com/
I've tried it with different kinds of pasta, different veggies, different seasonings - it doesn't matter. The thing I found about the Martha Stewart recipe is that it calls for 12 oz of pasta for four servings which cooks up to a _huge_ (HUGE! 3 oz of uncooked pasta each!) portion per person. Two ounces of dry pasta cooked up with veggies was a really big serving that I could hardly finish (and it's not like I'm a dainty eater). Since then I've been doing one ounce with loads of veggies per serving and that's plenty. I figure if I'm still hungry after that I can have another helping. An 8 oz package of dry pasta will make 3 big (2 2/3 oz each) servings or 6 moderate ones (1 1/2 oz each).
Conversions:
1/4 cup = 4 T = 2 fluid oz;
1 T = 3 t = 0.5 fluid oz;
1 cup = 8 fluid oz = 1/2 pint.
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