• 23Jun

    Lisa’s German-Style Potato Salad

     
     

    3 lbs yellow-flesh potatoes (I prefer Klondike Rose)
    1 tbsp olive oil
    4 slices thick cut hardwood smoked bacon (not maple or maple smoked), chopped
    1 cup diced onion (or more to taste)
    1/4 cup balsamic vinegar (or to taste)
    2 tbsp Dijon mustard
    1 tsp garlic powder (or to taste)
    salt and pepper to taste

    Cut the potatoes up into bite-sized pieces and cook in salted water until tender. Drain and return to the pot. Put a dish towel over the put and then put the lid on – this will keep the potatoes warm and help dry them off a bit.

    While the potatoes are cooking, put the olive oil and bacon into a large frying pan and cook over medium to medium-high heat until the bacon is almost crispy.

    Add in the onions and stir well, then cook until the onions are soft.

    Pour the balsamic vinegar into the pan and stir quickly, scraping up all the browned bits from the bottom of the pan. Add in the mustard and whisk until everything is combined. Let it continue to cook on low heat until the potatoes are ready.

    While the potatoes (and the bacon mixture) are still warm, put the potatoes into the frying pan and stir well. Sprinkle garlic powder over the potatoes, stir, and add salt and pepper to taste.

    This potato salad is best served at room temperature, and is even better when made a day ahead. The potatoes and the bacon mixture has to be warm (or hot) when combined, otherwise it doesn’t taste right.

  • 14Dec

    Sundays are days that usually start out really slow for us. If I cook breakfast (and I usually do), we end up eating around 10:30 am. I wanted to try and avoid that this weekend, so I made breakfast Saturday night so that we could just reheat it the next morning. Below you’ll find my version of Rachael Ray’s Biscuit-Crusted Sausage-Egg Pie. I actually made 2 pies – one with sausage, the other with chicken. The sausage one turned out pretty good, and I have high hopes for the one with chicken, which is in the freezer right now.

    Read the rest of this entry »

  • 21Apr

    As much as I love to cook, there are days where we’re so busy that I have little time to put supper together. Like many people, I’m trying to find ways to get meals on the table faster, without resorting to fast food or ordering pizza. I’ve tried freezer meals (things you put together ahead of time and toss in the freezer), and the few that I’ve tried have turned out really well. Still, I find myself wanting to prepare meal components ahead of time, and not entire meals.

    Chicken broth is easy enough to do. A whole, 5 lb chicken gets my family 2 meals from the meat, and I can make up to 8 cups of broth from the carcass. In fact, since I first started my drive to cut back on our food expenses three months ago, I haven’t had to buy chicken broth from the store. I am truly starting to love my freezer as something more than just to store the ice cream. :)

    One of the things this freezer-food revolution talks about is stocking up on things that are on sale for a really good price. There’s a small market in town that has made its name on having one of the largest selections of wines and spirits in the area. Seeing the inside of it makes me believe it. Anyway, they sell more than just alcohol – they have a fantastic meat counter. We’ve bought steak there (boneless top sirloin for $3.99/lb – a real steal in my area), and chicken breast (very nice stuff). Their ground beef, however, I think is the best. The regular price of their ground chuck is $1.99/lb, but for the last two weeks, they had it on sale for $1.79/lb, if you bought a minimum of 3 lbs.

    We rarely use more than 1 lb per week, but there was no way I was going to let that deal pass us by. But what was I going to do with the meat? Just divide it up into meal-sized portions and put it in the freezer? That didn’t appeal to me, and then I remembered reading online about cooking large batches of ground beef at a single time.

    A quick search and I found the directions – you boil the meat. That really surprised me. I was concerned about how it might affect the taste, but I wanted to give it a try. It actually turned out pretty good. Boiling the meat lets you cook it quickly, and gets rid of most of the fat when you drain the water.

    I have found, though, that if you’re not going to use the meat right away (as in the day you originally cooked it), you’ll want to use the ground beef in a dish that will be simmered in a sauce. I don’t know why it is, but the meat doesn’t have much flavor after it’s been frozen, and works much better if it’s had a chance to cook in something else. For example, letting the sauce simmer for 20 minutes or so in tomato sauce gives the meat a better flavor than reheating the meat, tossing it into warm sauce and then serving. I don’t remember if I added salt to the water when I cooked the first batch, so part of the reason for the blandness could be the lack of seasoning.

    You don’t just have to boil the meat on its own. The second batch of meat I cooked I added salt, pepper, onions and garlic. That turned out much better. I used a frozen portion of it in a batch of beefaroni and you couldn’t tell the meat wasn’t freshly cooked for the meal.

    So, how exactly do you boil ground beef? Fill a large soup pot half full with water and bring to a boil. When the water is boiling, add in salt as if you’re cooking pasta. Remember, like pasta, whatever you cook the meat in will be giving it flavor. When the salt has dissolved, break the ground beef up into small pieces and put it in the water. Let it cook, stirring occasionally, until there’s no visible pink. Remove from heat and drain. And you’re done! Let it cool for about half an hour, then divide up into whatever portion sizes you want for meals.

    If you want to do as I did and add onions and garlic to it, add 1 onion and 2 cloves of minced garlic for every pound of meat you’re cooking. There’s really no limit to what you can add to the meat, either during cooking, of just before you put it in the freezer.

    When you’re cooking the meat, however, make sure you don’t overcook it. While it may not burn like it would if you were frying it in a pan, it can still get really dry and yucky.

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  • 20Mar

    I really enjoy cooking, but some days I just don’t have the energy, time, or even the desire to be in the kitchen. I’ve been exploring using my slow cooker more often, and trying to cook so that I can get a stash of food in the freezer. Sometimes, it’s as simple as cooking a regular dish and saving half – 4 servings is more than enough for us, so meals that serve 6 – 8 mean a second meal for us.

    Something else I’ve been looking at is freezer meals – meals you assemble and put directly into the freezer to be cooked later, or are completely cooked and can be thawed and reheated at a later time. We got a gift card for a bookstore for Christmas, and we finally got around to spending it. I picked up the book Don’t Panic – Dinner’s in the Freezer. It’s been recommended by several of the sites I read.

    This recipe is my version of Continental Beef – I used smoked paprika (as I wanted a smoky flavor) and reduced the amount of mushrooms (as while we like the mushroom flavor, half the family has issues with their texture).

    Lisa’s Continental Beef

     
    Makes 6-8 servings.

    2 tbsp butter
    1 cup chopped onion
    1/2 lb white button mushrooms, sliced
    1 tsp salt
    2 1/2 lbs boneless chuck eye roast (or any other beef suitable for stew)
    8 oz plain tomato sauce
    2 tbsp Worchestershire sauce
    1 tbsp granulated sugar
    2 tsp smoked paprika
    1/8 tsp pepper
    2 cloves garlic, minced
    1 cup sour cream

    Melt the butter in a large dutch oven (or other large, heavy bottomed pot) over low heat. Add onion and mushrooms, sprinkle with salt, and cook until lightly browned, about 10 to 15 minutes. Remove from the pot and set aside. Add 2 tbsp of oil to the pan and brown beef in 2 or three batches. When all the meat is cooked, return meat and onion to the pot.

    Combine tomato sauce, Worcestershire sauce, sugar, paprika, pepper and garlic. Pour over meat mixture and stir well. Cover and cook, stirring occasionally, over low heat for 2 1/2 hours or until meat is tender.

    If you’re going to eat this all at once, add the sour cream, stir it in and let it heat through. If you’re going to freeze it, let the meat cool, then put in a freezer bag and freeze. To serve, thaw the meat completely, heat it over a low flame until hot, then add the sour cream, bring back to the temperature you want to eat it at and serve.

    We tried this recipe on Wednesday, and decided it tasted far better without the sour cream, so that will be omitted in the future.