Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

chili on a warm day

Warmest day of the year so far, in fact! Honestly, how much sense does this make?!
I have several poor excuses for why I didn't post this three days ago, so let's just skip them.

yumm chili!

First, I have to credit my mom for this recipe, as it is almost entirely based on my foggy memory of "helping" her pour cans into a pot as a child. That, and several confused phone calls home from the canned vegetable aisle since I've moved away.
Second, this isn't really a recipe. I've never made chili the same way twice (not exactly on purpose). I would call this more of a 'guide on how to create your own chili recipe'. Yay! I don't know about you, but I hate being told exactly how to do something!


You will need:
two cans of beans of your choice, preferably one "in sauce" such as "chili hot beans", and I can't go without kidney beans!

one can tomatoes, I got "chili ready" diced tomatoes

one mini can tomato paste

half of an onion, chopped, red, yellow, or white--I prefer red--chopped to size of your liking

green pepper, chopped

catchup, unless you don't have any (what?!), then you can skip this, although it is the secret ingredient, you know!

small amount of oil, I use olive oil, whatever cooking oil you prefer is fine

salt, pepper, and sugar

garlic form of your choice we use the pre-chopped in a glass jar kind

if you want meat small package of the leanest ground beef you can afford
OR
if you want to reduce the fat or go vegetarian a package of Morningstar "crumbles"
OR
if you want vegetarian chili without fake meat a third can of beans, the other half of that onion, and perhaps a red pepper or other vegetable of your choice


Time to get creative...

In a large pot (I use the one from my set with the handles on either side) on medium heat add a tbsp or so of your oil. Once the oil has warmed up, add your green bell pepper and onion. I usually add as I chop, so start with the bell pepper as it takes longer to soften up. Season lightly with salt and pepper, and brown your veggies. You just need to cook them until they get dark on a couple edges and start to soften up. This gives them flavor!

If you are using beef, in another pan, brown it at the same time you are cooking your veggies. Drain excess oil and add to your large pot.

Now comes the easy part! Add your can of tomatoes (do not drain!) and your cans of beans (if it's an "in sauce" kind, don't drain at all; if it just has "bean juice" in it, I usually drain about half of that off before adding to the pot). Next add the small can of tomato paste, then fill the can with water and add it as well. Combine everything well. If you are using the faux-beef in place of the ground beef, add it at this time. This was my first time using it in chili, and we loved it! I added about half the package of 'crumbles'.

As far as seasoning...I wing everything, of course. I will guess for you on quantity. Add apx 1-2 tbsp catchup, and about a cloves worth of garlic. Salt, pepper, and sugar should all be added in small amounts to taste. I always end up using more than I think I will! But it's easier to add than it is to take out. Sugar is actually the secret ingredient! Sometimes I forget, and can't figure out why the chili tastes bland, flat, and just plain weird. But add in a tbsp of sugar (or more....) and it just blossoms.

Now just leave it on medium-low heat with a lid on and let it simmer, stirring every 5 or so minutes. For how long? Mmm, I don't know, til you're ready to eat I suppose. I use this time to make the cornbread! The ONLY choice for cornbread is Jiffy. And you have to obey the instructions when they suggest to let the batter sit for 5 minutes and then stir again.


Okay, I hope that made a tiny bit of sense! I'm definitely not a recipe writer, eep. That felt like homework! Let me know if you try it out and any variations you may come up with. I'm always willing to add new things to the pot.

Friday, December 25, 2009

christmas is for...

making!

xmas1
Sugar cookies on Christmas morning, even when you don't have vanilla extract (why??), or maple syrup (left it at my old place!), a suitable substitute. So what do you do? Using the previous recipe, substitute 1 tsp vanilla extract for 3 tsp lemon drop martini mixer, add 3 tbs butter for easier hand-creaming, and an extra tbs flour because you added too much liquid ingredients. Use a sawed-off portion of an upholstery fabric tube (covered in aluminum foil and saran wrap) as a rolling pin, a cup as a cookie cutter, and a cake pan for a cookie sheet, and you end up with a little over two dozen amazing cookies!

Lessons learned: unpack kitchen tools and buy what I don't have, buy vanilla extract (and lemon!!), make do and mend!

xmas2
One of Mark's Christmas wishes, for his "cubby" to be padded (still working on the pads for the walls, heh).

xmas3
The boys' litter mats are about half done...

xmas4
here's a close-up of the quilting I did on one of them. My first time trying stippling, done in between lengths of painter's tape.

xmas6
The project from Linen, Wool, Cotton I was working on, fruit bags, for Christmas presents! Two down...ten to go. Hmph.

Hope everyone had a good one! There's one minute left in mine. I'm gonna go pretend we've got some mistletoe.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

saturday projects

or: "Why the curtains are still not done after two weeks."

christmas sewing

Finally getting started with sewing for Christmas. Luckily I picked a fairly simple project (I hope) that works for everyone, so I can whip them out assembly-line style. Just because you don't spend weeks on presents doesn't mean they're not thoughtful!

Everything is serged and ready to be pre-washed. The plaid is going to be combined with some white terry to make litter mats for our boys. The gauze and osnaburg are going to be a few little somethings from this wonderful little book:



I will share more when they are finished.

apple empanadas

Second project for today was making these yummy apple "empanadas". I realize I did empanadas wrong, technically. This is a recipe my aunt gave my mom and I when I was quite young. Of course, it's been lost since then. My aunt now lives in California, taking care of my uncle, who has fairly advanced Alzheimer's, so I didn't feel comfortable asking for it again.

Here is what I managed to work out on my own...

Ingredients:
2 tbs water
2 tbs butter
1/2 cup sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp honey
1 can apple pie filling
4 soft-taco sized flour tortillas

In a saucepan on medium-low heat, combine water, butter, sugar, cinnamon and honey. Stir to combine and let simmer, stirring regularly, for a couple minutes. Set burner to lowest setting while working on the next step. Use 1/4 can of apples for each tortilla, rolling them up burrito-style and placing them fold side down in pan (I used a metal baking pan but have decided a small, square glass pan would have been best to keep the sauce from caramelizing and burning). Then take the remainder of the "juice" from the pie filling can and stir it to the sauce you have prepared. Pour sauce evenly over the empanadas and place in 350° oven for apx. 10-15 minutes. Cut in half, top with homemade (just kidding!) vanilla ice cream, and enjoy. Makes 8 servings. Nutritional information: don't know, don't care.

Let me know if you try it, and what sort of changes you make! I'm always interested in improving my creations.