Showing posts with label The List. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The List. Show all posts

Thursday, February 2, 2012

And that's why I created a blog... Now I get it!


Scene: Husband and wife, sitting in a waiting room.  Husband absent-mindedly flipping through through a magazine; wife looking through her latest issue of Everyday Food by Martha Stewart, list and pen in hand.

Wife: So, which sounds better: beef kebabs with butternut squash and onions and a side of cooked arugula OR halibut with an avocado and pineapple salsa and the same side of arugula?

Husband: Huh?

Wife: Ok, I said (enter dramatic sigh)... which sounds better?  THIS (points) or THAT (points again).

Husband: Oh, that (points down at a picture), for sure. 

Wife: (Scribbling down on her notepad)  What else do you want to eat this week?

Husband: Food.  Maybe mashed potatoes. 

Wife:  Yeah, I got that.  But what kind of food?  What do you want with the potatoes?

Husband:  Babe, isn't this why you created your blog?  You have all those recipes right there, and every week we go through the same thing -- what to eat with mashed potatoes?  Here (hands her his iPhone) -- use your blog.

And use her blog she did.


Which would be why now she is getting off Blogger and heading into the kitchen to make Greek Style Chicken with Pickled Onions, Tomatoes, and Tzatziki... instead of peeling potatoes AGAIN.

Brilliant, I tell you, brilliant.

Sunday, January 1, 2012

Weekly Menu: January 2


Happy 2012, Friends! 

To start off this new year I am going to try to add something new here.  Since I already go through the work of making a weekly menu + grocery list for us, I have decided why not share it?  I know most of the time you will not need it, but just in case you think, "Man, I am so tired and I can't think of anything I want to cook for this week..." well, you won't have to.  It will all be right here.  And for those who don't cook because they never have any ideas... this is for you, too.  The grocery list attached will have everything you need to make these meals happen at your house.  And chances are, you probably have lot of stuff on the list anyway, cutting the list to a much smaller size.  Just buy the rest of the stuff, click on the links to take you to the recipe, and Happy Cooking!

Hawaiian meatballs w/ rice
Salad

Bread & Butter

Penne Pasta with Marinara Sauce  (NO LINK, but it is easy.  You can figure it out :)
Bruschetta (basically, toasted sourdough with chopped up tomatoes, garlic, basil, olive oil, salt & pepper mixture on top)
Salad

Chicken Piccata with Mashed Potatoes   (NEW RECIPE... click HERE)
*Note- the recipe I am using calls for chicken broth instead of white wine.  Use either.
Roasted Zucchini & Squash



PRODUCE
1 1/2 bunch asparagus
1 zucchini
2 yellow squash
4 small potatoes
1 leek
garlic
1 lemon
1 onion
fresh basil
tomatoes
parsley
4 large potatoes
salad base (lettuce or spinach) and extra fixings

MEAT
2 8-oz boneless, skinless chicken breasts
meatballs (of any kind; I get turkey)
chicken sausage (optional)
1 lb. ground beef

DAIRY
butter
milk
mayo
Greek yogurt - 6 oz.

OTHER
soyaki (or soy sauce w/ minced garlic)
can of pineapple chunks
rice
chicken bullion
sourdough bread
hamburger buns
penne pasta
marinara sauce
capers
Italian seasoned bread crumbs
garlic salt
ketchup
mustard



Thursday, October 27, 2011

October Unprocessed: A List I Can Feel Proud Of!

I went shopping last night, my last trip to the grocery store before the month is over.  I love my list.  It is so fresh and you know what?  It also came out so inexpensive.  Two adjectives I want to describe my grocery list all the time, not just during October Unprocessed.


The truth is, I feel like Super Woman when I have these ingredients on the conveyor belt and the guy or girl working the lane asks, "What are you making with all of this?"  If I had thrown just pasta and sauce on there, she would have known (and yes, I do throw pasta and sauce on there quite a bit -- I am not really Super Woman).  But these ingredients, so simple all by themselves, can lead to something so magnificent when combined.  It is truly a beautiful thing.

Two years ago this list would not have made me feel like Super Woman, however.  It would have made me feel inadequate.  "What I am going to do with things?!"  That would have been my response. 

Two years ago?  Shoot, who am I kidding?  More like six months ago...  Yeah, you would have seen some veggies: onions, garlic, spinach.  Maybe carrots.  And a few years ago?  Good luck finding the veggies.  Except for frozen peas, you would have needed to look elsewhere if you wanted something "fresh". 

But today, my list is different.  It is a short list, just enough to last for four days until the week is over, but it is a good list.  A healthy list.  My list.



** Yes, you see tortellini up there.  No, I did not make it, as you can tell.  But I think it counts in my October Unprocessed challenge because when I look at the ingredient list I have all of those exact same things in my kitchen, unlike when I check the ingredient list of the package of tortellini at Lucky.  (One of the many reasons I love Trader Joe's.  That, and the fact it is only $1.99 per pack, as opposed to $3.49.)   So, fresh pasta that is preservative free counts for me as unprocessed -- because really, could I make tortellini?  Probably.  But am I gonna?  Not right now.  But maybe someday.  Send me some recipes and let's see :)

Monday, May 23, 2011

One Week Meal Plan -- Vegetarian

"I just don't know what to cook!"  "It takes so much planning."  "I never have the right stuff on hand."  "It takes so loooong..."

Cooking once looked like this...
Raise your hand if you have ever uttered (out loud or in your head) one of these phrases when you think about cooking.  Ok, now that every hand has gone up (Oh, I see you back there with your hand half raised, bobbing up and down as if letting this secret out would ruin you.  It's ok, raise it up, you are in the majority here), I would like to give you some good news.

I have a plan for you. 

Let me first say, this is dedicated to my friend Alex.  She commented on one of my posts that she HATES cooking (and yes, it was in all caps) because it is stressful.   And I know the feeling.  I, too, used to have that feeling.  Then, when I decided I wanted to be able to actually cook, the things I could make were limited to two or three meals.  Not exactly enough to make my food plan a plan, per se, more like a sketch of a plan.  So I decided that I would do what I wished someone would do for me: make an easy meal plan for one week.  I started thinking of all the things I could put in it... Chicken thighs grilled in BBQ sauce, fish with a fresh lemon butter sauce... and then I remembered something.  Alex is a vegetarian.  Oops.  I scratched the items off of my list (and starting to scratch my head as I pondered which veggie recipes I know that are both delicious and easy) and replaced them with meals that she could enjoy.  And, so, I bring you a one week meal plan that is vegetarian.


But now it can look like this!
(Maybe just a little less creepy...)
The things that I put on this list are ones that I myself have tried and tested.  As is my style, I follow the recipe down to the letter the first time, check the directions frequently the second time, and then just kind of throw out any challenging bits and make it work for me by the third run.  Each of these has come from something much more overwhelming, but it has been broken down to the way that fits into my lifestyle -- a busy one -- so that I can enjoy good food without sacrificing my life to do it.  Some things I have changed for you, the reader, such as the beans and rice, because frankly nobody cares to spend as much time on making beans as I do, unless you have a last name like da Silva or Medeiros.  Instead of adding the complication of all that, I tell you to open a can, throw it in the pot, and heat.  Easy, huh?  Basically, EASY is what I was going for -- along with DELICIOUS and BALANCED. 

So, here, have at it.  Try it.  And then, please, let me know how it goes!

THE MENU & RECIPES (CLICK ME!!!)

THE SHOPPING LIST (CLICK ME!!!)

(How nice of me, I even included a shopping list!  If you cook anything at all you should have at least some of these in your cupboards at home.  If not, remember, the first time you go shopping is the most expensive.  But I promise you, that bag of flour will really last quite a while...)

If he can do it, you can too!

NOTES:
  • You can use either vegetable or chicken bullion when it calls for it.  Some vegetarians I know don't care if there is chicken bullion in the food, while others are more sticklers to being all-meat-free.  Your choice; however I think chicken does taste a tad bit better. 
  • The recipes here are made for 3-4 people.  I wrote them as I make them, which allows for enough food to feed both Paulo and I, while providing left overs for lunch the next day for at least one of us.  I am assuming that you know how to cut recipes in half.  If you don't, call your fourth grade teacher and complain to her, not me.
  • The mac & cheese recipe is SO delicious, but if you have trouble digesting cheese, DO NOT EAT IT.  Let me just say, you have been fairly warned. 
  • I make all of the recipes without cheese most of the time, and they still taste good.  Maybe not as great as they could, but far far far from bland or bad.  Feel free to cut back on the cheese.  But feel free to enjoy it if you want to.  I would if I could!
  • Shop at a Mexican grocery store (or something similar) for the vegetables.  It will save you tons of dough.
And Alex, I hope you are feeling the love!  This one is for you, Friend.  Your first ever version of The List ;)  (BTW - except the mac & cheese, this is what Paulo and I are eating this week.  He is willing to be a veggie so that YOU can have a week of home cooked foods.  Now if that isn't love, I don't know what is!)

One Week Meal Plan -- Vegetarian (SHOPPING LIST)

(This shopping list goes with these recipes.)

Veggies -
  • 3 onions
  • garlic
  • sliced mushrooms
  • 2 Portobello mushrooms
  • 3 Russet potatoes
  • 1 lb. green beans
  • 3 carrots
  • celery
  • frozen peas
  • 1 lb. red skinned potatoes
  • 1 lemon
  • 1 bag fresh baby spinach
  • 2 lbs. broccoli
  • 3 Roma tomatoes
  • 1 green bell pepper
  • Grape or cherry tomatoes (1 pack)
Dry Goods -
  • 1 box Arborio rice
  • 1 or 2 packs tortellini
  • bullion cubes or powder (vegetable or chicken)
  • dill
  • bay leaves
  • flour
  • olive oil
  • Dijon mustard
  • 2 cans white kidney beans
  • 1 pack macaroni elbows
  • instant rice (or other rice)
  • 1 can black beans
  • Bisquick
  • white distilled vinegar
  • salt/pepper
Dairy -
  • butter
  • Parmesan, in a block or wedge
  • milk
  • block of cheddar
  • eggs
  • 1/2 lb. fresh mozzarella (not shredded)
Let me know if I left anything out!

One Week Meal Plan -- Vegetarian (RECIPES)

Click here for the shopping list.

DAY 1 -- Mushroom Risotto
PREP -
  • Chop one onion and two garlic cloves
  • Prepare 3 cups of chicken or vegetable bullion (easiest way is to cook 3 cups water in microwave for 3 minutes and add either 3 cubes or 3 teaspoons, however your bullion comes)
  • Grate 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese
In large skillet, melt 1T of butter over medium heat.  Add sliced mushrooms, 1/2 of the onion, some dill, and a bay leaf.  Saute until onion is clearish in color.  Remove from heat and set aside.

In medium sized pot, melt 1T of butter over medium heat. Add the rest of the onion and the garlic.  Cook for 3-4 minutes until onion is clear.  Add 1 1/2 cups of Arborio rice (or whatever other rice you have), stirring for one minute.  If you like, add 1/2 cup of white wine and cook until evaporated.  Add three cups of bullion.  Cover pot and turn heat to low.  Simmer for 20 minutes. 


After the 20 minutes is up, stir in the mushroom mixture along with 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese.  Make a small salad, butter some bread, and enjoy :)


DAY 2 -- Portobello Medallions with Mashed Potatoes and Green Beans
PREP -
  • Trim edges off of a large handful of green beans
  • Peel and cube 3 Russet (or other large) potatoes
  • Scrape out gills and stem of 2 Portobello mushrooms
Put potato cubes in medium sized pot; cover with water (until about knuckle deep).  Add some salt and boil. 

While the potatoes are boiling, heat up some olive oil in a non-stick pan (large enough to hold the two mushrooms) on medium heat.  In either a zip-lock bag, mix 1/3 cup of flour with 1/4t of both salt and pepper.  Quickly rinse the mushroom caps, coat with flour by shaking in bag.  Add to the frying pan.  Cook for about 3-4 minutes each side.  Set aside.  (If you are feeling fancy and would like a sauce to go with it, you can make a cream sauce with 1T butter, 1T flour, 1c heavy cream, and 1T bullion -- Add the first two ingredients over medium heat, through in your favorite seasonings, add the cream and the bullion and cook until thickened.  Otherwise, have at it.  They are good either way.)

When the potatoes are soft (check by inserting a fork), remove from heat and drain.  Put drained potatoes back in the pot and add 1/4 cup of milk and 2T of butter.  Mix with a fork (or a potato masher if you have one) until potatoes are soft.  I often add some sour cream or cream cheese if I have it, but it is not necessary.

Cook green beans in boiling water for 4-5 minutes, uncovered.  Drain, throw on a dash of salt, and enjoy :)

DAY 3 -- Peas and Carrot Soup with Dumplings
PREP -
  • Thinly slice 3 carrots
  • Chop 1 rib celery
  • Chop one medium onion
  • Prepare 4 cups bullion
  • Mix 2 cups Bisquick mix with 2/3 cup of milk.  Leave in bowl for now.
Heat 2 T of olive oil in large pot over medium-high heat.  Melt 3T of butter.  Add the carrots, celery, and onion; season with salt and pepper.  Cover the pot and cook, stirring occasionally for 7 minutes.  Sprinkle 2T of flour on the veggies and stir for a minute.  Whisk in the bullion and stir until thickened.  Stir in 1 cup of frozen peas and 1 T of Dijon mustard

When the soup is bubbling, roll the Bisquick batter into medium sized balls and drop (carefully) into soup.  When all the batter balls are in the soup, cover the pot and cook for 10 minutes.  Enjoy :)

DAY 4 -- Stewed White Beans with Spinach
PREP -
  • Cube 1 lb. of baby red potatoes
  • Make 1 cup of bullion
  • Squeeze the juice of 1 lemon into a cup or whatever
  • Grate 1/2 cup Parmesan
  • Slice 1/2 onion into small slices
In large skillet, heat 2 T of olive oil over medium-high heat.  Add potatoes and cook until golden, 6-8 minutes, stirring occasionally. Stir in most of the onion, leaving just a bit to garnish later.  Cook for 5 minutes and then add 2 cans white kidney beans (drained), the bullion, and the lemon juice along with a bit of salt and pepperSimmer until most of the liquid is absorbed.  Stir in 2 cups of spinach and cook just until wilted (about 1 minute only).  Enjoy :)

DAY 5 -- Mac & Cheese with Broccoli
PREP -
  • Chop 1/2 onion
  • Cut the stems off of 2 lbs. of broccoli and discard
  • Prepare 1 cup bullion
  • Grate 3 cups of cheddar cheese
Bring medium sized pot of water to boil.  Add 1 lb. of macaroni elbows, the onion, and some salt.  Cook 5 minutes and add the broccoli.  Cook three more minutes and drain.

Meanwhile, in medium sauce pan melt 3 T of butter.  Add 3T of flour and whisk until bubbling, then cook one more minute.  Then whisk in 3 cups of milk and the bullion; raise heat and bring to a boil.  Let cook 5 minutes or until thickened.  Add the cheese and 1T of Dijon mustard, some salt and pepper, and stir until melted.  Add to macaroni and mix.  Butter some bread, make a small side of salad, and enjoy :)

(This one makes A LOT.  Make it on a day you plan to feed many.)

DAY 6 -- Beans & Rice with Tomato Salad and a Fried Egg
PREP -
  • Chop 1/2 onion
  • Chop 1 garlic clove
  • Dice 3 Roma tomatoes
  • Chop 1/4 of a green bell pepper (one side)
Prepare rice according to the style you like -- in the rice cooker, instant rice, over the stove, whatever.  Set aside.

In small pot, heat 2 T of olive oil over medium heat.  Add half of the onion you chopped and the garlic and cook until clear.  Add 1 can of black beans and some salt.  Cook until warm.  Set aside.

For the tomato salad, mix the tomatoes, the remaining onion, and the bell pepper you already chopped.  Add 1 T of white vinegar and some salt to taste. 

Fry an egg, scramble an egg, or whatever you want.  Just cook the egg!   Put your beans and rice together, add a side of tomato salad, and throw that egg on your plate.  Enjoy :)

DAY 7 -- Tortellini with Green Beans and Tomatoes
PREP -
  • Preheat oven to 350.
  • Trim the edges off of two large handfuls of green beans.  Cut so the beans are about 1 inch in length.
  • Cut 1/2 pound of mozzarella into small cubes.
Cut a pack of grape or cherry tomatoes in half and set on foil-lined baking sheet, cut sides facing up.  Drizzle olive oil on the tomatoes (no worries if you don't get all of them) and season with salt and pepper.  Place in oven and let cook for 15 minutes.  (Don't put them on the top rack, though!  The oil will pop up and cause the oven to get smoky.)

Meanwhile, bring a pot of water to boil.  Add one pack of fresh Tortellini.  Cook for 3 minutes and add the green beans.  Cook for 3-4 minutes more.  Drain.

When the tomatoes are done, add them to the pasta/green bean mixture along with the mozzarella and stir.  Add salt and pepper to taste.  Butter some bread and enjoy :)  And then celebrate.  Why?  Because you have a delicious meal in front of you AND you did it... you cooked seven meals.  WAY TO GO, YOU!

(Disclaimer - none of these pictures were taken by me.  They were found via a google search, and I did not mark down where I got them from.  But they are rather pretty, I think.)

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Thirty Days -- Day 4: The Slippery Slope

It is 10:10pm, meaning ten minutes past my "bedtime", and yet I am waiting for the pot of water on the stove behind me to begin to boil.  No, I am not in need of a late dinner, nor do I need a late night snack.  Rather, I am preparing a lunch for my husband for tomorrow. 

So far, this whole not eating out thing has not been too difficult.  Rarely do we go out to eat during the weekdays as I create The List every week and am ready to make a home cooked dinner every night.  Since this 30 day challenge started on Monday and today is Thursday, I have only encountered week nights so far.  So I have to say no to a parfait in the afternoon when I am bored and have a few minutes to run down the street to grab one, whatever.  Not too bad. 

Yet.

And then we came to tonight.  I made delicious chicken thighs cooked in BBQ sauce with onions, a good sized salad, and some garlic bread.  Fantastic.  But what I thought would be enough for dinner and leftovers, well, let's just say I underestimated.  The conversation that followed went something like this:

Paulo:  "Can I have seconds?  Do you have enough?"
Tiffany: "Sure, but don't eat too much, you need some for your lunch tomorrow."
P:  "There is no way that is going to feed me tomorrow.  I will just eat it now."
T:  "What?  That's enough, for sure."
P:  "No, Babe, it's not.  Maybe enough for you, but I am bigger than you.  I need more food."
T:  "But I don't have any more food..."
P:  "That's OK, I will just grab a sandwich."
T:  "NOOOOOO!  You can't do that!"
P:  "Why not?  What else am I supposed to do?"
T:  "But the 30-day challenge... we will break it... it has only been four days..."
P:  "Babe, it's only once."
T:  "NO!  That's how it all starts!  You do it once and then you want more!"

My neighbors are probably saying a prayer right now asking for intervention on what they most likely (and understandably so) assume to be a potential drug addiction.  The poor man asked for a sandwich, yet by my response you would have guessed he asked for a joint. 

But I still stand by it: JUST SAY NO.

Running through options in my head, I came up with a plan.  Trader Joe's, oh-so-conveniently located next to our gym which we were headed to anyway, carries fresh packs of tortellini for $1.99.  I have left over red sauce in the fridge.  Hence, I am now cooking pasta at 10 o'clock at night.  A sandwich costs about $5, right?  So really, what are we saving? Three bucks?  It's not that much, but $3 is $3, and if I can save that much ten nights, that is $30.  So, yes, that is some motivation right there.  But the bigger motivation?  I don't want to have to come to you, eyes downcast and voice low, admitting defeat this early on.  No leftovers for lunch?  I will make it happen! 

I have a feeling Paulo will be sick of tortellini at the end of this month...

Monday, May 2, 2011

My OCD Tendencies and The List...

Tonight is Monday.  It is the night I should be so excited to try a new recipe.  But I am not.  Why?  Because I do not have a new recipe to try, and even if I did, I would probably crumple it up and toss it out the window. 

There can only be one answer to that question: I did not make The List. 

"What is The List?" you ask.

The List is the answer to all of my struggles with cooking.  Before The List came into my life I was a disorganized cook at best, always stressing over what I could/should cook with my knowledge and ingredients on hand.  Many times I would think, "Well, I could make a tuna casserole..." but lo and behold, I would have no tuna on hand.  And a nothing-casserole just doesn't seem like it would do the job.  Or I would have a wealth of ingredients on hand, but I didn't know what to do with them.  Which would mean one of three possible things would transpire:
  1. I would have to run out to the grocery store to pick up that one item, say tuna, and come home instead with five items -- tuna, chips, peanut butter, cookies, and juice.  This turned out to be both a waste of time and money.
  2. I would try to make something up, which had something like a 20% success rate.  Not that great...
  3. I would give up entirely, hop in the car, and head out to eat.
But then I created The List.  When Sunday, or whatever day I plan on doing my grocery shopping, comes around, I sit down down with a piece of paper and a pen.  I think, "What sounds good to me?"  and start jotting down the ideas.  Tacos, tuna casserole (yes again, don't make fun of me, I loved my canned fish), grilled chicken with mashed potatoes, and so on and so forth.  I then plop them into the days it will work best.  For instance, I know I have more time on Monday and Tuesday nights, so I put the more laborious work there.  Wednesdays I have no more than an hour free from the time I get home from work before I head out to my Bible study, so that day always says, "Pasta."  Then I make one final run through to add a variety of veggies to the week, and viola!  I have The List.
(Photo courtesty of weheartit.com)

That, however, is just the beginning.  I then take The List, and on the back I subdivide it into three categories: TJs (Trader Joe's), Mi Pueblo, and Lucky.  Going through each day, I write down the ingredients I would need to make that meal that I don't already have at home.  That way, when I go shopping, I know exactly what I need and where I can find it at. 

I know, I know, I sound like I have OCD.  And I might, but I don't really think so.  Whether or not I do is not the point however.  THIS is the point:  Since I have started doing this I have (A) stopped throwing away food that went bad before I could use it, (B) cut way down on my grocery list because I know exactly what I want, and (C) I am excited to cook each night.  Before it was a stress to me.  What do I make?  Do I have the stuff to make it?  Does it even sound good to me?  Honestly, since The List has come into my life, these questions are a thing of the past.  My thought pattern now goes something like this:  I am going to have veggie soup and dumplings tonight, YES!   The end.  And since I try to write down only one new thing a week with the rest being recipes that live in my head, the cooking process is quite easy.  No cookbooks, no failed attempts, no defeat.  Just food, good food.  And a lot of free money in my pocket and time on my hands. 

But this week I failed.  I did not make it.  Instead, I just said, "It's OK, I will  just make something with what I've got."  But what I've got sounds like yuck.  I don't want that.  I want something else.  Yet I don't have the ingredients for my something else.  And I don't want to go to the store.  Gee, I really should have my The List.  I guess I will sit down, and get to work.  It only takes ten minutes but saves me a week of agony, so why not?
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...