Monday, June 21, 2010

Ice Cream and leftovers

Though, preferably not at the same time.

Just to prove that Ice Cream is a happy thing:

Now, I had several miscellaneous left overs in the fridge that needed dealing with - carnitas, mexican rice, cheese, tomatoes, corn... I combined them all, loaded up a romaine lettuce leaf, topped with crunchy chow mein noodles, sour cream, cotija cheese, cilantro and lime juice..... don't knock it till you try it.... warm up the carnitas, rice, cheese & corn. Fill the romaine leaf and top with the rest of the goodies & eat like a "taco."

Thursday, June 17, 2010

Beth's favorite chicken

Last time I made this, Beth told me I didn't make enough.... so tonight I cooked up 6 chicken breasts worth of this stuff.

It's SUPER easy. Cut each boneless skinless breast into 3rds, and place in a zip loc bag. Add a bottle of "30 minute marinade" - you can use Lawry's or any house brand equivalent - I've used both and they come out the same. The flavor I use is the Herb & Garlic one. Let them sit in the marinade for at least 30 minutes. Place them on the grill & cook for several minutes on low heat turning & basting with any left over marinade.

YUM.

You can serve them with these yummy sliced baked potatoes -

4 lg russet potatoes, scrubbed and sliced into 1/8-1/4 inch slices, but don't cut them all the way through - you want the potatoes to "fan" out when you place them in a baking dish.
1 cube butter, melted
2 tbsp finely chopped herbs - I used fresh: lemon thyme, parsley, basil and rosemary
salt & pepper
cheeses - about 1/4 cup grated/shredded cheese of your choice.

Heat oven to 425
place prepared potatoes in the pan, pour the melted butter over the potatoes, sprinkle the herbs, salt & pepper over the top - make sure the butter gets in between each slice of the potatoes.
Bake uncovered for 50 to 60 minutes
Remove from the oven and with a pastry brush, baste the potatoes with the butter from the pan. Sprinkle cheese over the top - tonight I used a mix of grated cheddar and fresh parmesan
Place back in the oven and bake another 10 minutes.
Enjoy!

Friday, June 11, 2010

Carnitas & homemade flour tortillas

I love Mexican fare. Of all the "ethnic" foods out there, it's positively my favorite. I love the contrasts - colors, flavors, textures, temperatures (hot/cold, spicy/mild etc). Today, we had MEXICAN!!! 'Ole!

First, I started by reheating the yumminess that I'd started yesterday in the crock pot - at that time, it looked like this:

And THIS, this is pork carnitas, AFTER being cooked for hours upon hours - trust me, the flavor is out of this world! I added a can of fire roasted chiles and diced up a largish roma tomato. Set the crock pot to high. After cooking the better part of yesterday, the meat was fork tender and was easily shredded. Certainly not "authentic" Mexican carnitas, but it's my own spin on them. AND a dear little Mexican friend of mine gave me her seal of approval, so I'm good with it!

A couple hours before dinner time, I put the crock back in the heating unit, set it to "warm" and left it alone. While the carnitas were spending some quality time with the chiles and tomatoes and broth created from cooking all day yesterday, I made PW's flour tortillas.

I opted to wait to make these until I had lard. Having never made fresh flour tortillas before, and having never used lard before, I figured this would be the perfect opportunity to do both. I'm glad I did, on both accounts. The lard was essentially like shortening, with two subtle differences: 1. consistency - it's rather gelatinous where shortening is more solid. 2. smell - well, this should not have been a surprise but I really wasn't expecting it. It smelled like FAT, as in the FAT smell when I cooked down the pork carnitas and the fat was all liquified. I know, big shocker!

As far as PW's recipe goes, it was NOT hard. I kneaded the dough, let it sit, and then shaped it into balls. Clearly, I have NO ability to make uniformly sized balls of dough though:

I followed the recipe, and after rolling out a few with my rolling pin (which is marble), I decided to try just sort of smushing them out. Remarkably, I found this to be FAR easier than the rolling pin and I was able to achieve a more uniformly round shape - which pleased my inner perfectionist quite nicely. I rushed Beth through the next few pics.... sadly they didn't turn out as clear as we'd have liked).

Cooking them proved to be the more challenging part of this - getting the heat to be just right so that they weren't under or over cooked. After they were cooked, I placed them in my handy-dandy tortilla keeper and left the lid on them until the rest of dinner was ready. The only thing I noticed was that they became a little brittle after being exposed to air for a while - my guess is that I made them just a touch too thin. No matter though, they were WAY better than store bought.

Now, a Mexican meal is not complete without an appropriate side dish. And I'm not talking beans. NO BEANS ALLOWED here. While I could  have made one from scratch, by adding some of my pico to some cooked rice:

I opted instead to use this little number - FAR easier than steaming some rice etc. AND, this is NOT Spanish rice, which is more red than this. My family prefers this to traditional Spanish rice. Go figure!

Though I didn't get any pictures of it all together, I served up the shredded and seasoned carnitas with the Mexican Rice, pico, the fresh tortillas, tomatoes, lettuce, colby jack cheese, Cotija cheese, sour cream... and of course limes and cilantro.

YUM.

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Ravioli & Broccoil with PW's Alfredo Sauce.

Because I was exhausted from building a fence today, I wanted EASY yet satisfying food for dinner tonight. I wanted pasta... and some sort of creamy sauce.... and did I mention I wanted it to be EASY??? Off I went to PW's recipes and found her Alfredo sauce.... 3 ingredients (plus salt & pepper). THAT was what I was looking for.

I pulled some of these little jewels out of the freezer. If you've never tried these, you really should. They're phenomenal, for frozen stuff that is. They also went REALLY well with the cheesy Alfredo sauce - there's NO cheese in them and the chicken/herb mix was a perfect compliment/contrast to the creamy cheesy sauce.

I steamed some broccoli and added it to the raviolis & Alfredo sauce.

Ok, so I could have wiped around the edge of the bowl to make it look pretty... and I did forget to top it with the extra Parmesan before I served it up.... but hey, I was too tired and too hungry to care! Take a look at it though... Ohmigosh it was yummy.

I also baked some Pilsbury crescent rolls, and dinner was ready in less than 30 minutes. The best part??? It was absolutely, positively delicious. Dad loved it. The kids loved it. I loved it. It was just what I was hoping for, and it was easier than I imagined. And, PW wasn't kidding, I fell in love with this sauce. I can't believe I ever thought Alfredo sauce was difficult to make, and I can't believe I ever bought jars full of the stuff, or even the little packets of sauce mix. I will NEVER, EVER, scout's honor, make Alfredo sauce any way but this way, ever again.

The only word of caution I have is in regard to the salt. I thought at first that I had oversalted it - Parmesan is pretty salty, and I'd already added some salt to the cream/butter mixture before I added the cheese. However, it turned out perfect. So, perhaps use less than you think it needs, because you can always add more later!