Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Beef Yakitori


Who knew Japanese could be so easy-peasy?!?!  Inspired by AllRecipes.

Ingredients
  • 1/2 cup soy sauce
  • 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
  • 2 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 1 tablespoon sesame seeds
  • 2 tablespoons white sugar
  • 2 green onions, thinly sliced
  • 1 garlic clove, minced (I can't mince well, so I thinly sliced and chopped mine)
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
  • 1 pound cubed steak


Method

Stir all of the ingredients together (except for the cubed steak) into a nice marinade.

Let the beef cubes sit in the marinade for four hours.  I stirred mine about every half hour to make sure each cube was well covered.  It was a torturous wait as the marinade smells that good!

I ended up doing the marinade overnight this time around because some other dinner plans came up.  I do not recommend doing this, unless you like your beef yakitori to come out a bit more like beef jerky-- which isn't terrible but I would have liked my meat to have come out more succulent.

Skewer the cubes and set the marinade aside.

Grill the skewered beef for 10-15 minutes.  I did mine in the oven, on broil, turning them every few minutes until I was satisfied with how the beef cooked.

Serve with vegetables stir fried with the remaining marinade sauce and a nice side of rice.

Hubby recommends doing this one as a steak (and that would likely call for overnight marinade).

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Garlic and Lemon Breaded Cheese Stuffed Chicken

I did up this recipe tonight for dinner and sent some off to the grandparents as well...

Ingredients



  • Oil for greasing the baking pan
  • 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
  • 4oz cream cheese (herb, if desired)
  • 4oz shredded cheddar cheese (I used white, mild Lancashire cheddar)
  • 1/4 cup milk
  • 1 egg
  • 1-1/2 cups crushed Corn Flakes (can also use Italian breadcrumbs or even 'Cheerio Dust', but Corn Flakes gives the best color and flavor, imho)
  • 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
  • 1 tablespoon minced garlic
  • 3/4 cup melted butter
  • 4 tablespoons lemon juice
  • 1/2 teaspoon garlic salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon paprika

Method

Preheat oven to 175 degrees Celsius and oil the baking dish.

Butterfly the chicken breasts. If you have smaller breasts, get a meat tenderizing mallet and gently work the chicken to spread the 'wings'.


Mix the cheddar cheese into the cream cheese.

Spoon out the cheese mix into the butterfly wings. Spread the mixture with your fingers and then close the wings, wrapping the chicken around the cheese mixture inside. The cream cheese does a good job at holding and sealing the chicken together.

Break the egg into one bowl and add the milk. Beat the mixture to a nice omelet consistency.


Add the Corn Flakes and Parmesan cheese to another bowl.

Dip the chicken into the omelet mix and then bread them generously in the Corn Flakes and Parmesan.



Place the chicken onto your baking pan or into your casserole.

Melt the butter in your measuring cup. Add the lemon juice and minced garlic and mix.

Drizzle the butter, garlic, lemon sauce onto the chicken breasts. Pour the remaining sauce around the chicken breasts.
 Season with garlic salt and paprika to taste.

Bake in the oven for 30 minutes.
Here's what mine looked like when it came out of the oven!

Monday, May 28, 2012

Crock Pot Lasagna

And here, I thought lasagna was hard to do!  What was really surprising about this dish was that I was afraid it would turn out too runny what with cooking slowly covered in a crock pot.  But not only did it come out perfect, it even had a little crunchy cheese here and there.  NOM!  My husband lifted the cover 30 minutes after I had spooned the ingredients into the crock pot and was ready to renew his wedding vows right then and there.

Serves 8.  Prep time approx. 1 hour.  Cooks for 4-5 hours.

Ingredients

  • 1lb minced beef
  • 1 chopped onion
  • 2 smashed garlic cloves
  • 1 can chopped tomatoes
  • 1 can tomato paste
  • 1-1/2 teaspoon garlic salt
  • 1 teaspoon Italian seasoning mix
  • 12oz cottage cheese
  • 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
  • 16oz shredded mozzarella cheese
  • 12oz lasagna noodles

Method

  1. Brown beef, onion and garlic in a frying pan
  2. Add chopped tomatoes, tomato paste, and seasoning and mix
  3. Cook long enough for this meat sauce to get warm
  4. Spoon a layer of meat sauce into the bottom of the slow cooker
  5. Top the meat sauce layer with two layers of lasagna noodles.  Break up the noodles to fit them around the inside
  6. Top this noodle layer with the cheese.  I found that spreading 2-3 tablespoons of cottage cheese first helps 'anchor' down the noodles.  Then spread the mozzarella followed by Parmesan.
  7. Repeat adding a layer of meat sauce, followed by a layer of noodles, followed by a layer of cheeses again and again until all of your ingredients are used up.  I was able to get 3 layers in.
  8. Cover and cook on low heat for 4-5 hours.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Banana Nut Bread Recipe

Here's the recipe I followed for yesterday's scrumptious banana nut bread.  At first, I thought the person who wrote up the recipe was being a little pretentious, but honestly... they aren't kidding.  It is absolutely decadent!

Extreme Banana Nut Bread

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Anything Goes Stuffed Bell Pepper Recipe

I always accidently over buy fresh vegetables and then I'm scrambling to get it all used up before it goes off.  One of my favorite go to recipes to solve this problem is 'Anything Goes Stuffed Bell Peppers'.  With this recipe as its titled, really anything goes... you're an adult, you know what tastes good together.  With this recipe, of course, wash your bell peppers and cut them in halves.  Poke a few holes into the bottom of each bell pepper bowl so that any extra juices can drain out.  Arrange the bell pepper bowls on a foil tray.
Coarsely chop all of the fresh vegetables that you want to use.  In this case, I had loads of mushrooms, a little bit of onion and added one chopped bell pepper.  Not pictured but included in this batch was also cherry tomatoes.
Pull out that food processor that you haven't used since you were making your toddler's baby food.  Yah, that dusty old thing kept in the very back of that cabinet that's just out of reach.  Mince down all of the veg.
You should have a mostly dry mixture like shown here when finished.  Add any spices that you want to include.  In this round, I used two teaspoons of garlic salt, some ground peppercorn, and one Oxo beef bullion cube.  Stir these dry-ish ingredients all together.
Take some pre-bagged rice and follow the instructions for making the rice, but cut the cook time in half so that the rice is 'al dente'.  This rice is going to be added to the mixture to help soak up extra juices and retain some nice flavor.  In this case, I used Uncle Ben's quick rice cooked for 5 minutes rather than the 10 minutes recommended in the instructions.
Add one egg and then ground beef to the mixture.  Egg helps bind it and lends some flavor.  In place of beef, almost any meat can be used really.  Then really get in there with your hands and mush it all together until its homogeneous.  Stir in the partially cooked rice until its all an even mix.  Then stuff your bell pepper bowls.  Preheat the oven to 190 degrees and set the tray in for 20-30 minutes, depending on how much crisp on top you want on your stuffed bells.  Definitely cook it to the point where it passes the fork test and the juices are running clear.
Chances are, you'll have some stuffing left over.  These can be made into meatballs and pan fried.  Or you can make a meat loaf out of the extra easily.
In this case, I made a meat loaf with the extra stuffing.  Rather than boring old ketchup, I used a little bit of BBQ Sauce and a little bit of HP Sauce-- I planned on giving this meat loaf to the grandparents as a huge thank you for watching my son yesterday while I showered, napped, and cooked this dinner, and grandpa's a big fan of HP Sauce. 
And here's what hubby had waiting for him when he got home!  A delight for the senses!  And all of the extra veg I bought got used before it went off!  What I also really like about this recipe is that beef is really expensive in England. With this recipe, I used 4 premade hamburger patties (they were on summertime sale and pound for pound were cheaper) and stretched the meat with the veg and rice to two meals for two adults and a child.

What are your go-to recipes when you've accidently over-bought on something?

Homemade Pedialyte Recipe

A good friend of mine passed this weblink to me this morning... a simple recipe for more or less home made Pedialyte.  Pedialyte isn't sold in the UK, and I'm not familiar with the English equivalent.  I'll likely give this a go later today, mixing it with some of my flavored water, since Arthur loves drinking whatever Mummy is drinking.

Oral Re-hydration Solutions:  Made at Home