Showing posts with label meal planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meal planning. Show all posts

Monday, February 17, 2014

What's For Dinner? February 17th-22nd

Happy Monday! Here’s what we’re eating this week:

Monday – Salmon in Italian Dressing, Roast Potatoes, Broccoli – This is a super easy recipe my kids like. Marinate 1 cup cherry tomatoes sliced in half in ¼ cup Italian Dressing. Spoon over salmon and bake until cooked through.

Tuesday – Chicken Shwarma in Pita Bread, Tomatoes and Cucumbers in Vinaigrette – The Scotsman loves him some Shwarma ever since he tried it at a take-out place near where we used to live. We’ve never made it at home, and he decided it was time to change that. After extensive recipe goolging, he chose this one.

Wednesday – Slow Cooker Beefy Peppers – I made these for the first time three weeks ago and they were immediately added into the dinner rotation. Super easy and delicious. Recipe to come on Wednesday!

Thursday – Homemade Pizza – well, with store bought dough and sauce. But its assembled at home. That makes it homemade, right?

Friday – Salsa Chicken, Cornbread – Last weekend a neighbor told me about her go-to slow cooker recipe: throw frozen chicken breast and a jar of salsa in the slow cooker and cook on low for 7-8 hours. During the last half hour add a can of black beans, a cup of frozen corn and a sprinkling of shredded cheese.

Saturday – Beans and Rice, Parmesan Cauliflower Cheese – my kids love beans and rice. Me? Not so much (I think it’s a wee bit on the boring side). One day, I’ll figure out how to spice it up without offending the kids taste buds.

What’s on your menu this week?

This week I’m participating in Menu Plan Monday hosted by the Organizing Junkie.

Friday, June 7, 2013

What's For Dinner - June 8th - 14th

Last night I cleaned out my freezer. It contained many "mystery" items as well as stuff from Trader Joes that was so old I'm not even sure TJs carries those products anymore. I was holding on to them because I hate to throw away food, but I decided that they were adding to both physical and mental clutter as far as the freezer is concerned and are probably so past their prime that they wouldn't taste good anyway.
What I found was some perfectly good meals and meal starters that I forgot we had which have helped me with this weeks meal planning, not to mention greatly reduced what I needed to buy from the grocery this morning.
Here's the line-up:
Saturday - Nigella Lawson's Mini Meatloaves. I found a ziploc full of them during the freezer clean out. The Scotsman made them about a month ago and I had fogotten that we froze half of them. These are delicious, super easy to make and kid friendly. Give them a try!
Sunday - The Scotsman is making some sort of middle eastern inspired turkey burger. I think he got the recipe from Gwyneth Paltrows book. I don't know much about it except that it involves Tahini and will be served in whole wheat pita bread rather than buns as he asked me to pick up those two things at the grocery. If it's good, I'll post the recipe next week.
Tuesday - Salmon (found some in the freezer). Try this easy recipe my mom has been making for years - place salmon in a baking dish. Fill the dish with white wine until the wine comes half way up the salmon. Sprinkle with fresh or dry dill (and if you have neither, don't sweat it, just cook as is). Cook for 15 mins or until fish flakes easily.
Wednesday - End of Year Picnic at Ben's preschool. Pizza and salad will be provided.
Thursday - Pasta. With sauce from a jar. Thursdays are tough for us because Jake and The Scotsman get home late from soccer practice.
Friday - Taco night! Jake and Ben will only touch avocados and raw tomatoes when they are in the form of guacamole and salsa, so I try to work in taco night once a week. For some reason, burrioto night does not fly with them.
What are you eating this week?

Friday, May 31, 2013

What's For Dinner

Tomorrow starts a new month. So I’m recommitting myself to meal planning which fell very much by the wayside in May. This is what we’re eating for the next week. It’s meant to be hot, hot, hot here in the New England so I’m taking advantage of the grill. What are you eating this week?

Saturday – Steak, potatoes and corn on the cob on the grill. I may decided to marinate the steak in 1 cup creamy Italian dressing, 1 cup “regular” Italian dressing and 1 cup BBQ Sauce. It’s the “secret” recipe from a local restaurant that makes the best steak tips.

Sunday – Grilled Tandoori Chicken (recipe below – from my friend Kelly who served it to us at her house last week. Delicious!) grilled veggies, Naan bread. I may get adventurous and heat the Naan on the grill.

Monday – Taco Night!

Tuesday – Penne a la Vodka with prepared sauce and salad.

Wednesday –  Homemade Turkey Burgers (1 lb ground turkey, 1 cup shredded mozzarella cheese, ½ cup shredded zucchini, 1 egg. Form in to patties and grill), Maple Baked Beans (recipe in previous post), more grilled veggies.

Thursday – Grilled veggie frittata (I don’t really have a recipe – I’m going to wing it.)

Friday – Grilled Shrimp, couscous, watermelon

Grilled Tandoori Chicken

1 lb chicken (I use random pieces from my meat CSA. Most are bone-in. Boneless breasts or thighs would be fine, too)
2 TBS plain yogurt
1 TBS lemon juice
1 Tbs tomato paste
2 TBS Tandoori spice mix (I purchased mine at Whole Foods, but you can get it almost anywhere)

Mix the ingredients together and marinate the chicken for 2-3 hours. Grill and enjoy!

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Project Recipe Binder

Mitt Romney may have binders full of women, but I have binders full of recipes. Or rather, one binder in particular:


 This binder is probably about 15 years old. I have spent the last decade and a half filling it with recipes snipped from newspapers or magazines, printed from the internet and handwritten gems from friends and family. As you can see, I haven’t exactly been neat about my recipe collecting and truth be told, I haven’t cracked open this binder in well over a year.

Looking through it was a pleasant walk down memory lane. Recipes from my mom and stepmom reminded me of favorite meals from years and holidays past (in particular Spinach Stuffing Balls, Orange Rice and Tandoori Chicken). My friend Kerry’s Eggplant “meatballs”  and Katie’s Cumin Chicken brought me back to delicious meals in their homes. I found recipe clippings from Scotland’s Sunday Express newspaper from when the The Scotsman and I actually lived in Scotland.  Recipes from The Boston Globe reminded me of a time before we had kids and I actually sat down to read the paper most days (it was also so long ago that people actually read the paper rather than surfing the web for their news). And there were also some recipes I couldn’t explain – like  print out from Food Network for “Basic Stuffing.” Why I saved a recipe for something I can find in half a dozen cookbooks that I already own or in a three second google search I will never know.

What also occurred to me is that I have never made at least half of the recipes in this binder. For all I know, they’re duds.

So, I’ve set myself a challenge: I’m going to make at least one of these recipes every week until I’ve made every single one of them. I’ll ditch the duds and put the good ones into our dinner rotation. I’ll keep you updated on my progress and share the good ones with you (no point in sharing the ones I send to the recycling bin – I like you all too much to share mediocre recipes with you.)

When I finish my self-imposed challenge, I think I need to find a better way to store the keepers. The current binder is ugly and has seen better days. And I have soft spot for cute stationary items and need an excuse to buy one of the flowery binders I’ve been coveting in Target. I know someone who transfers all of her recipe clippings and recipe cards/scribbled notes into a Word document that she then then prints out and puts in a plain black three-ring binder.  For me, that takes all the fun out of recipe collecting. Part of what makes my recipes so special to me is the memories the actual paper recipes bring to me; the red wine stain on the Apple Cake recipes reminds me of lunch at a local vineyard with a good friend whom I haven’t seen in a while. Seeing my great-grandmothers handwriting on her Chocolate Peanut Butter Pop recipe brings me straight back to my childhood. Typing recipes and discarding the original may make them easier to read, but it also takes away their character.

I’ll do my meal plan for next week in the next day or two. I’ll work in a couple of recipes in the binder. Until then, I leave you with two of my favorites; my stepmothers Sweet and Sour Red Cabbage and my beloved Gruyere and Mushroom “Breakfast Pie”.

What recipes remind you of happy times long ago?

Sweet and Sour Red Cabbage – Serves 6-8 as a side dish
This recipe is from my Stepmother, Susan. I’m not a fan of cabbage so I was quite dubious when this first showed up at Christmas Dinner years ago. I still don’t like cabbage but I LOVE this recipe. I’ll be serving it as part of Easter dinner this weekend.

3-4 lbs red cabbage, shredded (4 bags of the pre-shredded)
1 tart apple, chopped (such as granny smith)
4 TBS butter
1 heaping TBS brown sugar
1 cup onion, minced
6 TBS red wine vinegar
1 cup chicken broth
1 tsp salt
½ cup red currant jelly

Melt the butter and stir in the brown sugar. Add the apple and onion. Cover and cook on low heat for 4-5 minutes. Stir in the cabbage, add the vinegar and braise for 10 minutes. Add the chicken broth and salt. Cover and cook over low heat for 2 hours. Stir in the jelly just before serving. Tastes even better the next day! I have been known to eat this cold, straight from the fridge.

Gruyere and Mushroom Breakfast Pie – Serves 4-6 depending on how hungry everyone is
This is adapted from a Martha Stewart recipe. Martha’s original recipe is called Bacon and Egg Casserole. I’ve stayed pretty true to the original but I’ve made a couple of changes. I would eat this everyday if I could, but usually bring it out when we have company for brunch.

1 sheet store-bought puff pastry or Pillsbury Crescent Roll Dough, depending on your mood
8-oz bacon (about 12 slices) cut into small pieces
1 medium onion, sliced
8-oz mushrooms, sliced
2 large eggs
½ cup heavy cream
Salt and pepper to taste
½ cups Gruyere cheese, grated

Preheat the oven to 400. Press the puff pastry or Crescent Roll dough into the bottom of an 8x8 inch pan or a pie plate.

In a large skillet over medium high heat, cook the bacon until it begins to brown; about 5 minute. Add the onions and mushrooms and cook until the bacon is crisp and the onions are just starting to brown. Transfer the mixture to a plate and let it cool slightly.

Spread the onion mixture over the pastry/dough. In a small bowl, stir together the eggs, heavy cream, salt and pepper. Sprinkle the Gruyere over the top. Bake for about 40 minutes, or until the filing is set and the top is beginning to turn golden brown.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Stuck in a Dinner Rut

I’m stuck in a dinner rut. You know what I mean – trying to plan your meals for the week and having no inspiration. What I don’t understand is that if you told me I needed to plan a dinner party or a holiday meal I’d be able to plan multiple, intricate, yummy, interesting meals in a matter of minutes. Ask me to plan some basic dinners for the family and I’m stuck staring at a blank page. Why, why, why? What is so hard about this?

I don’t know the answer to that question but obviously I’ve been asking it for years. I poked through some old and emails found an email to my husband from November of 2011 listing all the various meals I could think of for lunch and dinner. It must not have been very inspiring to either of us as it hasn’t been looked at since….November of 2011. And looking at it now isn’t exactly getting the culinary juices flowing, either.



I think this issue is a big reason why family dinners are so hard. And I’d like to think I’m not alone. It’s one thing to manage to get the family gathered around the dinner table. It’s a different matter to come up with what your going to serve. I think for me, the issue performance anxiety. I’m afraid to try something new in case someone doesn’t like it. My husband is not a fan of pasta so that’s out (although I’m working on him). The kids surprise me with what they do and don’t like. So rather than taking a chance I do nothing at all.

I still don’t know what we’re going to eat in the coming week. But in the meantime I’ll leave you with a recipe for an old favorite that appeared on that 2011 email. This is the best beef brisket you’ll ever have. I demanded the recipe from my friend Kerry years ago after eating it at her house. It was so good I made it for dinner that same night (it was THAT good). I’ve tried other brisket recipes but none of them have held a candle to this one.

Kerry’s Beef Brisket (aka The Best Brisket You’ll Ever Eat)

3 lbs single cut beef brisket
1 cup ketchup
½ cup brown sugar
½ cup cider vinegar
1 pkg dry onion soup mix
½ cup water
½ cup BBQ sauce

Preheat oven to 375®

Place the brisket in a 13x9 dish. In a medium bowl, mix together the other ingredients and pour over the brisket.

Cover the brisket tightly with foil and bake for 3 ½ hours. Remove from oven and let cool.

Slice the meat against the grain and return to the sauce. Reheat in the over for approx. 20 minutes.