Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Pic for Ham & Black Bean Soup

Here it is as promised.  I will try to get a digital camera this weekend from Wallymart.  Wish me luck.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Practical Beans and Things

I hope everyone had a good Memorial Day weekend.  My thoughts go out to those that are here after being there, those that are still there, and those that are gone.


I had a pretty fun and uneventful weekend myself  - boyfriend had a birthday and we celebrated by throwing our heads back and yelling "Meat! And Fire!" and a grand old time was had by all here, but I have friends and family going through tough times right now.  I am down to pennies in my coin jar but that's normal for me so we'll survive.  Some advice for them - I learned that in tough times it's good to get back to basics. 

For those that are stressing about things a good hearty bowl of soup, even in the middle of hot summer day, can be soothing. If you don't have one, I suggest picking up a crockpot at your local discount store.  Long and slow really defines a thick soup or a good broth and in summer you REALLY don't want to be using that oven or stove if you can help it.  If you have a grill, that can also be used with a good old fashioned cast iron Dutch oven to pull this off. Even consider an electric hotplate. 

If you have pressure from other stuff don't add to it by filling your house with unnecessary heat if you can help it.  Of course if you're poor and in need of one it can make for a good cheap sauna substitute.  Wrap me in a terrycloth towel, put in my earphones and shimmy while stirring and singing to Bananarama, but then I'm OK with scaring the neighbors.

My crockpot started to do it's thing around nine this morning.  I was looking through my freezer and spotted the last of the ham I had stuck in there.  It seems that when I buy a ham that sucker lasts forever unless I force myself to use the last bits.  I have so far made ham and navy bean soup, ham casserole, ham and eggs, ham salad and ham sandwiches out of it.  I try to stretch that out over a long period of time though.  I can get hammed out pretty quick and it seems to do very well in the deep freeze.

I decided to make soup again and even add more beans, but this time I used my dried black beans. I wash them and then just throw them in.  I never parboil them or soak them over night and the soup comes out just fine. You prep them however you want but I don't have time to be intimidated by a bean.  In goes tons of onions, bell peppers, celery and chives (I have tons of chives from my mom's garden.  They are free and extremely tasty.)  Add beef broth, 1 dried chipotle pepper, oregano, black pepper, cumin, chili powder and the shredded ham.  This simmered all day on high for about 14 hours.  The beans are tender, the vegetables are completely soft and melded in flavors, the ham has worked it's way in ready to caress your taste buds and scented it's way through my kitchen like a ham fairy's kiss.  It's magic time.

I didn't add tomatoes this time around but after the beans are tender you can add a can of diced or crushed or chop up some fresh, however you want to do it.  It's your refrigerator and your leftovers.  Have fun with necessity.


Milton has gone to sleep.  I'm about to.  I'll post a pic in the morning, for now you can just have that image of me scaring the neighbors burned into your mind's eye for the night.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Cinnamon Raisin Bread

These days I find myself totally stressing out (and yes, totally means I had my best years in the '80's).  When I find that I want to scream because my AC is out, or that my kids are going out of their way to break the laptop, or the dog smiles at me while pooping in the house, I break out a big plastic mixing bowl and bake something.  The other night it was cinnamon raisin bread.  I absolutely love the stuff and have never really made a good loaf of it.  I found my good loaf-muse it seems.

I have been making the "No Knead" bread lately for a couple of reasons. 

1st: it's cheap.  You really cannot get cheaper than home made bread at the cost per loaf - pennies, even with eggs and butter and cream (read brioche) vs store bought loaves which are considered a bargain if you can find one at the dollar store.  Specialty breads, like said brioche and cinnamon raisin, well, add at least a dollar or two per loaf.  God help you if you want something with icing or braided, etc.

2nd: I know what goes into it.  No "ites" or "ics" or viscous unpronounceable fluids. At my most basic the recipe has yeast, flour, salt and water.  I can even pronounce all of that without taking an extra breath!  Maybe it won't last on an open shelf for a couple of weeks without turning that lovely turquoise color but it doesn't have a funny chemical aftertaste and if I need it for that long I have storage bags and a freezer.  But the bread never lasts more than a couple of days without disappearing into ravenous maws anyway.

3rd: I can get as goofy with the ingredients as I want and I don't have to justify anything to the marketing guys.  If I want to throw in curry powder and bacon pieces (it's mighty tasty by the way) I can do so without fear of upper management reprimands.  I am upper management in my kitchen.

Cinnamon and raisins - the concept doesn't sound tough does it.  Mostly it's not but I want it to taste of more than just bread with raisins and cinnamon thrown in.  My mind flew back to being a kid and scarfing up warm cinnamon rolls.  Steaming from the oven, soft and fresh with the spiciness that was damned near intoxicating.  Cinnamon evokes images of both far off exotic lands and homey holiday gatherings all at the same time.  It's a phenomenal spice encompassing the magical and and the every day - gotta love it.

The rolls became my foundation for my bread.  I made my normal bread recipe.

1 1/2 tbsp yeast
1 1/2 tbsp salt
3 cups water
6 to 7 cups flour.


Mix the salt and yeast into the water.  Doesn't have to be a specific temperature, just make it as close to room temp as you can get.  In addition to the ingredients above I also throw in 1/2 cup of brown sugar and 3/4 cup of raisins.  This plumps up the little suckers - do not need crunchy bits on the inside of my bread unless it's nuts.  I also add in 2 cups of the flour.  Stir until blended.  Now walk away and let nature take it's course for about an hour.  You'll be amazed if you've never done this before.  Looks like something out of a bad post apocalyptic movie.  Smells like one too.  Stir this down and add in the rest of the flour - depending on the humidity of the day you may need more or less flour. 

It's not supposed to be a stiff dough, it should be loose, not watery. It'll look not mixed enough and have dry bits here and there - that's OK.  Cover with whatever will keep the flies out and the moisture in and walk away for abut 2 hours.  This will fill up an 8 quart dutch oven so make sure you have a large mixing bowl.  No need to knead - I love this recipe.  Came in handy when my shoulder got injured.

When you come back and it's finished trying to take over the earth and mix it down.  Flour a board, don't skimp on the flour, and do your best to flatten it out to a rectangle.  Cut that into 3 pieces.  Take each piece and get that as flat as you can without tearing anything.  Mix 2 sticks of softened butter with 1/2 cup brown sugar and 1 tbsp cinnamon.  Take 1/3 of mixture and smear over the flattened dough. Roll up from the long end, pinch both ends and fold under and bake in bread pan at 350 deg - I bake it usually for about half an hour to 40 minutes in my oven but I would suggest doing a test run in yours.  This makes 3 loaves but you can always freeze the other 2 unbaked loaves in freezer bags until needed.  Just take out and let come to room temperature then bake as normal.

The first time I tried this recipe, about 2 days ago, I think I had one of those out of body experiences.  I was hovering above myself looking down at a very happy Debie.  She was chewing soft, spicy and slightly sweet heaven, with a little butter.  The ghosts of ancient spice merchants and Coca-Cola Santa Clause were smiling in satisfaction.


Monday, May 23, 2011

Dinner from a dollar store

I've been haunting my local dollar store more lately.  They now have a freezer and cooler section in the back.  You'd be amazed at what they stock in there.  I have gotten everything from tater tots to thin-cut rib eyes.  Frozen berries, frozen lemonade, frozen peas, and well, whatever else comes off the truck that week.  It seems to change every week too, I'm guessing these are closeout offers.

More than a few times I have grabbed stuff out of there and made dinner, dessert or whatever else comes to mind with things.  Sometimes it's great and other times not so good.  The berries were a great example of not so good.

I was saw a bag of frozen blueberries so I grabbed them.  Let me fully explain this to you so you understand how rabid I was when I saw this bag.  I LOVE blueberries.  I have made a meal out of an entire grocery bag of blueberries I got once at a pick-your-own place.  I washed them, picked out the little bits of grit and stems you always find in with them and ate them.  All of them.  By myself.  I paid for it horrible the next day - I think that was my recommended fiber intake requirement for the entire year at one sitting.  I would be tempted to do it again.

Heck, to this day when I watch Willy Wonka (the old one with Gene Wilder) I still have an urge to see what the little purple girl would taste like in a turnover.  It'd be OK as long as it's sprinkled in sugar - right?

The contents of the bag looked and smelled pretty good.  When they thawed out however the little blue round things turned out to be leather pebbles.  That's the only way I can describe the sensation when I popped one into my mouth.  I was so sad, my blue berries that looked and smelled great had the texture of little soggy mummies.  I ate every one of them right out of the bag, but I'll never get them again.

Tonight's experiment came out quite tasty.  I grabbed a box of tri-colored rotini, kielbasa sausage, canned mushrooms, frozen spinach, condensed cream of chicken soup, shredded cheese and half & half.  Cook the noodles to al dente, simmer the soup, add a can of half & half, the canned mushrooms (undrained).  Cut up the kielbasa into bite sized pieces, throw the spinach into the pot while it's still frozen.  Technically the only thing that has to be actually cooked is the pasta.  Everything else just has to be heated threw so this was kinda like an instant dinner.   Sprinkle whatever seasonings you like, I added black pepper and garlic powder.   Just before serving add 1 cup of shredded cheese and let melt through - stir gently.  Serve over the pasta.

You can imagine this goes good with any easy meats - meaning leftovers, canned stuff like chicken and tuna, frozen cooked shrimp, almost endless in variations and I am all about the variations.

So dinner tonight was easy, nothing fancy, filling and of course cheap.  I made it and served it to five people and my total cost, not including the seasonings which I had on hand, was around $5.  Makes my budget happy.

Because it was easy it gave me plenty of time to daydream while putting it together.  What about you may ask?  Why, being reincarnated as a bear cub in Alaska, in an open sunny field with wild blueberry bushes as far as the eye can see.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Pefect Bacon

One of the best reasons I have of keeping around a big jar of bacon grease is because I use it to deep fry bacon.  Seriously.  And it makes perfect bacon every time.

Now being from my dad's family, bacon grease is a staple for good breakfasts.  Bacon grease to fry eggs in, bacon grease to fry waffles and pancakes on, bacon grease in my gravy, etc.  I have always used it.  Heck any other meal makes it makes things oh so wonderful too.  Chopped veggies thrown into soups and stews, the small pieces of chicken when I make soft tacos, et cetera et cetera.

A while ago I had a bunch of friends over for breakfast and I picked up a ton of bacon.  I figured if they didn't eat it all I could always use it for other stuff so I dragged out my favorite cast iron frying pan and went to work.  What I forgot to do was to grab one of my metal bowls to dump the grease into as I was cooking so it wouldn't fill up the pan.  After a while I noticed that the bacon that was being cooked in the deep part of the fat (my burner tilts to one side a little bit) was straighter, more evenly cooked and had better color.  I pulled a few pieces out, let them cool slightly and then bit into bacon heaven. The pork gods gave me the greatest of gifts that day.  I have decided to not cook bacon any other way if I can help it.

Don't get me wrong.  If it's a crowd I am cooking for bacon in the oven still comes out great.  But I can get distracted and if I don't stay on top of it they tend to burn on one side, I have to rotate the cookie sheet for the good results.  This is wonderful for the breakfast hordes, or for BLT's at gatherings. 

But if I have any kind of a choice it's the deep fried stuff.  Take your deep fried snickers bars, your fried chicken, your tempura and other crispy offerings and just know in my heart of hearts they come in a close second place.  As my Dad is always saying (and as I am always quoting him) "You have to be thankful for the things that work out, and you have to be especially thankful for the things that don't."



Friday, May 20, 2011

Seriously Cheap Steaks

I have a local grocery store that I invade about once a day.  Sometimes I hit other stores when I see a good sale or if I find a great coupon, this Bottom Dollar, this haven of frugality, this heroin of bargain hunters - sigh (told you I sigh a lot).  It used to be a Food Lion but it has since been split into two chains here in Northern Virginia.  Bloom for the above average earning crowd, and Bottom Dollar for those of us willing to pick lint off of found pennies and use them.  In other places I hear it's still Food Lion - I'll have to figure that one out some day.

I wandered in there today after I got off of work and went straight to the meat cooler.  They have meat clearance sales every day and every day it's something different - which for me is excellent since I like variety.  I also like a challenge.  Try making something fun and cool out of beef cheeks for picky kids.  I'll give you a few pointers if you ask nice.  Tonight I "Found the Beef", hit the bovine jackpot.  They had a package of six, I repeat SIX, Now York strip steaks for $6.  I blinked a few times then grabbed them to looked them over.  If I had a pocket microscope I might have been tempted. I mean come on, this was a buck a steak.  What trick were they trying to pull on me?

The color looked good with no greying, no funky smells emanating from the package, no weird looking liquid.  I did see some pretty good marbling of fat, good sign.  I took a chance and bought the lot of them.  If they didn't come out good I could always cut them up and mutate them into something else, watch me.

I took out the frying pan, lit up the stove to medium heat (we literally have to light it up as it's a gas stove with a broken igniter) and when the pan was ready threw the steaks on.  The steaks had a nice sear and cooked to medium rare......and then the taste test.......slice.......spear........grunt of happiness.  Yah, these were great steaks.  I wasn't about to look this gift horse, or cow, or whatever in the mouth.  I cooked up the rest of them, made buttered peas and brown rice and fried fresh mushrooms in the pan after deglazing with chicken broth.  Add garlic, onion and soy sauce, serve over rice.

Everyone is stuffed to the gills.  The great thing is I bought enough of the steaks I can enjoy another night of meat nirvana soon.  I have to figure out who the Saint of Carnivores is and say thank you.

Salmon Burgers

So I'm looking through my cupboards last night trying to think of what to make for dinner and I spy a couple of cans of salmon I had bought a few weeks ago when they were a good price.  I had been meaning to use them for a while now - you wouldn't think that picking up cans and walking them to the can opener would be such a chore.  Some days are like that.  Or like my Dad would say "One of those daze".

The moment I open the cans I get hit with the lovely, rich smell of salmon and I'm thinking why the heck haven't I done this sooner.  I'll tell you why - spring is when meats go on sale.  I have found beef, like London broil and sirloin roasts, for under two bucks. I have been going crazy with ham and pork too.  A plethora of soups and stews and curries have can be found for dinner lately.  Getting tired of that.

Chicken hasn't hit the sweet wallet spot yet but I'm sure a overloaded truck heading to Wally Mart will come at some point and they'll have whole roasters to unload at mind boggling prices. They do this every year and my bulging freezer will start to weep when it sees me coming in with another load.  My freezer probably wants a big brother soon.  I'll hit the Craigslist and see if we can adopt.

I dumped the salmon into a bowl and added 3 large eggs, beaten, 1 cup of bread crumbs (plain), some Italian seasoning, season salt, black pepper, both garlic and onion powders.  Stir this up, try not to break up the salmon meat too much.  Pan fry at medium low heat and fry them crispy brown on both sides.  Try not to fry at too high of a heat or they will be soggy in the middle. I do fry some stuff in oil but for some reason a burger, whether it's beef, salmon or anything else, tastes otherworldly when fried in butter. 

I picked up some burger buns at the dollar store and threw cheese on top - good to go.  I like provolone on mine, the kids had shredded Mexican on theirs.



That recipe is good for a lot of different types of burgers, salmon, tuna, beef, pork, Italian sausage, black beans, canned chicken, etc.  My tofu burgers are a little different but I guess that's because they are wetter.  I'll have to make some of those later in the summer and show them off, but right now the pacific northwest is on my plate whispering I need horseradish sauce. And tater tots.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Sausage Refrigerator Stew

Here's the pic as promised.  Thank you Milton.  I'll do this myself someday - promise.

Leftovers

When I added more people in my life, boyfriends, daughter of boyfriend, I started to encounter a food dilemma.  I would to go into my fridge and find moldering leftovers in the back.  It seems to me that they regarded leftovers as something created by the devil himself - to be shunned and be certain to make warding gestures as you walk past.  I always thought that wasting food was the real sin but I was hoping to avoid a religious food war if I could.

My daughter Casey and I look forward to a bowl of warmed over leftovers.  My other daughter, Rhea, when she comes to visit likes to scarf them down just as eagerly.  Everyone else would prefer to waste away until they end up looking like forgotten island castaways before they nuke up a plate.  My two girls and I grew up knowing that a lot of foods - soups, stews, curries, casseroles, etc - taste so much better the next day.  I always wondered what the new crowd in my life grew up eating.  I can't afford to cook entirely new meals every day.  Even if I could afford to - I like the flavors these concoctions pick up when allowed to meld overnight.  Sigh (I sigh alot some days).

I did finally figure out a good way to get the less enthusiastic eaters in my house to consume them.  Turn them into something unrecognizable. Take tonight's dinner for instance.

I had leftover peas, onion and mushroom gravy and Italian sausage which I scrambled and fried.  These were from three different meals.  Looked like I had enough stuff to make something else altogether from them.  I threw the peas and a package of frozen stir fry veggies (I buy these by the ton when they go on sale - my freezer bulges) into my beat up wok - best wok ever.  Cranked up the heat, added garlic, black pepper, chicken stock.  When bubbling I added the gravy and sausage and heated through.  Spooned it over leftover rice and everyone made it disappear.  I lovingly call this refrigerator stew.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

The start of wise and cheap

When I was growing up I did it poor and surrounded by loving family.  We ate what was available from the local farmer's market - because we lived in farmland and that was the only market around.  Everything was fresh and cheap and bright and colorful - like a food carnival to a little kid.  Not a lot of pre-packaged food to be had back then except twinkies and other Hostess goodness, occasional bottles of King syrup or Aunt Jemima for pancakes.  I grew up eating an obscenely healthy diet.
Mom would get ingredients and make food from her homeland, Korea, from scratch. I learned to eat kimchee very young.  She would cut it into little strips and swish it a little in water, had all the flavor but lost some of the heat.  The swishing got less and less as I got older and now I can eat blazing hot without batting an eyelash.
Dad insisted on middle America food which she eventually learned to make, and very well I might add.  I have my Grandma and my Aunt Ellie to thank for that.  Good, basic stuff. Meatloaf was a favorite, fried chicken and green beans, a lot of fried chicken with green beans.  Most meals came with mashed potatoes and gravy.  The gravy was phenomenal and a roux was never used back then. Mom used to use one of those shakers from the instant breakfast packages to get the lumps out of her water and flour mixture by shaking the crap out of it - worked wonders.
My dad was in the army, met my mom when he was stationed in Korea back in the 60's.  His best friend married my mom's best friend and set them up.  So dad is tall, blonde haired (well now it,s grey, dad says it's just the blonde coming back) and blue eyed.  Mom is short, at the time had black hair and was beautiful.  Dad was pretty goofy looking with his sticking out ears and lanky frame.  How he scored Mom is still beyond me, but they've been together now since 1964.  Not too shabby.
I started this blog because I watched a show one time called "Chopped" in which contestants opened a basket of ingredients and made what they could out of it to win money.  I could do that show, I live "Chopped" pretty much every day.  I have five people I have to cook for every day and when I go shopping I try to buy only things that are on sale at the time.  You learn to get very creative because you never know what's going to be on sale at the time.
I'm making teriyaki tonight. I haven't made this in a long time but I saw the beef on sale at my local grocery store and I had to get it.  It was paper thin shaved beef in shrink wrap packages.  I'm guessing it's normally used for carne asada or some such.  I have other ideas.
We'll start by marinating it in soy sauce, toasted sesame oil, grated fresh ginger (I also freeze it depending on how much I have on hand), pineapple juice, black pepper, a pinch of powdered dashi stock and chopped spring onion. Will let that sit for about half an hour, then stir fry over frighteningly hot heat with a little more sesame oil and then serve over rice - tonight it's short grain white rice for a change. Will serve sauteed spinach and onions on the side. Simple, delicious and no one really dislikes it - and oh boy we have some picky eaters to contend with.
I'll try to start posting pic soon.  Right now I don't have a digital camera, just a phone that pretends to take pictures.  The latest and greatest  camera at Walmart, you know the one on the cheap electronics aisle that goes for 29.99 (think Earl Scheib's voice for a moment) takes better pics.

So be patient, something fresh and cheap and bright and colorful forthcoming.