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Shrimp & Scallop Scampi with Linguine

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My friend, Suzie, shared this recipe with me, which she got from The Quarterdeck restaurant in Cape Cod, MA via The Food Network.  That’s a lot of vias, but I’m glad it made its way to my kitchen!  It is a delicious meal, and you really will feel like you’re eating at a fine restaurant when you dig in!

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Shrimp and Scallop Scampi with Linguine
Printable recipe
Printable recipe with picture

Kosher salt
1 pound linguine
12 jumbo shrimp, peeled and deveined
12 large sea scallops, tough foot muscles removed
Freshly ground pepper
3 1/2 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice, plus lemon wedges for garnish
1/2 cup dry white wine
1/4 cup torn fresh basil
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley

Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the linguine and cook as the label directs.

Meanwhile, heat a large skillet over medium-high heat. Pat the shrimp and scallops dry, then season with salt and pepper. Add 1 1/2 tablespoons butter to the pan and cook the shrimp until golden on one side, about 3 minutes. Turn the shrimp and add half of the garlic; cook until the garlic is fragrant but the shrimp are still translucent, 1 to 2 more minutes. Transfer the shrimp to a plate.

Add the scallops to the skillet and cook until golden on one side, about 3 minutes. Turn the scallops, add the remaining garlic and cook 1 to 2 more minutes. Add the lemon juice and wine and bring to a boil, scraping up any browned bits with a wooden spoon. Cook until the sauce is reduced by half, about 3 minutes. Return the shrimp to the pan, then add the basil and the remaining 2 tablespoons butter; season with salt and pepper.

Drain the pasta and transfer to a large serving bowl. Toss with the shrimp, scallops and sauce; garnish with parsley and lemon.

Veronica’s Notes: If you buy frozen scallops, you will not have to remove any foot muscles–they are ready to cook.  I used a pound of regular sized shrimp in place of the jumbo, chicken broth in place of the wine, 1 1/2 T dried basil in place of the fresh and served with roasted asparagus on the side.

Recipe Source: The Food Network

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Roasted Asparagus

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Asparagus is one of my favorite veggies.  And although I do snack on it raw occasionally, I actually prefer it cooked, unlike my other two favorite veggies–sugar snap peas and green beans.  I have seen three posts for roasted asparagus lately and since it’s in season and was a pretty good price, I picked some up to use as a healthy side dish for dinner.  I went with the first recipe I saw from my favorite food blog, My Kitchen Cafe, which incidentally I saw repeated when Real Mom Kitchen reposted the recipe.  I think Mel has started a chain reaction!

I usually steam asparagus and never minded it being sort of limp until I tried this recipe and delighted at the fresh crunch it still had after being roasted!  Tender & crisp=asparagus perfection in my book.  If you want to change things up, you can add garlic powder, parmesan cheese, a squeeze of lemon juize, balsamic vinegar or whatever your creative mind comes up with!

Perfect Roasted Asparagus
Printable Version
Printable recipe with picture

*Serves about 4

1 pound asparagus spears (the thicker the better for roasting)
2 tablespoons olive oil
Kosher/Coarse salt
Black pepper

Preheat the oven to 400 degrees. While the oven is preheating, gently break off the lower ends of the asparagus. This is the tough part that isn’t so great for eating. The asparagus should break naturally when you bend the asparagus about 1-2 inches up the stalk. Discard the lower, tough portion.

Lay the asparagus in a single layer on a rimmed baking sheet. Drizzle with the olive oil. Using your fingers, gently roll the asparagus to evenly coat with the oil. Sprinkle the asparagus with salt and pepper. Again, lightly roll the asparagus so the salt and pepper gets evenly distributed.

Bake for 10-12 minutes, checking often the last one to two minutes of baking, until the asparagus is tender when pierced with a fork. Serve immediately.

Recipe Source: My Kitchen Cafe

I’m still thinking about the raw veggies I enjoy.  What are your favorites?  Have you ever tried eating raw sweet potato?  My Mom used to slice raw sweet potatoes up into thick french fry shapes and put them on veggie platters.  My friends and I had no idea what they were, but we loved them and they always disappeared first.  For years Mom wouldn’t tell me what they were!  I guess she thought I’d stop liking them if I knew it was a sweet potato and not an exotic vegetable.

Ultimate Beef Stroganoff

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I know I sound like a broken record, but you’re gonna have to get used to it: this is another great recipe from My Kitchen Cafe!  I’m actually starting to wonder why I even have a food blog because I’m just stealing Mel’s recipes and putting them on my own!  Well, at least you know when I post them they have been approved not only by her family but mine so you can probably trust that it’s gonna be good.

Not only was this delicious, it’s so easy!  I love preparing meals in the crockpot because after coming home from work,  the last thing I want to do is start dinner.  Usually I’m starving and just want to sit down and eat.  This meal is perfect for career-women and Moms.  And just anybody that loves an easy and delicious meal!  Slow-cooking the meat makes it super tender and it practically melts in your mouth.  Scanning the ingredients, I thought it sounded too simple to be very impressive but it just goes to show that sometimes simple is best!

THE ULTIMATE BEEF STROGANOFF
Printable recipe

Put in crock pot:
2-3 pounds stew meat
1 tsp. salt
dash of pepper
1 onion, sliced

Mix in a bowl and pour over meat:
¼ tsp. garlic salt
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 ½ cups beef broth or stock (made up from cubes or granules)
1 tablespoon ketchup

Cook in crockpot on low for 7-8 hours or high for 4-5 hours. When cooked make a simple roux by whisking 1/3 cup flour with enough apple juice (about 5-6 tablespoons) to make a thick but still pourable flour mixture. Whisk the roux into the crockpot and add 4 ounces sliced mushrooms.

Cook on high for 15-30 minutes. Then stir in ½ cup sour cream. Serve over pasta, rice or baked potatoes.

*Freezable Meal: The leftovers of the stroganoff can be frozen. Mel stores the leftovers in a freezer-safe container and then thaws in the refrigerator (usually takes about a day) and reheat over medium-low heat in a saucepan on the stove.

Veronica’s Notes: I didn’t have apple juice so I just used water for the roux.  Though it didn’t seem to suffer for it, I hate that I might have missed out on the full flavor experience so next time I will be sure to have apple juice! I also used a ton of mushrooms (four times what’s called for) because I had a ton of mushrooms and didn’t want them to go to waste.  Still tasted good!  So if it bothers you to only use half of an 8-oz container, go ahead and put the whole thing in. Lastly, if you’re wondering about those fabulous fat noodles that look homemade, they are Essenhaus Amish Country Kitchen Extra Wide Homestyle Noodles.  I found them on the bread aisle in the grocery store.  You can purchase them online here or use their store locator to see if they are sold near you.

Recipe source: My Kitchen Cafe

General Tso’s Chicken

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How was your Easter?  Dennis and I went to Abilene to spend it with his family and had a lovely time.  Phyllis, my mother-in-law, made a killer ham and my favorite scalloped potatoes, and we also had the creamed corn (the REAL kind with whole corn mixed with butter and cream cheese–Dennis HAS to have that stuff at every family function) and Mexican coleslaw that my sister-in-law, Joan brought.  The coleslaw was really yummy and I plan to use it on some fish tacos so I’ll be blogging it eventually.  I brought the dessert (was there any doubt?) and supplied lemon bars and white cupcakes with my favorite lemon frosting.  I’ve had lemon on the brain since it finally started warming up and I’m still thinking about making more lemon desserts!  Something to look forward to.

Anyway, now that we’re all getting a little tired of leftover ham, I have something completely different for you to add to your meal plan.  I mentioned in a recent post that I’d been wanting to spread my wings a little and try more ethnic cuisine so it’s a little ironic that I chose General Tso’s chicken as one of my first attempts since it’s actually an American creation.  But it tastes and looks Asian and is served in Chinese restaurants so that’s close enough for me!

I based my recipe & method off of a You Tube Video that my friend Dewey sent me when he read that I was wanting to try it out.  After watching itkman cook it up with little effort, I was comfortable enough to change it up a little, and it turned out beautiful and delicious!  I hope you try it.  Just looking at the photos has me drooling and wanting some more!

General Tso’s Chicken
Printable recipe

Sauce
½ cup chicken broth
¼ c sugar
¼ c rice vinegar
2 T hoisin sauce
1 T sesame oil
1 T soy sauce
1 T cornstarch
2 t minced fresh ginger
6 cloves minced garlic
4 scallions, chopped

Chicken
2 lb. chicken breast, cut into chunks
1 egg
1 T soy sauce
Flour
Vegetable oil for frying

Vegetables
1/3 of a red pepper, sliced
1/3 of an orange pepper, sliced
1/3 of a yellow pepper, sliced
2 cups broccoli florets

Mix all but the last three ingredients for the sauce and once the sugar & cornstarch are dissolved, stir in the ginger, garlic & scallions.  Set aside.

Mix the chicken with the egg and soy sauce, then roll each chunk in flour.  Fry the chicken in vegetable oil that is 375 degrees F until golden brown.*  Remove to a plate lined with paper towels and set aside.

Put the vegetables in a microwave-safe dish with a cover and nuke for 3 minutes.  Meanwhile, heat a large wok on high, give the sauce a stir, and pour it into the wok.  Wait for it to start simmering, then start stirring until it gets thickened.  Add in the chicken and toss until it is evenly coated.  Remove from heat and add the vegetables, stirring until mixed.**  Serve hot along with rice if desired.

Serves 6.

*Veronica’s notes: I do not own a fryer, so I filled an uncoated (as in, no Teflon coating or nonstick surface) skillet half full of oil and used my candy thermometer to gauge the temperature, frying the chicken in three batches.  If you do your frying on the stove top, be sure to keep an eye on the temp b/c you don’t want it over 400 or below 350.

**If you are wondering why I didn’t just stir-fry the veggies before adding the sauce & the chicken, it is because the veggies would absorb too much of the sauce if done this way and the chicken wouldn’t get enough.  Coating the chicken first ensures it’s thoroughly coated so that just the little bit extra coats the vegetables, making them slightly flavored but still bright and fresh tasting, which nicely contrasts the saucy chicken.

I’m linking this with Food For Thought for BSI: Broth.

Green Chili Chicken and Lime Soup

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Much like the cinnamon roll sugar cookies, this was another recipe from Picky Palate that I had to make as soon as I read it.  Jenny based it off of the Chicken Green Chili soup that she recently enjoyed at Chili’s and says it tastes almost exactly the same.  I’ve never had it, but I can attest that her version is so fabulous that it officially took the number 1 spot on my “favorite soups” list.

I know it seems odd to post a soup recipe when the weather is finally warming up, but this is such a healthy and light recipe that it actually seems more spring-appropriate than fall or winter, when soups tend to get heartier, so I thought I’d better put it up now before it gets any warmer!

Read over the ingredients and imagine them combined and in your mouth–and then imagine it’s even better than what you imagined. Because it is.

Green Chili Chicken and Lime Soup
Printable recipe
Printable recipe with picture

2 Tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 onion, chopped
4 cloves fresh or roasted garlic, minced
80 oz chicken broth (2 1/2 cartons of the 32 oz)
10 oz can Rotel tomatoes, mild
7 oz can diced green chilies
4 medium boneless skinless chicken breasts; cooked, shredded and lightly seasoned with salt and pepper
2 1/2 Cups cooked rice of choice
1/4 Cup fresh lime juice
1 1/2 teaspoons ground cumin
Pinches of Kosher salt, fresh cracked black pepper and Lawry’s Garlic Salt with Parsley to taste
1 bunch of fresh cilantro, chopped
Fresh diced avocados, drizzled with lime juice
1 Cup shredded cheddar cheese
Tortilla chips

1.  Place oil into a large dutch oven over medium heat.  Saute onion for 5 minutes then add in garlic; cook for 1 minute.  Stir in chicken broth, tomatoes, green chilies, chicken breast, rice, lime juice and seasonings.  Cook for 5 minutes; taste and season according to your liking.  Right before serving add chopped cilantro.

2.  Serve soup with fresh diced avocado, shredded cheese and crushed chips if desired (I used whole chips to scoop the soup into my mouth–yum!).  If you can handle the heat, Jenny recommends squeezing some Siracha over top.

10-12 servings (for us it was only 6, but we ate big bowls!)

Veronica’s Notes: OK, I’m never prepared in advance. I had no rice already cooked and by the time I realized I needed cooked rice, my soup was all mixed and hot. So I just stirred in 1/3 cup of uncooked long grain white rice and brought the soup to a boil, reduced it to a simmer and cooked like 15 minutes (whatever it says on your rice package–that’s how long you’d cook it). This worked perfectly. I also only used 2 cartons of chicken broth and it was still more than plenty, even with the rice absorbing some of it.  Lastly, this soup isn’t spicy if eaten right after making it, but does have a nice kick the next day.

Recipe Source: Picky Palate

Thanks to Mel from My Kitchen Cafe for telling me how to include printable versions of my recipes on my blog!

Guacamole BLT & An Award

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This is a simple lunch or dinner idea from Faith of An Edible Mosaic that comes together quickly, and is quite healthy, filling, and delicious.  I think Faith described it perfectly so I’ll quote her summarization here: “The salty, crispy bacon and the smooth, creamy avocado pair perfectly, and the tomato and lemon juice really help to brighten the avocado’s flavor.”  It’s truly wonderful! 

Guacamole BLT
 recipe from An Edible Mosaic
(Yield:  1 sandwich)

2 slices multigrain bread (or any bread you like)
2-3 slices turkey bacon, cooked
2 large leaves lettuce, washed and dried
1/4 avocado
1/4 c cherry tomatoes, quartered
1 scallion, thinly sliced
1 tsp lemon juice
Dash salt and pepper

Toast the bread.  Mash the avocado and stir in the lemon juice, salt, and pepper; then mix in the tomato and scallion.  Spread the avocado mixture on one slice of bread, then top with the lettuce, turkey bacon, and the remaining slice of bread.

Faith recently passed on the Sunshine Award to me.  Isn’t she a sweetheart?! Thank you, dear Faith!

The Sunshine Award is awarded to bloggers whose positivity and creativity inspire others in the blog world.  I would like to pass this award onto the following bloggers:

1. Laura Flowers of The Cooking Photographer

2. Sarah of If These Curls Could Talk

3. Glenn of Tupper Cooks!

4. Sophia of Burp and Slurp (though I’m sure she’s already gotten it before!)

Cookie Mondays Gets the Axe

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Remember that “genius plan” I had to bake cookies for Dennis’ co-workers once a week so that I could get my bake on while losing weight since I wouldn’t be as tempted to eat something meant for others?  Yeah, that didn’t work out so well.  Almost four months into the year and I’m actually a few pounds heavier than I was on January 1st.  And cookie Mondays was definitely a factor that played into the weight gain. 

Despite the fact that I was making cookies for others, one batch of cookies usually makes plenty so that they’d never miss a few.  And in the case of the brown butter chocolate chip cookies, I ate more than two dozen.  I kid you not.

So when Dennis got a new supervisor and was switched to a different team of all-new co-workers that had no idea about Cookie Mondays, I took advantage of the situation and decided to stop the madness.  If you were wondering why I hadn’t posted any cookie recipes in a while, now you know.  Cookies seriously are my favorite of all sweets and I must have been insane to think I could keep my paws off of them.  I now realize why, despite loving them so much, I rarely make them.  I just can not resist homemade cookies, so it’s better not to make them at all!

All told, I made 11 batches of cookies:

Jan 4 – Easy Lemon Crinkle Cookies

Jan 11 – Peanut Butter Sandwich Cookies

Jan 18 – Millionaire Bars (Twix Bars)

Jan 25 – Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Feb 1 – Chocolate Gooey Butter Cookies

Feb 8 – Cherry Tea Cookies

Feb 15 – Peanut Butter Blossoms

Feb 22 – Cinnamon Roll Sugar Cookies

Mar 1 – Salted Brown Butter Crispy Treats

Mar 8 – Black Gold Cookies

Mar 15 – Loaded Oatmeal Cookies with Brown Butter Icing

The co-workers voted on their favorite cookies for the months of January and February.  January’s favorite was the Brown Butter Chocolate Chip (no surprise there!) and the Peanut Butter Blossoms and Cinnamon Roll Sugar Cookies tied for February’s favorite.  No votes were cast for March’s cookie since Dennis left his team, but one co-worker, upon gobbling a Black Gold cookie, proclaimed “I know which cookie I’ll be voting for this month!” 

The Loaded Oatmeal Cookies never made it to the co-workers because the switch was sudden, so most of them went in my belly, some to friends, and the rest remain in the freezer because the recipe makes a very large batch.  I’ve posted the recipe before, but I’ll include it here as well since I now have prettier pictures than the first time I made them. 

They are my favorite oatmeal raisin cookie because they really are loaded with all the good stuff and I really think the brown butter icing puts them over the top (brown butter makes everything better!).

Loaded Oatmeal Cookies with Brown Butter Icing
recipe from Paula Deen

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, softened
1/2 cup vegetable shortening
1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar
2 eggs
1/2 cup buttermilk
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
2 1/2 cups quick-cooking oatmeal
1 cup raisins
1 1/2 cups chopped walnuts
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
Brown Butter Icing, recipe follows

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

Grease 1 or more cookie sheets or line with parchment paper. Using an electric mixer, cream together butter, shortening, and sugar in a bowl until fluffy. Add eggs and beat until mixture is light in color. Add buttermilk. Sift together flour, baking soda, salt, baking powder, ginger, nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, and allspice; stir into creamed mixture. Fold in oatmeal, raisins, walnuts, and vanilla, blending well. Drop by rounded tablespoons onto cookie sheet. Bake for 10 to 15 minutes. Drizzle with Brown Butter Icing.

Brown Butter Icing:
1/2 cup butter
3 cups sifted powdered sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 to 4 tablespoons water

In a small saucepan heat the butter over medium heat, stirring often, until golden brown and the milk solids have separated and turned chocolate in color.  Remove saucepan from heat; stir in 3 cups sifted powdered sugar and 1 teaspoon vanilla. Stir in enough water (3 to 4 tablespoons) to make an icing of drizzling consistency. Drizzle on warm cookies. (I left mine fairly thick and used a pastry bag with the end snipped to drizzle. Ideally you’d want a thinner icing that you could drizzle with a spoon or fork.)

Sunflower Peeps Cake & Fudge Frosting Recipe

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I got this idea from Cathy from The Noble Pig, who got it from Taste of Home.  Since a recipe for the cake and frosting wasn’t included in Cathy’s post, I figured I’d make my own masterpiece and submit it to All Through The Year Cheer’s Easter Recipe Roundup.  I’ve been participating in each holiday recipe roundup with them since I found out about it last fall and even won the last one for Valentine’s Day with my cherry cordials recipe.  It’s been a lot of fun and I was looking forward to submitting a really great idea & recipe for Easter.

Well, all I have is a really great idea.  Because the recipe failed.   And that really great idea isn’t even my own! :(

After reading Cathy’s post, I decided I’d make an orange cake because I really like the combination of orange and chocolate and felt that using a citrus cake made it more spring-appropriate.  I imagined a light and fluffy cake with a sweet orange flavor that would perfectly balance the intense fudge frosting.  I decided upon the Orange Sour Cream Cake from Eating Out Loud.  I love how the sour cream in my favorite chocolate cake makes the crumb so incredibly moist and was hoping for a similar result with this recipe.  While the cake was very moist, it obviously was not meant for a layer cake–it’s almost more of a coffee cake–a dense cake, almost like pound cake, with a glaze on top instead of frosting.  Mistake number 1. 

I cut each cake layer in half and before spreading frosting over each layer, I doused them with a couple tablespoons of orange juice that I’d cooked with sugar to intensify the orange flavor and increase the moisture. Mistake number 2.  The cake was already moist enough and adding so much liquid made it even more dense and basically saturated it.  Mistake number 3 was letting my fudge frosting get too cold and instead of warming it to soften it, I just smashed it on top of the cake and pressed down really hard as I frosted the cake, thus compacting the poor, dense cake even further.

By the time I was done with it, the cake looked more like the center of a cake truffle than the light and fluffy cake I’d imagined.

However, the flavor was very good.  I would highly recommend trying this cake, but in a single layer as the recipe indicates and with the orange glaze instead of frosting.  This cake was not meant to be frosted.

OK, all is not a total loss.  I mean, look at this cake.  It’s adorable.  Such a great idea for an Easter cake!  And the frosting recipe, one of my favorites, is certainly not a failure–it was a success as usual and I’ll include that here with the directions on the cake.

Sunflower Peeps Cake

adapted from The Noble Pig

*Your favorite yellow cake recipe or 1 box mix (I’d recommend orange if you can find it, b/c it’s more spring-timey. Oh, if only they sold orange cake mix in Wichita!)
*Fudge Frosting (recipe follows)
*2 packages yellow chick Peeps candies

Prepare and bake cakes using two 8-inch round baking pans.

After cakes have cooled, make sure to level the tops so the cakes sit evenly on top of each other.  If you would like a four-layer cake, cut each layer in half.  Spread a thin layer of frosting, about 1/3 cup to 1/2 cup, between the four layers.  If you are just using two layers, spread about a cup of frosting between them.  Reserving 1/2 cup frosting, spread the remaining over the top and sides of the cake.  Without pulling the Peeps apart, arrange them around the edge of the cake, curving to fit.  Put the remaining frosting in a Ziploc or pastry bag, massaging if it has become too firm.  Snip the corner or tip and pipe “sunflower seeds” in the middle of the cake.  Alternately, you can use chocolate chips for the sunflower seeds as Cathy did, but I prefer using the frosting because it’s easier to cut through.

Fudge Frosting

2 cups (1 pint) heavy whipping cream
1 pound semi-sweet chocolate chips (1 1/3 12-oz bags)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

Heat the whipping cream in a medium saucepan over medium heat just until it begins to simmer.  Remove from heat and stir in the chocolate until smooth and shiny, about 1-2 minutes.  Stir in the vanilla and pour mixture into a glass or plastic bowl (metal makes the edges set up too quickly).  Place in refrigerator and stir every ten minutes for about 50 minutes or until the consistency of thick pudding.  The frosting will begin to set up quickly at this point, so begin stirring every five minutes for 5-15 minutes, or until the consistency of fudge.  Remove from fridge and use immediately.  If the frosting gets too firm, warm for a few seconds in the microwave and stir, repeating as many times as necessary (once or twice should suffice–you don’t want it liquified).  Let cake sit at room temperature for a few hours for the frosting to set up.  Serve at room temperature.

Dennis disagrees that there's anything wrong with the cake and had no problem polishing off a slice.

If you have an Easter recipe you’d like to submit to All Through The Year Cheer, hurry because the deadline is April 1st (no foolin’! :) ). You don’t have to have a blog to submit a recipe–click here for all the details.

Lasagna & Garlic Bread

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Both these recipes come from my favorite food blog, My Kitchen Cafe, and are the best lasagna and garlic bread I’ve ever made.  We ate huge pieces of the lasagna and couldn’t stop going back for more of this amazing garlic bread until only 1/4 of the loaf remained.  5 cloves of fresh garlic cooked in butter for 7 minutes, then stirred into softened butter makes an amazing spread.  This dinner was delicious, hearty & satisfying. Serve it with a green salad and you’ve got a wonderful meal.

Mom’s Lasagna
recipe adapted from My Kitchen Cafe

1 package oven-ready lasagna noodles
1 to 1 ½ pounds ground beef
1 cup chopped onion
1 28-ounce can crushed tomatoes (undrained)
2 6-ounce cans tomato paste
2 teaspoons sugar
3 cloves minced garlic
2 ½ teaspoons dried basil
¼ teaspoon pepper
1 container (15 ounce) ricotta cheese
1 egg, beaten
1/2 cup chopped parsley
1/2 teaspoon salt
¾ cup grated parmesan cheese
4 cups shredded mozzarella cheese

Cook ground beef and onion, drain. Stir in tomatoes (undrained), tomato paste, sugar, garlic, basil, and pepper.  Simmer uncovered for 20-30 minutes, stirring occasionally (this is actually so thick that it doesn’t exactly simmer. I just left it on low heat and stirred it once in a while). In a small bowl blend ricotta, egg, parsley, parmesan cheese and ½ teaspoon salt. Put a layer of noodles in a 9 X 13 pan that has been sprayed with cooking oil, a layer of meat sauce, layer of ricotta mixture and a layer of the cheese then repeat all the layers twice more. Cover with foil. Bake at 375 degrees for 40 minutes. Uncover, bake 10 minutes more. (I cooked mine 30 minutes foil on & 20 minutes without the foil, that’s why the cheese got all dry-looking.) Let stand 10 minutes before cutting.

*Freezable Meal: Prepare recipe right up until the baking step and then cover with a double layer of aluminum foil. Freeze. Thaw in the refrigerator for 1 to 2 days. To bake, increase baking time to about 40 minutes covered and 20 minutes uncovered. If baking from frozen, bake covered for 1 hour and 30 minutes, uncover and bake 30 minutes longer.

Garlic Bread
adapted from Melanie’s Cheesy Garlic Bread

5 garlic cloves, finely minced (click here for a tutorial on working with fresh garlic)
8 tablespoons (1 stick) butter, softened
1/2 teaspoon water
1/4 teaspoon salt (1/2 tsp if you’re using unsalted butter)
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1 18-20-inch baguette or loaf of french bread, sliced in half horizontally

Adjust oven rack to lower-middle position and heat oven to 400.

In a small nonstick skillet, cook the garlic, 1 tablespoon of the butter and water over low heat, stirring occasionally, until the mixture is straw colored, 7-10 minutes. It is important to keep the heat low or the garlic will burn and turn bitter. The garlic should be lightly browned but not burned!

In a small bowl, place the remaining 7 tablespoons softened butter and the salt and pepper. Mix in the hot garlic mixture and stir to combine. Using a rubber spatula, spread the butter mixture on the cut sides of bread. Sandwich the bread back together and wrap the loaf in foil. Place the wrapped loaf on a baking sheet and bake for 15 minutes.    Cut into angled pieces and serve hot. Please try to exert self-control and share the bounty with others at the table.

Any Berry Sauce

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I was making my favorite buttermilk pancakes a couple Saturdays ago and near the end of the process, I suddenly remembered a recipe for blueberry sauce I’d gotten in an email from Alice’s Savory Sweet Life blog. The gorgeous pictures of the sauce sitting atop a pile of pancakes was still fresh in my mind even three weeks after seeing it, and I knew I had to make it for my own pancakes. Dennis was totally willing to wait an extra ten minutes so I could whip up the sauce.

I only had a bag of mixed frozen berries, which worked very well with the recipe. The blueberries kept their shape along with a few of the blackberries and the raspberries and most of the blackberries cooked down to flavor the sauce and fleck it with pretty seeds.  Feel free to use whatever berries you have, frozen or not, to make this simple and amazing sauce. 

Any Berry Sauce
recipe adapted from Savory Sweet Life

Ingredients:

2 cups fresh or frozen berries of your choice
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup water
2 teaspoons grated orange zest/rind (optional, though Alice recommends it for the blueberry sauce)

Directions:

Cook blueberries, sugar, and water on medium-high heat for 10, minutes stirring occasionally. Turn heat off and stir in orange rind. Serve immediately while warm. Makes approx. 1 1/4 cups of sauce.

Ideas for berries: blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, cranberries, lingonberries or a mixture of any of these.  I think cherries would also work well and would be awesome on top of chocolate pancakes. :)