So.
J and I are always up for a quick, yummy meal. I don't like to cook on week nights, and save big showy recipes for weekend hobby cooking when I have large amounts of time to dirty every piece of cookware in my kitchen. But Monday to Friday I need something fast and simple or we go out.
These quesadillas are perfect. It seems like there's a lot of steps, but I discovered that there really weren't that many dishes in the sink when I was done, and they went together relatively quickly. I shredded the cheese and sliced the onions while the steak cooked, and then I cleaned up while the quesadillas baked. We got 3 quesadillas out of the recipe, and that was a nice sized meal for the two of us: one and a half each. I often buy my steaks at Costco and divide them into servings for the 2 of us. I used one of those strip steaks for these. With a little steak rub, they were delicious.
It's June, and I've already made a recipe from the June 2006 issue. That's an all good thing, seeing as June is crazy. But when things are like this, it's not hard to make things for us to eat during the week.
I present to you now from the June 2006 issue of Everyday Food, Steak Quesadillas:
I love to cook...when I have the time. Here's what I've tried recently in my kitchen.
Friday, June 13, 2014
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
Bride of Magazine Challenge: Chocolate Pecan Pie Bars
So.
When I was growing up, my favourite type of square was the Hello Dolly, also known as the Magic Bar. I don't really know why. My mother made dozens and dozens of squares every Christmas, and she never made Hello Dollies. Perhaps it was just the novelty of those that my mother never made. But chocolate chips, nuts, coconut and sweetened condensed milk on a cookie base? Count me in.
As an adult where I could make Hello Dollies, I never do. J and I like to have sweet treats in the house, but we seem to eat them very quickly. So when I saw this recipe in the March 2006 Everyday Food, I was intrigued. It used lots of pecans and chocolate chips, but that would make them yummy. When they were finally done, I was just as happy that we had Home Church that night and I could take the squares with me so that J and I wouldn't eat them all.
They're not Hello Dollies, but J doesn't like coconut. They're just as good...or even better.
I present to you now from the March 2006 issue of Everyday Food Chocolate Pecan Pie Bars:
Saturday, June 7, 2014
Planning?? Whining?? You be the judge
So.
While I was well aware that XP was going away, I did nothing about it. My laptop now is sloooooow, and I can't get the internet to open on it.
This wouldn't be a problem if the cat hadn't decided to be sick. Last week, she saw her regular vet 3 times and spent 24 hours in emergency care for a tapeworm. (My cat has now had 3 enemas. She hates us all when she's not being petted and snuggled. But she's clean as a whistle, inside and out)
The laptop money went to the vet. And then some. Bleh.
So, the long and the short of this is I don't know when I'll be back up and running with pictures and everything.
But J and I have found a bunch of fun recipes to try in the meantime. Southwestern Chicken Spaghetti, Steak Quesadillas, Chicken Taco Skillet. It's Tex-Mex week around here, apparently.
I'll be back soon, once I've figured out how to make the cat pay for my laptop. She must have some saleable skill...right?
While I was well aware that XP was going away, I did nothing about it. My laptop now is sloooooow, and I can't get the internet to open on it.
This wouldn't be a problem if the cat hadn't decided to be sick. Last week, she saw her regular vet 3 times and spent 24 hours in emergency care for a tapeworm. (My cat has now had 3 enemas. She hates us all when she's not being petted and snuggled. But she's clean as a whistle, inside and out)
The laptop money went to the vet. And then some. Bleh.
So, the long and the short of this is I don't know when I'll be back up and running with pictures and everything.
But J and I have found a bunch of fun recipes to try in the meantime. Southwestern Chicken Spaghetti, Steak Quesadillas, Chicken Taco Skillet. It's Tex-Mex week around here, apparently.
I'll be back soon, once I've figured out how to make the cat pay for my laptop. She must have some saleable skill...right?
Wednesday, June 4, 2014
Bride of Magazine Challenge: Coffee Cake Muffins
So.
In my quest to eat breakfast, I don't always think of muffins, but I think that perhaps I should. It would be easy to make muffins more often than I do, and make a variety. They freeze well, and can be changed up to suit what's in the cupboard.
Take these muffins as a case in point. While there is a streusel topping on these muffins, there's very little else that makes me think "Coffee Cake". No cinnamon, no nuts, but the original recipe called for raisins, which I guess you could put in coffee cake if that's how you roll. That's not how I roll.
But I was pretty sure that these muffins would be wicked boring with nothing in them. I still had some dried cherries leftover from making Hot Cross Buns, and I also had a small package of dried blueberries. Both of those would be excellent in coffee cake! And really, if I didn't have either of those, chocolate chips would be darn tasty in these little cakes too.
Plus, it's a recipe towards the Magazine Challenge. That's not a bad thing.
I present to you now from the April 2006 issue of Everyday Food, Coffee Cake Muffins:
In my quest to eat breakfast, I don't always think of muffins, but I think that perhaps I should. It would be easy to make muffins more often than I do, and make a variety. They freeze well, and can be changed up to suit what's in the cupboard.
Take these muffins as a case in point. While there is a streusel topping on these muffins, there's very little else that makes me think "Coffee Cake". No cinnamon, no nuts, but the original recipe called for raisins, which I guess you could put in coffee cake if that's how you roll. That's not how I roll.
But I was pretty sure that these muffins would be wicked boring with nothing in them. I still had some dried cherries leftover from making Hot Cross Buns, and I also had a small package of dried blueberries. Both of those would be excellent in coffee cake! And really, if I didn't have either of those, chocolate chips would be darn tasty in these little cakes too.
Plus, it's a recipe towards the Magazine Challenge. That's not a bad thing.
I present to you now from the April 2006 issue of Everyday Food, Coffee Cake Muffins:
Monday, June 2, 2014
Secret Recipe Club: Dreamy Baked Ziti
(I have actually made 2 recipes for the Secret Recipe Club Reveal this month! Make sure you scroll down and visit both recipes!!! They were delicious!)
So.
Whenever J and I go to Olive Garden, I order the 5 Cheese Ziti. When I order something else, I wish I ordered the 5 Cheese Ziti. After doing this a couple of times, I learned and have a regular order. While I have looked at copycat recipes for this amazing dish, I've never found anything that has made me sit up and want to try it. The garlic, the cheese...how could I replicate the sauce? Until now. I finally found one to try.
This month for Group A's reveal for the Secret Recipe Club, I was given the blog, Cheese with Noodles. Anna lives in Alaska with her husband, her bunnies and her cats. Like me, she doesn't take the beautiful pictures that I aspire to...nor does she photo every recipe. She does say, however, that the recipes need to be amazing to make it onto her blog. Amazing food? Count me in!
This ziti recipe looked easy, made a ton, and had lots of garlic. Plus, with the cream in the sauce, perhaps it would be like that which I love from Olive Garden. Information that could prove to be very dangerous in the wrong hands, which in this case would be mine.
I present to you now Cheese with Noodles' Dreamy Baked Ziti:
So.
Whenever J and I go to Olive Garden, I order the 5 Cheese Ziti. When I order something else, I wish I ordered the 5 Cheese Ziti. After doing this a couple of times, I learned and have a regular order. While I have looked at copycat recipes for this amazing dish, I've never found anything that has made me sit up and want to try it. The garlic, the cheese...how could I replicate the sauce? Until now. I finally found one to try.
This month for Group A's reveal for the Secret Recipe Club, I was given the blog, Cheese with Noodles. Anna lives in Alaska with her husband, her bunnies and her cats. Like me, she doesn't take the beautiful pictures that I aspire to...nor does she photo every recipe. She does say, however, that the recipes need to be amazing to make it onto her blog. Amazing food? Count me in!
This ziti recipe looked easy, made a ton, and had lots of garlic. Plus, with the cream in the sauce, perhaps it would be like that which I love from Olive Garden. Information that could prove to be very dangerous in the wrong hands, which in this case would be mine.
I present to you now Cheese with Noodles' Dreamy Baked Ziti:
Secret Recipe Club: Margarita Donuts
So.
It's Reveal Day today for the Secret Recipe Club. Once a month, I, along with the other people in my group, are assigned another blog of the group. Westalk go through the assigned blog, choose a recipe, make it, and all reveal at the same time. Fun, right?
This month, I was assigned Searching for Dessert. Shannon has a variety of desserts and meatless recipes to choose from. I decided that ultimately this month I'd make a dessert to share. I pinned a bunch of things for later, and made the Hot Fudge Cakes immediately (So. Freaking. Good.) But when I saw this recipe, I was intrigued...and not just by the use of tequila.
Canada is the land of Tim Horton's - a donut shop and coffee temple that is every few blocks around these parts. While my favourite donut is the Walnut Crunch, it's no longer available. I've turned to the Canadian Maple for solace (although the last time I got anything but coffee at TImmy's is a little beyond me). The Canadian Maple is much like a Boston Cream donut: yeast donut with vanilla creme filling and maple icing. I love filled donuts that don't leave a powdery remnant on my clothes, and the Canadian Maple is a winner. I may have found a new favourite, though. Margarita filling is darn tasty.
While I do enjoy a good margarita, my summer drink of choice is probably a G&T. Gin would not make for a good tasting filling, even if you do boil the alcohol off as you make the lime curd. But just a little tequila and a whole lot of lime? In a word, YUM. In a few words, even if you don't make the donuts, if you're looking for something amazing to drizzle over a cheesecake or eat off a spoon, might I recommend this margarita curd? It is to. Die. For.
This recipe would have been awesome for last month...seeing as Reveal Day was May 5. But you know, there's never a bad time for either donuts or margaritas! So just a month late, I present to you now my Secret Recipe Club offering, Searching for Dessert's Margarita Donuts:
It's Reveal Day today for the Secret Recipe Club. Once a month, I, along with the other people in my group, are assigned another blog of the group. We
This month, I was assigned Searching for Dessert. Shannon has a variety of desserts and meatless recipes to choose from. I decided that ultimately this month I'd make a dessert to share. I pinned a bunch of things for later, and made the Hot Fudge Cakes immediately (So. Freaking. Good.) But when I saw this recipe, I was intrigued...and not just by the use of tequila.
Canada is the land of Tim Horton's - a donut shop and coffee temple that is every few blocks around these parts. While my favourite donut is the Walnut Crunch, it's no longer available. I've turned to the Canadian Maple for solace (although the last time I got anything but coffee at TImmy's is a little beyond me). The Canadian Maple is much like a Boston Cream donut: yeast donut with vanilla creme filling and maple icing. I love filled donuts that don't leave a powdery remnant on my clothes, and the Canadian Maple is a winner. I may have found a new favourite, though. Margarita filling is darn tasty.
While I do enjoy a good margarita, my summer drink of choice is probably a G&T. Gin would not make for a good tasting filling, even if you do boil the alcohol off as you make the lime curd. But just a little tequila and a whole lot of lime? In a word, YUM. In a few words, even if you don't make the donuts, if you're looking for something amazing to drizzle over a cheesecake or eat off a spoon, might I recommend this margarita curd? It is to. Die. For.
This recipe would have been awesome for last month...seeing as Reveal Day was May 5. But you know, there's never a bad time for either donuts or margaritas! So just a month late, I present to you now my Secret Recipe Club offering, Searching for Dessert's Margarita Donuts:
Filed Under:
Baking,
Dessert,
New for 2014,
Secret Recipe Club
Sunday, June 1, 2014
Bride of Magazine Challenge: June Planning
So.
We're now half way through another year of the Magazine Challenge. It's amazing how much better I feel like I've done this year than last year. I spend a lot of time planning and cooking from the Everyday Foods in a way I didn't before. J and I have had a lot of yummy new recipes.
I've started thinking about the magazines themselves: what am I planning to do with them at the end of the challenge? Any recipes that I might want to make again I'll have in electronic form. Do I get rid of the paper copies? Anyone? I'm not sure. But seeing as I have a few more years of Everyday Food to explore, I don't need to decide any time soon.
When I started through the June 2006 edition, I wasn't sure that it was going to be a winner. There were a lot of things that I wasn't interested in trying. But when I got around to making my list, I had 9 recipes to try. As I've said before, June's pretty dicey as far as interesting cooking. It's the end of school, so I'm crazy busy, and it's the beginning of BBQ season, so we grill a lot. But when I look at what I've come up with, I think 6 might be doable. Currently, I make about 4 new things from Everyday Food every month. 6 would be impressive!
Here's what I'd like to try this month on the mountain:
We're now half way through another year of the Magazine Challenge. It's amazing how much better I feel like I've done this year than last year. I spend a lot of time planning and cooking from the Everyday Foods in a way I didn't before. J and I have had a lot of yummy new recipes.
I've started thinking about the magazines themselves: what am I planning to do with them at the end of the challenge? Any recipes that I might want to make again I'll have in electronic form. Do I get rid of the paper copies? Anyone? I'm not sure. But seeing as I have a few more years of Everyday Food to explore, I don't need to decide any time soon.
When I started through the June 2006 edition, I wasn't sure that it was going to be a winner. There were a lot of things that I wasn't interested in trying. But when I got around to making my list, I had 9 recipes to try. As I've said before, June's pretty dicey as far as interesting cooking. It's the end of school, so I'm crazy busy, and it's the beginning of BBQ season, so we grill a lot. But when I look at what I've come up with, I think 6 might be doable. Currently, I make about 4 new things from Everyday Food every month. 6 would be impressive!
Here's what I'd like to try this month on the mountain:
- Sour cream Poundcake
- Tex-Mex Beef Enchiladas
- Basil Butter
- Chicken and Basil Stirfry
- Steak Quesadillas
- Peanut Crusted Chicken Breasts
- Goat Cheese and Sundried Tomato Pasta
- Potatoes Vinaigrette
- Lemon Cheesecake Squares
Very little dessert, and lots of yummy sounding entrees. Here's to the end of school and a good month of cooking!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)