Monday, June 30, 2014

Crepes


Time off in the summer is glorious.  The sun is shining, a pool and the beach are mere moments away, and in my free time I go cooking crazy.  The fact that I haven't posted since last summer is a fair indicator that there is so much going on at my job during the school year, that I just don't take the time to post...let alone cook at all some days.

On one of these lazy summer mornings I got a bee in my bonnet to try something different for breakfast.  According to my New Better Homes and Gardens Cook Book, crepes take just 5 ingredients, all of which I had at my disposal.  Ingredient availability is paramount in this house, so I jumped at the chance to try my hand at crepes.

In all of the cooking shows, crepes are one of those "difficult" dishes that people struggle to pull off, so I fully expected a challenge.  However, the mere quarter page mention of the "Crepes" recipe in the cookbook made me wonder if this had all been a great deception.  Time to bust this crepe mystery wide open!

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Chocolate Chip Muffins with Streusel Topping


Breakfast is so boring.  I have friends and family who think breakfast is the bees knees, but I'd rather have two dinners, or maybe a dessert meal than breakfast.  There's just so little variation to breakfast, and because I would rather hit the snooze button an extra two times than take the time to make something elaborate, more often than not my breakfast consists of something I can stick in the toaster and eat in five minutes.  Sometimes on the weekends I get ambitious and try to brighten up the rest of my week by prepping something homemade that will spice up my mornings before work.  Muffins fit this bill.

For all intents and purposes, muffins are basically breakfast cupcakes.  You really can't ever go wrong with cupcakes (especially if they involve chocolate).  The basic "Muffins" recipe in the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook is an excellent blank canvas for all sorts of breakfast creativity.  Chocolate chips + streusel topping?  Now that's nutrition!

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Chipotle Turkey Chili


Chili is an American staple.  There are entire festivals devoted to chili, and it seems that every southwestern household has its own signature recipe.  I've never been a huge chili aficionado, mostly because I'm scared it will burn my mouth off.  However, I read a magazine article a while back about a Halloween game plan involving children and adults gathered around a table enjoying a pot of chili followed by full bellies and trick or treat festivities.  This pretty little picture popped into my head, and I was determined to make it mine.  I found the "Chipotle Turkey Chili" recipe in the Cooking with all things Trader Joe's cookbook by Deana Gunn and Wona Miniati, and found the ingredient list general enough that I should be able to find everything at the regular grocery store.  Time for the chili cookoff to commence!

Monday, April 22, 2013

Vanilla Rabbit Hole Cupcakes


Few words invoke my creative juices quite like, "Will you bring dessert?"  Of course, the answer is always yes.  I begin giddy with excitement, poring over my cookbooks for just the perfect confection for the occasion.  The flip side is that this excitement usually turns to sheer panic as I find myself covered in frosting and short just three more candy canes at the eleventh hour.  Alas, dessert is a labor of love and goodness knows, I'm smitten.

Last month, I took on the challenge of Easter dessert, deciding to put my cake decorating chops to the test with the "Rabbit Hole Cupcakes" featured in Karen Tack & Alan Richardson's Hello, Cupcake! They're cute, whimsical, and I figured I could cut the cost often associated with the very specialized candies needed to make many of these cupcake designs work.  I also chose to bake my own cupcakes from scratch, rather than from the box, using the "Vanilla Cupcakes" recipe from the same cookbook.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Roast Chicken


I'm pretty good at planning side dishes, pasta dishes, appetizers, and desserts, but entrees often escape me.  I'm not a big meat eater, though I definitely appreciate it when done right.  With an impending road trip with the husband, I'm trying to find creative ways to empty out the fridge and eat up our leftovers.  Unfortunately, a lot of it is carb-o-licious and not exactly full-meal material.  In an effort to incorporate more protein into our meals, I decided to prepare one item so versatile that it could compliment any of the dinner leftovers in my fridge: chicken.

I was doing my meal planning from the passenger seat of the car today, so I decided to travel light and take Real Simple's Meals Make Easy: Quick and Delicious Recipes for Every Night of the Week.  Lo and behold, the very first recipe in this book is one for "Roast Chicken and Vegetables."  I left out the vegetables part of this recipe because I was already planning to make "Spring Salad with New Potatoes" from my favorite food blog, smitten kitchen.  You can see how that turned out on the right.


Thursday, March 14, 2013

Yankee Doodle Dandy Baked Macaroni and Cheese



Every so often I attempt to continue my quest for the perfect macaroni and cheese.  I say every so often because while I would be happy to partake of the dish every day, I would need to constantly replenish my stretchy pant supply, and that's just expensive.  Based on it's ingredients alone, the "Yankee Doodle Dandy Baked Macaroni and Cheese" recipe from the Macaroni and Cheese cookbook by Marlena Spieler appears quite a contender for mac & cheese perfection.  Will it measure up?  Let's get cheesy and find out!


Monday, March 4, 2013

Italian Egg Sandwich


It's no secret that much of my love of food and cooking comes from the Italian side of my family.  Thinking back on my childhood brings memories of vegetables fresh from the garden, days full of making sausage or deep fried cookies, and countless meals surrounded by family.  That's why when I'm feeling a little homesick, or when I want to taste a bit of my past, I devote the better part of a Sunday to making Giada's marinara sauce.  The result is complex, fresh, and far surpasses anything that you can buy in a jar.  However, in addition to a great deal of tastiness, making a full batch of the sauce presents a delicious dilemma: What on earth do you do with two quarts of sauce?  You can only eat so much spaghetti in a week's time before your husband starts complaining & insists on making burgers or something.  Therefore, I had to start getting creative...or keep reading the cookbook and let Giada do the work for me.  Whatever.

The "Italian Egg Sandwich" from Giada de Laurentiis' Everyday Italian cookbook called for simple ingredients that were already in my fridge and pantry and less than half an hour cooking time.  After hours slaving away on marinara sauce, I'm SOLD!