Friday, February 24, 2012

Cilantro-Lime Pork Enchiladas

The Date: 18 February 2012

The Occasion: Saturday night dinner

The Recipe: From Pillsbury 2009 Annual Recipes cookbook

How it went: I did this differently from the recipe’s instructions. I’ve never had luck with cooking pork in a skillet, which is what this recipe suggests. So I slow-cooked this in the crock pot all day. It was only supposed to be marinated for 1/2 - 2 hours, but I cooked it for probably 9 or 10 hours. I think this made the pork really tender and good. I've written the recipe below the way I did it, but the original recipe can be found here.

What You Need:
Vegetable broth or bouillon 
One lime
Cilantro
Garlic clove
Crushed red pepper flakes
1 lb boneless pork loin chops
2 small onions
1 can refried beans
Flour tortillas (about 6)
Shredded cheese (Mexican flavor, or Monterey Jack is good)
Salsa
Sour cream

Your Turn:
In a crock pot, place 1 lb boneless pork loin chops.
Add
· 2 C vegetable broth (I use 2 C boiling water over 2 vegetable bouillon cubes)
· The grated peel of the lime
· As much lime juice as you can squeeze from one half of the lime
· The other half of the lime, with the skin cut off
· 1 minced garlic clove
· 1 T fresh cilantro, finely chopped (more, if you love cilantro like we do)
· 1/2 tsp crushed red pepper flakes
Let cook 7 or more hours on low.

When you’re ready to assemble the enchiladas, you can drain the pork and discard the marinade (or I guess you could save it for something else, if you wish). Chop 2 small onions and sauté in oil or butter until golden brown, about 10 minutes. Open a can of refried beans, empty them into a bowl and zap for 1 minute or so in the microwave until warm. Prepared some shredded cheese, Mexican blend or another type of your choice.

Spray a 9x13 casserole dish with cooking spray. 

Assemble enchiladas as follows:
On a tortilla, spoon a few tablespoons of refried beans down the center. Top with some pork, onions, and shredded cheese. Roll up and place, seam side down, in the casserole dish. (I bet this would also be great with some rice in each enchilada!) I only made 5 enchiladas, but how many you can make depends how full you stuff them. Sprinkle additional cheese, and any onions you have left, over the top of the enchiladas. Bake 18-24 minutes at 375, until edges are golden brown. Serve with salsa and sour cream. 


Thursday, February 23, 2012

Hawaiin Stir Fry


The Date: 6 February 2012

The Occasion: Weeknight dinner

The Recipe: From Taste of Home’s 2011 Annual Recipes Cookbook. It was in the “Cooking for One or Two” section. Perfect of us, you would think. But I doubled it, and therefore defeated the whole purpose of the recipe. But it lasts longer this way.


How it went: This is a pretty good meal. A little strange, maybe, but it’s tastier than you might think. 
I added some Orange Ginger Sugar
from this set of gourmet sugars
Mom got me for Christmas.
Quite yummy!!

What You Need:
1 lb ground beef or turkey
1 onion
2 or 3 stalks celery
1/2 green pepper
Garlic
Butter or oil
1 can (12 oz) pineapple chunks
1/2 C brown sugar
2 T flour
2 T vinegar
1/2 tsp salt
Cooked white rice

Your turn:
In a skillet, cook the ground meat until no longer pink.
Drain grease and set aside.

In the same skillet, sauté
· 1 onion, diced
· 2-3 stalks of celery, chopped
· 1/2 of a green pepper, chopped
· The pineapple from a 12 oz can (save the juice—you’ll need it later!)
· Some fresh minced or dried minced garlic, to your liking
in butter or oil until veggies are crisp-tender, about 5 minutes.

To the pineapple juice you’ve saved, add
· Enough water to measure 1 C
· 1/2 C brown sugar
· 2 T white flour
· 2 T white wine or rice vinegar (I tried it with apple cider vinegar, but it made the whole thing too cidery)
· 1/2 tsp salt
Whisk until smooth. 

Add to veggies in skillet and bring to a boil. Cook and stir over medium heat about 2 minutes. Add meat back to the skillet and stir to heat everything through.

Serve with white rice, and (optional) cilantro! 

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Marinated Oven Steaks


The Date: 5 February 2012

The Occasion: I was out shopping on a Sunday afternoon, and thought that it might be nice to have a “real dinner” on Sunday evening. I bought some cheap steaks and used a marinade recipe I’d liked once before.

The Recipe: From Sara Lee’s Semi-Homemade Meals Cookbook.


How it went I guess this would be better with high quality steaks, but considering I bought the cheapest ones I think this came out pretty well. 

What You Need:
Steaks
2 T Olive oil
2 T Worcestershire sauce
2 T Some kind of red wine
1 T Steak seasoning

Your turn:
Combine
· 2 T Olive oil
· 2 T Worcestershire sauce
· 2 T Some kind of red wine
· 1 T Steak seasoning
in a wide shallow bowl. Stir gently to combine.

Place steaks in marinade. Prick each one a few times with a fork to let the marinade into the meat. Turn steaks over and prick again. Let the steaks marinate for as long as you like, the longer the better, I suppose.

Mash up some potatoes or cook green beans or something.

Place steaks on a broiler pan covered with aluminum foil. Broil 4-6 inches from the heat for about 8 minutes. Flip steaks over and broil 8 minutes on the other side. (Longer or shorter, depending on how rare you like it.) 

Serve and enjoy! 


Thursday, February 2, 2012

Ravioli with Pesto Cream Sauce

The Date: 31 January 2012

The Occasion: Easy weeknight meal.

The Recipe: From a 2010 Betty Crocker Annual Recipes cookbook.

How it Went: Great. This is really simple, and makes an all-in-one meal. You can easily swap the vegetables in the recipe for what you like or have on hand. I skipped tomatoes and used carrots instead, but you could use plum tomatoes if you like. Sometimes I've used onion too. The green beans are really good, though.

What You Need:
frozen ravioli
olive oil
bell pepper
green beans (fresh or frozen)
carrots
salt
sour cream
pesto
lemon

Your Turn:
Heat a few tablespoons of olive oil in a skillet and cook 1/2 sliced bell pepper (any color), 3/4 C sliced carrots, and 1 C green beans (fresh or frozen, about two handfuls), stirring frequently until tender. Add 1/2 tsp salt and stir.

Meanwhile, cook 1 package (16 oz) frozen ravioli as directed.

Mix 1/2 C sour cream, 1&1/2 T pesto, and 1/2 tsp grated lemon peel.

Toss hot cooked ravioli with vegetables and pesto cream sauce.