Showing posts with label Cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cooking. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Simply DelecTable Catering and the Simply Delightful Cowgirl

Julie is one of the most delightful cowgirls you'll ever meet. She raises cattle, ropes, and rides, teaches church youth and volunteers for church camp. If you said something ugly to her, she would be more likely to hug your neck and call you honey than say something ugly back.

We went to lunch shortly after I moved back to the plains, and she told me she was starting a catering company, Simply DelecTable. I knew it would be successful, because she's just too nice to serve people food that is anything other than delicious.

Simply DelecTable, about a year in, is off to a great start. Here in our little farm town, we're lucky to have her offering lunch every Tuesday. The Marlboro Man sandwich, one of my favorites, was on the menu today. All that meaty delicious goodness served up with grilled peppers and onions on a savory roll had my mouth watering before I even got there. I almost had to buy two because I wasn't sure I could stave off eating it until I photographed it for this post, but I did . . . just barely.

Marlboro Man Sandwich
 
And brownies galore on the menu today! Of course, I needed to sample eat one of each kind for this post. A girl's got to do what a girl's got to do. Sigh. (They were delicious!)
 
Heath Almond Brownie
O-M-G!
Please, may I have another?

 
Oreo Brownie
Will make you love Oreos like only a kid can.

Twix Brownie
The candy bar should be name after this brownie
instead of the other way around. It's that good.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Tasty Cactus

Until recently I hadn't looked at these and thought, "Mmmm, tasty!" Growing up in Oklahoma, they were a nuisance that found their way into crops and yards and were a pain to permanently remove, but during my years in southern California, I saw them frequently in grocery stores. A friend I worked with in downtown LA said she loved her grandmother's napolitos. From the affectionate way she described her, I could almost see her standing over the stove cooking them in her kitchen. After that each time I walked past the prickly pear cactus I had previously thought of as a nuisance in a grocery store, I imagined her grandmother cooking.
 

 
A few days ago, I told my sweetheart, "People eat these, you know," thinking it might be time for me to take the plunge and try my hand at cooking cactus.
 
"Really," he said. "How? What do they make with them?"
 
"Cactus jelly," was all I could come up with. (My ignorance and my sweet tooth were showing.) I 've seen cactus jelly many times, but on the spot I could not describe the dish my friend's grandmother made. And really, I should be better educated about cactus, because if our two-year drought continues much longer, it might be easier to grow cactus as a cash crop than cotton.
 
So I began thinking more about cooking prickly pear, also known as nopales, paddle cactus, or Opuntia.  Now I'm sixteen different kinds of curious and in search of a fabulous cactus recipe.
 
So far, I've come across the ones below, and am thinking prickly pear will be showing up on the dinner or breakfast table soon.
 
 
Cactus Corn Muffins from Taste of Home - I've never gone wrong with a Taste of Home recipe.
 
 
 
 

Friday, August 31, 2012

Cowboy Food - Crockpot Buffalo Chicken

Yesterday I needed a new recipe for chicken breasts, and boy did my friend Josh come through with a winner! This is the kind of food that will satisfy even a hungry cowboy at the end of a hard day - Crockpot Buffalo Chicken.

Three ingredients, four if you're fancy, dump them in and let them go!




Ingredients:

4 Frozen Chicken Breasts (thawed work too)
1 12 oz Bottle Buffalo Wing Sauce (mild for kids)
1/2 Packet Dry Ranch Dressing Mix (1/2 oz)

And, if you're fancy:

2 Tablespoons Butter

Directions:

Put chicken breasts in crockpot. Pour wing sauce on top. Sprinkle ranch dressing mix over top. (Add butter, if you're fancy.) Cook on low for 7 to 8 hours, if using frozen chicken breasts, 5 hours if using thawed chicken breasts. Pull meat apart with two forks. Serve on your favorite sandwich rolls or good old fashioned hamburger buns. Enjoy!

Adapted from - http://www.bigoven.com/recipe/190237/slow

Check out Josh's great Food and Drink Pinterest board here - http://pinterest.com/joshbob/food-drink/

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Honey's Concord Grape Cobbler

This is the cobbler that Honey made. Her real name is Nancy, but the kids she takes care of call her Honey, and she is sweet enough to be called Honey. This is the mouth-watering, just-right-consistency, delicious Concord grape, melt-in-your-mouth crust, made-from-scratch grape cobbler that Honey made. If I was a grape, when my life came to an end, I would want to be in Honey's Concord Grape Cobbler.


I love that she created this fantastic homemade dish, not for Sunday dinner at home or Thanksgiving or Christmas, but for our church potluck honoring our sweet friend JoAnn B who has served the church for many years and is moving away to be closer to family.

Not only did she make this great cobbler and some tasty tasty vaquero beans, but Honey and her hubby Roger, Dick and Marie, and JoAnn A all showed up WAY early to set up the potluck dinner my sweetheart and I were responsible for hosting. In fact, they did such a good job there was hardly anything left for us to do. (I love these people!)

And when I thanked Honey for all they had done. She simply said, "That's what family does." And that's how Honey is.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Steak Fingers and Gravy - The Pioneer Woman Style

The Pioneer Woman's Perfect Pot Roast recipe was so delicious, I just had to try another. Her recipe for Steak Fingers and Gravy was my next pick.


It took me an hour and half to prepare . . . because I am part turtle . . . and started with not fully thawed cube steak . . . that I then defrosted the rest of the way in the microwave . . . and hand cut . . . because I am dedicated (translate cheap) . . . and already had cube steak thawing in the fridge. After about 20 minutes, I had gotten this far -- two breaded steak fingers and one, uhm, steak nugget. Ehem.


Next time, I might will splurge and buy the pre-cut not frozen cube steak.

I eventually got them into the pan and it was pretty smooth sailing from there on. I love that familiar country cooking sizzle you know is going to end up in something tasting really good. I am a firm believer in cooking by sight, smell, and sound. Here is a batch just before turning, halfway through cooking.



By the time they were done, the steak fingers were a beautiful, crisp golden brown on the outside, meat done just right on the inside, and smelled delicious!



The gravy was a nice consistency, not the least bit lumpy, a big accomplishment for me. Served with skin-in mashed potatoes, it made a tasty dinner that even my seven-year-old twins gobbled down quickly.

Done over again, I would season the meat as well as the batter, but all in all, this recipe is a definite win. Shoot, with a little practice and pre-cut meat, I think I could even get the prep time down to an acceptable 30 minutes or so.

Try the recipe out yourself and see what you think. You can find The Pioneer Woman's recipe for Steak Fingers and Gravy here - http://thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2012/07/steak-fingers-with-gravy/.

Friday, August 24, 2012

Dishing It Up, Pioneer Woman Style

If you haven't heard of the fabulous Pioneer Woman, I've got to tell you, she's a blogger, photographer, and cook extraordinaire. She writes about ranch life, family, and food. She's entertaining, funny, and I'm learning, a pretty darn good cook.

I've heard her recipes are great, and I've finally gotten around to trying one. Yesterday, faced with one of the most beautiful cuts of meat I've ever seen, a gorgeously marbled chuck roast from Mitchell Farms, I turned to the Internet in search of the perfect recipe.

When I came across hers, I knew it had to be the one. It was, after all, labeled "Perfect Pot Roast." And Sister, she wasn't kidding.

My sweetheart raved about it. Said it was the best roast he'd ever tasted. He's good like that. He even came by for leftovers for lunch. That's really, really good.

I've got to admit, it was probably the red wine that pulled me in initially. Sounded fancy.


But I was hesitant to invest the time in browning the onions, searing the roast, and deglazing (fancy again) the pan before popping it in the oven to bake for four hours.



Oh, but it was so worth my time,


so very worth it.


 
 
Here's the link to The Pioneer Woman's Perfect Pot Roast recipe - http://thepioneerwoman.com/cooking/2011/09/2008_the_year_of_the_pot_roast/




Friday, August 10, 2012

The Quest for Chuck Wagon Worthy Biscuits

Mamaw Peters, my great-grandmother, was a celebrated country cook, and a particularly good baker. Her red velvet cake is pretty much legendary within our family. The baking tradition has been passed down through the generations, with one of my cousins even placing second in a nationally televised pie baking competition.


But I, somehow, missed out on Mamaw's biscuit making mojo. Oh sure complicated recipes like German Chocolate Cake and Red Velvet Cake I have mastered, but the simple southern biscuit recipe has been doing me in.

Then, this morning's biscuits came out looking light and fluffy. Delicate and flakey even.


Biscuit nirvana, I thought. And then the first bite. Like a rock, a big doughie rock . . . with a little butter.

I think it's time I turn to the experts to find that chuck wagon worthy biscuit recipe. I saw these guys talking about their chuckwagon cookbook, Barbecue Biscuits & Beans, on In the Bunkhouse with Red Steagall not long ago. It's going on my shopping list pronto.