Thursday, March 29, 2012

Chocolate Oatmeal No Bake Cookies

Yummy! I am a sucker for anything Chocolate. Mine did not harden as quick as they should, but that didn't stop us from digging into them! This is a great recipe!

Chocolate Oatmeal No Bake Cookies

2 Cups Sugar
1/2 Cup Milk
1/4 Cup Cocoa
1/2 Cup Butter
1 tsp. Vanilla
1/2 Cup peanut butter
1/4 tsp. salt
3 cups oatmeal

Combine first 4 ingredients in a pan and bring to a boil on medium heat. Cool one minute and add remaining ingredients. Stir well and drop by teaspoons onto waxed paper. These are no bake cookies. Optional: nuts or coconut

Shrimp Scampi

This was delicious. Very quick to throw together and the family loved it.

Shrimp Scampi

1 ½ lbs large shrimp (16-24 count)                              
¼ cup dry white wine
1/3 cup butter (or olive oil)                                          
2 Tbsp lemon juice
4 Tbsp minced garlic                                                    
2 Tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
6 green onions, thinly sliced                                        
salt and pepper to taste


Rinse shrimp and set aside.  Heat butter in large skillet over medium heat.  Cook garlic 1-2 minutes until softened but not browned.  Add shrimp, green onions, wine and lemon juice; cook until shrimp are pink and firm, about 1-2 minutes on each side.  Do not overcook.  Add chopped parsley and salt and pepper before serving.  Garnish with lemon slices and parsley springs if desired.

Garlic Shrimp

Here is a nice break from all of the Chicken Recipes. This was so good, we only had a tiny bit for leftovers (I doubled the recipe on top of it). I recommend eating it all the night you make it. The garlic in your fridge does not smell so great with everything else. Surprisingly even in a closed container! Haha.

Garlic Shrimp

2 doz. Large fresh shrimp                                            
¼ tsp pepper
¼ cup olive oil                                                            
 ¼ cup butter or margarine, melted
¼ cup chopped fresh parsley                                       
½ cup French breadcrumbs, toasted
3 cloves garlic, minced                                                 
½ cup parmesan cheese, grated
½ tsp red pepper

Peel and devein shrimp.  Arrange in 11x7 baking dish; pour oil over shrimp.  Combine parsley with next 3 ingredients, sprinkle over shrimp.  Cover and bake at 300 degrees for 15 minutes.  Turn shrimp over; drizzle with butter and sprinkle with breadcrumbs and cheese.  Bake, uncovered, 5-10 additional minutes.  2 servings.

Betty Jordan's Steak and Veggies

This is a nice little twist to the Pot Roast dishes I grew up eating. Very good for after church lunch!

Betty Jordan’s Steak and Veggies 

One round steak                                                          
 Four carrots cut up
Three tablespoons oil                                                   
One medium onion chopped
Four potatoes cut up                                                    
salt and pepper

Flour and brown steak on both sides.  Wrap steak in foil, add veggies and salt and pepper.  Cook at 300 degrees for two hours.

Cheeseburger Pie

I love onions, so this recipe was wonderful to me! Zach on the other hand could live without them no problem. So next time I may just cut the onions in half and add some to my personal dish at then end. It's not the healthiest home cooked meal, but sure beats going to a fast food restaurant!

Cheeseburger Pie

1 pound ground beef                                                   
½ cup Bisquick
1 large onion, chopped                                                
 1 cup milk
½ teaspoon salt                                                           
 2 eggs
1 cup shredded cheddar cheese

Heat oven to 400ยบ.  Spray 9-inch pie plate.  Brown beef & onion.  Drain.  Stir in salt.  Spread in pie plate.  Sprinkle with cheese.  In bowl, stir together remaining ingredients.  Pour into pie plate.  Bake for 25 minutes or until knife inserted into center comes out clean. 

Gumbo (Chicken)

I have always been a big fan of Gumbo. I think my dad makes the best Sea Food Gumbo ever! I decided with this recipe to start with Chicken Gumbo. I feel safe when it come to cooking chicken, especially on my first version of anything like this. Luckily Zach and JT really liked it and we will be trying the other versions of this recipe soon!

This recipe is long, but there are different variations of what you can put in it. So find what you need and go with it. It came from Zach's uncle Brian and his notes while helping a Cajun friend of his in grad school.

Gumbo              

Meat*                                                                           
2 Tbs flour
2 cups of okra                                                             
 2 Tbs oil
2 medium onions, chopped                                         
 Pinch of sweet basil
1 bell pepper, chopped                                                 
Dash of Worcestershire sauce
1 stalk celery, chopped                                                
2 cloves of garlic
½ cup oil                                                                      
Salt and red pepper to taste

If making a chicken or turkey gumbo, boil the bird in a gallon of water until the meat falls off the bone.  This is a particularly good way to treat that turkey after it is carved for the holidays.  KEEP THE BROTH.  Cook the okra, onions, bell pepper, and celery slowly in the oil for ~30 minutes or until the okra is not slimy.  Make a roux** with the 2 Tbs of oil and flour.  This is best done in a cast iron skillet.  Get the oil hot but not smoking.  Add the flour slowly, stirring continuously.  Continue to stir until it is chocolate brown.  The darker the better but DO NOT BURN IT.  This will take time (maybe 30 minutes) and patience.  The roux is what makes or breaks a good gumbo.  Cool slowly by removing from the heat and continuing to stir for 5-10 minutes.  Add everything*** back to the pot of chicken broth and slowly cook for ~2 hours until everything is soft.  Serve over rice.  Serves 6 more or less depending on what you added.

* The selection of the meat depends on the type gumbo you want.  If you are allergic to shellfish like me, the decision is made; it’s chicken or turkey.  You can make a seafood gumbo the same way with oysters, clams, etc. but just add your shrimp or crawfish tails in the last 10 minutes of the final cooking.  Obviously you will not have the bird broth, but just use water.  I always include andouille sausage cut into small pieces.  This can be any sausage like a polish, preferably smoked.

**You can buy roux.  Or if you want a quick way to have it ready when you need it, another Cajun friend said you can brown the flour in a cast iron skillet in the oven and then store the browned flour and mix it with the oil when you need roux.  However, the smell of a roux being made is simply music to my nose.

***For Jim it meant anything, e.g. other veggies, meats (jokingly road kill), etc.  Whole eggs were the bonus surprise that floated to the surface from time to time in the pot.  Gumbo is a way of clearing the fridge and wastes nothing.  I tend to not wander too far afield as some guests are not so adventuresome.