Showing posts with label mashed potatoes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mashed potatoes. Show all posts

Monday, November 24, 2014

Recipe #23: Rib-eye Steak with Whiskey Cream Sauce

Recipe: Rib-Eye Steak with Whiskey Cream Sauce
Source: The Pioneer Woman Cooks
Time: 30 minutes
Ease: 2
Taste: 10
Leftover Value: No leftovers!
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Keep it in the Strainer!

Confession time.  It has been ten days since my last post.  No, I have not given up on my recipe challenge.  Yes, my new job has occupied some of my time and energy.

Have no fear, I have still been keeping up with cooking, but the blogging piece has had to sit on the back burner in order to keep myself from spiraling out of control into a stress tornado.

When I mentioned to Hubby that I hadn't posted recently this was his response, "What? You had better. I'm not eating all these strange recipes for you to not be blogging about them."

Ah, I love my husband.

I think it might have been the cheese grits, or the recent Sherried Tomato Soup* from which this response was derived.

*Coming soon!

I'm almost half way through and I have learned so much during this challenge.  I've learned that though I love reading what Pioneer Woman has to say about each step in a recipe, when I'm in the midst of cooking a recipe the lengthiness of her descriptions can aggravate me.

I'm also learning a lot about meat.

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If ever I were to write a recipe book, I would make sure that the only meats I used were ones that all supermarkets carry, and ones that the at-home-chef would never need to awkwardly search through the meat section for only in the end to convince herself that such a meat does not exist.

Also, meats that don't break the bank.

At my local Shop Rite, the only option I had for rib-eye steaks was a package of three steaks priced at $65 that looked as though they had been portioned for giants.  I couldn't reason making such a purchase, even in the name of a most important recipe challenge, so I bought these:

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They were boneless so, as I stood in the meat aisle confused and wanting desperately to be back home, I assumed since the description included the word "rib" that these would count.

*Note: I learned afterwards that though we typically connect bone-in steaks with rib-eye, originally the term rib eye meant the center best portion of the rib steak, without the bone.

Steak alone is perfect.  Steak with cream sauce is like turkey with gravy.  It just makes things better.

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The cream sauce is super simple.  Onions, butter, whiskey, broth, seasoning,and light cream.

See, this recipe is slightly health conscious.  She could have used heavy cream.  But instead, she used light cream.  Still delicious, and slightly calorie conserving.

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My favorite part of this recipe is that it can be made in under thirty minutes--that is always a plus.  The only thing that could make it better is if somehow the meat and the sauce could be made in the same pan.  

I suppose if the steaks were made before the cream sauce, the sauce could then be made in the same pan the steaks were fried in.

But of course, then you would have to deal with where to keep the steaks while the sauce was being made.

It's a lot to think about for the sake of using one less pan.

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The steak was perfect.  I needed to cook it a lot longer than she said to, and this is not because I am against medium rare.  Hubby always orders medium rare, while I lean more towards medium.  However, following PW's suggestion of 3 to 4 minutes on each side (for a medium rare thick steak, she says) resulted in steaks that were rare rather than medium rare. 

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The only thing I would change about this recipe is that I would double the cream sauce.  This is always the case for me regarding sauces.  There can never be too much.  I want the sauce to be an ocean covering my plate, unifying my side dishes with my meat.

Yum.

Friday, November 14, 2014

Recipe #22: Meatloaf

Recipe: Meatloaf
Source: The Pioneer Woman Cooks
Time: 1 hr 15 min
Ease: 2
Taste: 10
Leftover Value: 10
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Keep it in the Strainer!

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I want you to take all your preconceived notions about meatloaf and throw them to the wind.

I have never taken issue with meatloaf.  This is probably because my mom always served it with mashed potatoes.  There was a certain point in time where I only wanted to eat mashed potatoes.  Thank goodness my second grade teacher convinced me that eating only mashed potatoes all the time wouldn't be a very intelligent choice.

Otherwise, I would have turned into a potato.

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I still serve meatloaf with mashed potatoes because there will never be another way in my mind to serve meatloaf.*  

I knew this meatloaf was a winner when Hubby raved about it.  Until I made PW's meatloaf, Hubby wasn't as excited as I was for meatloaf dinner.  But now, well, it is in his top five favorite meal list.

*Except maybe with macaroni and cheese?  Oh boy, wouldn't that be adventurous?

First, and of utmost importance, is that you line the broiler pan (because everyone cooks their meatloaf on broiler pans, right?) with tin foil.  This will save on clean up later.

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Another reason I love meatloaf---it's an easy meal.  I love a dish that can be made in one bowl.  That saves my head from spinning rapidly out of control as I look around my disheveled kitchen once dinner is finished.

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Here is why I think Hubby really likes this meatloaf.  Are you ready?

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Bacon!  How could any man resist a meatloaf laced with bacon?

Hubby, however, will claim the reason he loves this meatloaf is that the consistency is moister than most meatloaf.  He chalks this up to the fact that Parmesan is mixed in with the ground beef and breadcrumbs.

Here is my favorite part:

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Perhaps a close second to my love for mashed potatoes growing up would be my love for ketchup (butter being the other condiment fighting for second place).  This ketchupy sauce has all the right things in it: ketchup, brown sugar, dry mustard, and hot sauce!  I love it.

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Ketchup was a part of my meatloaf growing up, too.  At the last fifteen minutes of bake time my mom would pull the meatloaf out of the oven and slather it with ketchup. 

You might remember PW's Comfort Meatballs and how I said they reminded me of meatloaf.  This meatloaf is what came to mind as I ate the surprisingly delicious comfort meatballs.

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This meatloaf is special to me, not only because it is delicious, not only because my Hubby loves it, but because I made it on the day I met my third sister-in-law.  My brother, Joel, brought Mallory over my house to introduce her to me just as Hubby and I had finished eating dinner.  I can't resist feeding people, so naturally, I offered her some of our leftovers.  She ate two servings and then we talked for three hours straight.  So, for now and always, I associate this meal with her.

Is that weird or heartwarming?  I'm not sure.

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Recipe #17, #18, #19: Buttermilk Biscuits, Fried Chicken, and Cheese Grits

Recipe: Biscuits
Time: 40 minutes
Ease: 4
Taste: 9
Leftover Value: 7
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Keep it in the Strainer!

Recipe: Fried chicken
Time: 9 hr 30 min--minimum
Ease: 6
Taste: 5
Leftover Value: 3 
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Keep it in the Strainer!

Recipe: Cheese Grits
Source: The Pioneer Woman Cooks
Time: 1 hour 10 minutes
Ease: 4
Taste: 2
Leftover Value: Did not save leftovers 
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Down the Drain! 

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As I press on through the cooking adventure that is this challenge, but also though the cooking challenge that is life, I'm continually adding to a list of foods-I-love-but-never-again-will-cook.  Fried chicken has just joined this list.

Hubby has been aching for me to make fried chicken ever since he first flipped through The Pioneer Woman Cooks and saw the recipe for fried chicken.  I always shy away from cooking recipes that involved massive amounts of oil for frying because: 1. It seems like such a waste to use all that oil for one recipe and 2. That's a lot of oil!  

But I knew it was inevitable that I would one day make fried chicken.

Since I am cooking my way through The Pioneer Woman Cooks, I decided to raise the crazy element a little more by also making her cheese grits and buttermilk biscuits on the day I chose to make her fried chicken.    

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I made the biscuits before everything else so that I wouldn't have to think about them once I became consumed with rotating between dipping chicken into hot oil and taking it out.

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A side recipe that I did not count in the 65 total that PW includes is for butter and honey which she serves with her buttermilk biscuits.  I will admit, my butter wasn't room temperature and I had to microwave it a little, so perhaps that affected it (which is more than obvious from the above picture).  Regardless, I'll stick with biscuits and regular salted butter.

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The biscuits, however, were amazing.  Not only did they taste like the real deal southern style biscuit you would expect, but they were simple to make too.  I needed to add a little more buttermilk before I rolled them as they were too dry, but other than that they were a cinch.

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Ultimately, there was nothing horribly wrong with the fried chicken.  The coating consisted of spices, flour, and a little buttermilk--which I found interesting.

However, since with this recipe I was working with a whole cut up fryer chicken, there was a lot of chicken to fry and some of the pieces were rather huge, making it difficult to gauge how long to keep it in the oil.

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I did like that after frying the chicken PW bakes it in the oven for 15 minutes.  

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If I was going to make PW's fried chicken again, I would let it fry two minutes longer per side, and then let it bake for five or ten more minutes.

But I'm not going to make it again.

While the coating was delicious, it was far too much work for something that Chicken Holiday has been doing perfectly for years.  

If you don't have a Chicken Holiday near you, I'm sorry.

Now, the cheese grits.

Here is the first reason I never want to make cheese grits again.

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And here is the second:

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Okay, perhaps the second one is my fault.  Maybe the first one is, too.  

I don't want to offend my southern friends, but I totally and completely do not understand the purpose of grits.  While they weren't horrible, they were the type of food you eat and think to youself, "Why am I eating this?"

To enjoy the grits, I mixed my bites with my mashed potatoes.  But here is my question, how does one normally eat grits?  Are they meant to be mixed with other foods?  Are grits the type of food you serve with mashed potatoes, or instead of?  

If you are a southern food expert or a lover of grits, comment below to help educate me.

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Monday, October 27, 2014

Recipe #7 and #8: Mashed Potatoes and Comfort Meatballs

Source: The Pioneer Woman Cooks
Time: 1 hr 50 min
Ease: 4
Taste: 7
Leftover Value:
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Keep it in the Strainer!

Source: The Pioneer Woman Cooks
Time: 1 hr 35 min
Ease: 4
Taste: 10
Leftover Value: No leftovers!
Down the Drain or Keep in the Strainer: Keep it in the Strainer!

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In order to serve mashed potatoes with meatballs, I had to convince myself that these were not meatballs.

They are not meatballs.

They are not meatballs.

They are not meatballs.

I may or may not have had to recite this again and again.

I also may or may not have said the word meatloaf again and again to convince myself they were meatloaf meatballs rather than Italian meatballs.

I knew that if I allowed myself to be confused, I would want to make pasta instead of mashed potatoes to go along with these 'meatballs', not meatloaf meatballs.*

*Note: Though PW pictures the comfort meatballs being served with mashed potatoes, she also says you can serve them with egg noodles tossed with butter.  Yum!

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These recipes share a similar trait: they both take a lot of time to make.  The positive about the mashed potatoes is that you can make them ahead of time and save the final step of baking them for 30 minutes for later.  I haven't tried to do this yet, but Pioneer Woman says it can be done.  So I take a little comfort in that.

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Up to the baking point, these guys are a lot of work.  Mashed potatoes usually are.  All the peeling, the chopping, the time to boil...it's quite a process.

For these, she has you hand mash the potatoes.  Ugh.  I have been spoiled by using my immersion blender every time that I make mashed potatoes.  They are the smoothest, most delicious potatoes ever and whenever I serve them to friends they marvel at their consistency.

So, needless to say, mashing potatoes by hand was not something I wanted to do.

Especially considering it was five pounds of potatoes.

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But then when I put the butter and cream cheese in, everything was right in the world.

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It's a little over the top, I'll admit, but since PW said to do it, I did it.

I topped the potatoes with hunks of butter.

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This is decadence like none other.

I recommend serving these potatoes when you are feeding large crowds (think Thanksgiving), but not for an ordinary weeknight meal.

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The comfort meatballs were fantastic.  But just like the mashed potatoes, they required a lot of time and even more work.

After mixing all the ingredients, the meatballs are refrigerated for 30 to 45 minutes to set.  I like to do this sometimes with my Italian meatballs, but these meatballs were so moist that they needed it.  It was difficult to shape them perfectly because of how wet they were.  Next time I would either use a little more beef or use an ice cream scoop to shape them.

After the meatballs have set, they are to be dredged in flour, browned in a skillet, placed in a baking dish, covered in sauce*, and baked for 45 minutes.**

*The sauce was sweet, the sauce was delicious, and the sauce reminded me of meatloaf.  Perfect.

**Yes, this is real life.  I wanted to curse the day Pioneer Woman was born, but as soon as I tasted them I wanted to sing her praises.

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I did not make such a massive meal only for Hubby and myself.  

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Jon was the first to try it and, of course, loved it.  Then my brother, Justin, and his wife came over to help us eat the rest.

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These two recipes are perfect for each other.  I would recommend making the mashed potatoes ahead of time so that they can be thrown into the oven when the meatballs go in.  This way, when it is closer to dinner time you can focus solely on making the meatballs.