| I use a big crock pot I got at Costco a few years ago. It is wonderful and it holds big roasts. My favorite thing to cook in the crockpot is a whole chicken. I just wash it really good, then season the inside with garlic and onions, and sage, then I sprinkle kosher salt all over it. I put it in the crock pot on low with no liquid added. I also put onions and pepper and a little olive oil on top. It is wonderful!! I beats any rotisserie chicken I have had, and so easy. I use the meat for lots of meals. Super cheap too. |
I am not from a hunter's family, but venison is actually quite tasty. Often families who get a deer do not have to purchase meat for the entire year. Also, you should be grateful to these hunters for keeping the deer population in check. They help prevent diseased dear populations due to overcrowding and over population. |
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Come on, it's not that hard to cook most of these meals at home. In fact, I find it impossible to go OUT for dinner these days with my long commute, baby's early bedtime and mounds of chores I have to get done before heading to bed myself.
Cooking dinner takes me, MAX, 15 minutes of prep time and ten minutes of cleanup. The rest of the time I'm doing other stuff. We grocery shop ONCE per week. If you can't manage to cook dinner for your family at least most of the week you're just probably not very good in the kitchen! Anyway... Sunday: Pioneer Woman tortilla soup Monday: Spaghetti with turkey meatballs, salad Tuesday: Rack of Lamb, roasted broccoli Wednesday: Lentil Soup with poached eggs and garlic toast Thursday: Pizza (ordered in), salad Friday: Burritos (beef and bean), radish & cucumber salad with cilantro/lime vinagrette Saturday: Orange Chicken (TJ's frozen), steamed green beans. So, a combination of premade and homemade, and one pizza. Not a bad week. |
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Satuday: Arby's. Ate on the 3-hour drive home after going to support DH in a race he was running. We all had some version of beef 'n cheddar w/ curly fries.
Sunday: Homemade baked buffalo chicken tenders on salad Monday: Frozen TJ's meatballs cooked in their Arrabiata sauce, served on whole wheat hot dog buns, with some mozzarella & a side of broccoli Tuesday: Whole wheat pasta tossed with sauteed garlic, olive oil & basil. Added some spinach. Wednesday: Made pizzas on the grill Thursday: Chicken stir fry with brown rice Friday: Grilled steaks and asparagus |
Unfortunately the Northern Thai Curry requires a special spice mix that my mom got in Thailand. But for the stewed chicken: saute a table spoon of red curry paste in a bit of oil add chicken pieces (can be any part, though thighs taste best) and brown add just enough water to surround the chicken and a little bit of fish sauce (maybe a teaspoon - you can always add more later) add two stalks of lemon grass cut into 2 inch pieces and 3-4 kaffir lime leaves simmer until chicken is done add 1/2 cup cilantro and 1/2 cup scallions (chopped) and stir until wilted add fish sauce to taste serve over rice! Green Curry: saute a table spoon green curry paste in a bit of oil add chicken pieces and a little fish sauce and brown (add a little water if it starts to smoke) add diced Thai eggplants (or any Asian egg plant) add enough water to just immerse the chicken and eggplant and simmer until chicken is done and eggplant is cooked but still firm add 1 can unsweetened coconut milk and stir add 1/2 teaspoon white sugar add about 1/2 cup of whole Thai basil leaves add 3-4 kaffir lime leaves simmer until basil is wilted - about 5-10 minutes add fish sauce to taste serve over rice! Sorry the recipes aren't very exact, these are family recipes that have never been written down so I adjust according to how things taste. Having the right ingredients are very important. I've been able to find most things at the Thai grocery in Silver Spring. |
pp here, I'm pretty sure I just identified myself to anyone who knows me and is reading this thread
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We use our good china every Saturday night. We got it, we might as well use it. Holidays don't come around that often. We use cloth napkins every day. We use our for 2-3 meals or once we've eaten something really messy like BBQ.
This week: Mon - Pasta Carbonara Tues - Stir-fry shrimp with lemon sauce* Wed - Quick Chicken and Dumplings* Thurs - Still not sure, my mom is coming to town for a few days - might be some $6 dinners from Wegs. Fri - Homemade Pizza Sat - Ribs, cornbread etc... DH and I eat the leftovers for lunch the next day. I really like the "Best Simple Recipe*" book from the Cook's Illustrated folks. |
Just gettting to check this thread again, thanks so much! I am going to try it 2nite, it's a great recipe for using up leftover veggies. Haven't had a chance to read through the thread to see if you've posted the mushroom risotto, but I'm going to look up a recipe as I have mushrooms in the house
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I like your style! We have a freezer full of deer meat too (ahem, "venison"). And half a side of beef from the family farm. But no June Cleaver here -- last week we had -- Pot roast (from farm-raised beef) with potatoes, onions, and carrots in a mushroom/garlic sauce, crock pot roast chicken in the crockpot with tomatoes (from garden), olives, garlic, white wine and pepper, side of rice Beef steaks with Annies Mac N Cheese and cut up veggies Deer steaks rolled in flour and sage, side of wild rice and corn Leftovers from pot roast, steak and chicken dishes in pot; add broth; meld flavors for 15 minutes, serve over egg noodles (tasted great) Key is that all of these are fridge to table in about 20 minutes. Crock pot meals you throw everything in, turn on and done. Easy. Faster than DiGiornio's, trust me, I know -- we do that sometimes too. |
Amen to that!! |
Are you much of a cook to begin with? I think that's where the divide in this thread is coming from. Cooking really is effortless and enjoyable for a lot of people, including me. I work full-time, have no housekeeper or yard person, and cook almost every night. But then, my husband does the laundry.... |
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Agree with PP that how hard cooking seems on a daily basis is largely a reflection of whether it is something you like to do (and would do more if you had time) or hate to do (it is a chore you would rather not have to do at all).
I am FT WOHM (lawyer) but I like to cook. This week's menus: Sunday: Roast beef, rice, carrots Monday: Chicken fajitas, tortillas, beans Tuesday: I'm at a meeting tonight. DH is serving store bought roast chicken, mashed potatoes, and a veg (probably a salad) Wednesday: Roast beef hash (recipe from my mom that's not really hash but is a potato and onion and leftover meat dish), broccolli Thursday: Pasta with chicken (not sure exactly what sauce yet), steamed artichokes Friday: everyone is out and about or travelling so no cooking for me |
Yeah, I tend to agree. I also cook almost every night and posted here (although my meals weren't on teh top of the impressive-sounding list). But I enjoy cooking and maybe more significantly we cannot afford to eat out hardly ever so it's a necessity for us and I try to make it healthy and tasty. I work full-time, but both of our kids are preschoolers still so no evening activities. I know it gets more complicated when the kids are older and have stuff in the evenings - my sister, who only works part-time, said they eat Chipotles and/or pizza probably 4 nights a week and she has 2 kids aged 9 and 11. FWIW we (and by we I mean my DH) grocery shops once a week. |
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Tonight: Rice and baked chicken in sauce made of OJ concentrate, ginger, soy sauce and brown sugar.
Tuesday: Whole Foods roasted chicken, potatoes, corn and stir fry veggies. The white meat came out dry though. Monday: Grilled steak, artichokes, green beans and potatoes. Sunday: Chicken in mushroom sauce. Saturday: Grilled short ribs and vietnamese noodles with steamed veggies. Friday: Spaghetti with italian sausage. |