Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My in-laws are visiting for ten days at the end of May. I was thinking this morning that it'd be great to find some recipes that could be partially or wholly prepared in advance and then frozen, to make things less hectic when it actually comes time to cook.
The only recipes that came to mind are 60s frankenfoods involving cans of cream of mushroom. Delicious for sure, but... it'd be nice to add more, erm, elevated recipes to the rotation.![]()
In the comments on some NYT recipe, someone mentioned freezing chicken thighs in marinade, to pull out the night before. Hacks like that are really intriguing, too!
Limitations: MIL won't eat lamb or fish or bell pepper. Husband and kids have zero spice tolerance, otherwise will eat anything.
Thank you in advance, it's gonna be quite a week!
Why not 1) hire a personal chef for the week 2) dine at a restaurant where you won't have to worry about cooking?
Anonymous wrote:Eggplant parmesean is perfect, but takes 3+ hours to make. Its all the slicing, cutting in half, dip egg, dip bread crumbs, and frying of billion pieces until its brown that takes a few hours. Like 2 large eggplants, but I prefer multiple small ones. Raos sauce is fine, slice mozzarella to put on top of casserole (in deep large foil pan). Bake maybe an hour covered. Cool. Freeze. serve with spaghetti.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My in-laws are visiting for ten days at the end of May. I was thinking this morning that it'd be great to find some recipes that could be partially or wholly prepared in advance and then frozen, to make things less hectic when it actually comes time to cook.
The only recipes that came to mind are 60s frankenfoods involving cans of cream of mushroom. Delicious for sure, but... it'd be nice to add more, erm, elevated recipes to the rotation.![]()
In the comments on some NYT recipe, someone mentioned freezing chicken thighs in marinade, to pull out the night before. Hacks like that are really intriguing, too!
Limitations: MIL won't eat lamb or fish or bell pepper. Husband and kids have zero spice tolerance, otherwise will eat anything.
Thank you in advance, it's gonna be quite a week!
Why not 1) hire a personal chef for the week 2) dine at a restaurant where you won't have to worry about cooking?
Anonymous wrote:Enchiladas.
Lots of recipes out there. My fave is the Skinnytaste chicken enchiladas -- the sauce is fantastic. https://www.skinnytaste.com/chicken-enchiladas/
Anonymous wrote:My in-laws are visiting for ten days at the end of May. I was thinking this morning that it'd be great to find some recipes that could be partially or wholly prepared in advance and then frozen, to make things less hectic when it actually comes time to cook.
The only recipes that came to mind are 60s frankenfoods involving cans of cream of mushroom. Delicious for sure, but... it'd be nice to add more, erm, elevated recipes to the rotation.![]()
In the comments on some NYT recipe, someone mentioned freezing chicken thighs in marinade, to pull out the night before. Hacks like that are really intriguing, too!
Limitations: MIL won't eat lamb or fish or bell pepper. Husband and kids have zero spice tolerance, otherwise will eat anything.
Thank you in advance, it's gonna be quite a week!
Anonymous wrote:My in-laws are visiting for ten days at the end of May. I was thinking this morning that it'd be great to find some recipes that could be partially or wholly prepared in advance and then frozen, to make things less hectic when it actually comes time to cook.
The only recipes that came to mind are 60s frankenfoods involving cans of cream of mushroom. Delicious for sure, but... it'd be nice to add more, erm, elevated recipes to the rotation.![]()
In the comments on some NYT recipe, someone mentioned freezing chicken thighs in marinade, to pull out the night before. Hacks like that are really intriguing, too!
Limitations: MIL won't eat lamb or fish or bell pepper. Husband and kids have zero spice tolerance, otherwise will eat anything.
Thank you in advance, it's gonna be quite a week!
Anonymous wrote:Eggplant parmesean is perfect, but takes 3+ hours to make. Its all the slicing, cutting in half, dip egg, dip bread crumbs, and frying of billion pieces until its brown that takes a few hours. Like 2 large eggplants, but I prefer multiple small ones. Raos sauce is fine, slice mozzarella to put on top of casserole (in deep large foil pan). Bake maybe an hour covered. Cool. Freeze. serve with spaghetti.