Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Try chicken tikka masala
Looks complicated, but it's not. Don't let the long list throw you, most of the list is spices. You are doing like three things: making a past, cooking chicken in a pan and combining everything to cook. Try it on a Sunday to get a hang of it and serve it that night and monday. For the kids drop the jalapeño and get some naan.
1 tbsp. ground turmeric
4 tsp. garam masala
1 tsp. red food coloring (optional)
6 cloves garlic, crushed
1 2 1/2" piece ginger, peeled and chopped,
plus julienned strips for garnish
1 jalapeño, stemmed and chopped
1 28-oz. can whole peeled tomatoes, undrained
2 lbs. boneless skinless chicken breasts,
cut into 1 1/2" cubes
1/4 cup Greek yogurt, such as Fage
Kosher salt, to taste
6 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 tsp. coriander seeds
1/2 tsp. cumin seeds
1 tbsp. paprika
2 small yellow onions, finely chopped
1 cup heavy cream
Cilantro leaves, for garnish
Cooked basmati rice, for serving
1. In a blender, purée turmeric, 2 tsp. garam masala, coloring, garlic, ginger, jalapeños, and 1?2 cup water. Put paste into a bowl. In the same blender, purée tomatoes. In a bowl, mix 2 tbsp. paste, chicken, yogurt, and salt; marinate for 30 minutes(you can do this the night before or in the morning, cover and put in the refig).Place oven rack 4" from heating element; heat to broil. Transfer chicken to a foil-lined sheet tray; broil until cooked, 5–6 minutes; set aside (or just cook the chicken in a large pan and remove when cooked- one less thing to clean up)
2. Heat butter in 6-qt. saucepan(same pan you used to cook the chicken, don't clean it)over medium-high heat. Add coriander and cumin; toast 4–6 minutes. Add paprika and onions; cook until soft, 6–8 minutes. Add remaining paste; brown for 5–6 minutes. Add tomatoes; cook for 2 minutes. Stir in cream and 1 cup water; boil. Reduce heat; simmer until thickened, 6–8 minutes. Stir in remaining masala and chicken; season with salt. Serve with garnishes and rice.
Lady, you are smoking some interesting crack if you think an 18-ingredient dish is easy or quick for someone who is exhausted and hangry!
You don't cook do you? It so hard to measure a few teaspoons of spice, garlic, ginger and water and turn on a processor....wow!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Try chicken tikka masala
Looks complicated, but it's not. Don't let the long list throw you, most of the list is spices. You are doing like three things: making a past, cooking chicken in a pan and combining everything to cook. Try it on a Sunday to get a hang of it and serve it that night and monday. For the kids drop the jalapeño and get some naan.
1 tbsp. ground turmeric
4 tsp. garam masala
1 tsp. red food coloring (optional)
6 cloves garlic, crushed
1 2 1/2" piece ginger, peeled and chopped,
plus julienned strips for garnish
1 jalapeño, stemmed and chopped
1 28-oz. can whole peeled tomatoes, undrained
2 lbs. boneless skinless chicken breasts,
cut into 1 1/2" cubes
1/4 cup Greek yogurt, such as Fage
Kosher salt, to taste
6 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 tsp. coriander seeds
1/2 tsp. cumin seeds
1 tbsp. paprika
2 small yellow onions, finely chopped
1 cup heavy cream
Cilantro leaves, for garnish
Cooked basmati rice, for serving
1. In a blender, purée turmeric, 2 tsp. garam masala, coloring, garlic, ginger, jalapeños, and 1?2 cup water. Put paste into a bowl. In the same blender, purée tomatoes. In a bowl, mix 2 tbsp. paste, chicken, yogurt, and salt; marinate for 30 minutes(you can do this the night before or in the morning, cover and put in the refig).Place oven rack 4" from heating element; heat to broil. Transfer chicken to a foil-lined sheet tray; broil until cooked, 5–6 minutes; set aside (or just cook the chicken in a large pan and remove when cooked- one less thing to clean up)
2. Heat butter in 6-qt. saucepan(same pan you used to cook the chicken, don't clean it)over medium-high heat. Add coriander and cumin; toast 4–6 minutes. Add paprika and onions; cook until soft, 6–8 minutes. Add remaining paste; brown for 5–6 minutes. Add tomatoes; cook for 2 minutes. Stir in cream and 1 cup water; boil. Reduce heat; simmer until thickened, 6–8 minutes. Stir in remaining masala and chicken; season with salt. Serve with garnishes and rice.
Lady, you are smoking some interesting crack if you think an 18-ingredient dish is easy or quick for someone who is exhausted and hangry!
You don't cook do you? It so hard to measure a few teaspoons of spice, garlic, ginger and water and turn on a processor....wow!
Anonymous wrote:Jambalaya! Boxed rice mix from zatarains with sliced sausage and/or chicken and a salad.
Homemade Mac and cheese with broccoli and ham. Buy a ham steak and cut into chunks, steam some broccoli or use frozen. Make the cheese sauce and elbow noodles, add the broccoli and ham and bake it all together.
Thin boneless pork chops breaded with Panko and Parmesan and baked- serve with lemon juice squeezed on top and boiled potatoes tossed with butter and herbs.
Anonymous wrote:On a related topics, for folks with both parents WOHP and cooking semi-home cooked meals for every meal (no take-out, no packaged/frozen meals -- cutting your own veggies, some meats, tofu, or the like), do you end up with the kitchen a disaster E.V.E.R.Y night? And how do you manage to clean it up and get kids to bed and do all the other chores around the house.
By the time we have kids in bed, cleaning the kitchen disaster is all I have energy for, and thus cleaning the rest of the house and laundry gets lumped into the weekend, which I had hoped would be family quality time not WEEKEND OF CHORES.
Yes, we've looked at a cleaning service, but not in our budget or logistics right now. And we deal with the "clean before the cleaners" problem so common, where they can't really get started until we address the chaos.
We are trying to enlist the kids, but I feel between the homework, language study, practicing piano, and computer homework we are always directing them to work, and never give *them* anytime to be kids...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Try chicken tikka masala
Looks complicated, but it's not. Don't let the long list throw you, most of the list is spices. You are doing like three things: making a past, cooking chicken in a pan and combining everything to cook. Try it on a Sunday to get a hang of it and serve it that night and monday. For the kids drop the jalapeño and get some naan.
1 tbsp. ground turmeric
4 tsp. garam masala
1 tsp. red food coloring (optional)
6 cloves garlic, crushed
1 2 1/2" piece ginger, peeled and chopped,
plus julienned strips for garnish
1 jalapeño, stemmed and chopped
1 28-oz. can whole peeled tomatoes, undrained
2 lbs. boneless skinless chicken breasts,
cut into 1 1/2" cubes
1/4 cup Greek yogurt, such as Fage
Kosher salt, to taste
6 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 tsp. coriander seeds
1/2 tsp. cumin seeds
1 tbsp. paprika
2 small yellow onions, finely chopped
1 cup heavy cream
Cilantro leaves, for garnish
Cooked basmati rice, for serving
1. In a blender, purée turmeric, 2 tsp. garam masala, coloring, garlic, ginger, jalapeños, and 1?2 cup water. Put paste into a bowl. In the same blender, purée tomatoes. In a bowl, mix 2 tbsp. paste, chicken, yogurt, and salt; marinate for 30 minutes(you can do this the night before or in the morning, cover and put in the refig).Place oven rack 4" from heating element; heat to broil. Transfer chicken to a foil-lined sheet tray; broil until cooked, 5–6 minutes; set aside (or just cook the chicken in a large pan and remove when cooked- one less thing to clean up)
2. Heat butter in 6-qt. saucepan(same pan you used to cook the chicken, don't clean it)over medium-high heat. Add coriander and cumin; toast 4–6 minutes. Add paprika and onions; cook until soft, 6–8 minutes. Add remaining paste; brown for 5–6 minutes. Add tomatoes; cook for 2 minutes. Stir in cream and 1 cup water; boil. Reduce heat; simmer until thickened, 6–8 minutes. Stir in remaining masala and chicken; season with salt. Serve with garnishes and rice.
Lady, you are smoking some interesting crack if you think an 18-ingredient dish is easy or quick for someone who is exhausted and hangry!
You don't cook do you? It so hard to measure a few teaspoons of spice, garlic, ginger and water and turn on a processor....wow!
Anonymous wrote:
Try chicken tikka masala
Looks complicated, but it's not. Don't let the long list throw you, most of the list is spices. You are doing like three things: making a past, cooking chicken in a pan and combining everything to cook. Try it on a Sunday to get a hang of it and serve it that night and monday. For the kids drop the jalapeño and get some naan.
1 tbsp. ground turmeric
4 tsp. garam masala
1 tsp. red food coloring (optional)
6 cloves garlic, crushed
1 2 1/2" piece ginger, peeled and chopped,
plus julienned strips for garnish
1 jalapeño, stemmed and chopped
1 28-oz. can whole peeled tomatoes, undrained
2 lbs. boneless skinless chicken breasts,
cut into 1 1/2" cubes
1/4 cup Greek yogurt, such as Fage
Kosher salt, to taste
6 tbsp. unsalted butter
1 tsp. coriander seeds
1/2 tsp. cumin seeds
1 tbsp. paprika
2 small yellow onions, finely chopped
1 cup heavy cream
Cilantro leaves, for garnish
Cooked basmati rice, for serving
1. In a blender, purée turmeric, 2 tsp. garam masala, coloring, garlic, ginger, jalapeños, and 1?2 cup water. Put paste into a bowl. In the same blender, purée tomatoes. In a bowl, mix 2 tbsp. paste, chicken, yogurt, and salt; marinate for 30 minutes(you can do this the night before or in the morning, cover and put in the refig).Place oven rack 4" from heating element; heat to broil. Transfer chicken to a foil-lined sheet tray; broil until cooked, 5–6 minutes; set aside (or just cook the chicken in a large pan and remove when cooked- one less thing to clean up)
2. Heat butter in 6-qt. saucepan(same pan you used to cook the chicken, don't clean it)over medium-high heat. Add coriander and cumin; toast 4–6 minutes. Add paprika and onions; cook until soft, 6–8 minutes. Add remaining paste; brown for 5–6 minutes. Add tomatoes; cook for 2 minutes. Stir in cream and 1 cup water; boil. Reduce heat; simmer until thickened, 6–8 minutes. Stir in remaining masala and chicken; season with salt. Serve with garnishes and rice.
Lady, you are smoking some interesting crack if you think an 18-ingredient dish is easy or quick for someone who is exhausted and hangry!