Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a good baked ziti recipe they can share? Or even just the basics. I tried to make it once and it came out a bit dry and bland.
I'm embarrassed to say I served this to my fellow Jersey Italians one day when I didn't have time to make sauce from scratch and they all raved and asked for the recipe:
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/baked-ziti-i/
I claimed "Nonna's secret"
Disgusting!![]()
This is why I am always so nervous to cook for people. I might think that it is delicious, and my guests could leave thinking that it was the worst meal ever!
I wouldn't worry about it. There is obviously a real a-hole troll who's only joy is to criticize other people's suggestions. So far we've gotten yuck, disgusting, and ewww. Time to grow up mean poster.
Anonymous wrote:depends on who it is and when.
Summer with people who eat different things - skirt steak with chimichuri, veggies, sangria.
Summer with people who don't eat meat? corn risotto with fresh corn stock and other summer sides like fresh bruchetta or tomato salad
Cooler weather? Pot pie, lasagna, eggplant parm (love) with roasted asparagus. Sometimes salmon with pesto on top, baked...servied with prosciutto wrapped asparagus
Anonymous wrote:depends on who it is and when.
Summer with people who eat different things - skirt steak with chimichuri, veggies, sangria.
Summer with people who don't eat meat? corn risotto with fresh corn stock and other summer sides like fresh bruchetta or tomato salad
Cooler weather? Pot pie, lasagna, eggplant parm (love) with roasted asparagus. Sometimes salmon with pesto on top, baked...servied with prosciutto wrapped asparagus
Anonymous wrote:Do you find that little smokies taste funny, like are more fatty or something. I always find those little smokies to be grizzley almost.
Anonymous wrote:The one appetizer that is guaranteed to disappear every time, no matter how many I seem to make are pigs in blankets.
I take Hillshire Farms Lit'l Smokies (regular or beef) and roll them in Pillsbury Crescent rolls. Take a roll of crescent rolls, pinch the diagonals together, and cut into four rectangles (two croissants each). Cut each rectangle into 10 small rectangles and wrap one of these rectangles around a sausage. Bake according to the Crescent roll package or until golden brown. They disappear so fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a good baked ziti recipe they can share? Or even just the basics. I tried to make it once and it came out a bit dry and bland.
I'm embarrassed to say I served this to my fellow Jersey Italians one day when I didn't have time to make sauce from scratch and they all raved and asked for the recipe:
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/baked-ziti-i/
I claimed "Nonna's secret"
Any suggestions for making this the day before? I would be doubling the recipe if that matters. Would you assemble and then refrigerate, or cook store separately then assemble right before it goes in the oven?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have a good baked ziti recipe they can share? Or even just the basics. I tried to make it once and it came out a bit dry and bland.
I'm embarrassed to say I served this to my fellow Jersey Italians one day when I didn't have time to make sauce from scratch and they all raved and asked for the recipe:
http://allrecipes.com/recipe/baked-ziti-i/
I claimed "Nonna's secret"