Cream of Vegetable Soup
Using pantry vegetables, this soup is fast & flavorful … or have leftovers cold as a bean dip …
Continue readingUsing pantry vegetables, this soup is fast & flavorful … or have leftovers cold as a bean dip …
Continue readingI’ve made this several times for Christmas Eve and always delicious. This was a recipe known as Alton Brown’s Polish Christmas Soup. Served with a good bread and butter, this is a nice light meal to compliment all the holiday appetizers and sweets, and looks festive as a red,green and white soup.
If you keep the sautéed sausage separate from the soup and just layer in individual bowls you serve, this keeps sausage seasoned. And, since there will probably be soup leftover, another meal can be made from freshly sautéed sausage, reheat soup and repeat. Continue reading
This stove-top Pot Roast is simple, hearty and simmers for hours, making your kitchen smell delightfully rustic, with all those garlic cloves stuffed into the top of the roast and cooked in a classic Dutch Oven.
btw…I don’t know when Pots & Pans started to be called “Cookware, Skillets and Saucepans”, but the evolution of cooking terminology can get alittle complicated.
Out in the Wild West of Texas, early settlers, chuck wagon cooks, and cowboys cooked over an open fire and used a heavy black cast iron pot and tightly fit lid, known as a version of a Dutch Oven. Dutch Ovens have been used in cooking hundreds and years, and sometimes also called casserole dishes (casserole means “pot” in French). Are we confused yet?
Of course, about a hundred years ago, the French developed a hugely successful enamelled cast iron version, sometimes also called a “French Oven” and today, every beginner to advanced cook needs a least one of these classic pieces of “cookware” on their shelves. I’m still alittle confused on the correct descriptions, but my Dutch Oven (okay, it was made in France) is one of my favorite ways to cook, boil, roast and simmer.
This version of Chili is made with ground turkey, and a bit of cocoa powder to add a slightly lighter and smoother consistency. Adding beans to Chili is always controversial, but choosing either great white northern, or pinquito beans add a nice texture. Continue reading
You can find as many versions of Chili in Texas, as the number of people you talk with. This is one version of a very basic recipe version I found in a collection of Texas cooking cookbook from over 30 years ago. It never disappoints. Continue reading
This is a shorter and different take on traditional Chili and doesn’t need to cook for hours.
But it’s well worth the little extra time upfront, to roast the vegetables. They get blended with the spicey flavor of chipotle peppers in adobo sauce, and added to chicken stock/broth to make a thick rich chili sauce.
The combination of ingredients rock! Continue reading