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Showing posts with label pasta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pasta. Show all posts

Chicken & Orzo



A few weeks ago, I asked my Facebook followers which recipe I should make for this giveaway. The result was almost unanimous that Chicken & Orzo was what I should make. So I listened! This is one of my new favorite meals. It's a complete meal all together. I love the simple flavor of the Orzo, topped with some fresh squeezed lemon. Orzo is just tiny pasta. It's right in the pasta aisle so be sure to look for it. The chicken is super tasty and cooking the zucchini in the same pan as the chicken gives it a delicious flavor. It's all cooked on the stove so it's very simple to prepare. You will love this recipe! 



Printable Version

Ingredients
4 Tbsp. olive oil, divided
4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
1 tsp. dried basil
salt and pepper to taste
2 zucchini, sliced
8 oz. package orzo pasta, uncooked
1 Tbsp. butter, softened
2 Tbsp. red wine vinegar
1 tsp. dill
Garnish: lemon slices

Directions
  • Heat 2 Tbsp. oil in a large skillet over medium heat.
  • Sprinkle chicken with basil, salt and pepper.
  • Add chicken to skillet and cook, turning once, for 12 minutes, or until juices run clear.
  • Remove chicken to a plate and keep warm.
  • Add zucchini to skillet and cook for 3 minutes or until crisp-tender.
  • Meanwhile, cook orzo according to package directions; drain and stir in butter.
  • Whisk together remaining oil, vinegar, and dill; drizzle over orzo and toss to mix. (I added salt to my orzo for more flavor)
  • Serve chicken and zucchini with orzo. Garish with lemon slices.

This delicious recipe comes from Gooseberry Patch's 101 Stovetop Suppers.

This cookbook is full of easy and delicious stovetop recipes. It is one of my favorite Gooseberry Patch cookbooks. It has recipes like Pepperoni Tortellini, Chicken Romano, Creamy White Chili, and even desserts like Chocolate Hazelnut Skillet Bars. You need this cookbook.

Lucky for you, I have a copy to giveaway! Just use the rafflecopter form below to enter.



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Busy Day Lasagna Toss



Lasagna is one of my favorite comfort foods. When I make it, I use cottage cheese instead of Ricotta. It's just the way I've always eaten it. Once, I tried making it with Ricotta cheese and my husband didn't love it as much as he did with the cottage cheese. So I went back to using cottage cheese. Why fix something if it isn't broken and all? I am sharing this Busy Day Lasagna with you in conjunction with another Gooseberry Patch cookbook giveaway! Keep reading for the details.

But lasagna is not a fast meal to prepare. This skillet version is. While I still prefer the classic version, this is a tasty substitute for when you want and quick and easy meal.


Ingredients
1 lb. ground beef
1 C. green pepper, chopped
1/2 C. onion, chopped
3 garlic cloves, minced
26 oz. jar spaghetti sauce
1 2/3 C. water
1/4 C. Italian salad dressing (prepared not dry)
1/4 C. brown sugar (I used 1 Tbsp. and it was plenty sweet)
12 no boil lasagna noodles, uncooked (or use regular noodles and just break them up, then cook them in a pot of water and add to the beef mixture)
1/2 C. ricotta or cottage cheese
1 C. shredded mozzarella cheese

Directions
  • Brown beef in a large deep skillet over medium heat; drain.
  • Add pepper, onion, and garlic; saute until tender.
  • Stir in sauce, water, salad dressing and brown sugar. If using regular noodles, leave out the water
  • Bring to a boil.
  • Break each noodle into 4 pieces; stir into mixture.
  • Reduce heat to medium-low; cover and cook, stirring occasionally until noodles are tender, about 10-15 minutes.
  • Remove from heat.
  • Stir in ricotta or cottage cheese. 
  • Sprinkle with mozzarella cheese; cover.
  • Let stand for about 5 minutes, until cheese is melted. 
  • Serves 6.


This recipe comes from Gooseberry Patch's Garfield... Recipes with Cattitude.


I love this cookbook! It is full of over 230 quick and easy recipes for Garfield's favorite foods...lasagna, pizza and much more. There's Strawberry Ice Cream Soda, Upside Down Apple Muffins, Homestyle Potato Pancakes, Mocha Party Cake, Chicken Chimies, and so much more. Plus there are tips and pictures of Garfield and Odie throughout the book.


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Pea Salad

Remember how I love Pasta?
Remember how I love Bacon?
This salad has both. 
And peas for the health factor.

Ingredients
1 C. elbow macaroni, cooked
3 slices bacon, crisply cooked and crumbled
1/2 C. green onion, chopped
2 C. frozen peas, thawed
1 C. mayonnaise
1/2 C. shredded Cheddar cheese

Directions
  • In a bowl, combine macaroni, bacon, green onions, and peas. 
  • Stir in mayonnaise; cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours.
  •  Sprinkle with cheese just before serving. Serves 4 to 6.
Note: I used half mayo and half Miracle Whip. I like the tang. Also, I saved some bacon and sprinkled it on just before serving so it would be crispy on top.



This yummy recipe comes from Gooseberry Patch's 101 Farmhouse Favorites cookbook


It absolutely fits right into our kitchen. It is full of tasty farmhouse favorites like Fried Green Tomato Biscuits, Chocolate-Raspberry Brownies, Gooseberry Conserve, Farmhouse Pot Roast, and Quick Picnic Pickles to name a few.
Would you like a copy? 
I knew it.
Just use the Rafflecopter below to enter.


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Lo Mein

I have said it before, but Chinese food is my favorite. I really love Sweet and Sour Chicken, Fried Rice, and Lo Mein Noodles. That is usually what I get when I go out to eat Chinese food. But now I can make all of those at home and I love that. You can make it, too, and save money. It tastes just like take-out to me.




Ingredients
2 T. soy sauce
1 T. rice wine vinegar
2 T. brown sugar
½ tsp. toasted sesame oil
1 tsp. grated fresh ginger
2 tsp. minced garlic
½ tsp. Sriracha hot chili sauce
2 tsp. cornstarch
2 tsp. canola oil
3 C. Coleslaw
½ C. thinly sliced scallions
6 oz Chinese egg noodles


Directions

  •  Cook your noodles per the package directions. 
  •  Drain them and set aside.
  •  Combine the soy sauce, rice vinegar, brown sugar, sesame oil, ginger, garlic, sriracha, and cornstarch   in a small saucepan set over medium heat.  
  •  Bring to a boil and heat until thickened. Set aside. 
  • Set a large skillet over medium heat with the canola oil.  
  • Toss in the coleslaw and sauté until the veggies are tender.  
  • Add the noodles and sauce, tossing to combine.


Recipe Adapted from One Sweet Appetite
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Gluten-Free Baked Stuffed Shells

Gluten-Free Italian Stuffed Shells


Italian Dreams


There isn't a speck of Italian blood in me. Allegedly. No blood lines (even faint ones) to trace back to Italy's flavor and culture rich boot. I claim no Italian grandmother with deft, gnarled hands who could roll out ravioli dough in her sleep. No puttering, gardening grandfather who offered me my first taste of a sun warmed tomato straight off the string-tied vine. We didn't have lasagna on our Thanksgiving table. Or baked ziti. My mother never mixed me an almond infused Italian soda after a rough day at school.

So why is Italian food- forever, for me- the ultimate comfort food? Hungry, angry, lonely, tired- what do I crave? (Besides a bottle of wine? Darling those days are gone.)

Spaghetti slick with garlicky olive oil. Bubbling hot lasagna. Fresh baked focaccia. Bruschetta. Risotto. Baked stuffed shells.

All heaven.

The tough part is- living gluten-free AND dairy-free can seriously crush your Italian gilded comfort food dreams.

Back in the day, there were no gluten-free lasagna noodles or stuff-able GF pasta shells (not in my neck of the woods, anyway). Though times have changed, pasta-wise- thank goddess. Most supermarkets now carry gluten-free pasta in all shapes and sizes. And if you cook it just right (in salted water, till al dente) and immediately drizzle it with extra virgin olive oil- most of it tastes mighty good. And if you are among the agriculturally evolved among us who can digest milk, your cheesy world still glitters with buttery glory (cream, butter, and cheese go a long way to improving the flavor of gluten-free recipes, let's be honest). But.

If- like yours truly- you have to live without the salty flavor punch of Parmesan or creamy tang of fresh goat cheese, comfort food can turn into one big, ho-hum yawn. Vegan cheese is no substitute (yes, I've tried them all). Unless your concept of cheese involves an aerosol can, plastic-shiny slices in peel-away shrink-wrap or orange powder you added to hot milk (no offense to corporate giant produced fake foods, or anything). In that case, processed oil with pea protein vegan cheese might remind you of something seemingly related to the cheese family.

I can't get past the funky sock odor and poly-vinyl texture.

Maybe because I was lucky. I had two years of Home Economics class. I cooked my own whole milk white cheddar sauce for baked macaroni and cheese (the first thing I learned to cook, at 13, stirring a white roux with flour and unsalted butter). Post honeymoon I shaved velvet slivers of golden Parmesan from precious wedges of Italian Reggiano, thanks to two weeks in Italy. And I spoon-stuffed pasta shells with a classic blend of ricotta and shredded mozzarella thanks to an armful of hippie-vegetarian cookbooks.

So, yes, there are days I miss dairy food. Especially in winter.

And thus, began experimenting, inventing ways to make up for the loss of genuine cheesy goodness. The first part was easy. I turned to organic soft tofu for a ricotta substitute (my mainstay for years as a vegetarian goddess). I may as well admit I not only tolerate tofu, I love tofu. And lucky for me, this fermented bean curd stuff loves me, too (I know this is not the case for everyone- and for those of you with a milk allergy AND soy allergy, I truly feel your pain).

For the topping I use a blend of Italian seasoned bread crumbs (I use Udi's gluten-free white sandwich bread processed into crumbs with extra virgin olive oil, garlic, and herbs) and almond meal (almond meal has a soft, powdery mouth feel faintly reminiscent of grated cheese) with sea salt for a salty-cheesier taste.

The latest version (created back in West Hollywood) was a winner- and we've been making it ever since. The family loves it. Even the gluten-eaters.

All I know is there is never a scrap left over.

Which as any cook knows, speaks volumes


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Red & White Pasta


This is my new go-to recipe when I want something quick. Normally, spaghetti falls into that category.
But even that is a struggle for my Preston who doesn't like many tomato-based meals such as lasagna and spaghetti. Crazy kid. 
But he likes this meal and I like it better than spaghetti so it's a winner. We normally don't add any meat to this, but you can add ground beef or shredded chicken if you want. Or you could use the spaghetti sauce with meat in it. Serve it along a salad and garlic bread and you're good to go.
I cannot tell you how delicious this is. The combo of the spaghetti and Alfredo sauces is just perfect.


Ingredients
1 lb. Penne pasta
1 (26 oz.) jar spaghetti sauce
1 (16 oz.) jar Alfredo sauce
3 C. shredded Mozzarella cheese

Directions
  • Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Boil and cook pasta in a large pot of water according to package directions; drain.
  • In a 9x13 glass baking dish, spread 1/2 cup of spaghetti sauce on bottom. 
  • Pour half of the cooked pasta on top. 
  • Pour half the Alfredo sauce, half the spaghetti sauce and 1 1/2 cup of cheese evenly over pasta.
  • Repeat with remaining pasta, sauces and cheese. 
  • Cover with foil and bake for 30 minutes or until hot & bubbly.


Recipe Source: Life as a Lofthouse

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Crispy Chicken & Creamy Italian Pasta

Pasta and I are BFF's. Actually, carbs and I are BFF's. You know what I mean. If there was a diet for an all carb weightloss, I would so be that hot girl whose body everyone else would die for. Oh yeah. That's how much I love carbs. And sweets. So someone work on a diet like that, ok? Thanks.


Ingredients
3 large boneless, skinless chicken breasts
5 c. Corn flakes
3/4 c. flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 c. milk
6 Tbsp. Olive oil
1 (12 oz.) pkg bowtie noodles {Farfalle}

Sauce:
1 (10 oz.) Philadelphia Cooking Creme {Italian Cheese and Herb flavor}
2 cans Cream of Chicken soup
1 c. chicken broth
1/2 c. milk

How You Do It
In a food processor crush the corn flakes into crumbs. You could also use a gallon sized ziploc bag and a rolling pin to crush the cereal.


Add the salt to the flour. Stir to combine. Place the flour, milk, and cornflakes in their own seperate pans. Loaf pans or pie pans work great.
Place the chicken in a gallon sized ziploc bag, push the air out, and seal. Pound with a meat mallet or rolling pin until flat. Cut each chicken in half.
Heat the oil in a large skillet and start cooking your pasta according to package directions.
Dredge the chicken in the flour, making sure to do both sides. Then dredge each piece in the milk and then the flakes. Carefully lay the chicken in the hot oil. Cover and cook over medium high heat for about 5 minutes on each side. You may need to add more oil if it get all absorbed. Cover the pan and let it cook about 7 more minutes on medium heat. Careful not to let the chicken burn. Remove cooked chicken and place it on a plate and tent with foil to keep warm.
Into the same pan, add the broth, Cooking Creme, Cream of Chicken soup, and milk.


I love this stuff. Next time I want to try the Herb and Lemon flavor. Yum.
Whisk the sauce to combine and thicken, about 3 minutes. Slice up the chicken and serve over the pasta and sauce.


Printable Version

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Turkey Meatballs with Asian Style Noodles

Gluten free turkey meatballs with Asian noodles
Light and tempting turkey meatballs with fresh herbs, ginger and lime.

Let it Roll, Baby, Roll


Okay, I confess. I admit it. When it comes to this recipe? I was totally inspired by Jamie Oliver and his Jamie's Food Revolution. I loved the flash mob stir-fry dance at Marshall University in episode four (view here at WabiSabi, one of the participants). The energy, spirit and creativity of the students, the killer combo of cooking and dance, with a generous dash of self expression and celebration got this creaky gluten-free goddess off the couch and movin', Baby.

Not to mention, craving a pan-tossed noodle stir-fry.

No doubt about it, I've been more attuned to Asian inspired flavors since moving to Santa Monica. Understandable. It's hard not to respond to the fresh, Pacific-infused tastes and heady scents of Asian fusion out here. So when we decided to play around with meatball recipes this weekend, yours truly started conjuring fusion-style tweaks for the humble Mediterranean meatball recipe I know and love.

First- I wanted to use organic free-range turkey (come Spring, I favor lighter meatballs and meatloaf, don't you?). And I knew I wanted to use fresh chopped herbs- mint, cilantro and parsley. Perfect with a splash of lime. Some spring onion. A little ginger and chile. Boom.

This Asian fusion meatball was born.

A quick note on my noodle choice- I've discovered Ancient Harvest Gluten-Free Quinoa Pasta-- and I love the texture and flavor. This is the least starchy gluten-free noodle I've found. And the best part is (perhaps due to the higher protein content of quinoa flour?) it stands up to pan tossing for brilliant stir-fries.



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