Posts Tagged dinner

What’s on Your Plate? Dinner Ideas – Part 2

cook What’s on Your Plate? Dinner Ideas – Part 1 I introduced you to three recipes. I hope that you might have had a chance to try one. Maybe it wasn’t your type of cuisine. Here are a few more recipes to wrap up this particular blog.

Quick & Easy:

Parmesan-Crusted Chicken Fingers

Olive or vegetable oil cooking spray

2/3 c. panko (Japanese-style) breadcrumbs
1/4 c. grated Parmesan cheese
2 T. chopped fresh parsley (optional)
1/4 t. ground black pepper
1 T. Dijon mustard
2 egg whites
1 lb. chicken tenders

Place a rack in the top third of the oven. Heat the oven to 425 F. Set a wire rack on a baking sheet and coat the rack lightly with cooking spray.

In a shallow bowl, stir together the breadcrumbs, Parmesan cheese, parsley (if using) and pepper. In another shallow bowl, whisk together the mustard and egg whites until frothy and opaque.

Dip each chicken tender in the egg white mixture, then in the breadcrumb mixture to coat all sides. Place on the prepared rack.

Spritz the top of each tender lightly and evenly with cooking spray, then turn and repeat on the other side. Bake until the crumb coating is golden brown and crisp and the chicken is no longer pink at the center, about 15 to 20 minutes. Serve immediately. Makes 4 servings.

Hearty & Ethnic:

Jay’s (Yep me again) Asian Beef & Noodles

14 ¾ oz of Beef tenderloin all fat removed and cubed (3 in filet minion steaks)
1 T of Sesame Oil
1 T of Soy Sauce
1 t of Rice Vinegar
1 Tsp of fresh grated ginger
1 t of beef bullion granules
1 T of Chili Garlic Sauce
2 T of Hoisen Sauce
1 t of black pepper
2 garlic cloves minced
3 scallions bottoms, minced
3 T of water

Put all ingredients in a bowl and let marinade at least 1 hour.

1 c of fresh chopped spinach
½ c of shredded carrots
6-7 asparagus (chopped in half and split down the middle)
3 scallion tops chopped
1 c of fresh green beans, chopped into pieces
1 pkg of Soba or Udon Noodles.

Bring Water to boil and noodles and follow directions on package. In a hot pan sear the beef. Put the veggies in except the spinach. Cook for till almost tender add the spinach and stir in. Combine the drained noodles with.

Lent Friendly & Tasty:

Calypso Shrimp with Black Bean-Citrus Salsa by Betty Crocker

makes:4 servings

Shrimp and Marinade
2 teaspoons grated orange peel
1/4 cup orange juice
1/2 teaspoon seasoned salt
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1 lb uncooked large shrimp (21 to 30), peeled, deveined
1 tablespoon canola oil

Salsa
1 can (15 oz) Progresso® black beans, drained, rinsed
1 medium orange, peeled, divided into segments, membrane removed and cut in half
1/4 cup Old El Paso® Thick ‘n Chunky salsa
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
1 teaspoon grated lime peel
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped

In 8-inch square (2-quart) glass baking dish, mix orange peel, orange juice, seasoned salt and 4 cloves chopped garlic. Add shrimp; turn to coat. Cover with plastic wrap; refrigerate up to 2 hours to marinate.

In medium bowl, mix all salsa ingredients. Cover; let stand until ready to serve (or refrigerate if longer than 30 minutes).

In 10-inch nonstick skillet, heat oil over medium-high heat. Drain shrimp; discard marinade. Cook shrimp in oil 2 to 3 minutes, stirring frequently, until shrimp are pink. Among 4 dinner plates, divide salsa. Arrange shrimp around salsa.

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The Cooking Conversation- What’s For Dinner Tonight

woman-cooking

Part of my life was spent in my grandmother’s kitchen learning the basic fundamentals of cooking. She would always use the Betty Crocker cookbook as her Kitchen Go To Book. She did have a few recipes that were hand written in a card box that I never knew if she made them up or got them from some other source, but they always tasted the best. Today’s home cook has a plethora of sources for recipes; cookbooks, family, friends, the internet, and sometimes they are just blessed with the ability to create food from their own minds. I am one of those people, although I do use all the other sources as well and at time, get my inspiration from other cooks. I think that every person has a gift (or gifts if you are super lucky) that is all their own, and mine is cooking.

To me food and beverage is one of the universal things that every humans does and at times, interactively with others. Think about it, going out on a girls night? More than likely you are hitting a restaurant first. In laws visiting? We eat and talk politely over our meals oohing and ahhing over the food. Just got married? Great, free food at the reception. Watching football with guys? Break out the grub and libations. Even if you do not know each other or even maybe like each other, if you are sitting to a meal, the food at the very least, is a commonality of discussion.

My grandparents connected food with love, as do I. I remember coming home from school and having a tough day and there my my sweet grandma was with homemade cookies and milk and we sat and talked about the day. Every “supper” as they called it, we sat around the table together enjoying her labors over the stove and oven that day on some fantastic homemade creation. We would laugh and just talk as a family, the three of us taking the time to just be in the moment.

Last year I created a dish that I entered in a contest called, “So You Think You Can Cook Cleveland” on Channel 3 on the show Good Company. I became a finalist and eventually won and was even on TV. Check out the links below (sorry you’ll have to cut & paste them in your address bar, it’s not hyper-linking).

http://www.wkyc.com/video/default.aspx?maven_playerId=immersiveplayer&maven_referralPlaylistId=search&maven_referralObject=755302571 (My cooking as a finalist)

http://www.wkyc.com/video/default.aspx?maven_playerId=immersiveplayer&maven_referralPlaylistId=search&maven_referralObject=758463567 (My winning interview)

My only regret was my grandparents were not alive to witness my win, but I am proud my “15 minutes of fame” nevertheless (hence the shameless plug for the videos). I want one day to write a cookbook, but I am waiting on two things; motivation (anybody have some to spare?) and the economy to rebound a bit. Until then I will offer up some recipes from time to time. I can not say that everything I make is earth shatteringly delicious to all taste buds. I did once have a horrible debacle with Asiago Cheese to never be repeated again that still haunts my dreams. And like most home cooks, I do mess up and sometimes my labors of love end up in the abyss of the dreaded garbage can.

I will offer two recipes today, one my award winning dish and one another one for those who may not like the ingredients of the other! Maybe you’ll give it a try and it’s what’s for dinner tonight. If so, I hope you enjoy.

Jay’s Chicken Sausage Dish & Shrimp Dish (The Good Company Win)

1 lb of cooked shrimp

2 T of Lime juice

1 T of Seafood Seasoning

2 T of Tarragon Leaves

Take off the tails of the shrimp and dice into pieces. Add the other ingredients and set aside in a bowl. (if prepping earlier in the day leave lime juice off for now)

7-8 baby carrots

Small Onion

2 garlic cloves

Chop into tiny pieces the carrots and onions. Mince garlic. Combine in a small bowl. Set aside.

¼ – ½ of red pepper

¼ – ½ of green pepper

¼ – ½ of orange pepper

Chop all peppers and combine in a bowl and set aside

2 Jalapeño Chicken Sausage  (or any precooked chicken sausage you like)

1 T of Olive Oil

Remove Casings and chop Sausage into small pieces and cook in oil for three minutes stirring frequently on med-high heat. Add the carrot and onion bowl. Cook for additional 3 min minutes stirring frequently. Then add the pepper bowl, cook an additional; 3 min, then add the shrimp bowl and cook and additional 2 min. Serve separate or over rice or pasta or in a wrap or in egg roll wrappers that can be baked or fried.

Note: Almost everything should roughly be the same size, except the onion and carrot being slightly smaller.

Plain recipe serves 4 at 230 calories, 6 grams of fat, 1.6 grams of Sat Fat.

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Jay’s Asian Beef & Noodles

14 ¾ oz of Beef tenderloin all fat removed and cubed

1 T of Sesame Oil

1 T of Soy Sauce

1 t of Rice Vinegar

1 Tsp of fresh grated ginger

1 t of beef bullion granules

1 T of Chili Garlic Sauce

2 T of Hoisen Sauce

1 t of black pepper

2 garlic cloves minced

3 scallions bottoms, minced

3 T of water

Put all ingredients in a bowl and let marinade at least 1 hour.

1 c of fresh chopped spinach

½ c of shredded carrots

6-7 asparagus (chopped in half and split down the middle)

3 scallion tops chopped

1 c of fresh green beans, chopped into pieces

1 pkg of Soba or Udon Noodles.

Bring Water to boil and noodles and follow directions on package. In a hot pan sear the beef. Put the veggies in except the spinach. Cook for till almost tender add the spinach and stir in. Combine the drained noodles with.

Servings 3     630 cal each serving  (without noodles 375 calories per serving)

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