Showing posts with label Main Dish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Main Dish. Show all posts

Friday, July 17, 2015

Zippy Slimming Cabbage Soup - A yummy clean-eating lunch or dinner


Try this robust, delicious and easy to make metabolism-boosting soup. 

This yummy soup is a great clean-eating meal that is also kind to the pocket book. Even though this is "just a cabbage soup," I feel it is of restaurant quality. It is full-bodied with a nice zippy warmth that makes things interesting. I really like it and can eat it frequently without tiring of it.

It's nice to have a large batch of this in your fridge for quick meals. You can feel good in knowing that this is a great weight loss menu item too. I'ts full of fiber and flavor.

I like to make my own chicken stock when ever we buy a rotisserie chicken from Costco, or when I roast my own chicken. Stock made from our Easy Juicy Roast Chicken recipe is the best! Of course you can use boxed chicken stock if you want to, it just isn't as rich and flavorful.

I make the stock ahead of time by putting the picked over chicken bones and skin into a big stock pot. I add all the left over chicken drippings too! I roughly chop up some onion, celery and carrot and throw that in the stock pot, and cover the whole mess with purified water. I bring it to a boil, reduce the heat, put on the lid and let it simmer on medium for at least 3 hours, or on low heat over night. Make sure you check your water level before going to bed!

Then I strain the stock, pick out any usable meat, transfer it to 1/2-gallon mason jars and store it in the fridge to use for a meal later that week.

In the winter, if it is really cold, I will set the pot outside on the cold cement over night to chill. The fat floats to the top and solidifies and you can easily skim it off. If I have room in my fridge, I'll chill it in there (Ha, that's funny, I never have that much spare room in my fridge). Anyway, I'm not too worried about having some organic chicken fat in my soup. It makes for a rich soup, and eating fat doesn't make you fat. Eating a bucket-load of white flour, white sugar donuts, fried in hydrogenated oil - now that can plump you up a bit.

I use a can of tomato sauce and a can of stewed tomatoes in this recipe. The stewed tomatoes have more ingredients and flavor than just regular canned tomatoes. I used a can of organic stewed tomatoes, Italian-Style from Costco and it has the following vegetables: Onion, green bell pepper, celery, garlic, basil, and oregano. If you only have plain canned tomatoes, toss in some minced celery and bell pepper into the onions as you are caramelizing them. Add a pinch of basil and oregano to the soup as it's cooking. When seasoning at the end, you will need to add up to 1 T. erythritol too.

Another substitute idea is to use 8 cups of canned spicy tomato juice instead of the tomato sauce, canned stewed tomatoes, and the 4 cups water. That tastes good too, I just prefer my recipe the way I listed it below. I like to have options, and thought you might as well.



Zippy Slimming Cabbage Soup Recipe:

1 large to jumbo sized yellow or white onion, chopped
1 T. organic butter or deodorized coconut oil
1 pinch sea salt
1 pinch baking soda
4 large cloves garlic, smashed or minced fine
1/2 c. white wine
2 quarts homemade chicken stock (or boxed organic chicken broth)
1 15-ounce can organic stewed tomatoes, chopped
1 14.5-ounce can organic tomato sauce
4 c. purified water
2 T. fresh lemon juice
1 large head cabbage, cored and chopped
60 grinds fresh ground black pepper, to taste
1 to 1 1/2 t. Louisiana Hot Sauce (If Tabasco Sauce is used, use at least half this amount), to taste
1 T. sea salt or BioSalt


Method:

Heat the butter or coconut oil over medium heat in a large heavy stock pot.

Add the chopped onion and sprinkle with the pinch of salt and the pinch of baking soda.

Stir and cook until the onion starts to caramelize, about 10 minutes.

Add the garlic and saute 1 minute. do not let the garlic brown (it gets bitter if too browned).

Pour in the white wine to deglaze the pan.

Pour in the chicken stock, canned tomatoes, water, and lemon juice, Bring to a simmer.

Once simmering, add the chopped cabbage, cover and let simmer 20 to 30 minutes.

After simmering up to 30 minutes, check to see if the cabbage is cooked down and submerged in the cooking liquid. If the cabbage isn't fully submerged, add a little more chicken broth or water.

Let the soup simmer uncovered for at least 30 more minutes, until the cabbage is completely soft. You may also let the soup very gently simmer for a few hours, until dinner time. Add more water as needed.

Season with Louisiana Hot Sauce, salt and fresh ground pepper, to taste. Serve hot.


Tip: My mom likes to garnish of a dollop of sour cream flavored with caraway seeds.


Deglazing the pot with white wine.

The soup has simmered and is ready to serve.

Delicious!


Enjoy,

Leila.


Friday, July 3, 2015

Amazing Meatless Moussaka - You won't believe how good this is!

This beautiful main dish has 3 delicious layers of flavor and texture. 

This is one of my all-time favorite main dishes.The topping is so rich, creamy and wonderful, and perfectly compliments the robust tomato-based sauce underneath. The eggplant doesn't know what hit it. You will be shocked at how good the eggplant tastes here.

Eggplant seems to be the new darling in the low-carb world. Although the flour in this recipe negates that a bit...but it's SO worth it! I have not yet tried a gluten-free flour, but I see no reason why it wouldn't work.

This is a classic recipe of my mothers. I remember her serving this Meatless Moussaka to guests and it always got rave reviews. Many people swooned over this very recipe, telling her that she really must open up a restaurant. This impressed me as a child. I knew I liked her food but this is about the time that I figured out that she was a really amazing cook. I enjoyed seeing people make such a fuss over my mom. She may have had a marriage proposal or two over this recipe, I know she did over her tender buttery scrambled eggs!

If you so desire a marriage proposal, I suggest you invite your suitor over for a nice romantic dinner featuring this main dish! Even if you are already married, they may propose again!


Mom's Meatless Moussaka Recipe:

RED SAUCE:
5 c. tomato juice
3/4 t. cinnamon (you may cut to 1/2 t., if desired)
1 T. honey
1 pound minced mushrooms, browned well in 1/4 c. real butter
2 onions, chopped and sauteed until clear in 2 T. olive oil
2 t. sweet paprika
1 t. oregano
1 t. salt, to taste
1/4 t. fresh ground black pepper

MORNAY SAUCE:
2/3 c. white flour
1/2 c. real butter
4 1/2 c. milk
4 T. sherry
1 t. onion salt
1 T. Romano cheese
1 T. Parmesan cheese

EGGPLANT:
2 large eggplants, sliced in 1/2" thick rounds
beaten egg to dip eggplant slices in
oil (olive or deodorized coconut) to brown the eggplant
1/3 c. Parmesan cheese


Method:

RED SAUCE:
Combine ingredients in a sauce pan and gently simmer until thickened and flavorful.

MORNAY SAUCE:
Make a roux of the butter and flour. Cook on low 5 minutes.
Add remaining ingredients and cook gently until thick.

EGGPLANT:
Take the 1/2" round slices of eggplant and dip into the beaten egg and brown in oil on both sides.
Pat the eggplant briefly with paper towels.
Overlap eggplant slices in a 9 X 13-inch pan.
Sprinkle 1/3 c. Parmesan cheese over eggplant.


Assembly:

Pour prepared red sauce over top the eggplant in the pan and shake gently to settle the sauce.
Bake eggplant at 350 degrees, for 30 minutes.
Take out of oven and pour prepared Mornay sauce over-top.
Bake at 425 degrees, 15 to 20 minutes, or until lightly browned on top.
Serve hot.


ENJOY!

Leila.


Wednesday, June 24, 2015

The Best Chicken Bake - Gluten-Free Goodness in a Pan! (And our Favorite G-F Bread)

The Best Chicken Bake!


This will become one of your favorite go-to dinners... 
This chicken is juicy and so full of flavor. It's also very easy to make. It is made all the time in our homes, and it makes great leftovers too.

I want to eat some right now...but I'm busy blogging. Grrr, where is the kitchen fairy when you need her?

We recommend pre-brining the meat before making this dish, but if you don't have time for that, don't let that stop you. Brining does make a more tender, juicy, flavorful meat, and results in less shrinkage however.

This dish can be served with practically any sides. It is one of those staple recipes that you and your family will love! You can keep it a low-carb meal by serving it with deep green leafy salads topped with sugar and starch-free salad dressings. You can alsoserve it with fresh steamed vegetables like asparagus, green beans almondine, artichokes and garlic butter sauce, sauteed summer squash...

Juicy and perfectly cooked flavorful chicken.


The Best Chicken Bake Recipe:

4 to 5 skinless boneless chicken breast halves, trimmed of visible fat. Rinse well and pat dry
1 T. olive oil
Onion powder
Garlic powder, optional
Italian herbs
Fresh ground black pepper
2/3 to 3/4 c. high quality full-fat real mayonnaise
1/2 c. Parmesan cheese (or a mix of Parmesa, Romano, and Asiago cheeses)
1 c. "Against The Grain" gluten-free fine baguette crumbs


Method:

Optional: First brine the raw chicken about 1 hour in 1 cup water with about 1 T salt dissolved into it. I like to seal the brining meat in a Zip-Lock bag, with the air removed. Rinse the brined meat thoroughly 3 to 5 times to get rid of all the extra salt, or the meat will be too salty.The chicken will shrink less when cooking if you brine the meat first.

Spread 1 T. olive oil onto sides and bottom of a 9" x 12" heavy baking dish. Sprinkle the oiled dish lightly with onion powder and Italian herbs.

Pound the chicken breasts with a mallet until about 2/3-inch thick. All breast meat should be as evenly thick as possible for even cooking.

Snuggle the pounded chicken breasts side by side in the prepared pan to form an even layer.

Sprinkle lightly with a little more onion powder and Itallian herbs and grind on black pepper.

Top the chicken breasts with the full-fat mayonnaise, using from 2/3 to 3/4 c. total. Spread onto the chicken, like frosting a cake with a modest amount of frosting. (We don't recommend reduced fat mayonnaise, we do not think it turns out as well.)

Grind the "Against The Grain" bread crumbs in a food processor to a fine crumb.

Mix 1 cup of the bread crumbs with 1/2 cup Parmesan cheese ans mix together. You can try other gluten-free bread crumbs, but if you do, use 1 cup crumbs to 1 cup cheese.

Bake in a 350 degree preheated oven until golden brown, about 30 minutes, or until breast meat just reaches 150 to 155 degrees F.

Remove from oven and let rest 10 minutes before cutting into.

Serve hot.


 Photos of the process:


Pound chicken with a pounding mallet.
Place chicken in pan coated in oil and seasonings.
Top Chicken with more seasonings.
This is the amount of mayonnaise we like on the chicken.
Here the chicken is frosted with mayo.
The proportion of bread and cheese that we like.
Make the gluten-free bread crumbs.
Pulsing the bread in a food processor to make the crumbs.
The finished bread crumbs.
Before baking the chicken.
A finished batch of baked chicken.
A close-up of the crispy edges.
Another batch after baking the chicken. Looks good, huh?
Chicken Bake or Chicken Cake...That is the question.


Here is our favorite brand of baguettes, Against All Grain from The Gluten Free Gourmet:

Our Favorite brand of Gluten-Free Baguettes, used for the crumb coating.

The G-F Baguette label.
The G-F Baguette ingredient list.
This is my dad ready to dig in! See the Quinoa Tabouli Salad recipe shown HERE.


Enjoy,

Leila & Nancy.



Friday, May 15, 2015

Copy-Cat La Casita Chicken Salad

La Casita Mexican Restaurant has a delicious yet simple chicken salad that I have duplicated here.


I've posted earlier about one of my favorite Mexican restaurants in Springville, Utah, La Casita. The restaurant is a quaint hole in the wall but the food is great. I have often ordered this salad. It is a simple salad, yet I love it.

Here is a rare instance where I will use a commercially prepared salad dressing.

This salad is super easy to make at home. I like to gently poach a batch of chicken breasts and then chill them in their poaching liquid. Then the chicken is ready for quick meals later.

A trick for tasty poached chicken is to season your poaching liquid. You can even brine your chicken first in this liquid before cooking it.

Here is another post where I write about poaching chicken that you might like: On-The-Go Grilled Chicken Strips



Copy-Cat La Casita Chicken Salad Recipe:

Serves: 1

1 Poached skinless, boneless chicken breast
1/2 head Chopped romaine lettuce (or mixed greens)
1 Diced fresh tomato
1/2 c. Shredded Jack and Cheddar cheese
House Dressing (Kraft Zesty Italian dressing & marinade)
Black olive, as a garnish


Method:

To poach chicken breasts:

Place chicken breasts into a large pot and pour enough cool water to cover the chicken breasts by at least a couple of inches.

Season the water with some salt, black pepper, garlic powder and onion powder, to your liking.

Place the pot on the stove and turn the heat to medium and bring up to a boil. As soon as it comes to a boil, turn down to a gentle simmer and simmer just until the meat is tender and no longer pink inside. Do not cook the chicken in boiling water or your chicken will become tough.

Let the chicken cool down a little bit before placing meat in a storage container. Pour warm poaching liquid over the chicken in the storage container, until the meat is fully immersed. Cover tightly and chill completely.


To make the salad:

When it is time to make the salad, pull out 1 poached chicken breast and dice it into bite sized pieces.

Pile the lettuce on a serving plate. Top with the diced tomatoes and chicken. Top with cheese.

To serve, drizzle the salad with the house dressing and top with an olive.



Note: The House dressing listed on La Casita's menu now is Ranch. The house dressing they served a few years ago, is what I prefer, and it is Kraft's Zesty Italian.


Here's a secret: 

La Casita restaurant drizzles just a hint of Zesty Italian Salad dressing on all their tacos too. This adds an extra flavor dimension that most restaurants don't have, and it is delicious.



Our recent visit to La Casita below:


My husband Ordered a chimi.

I ordered Chicken Taquitos with verde sauce

My husband enjoyed his Chimi!

Chips and salsa for the road...


Enjoy,

Leila

Sunday, May 3, 2015

Porcpines - Old Fashioned Beef & Rice Meatballs (Gluten-Free and Sugar-Free)

Here is another Delicious home-style 
American supper.



I found this old recipe in my recipe box when I was trying to figure out what to make the Missionaries for dinner last night. It has been many long years since I have eaten this dish and I thought it would be fun to serve for a Sunday family dinner.

This recipe is made from scratch but still is very  easy to make. no commercial canned tomato soup here. With this recipe you have more control over your ingredients, which is great for those people who are off sugar and gluten. Canned tomato soup generally has lots of questionable ingredients in it. You may use brown rice or white, but please do not use instant or converted rice

This is a fun recipe because at the start, these look like innocent little meatballs. Part way through the cooking process however, watch out! They turn into prickly porcupines (hence the name). The rice as it cooks, swells and emerges from the meatballs, giving them a spiney texture.

I personally like more sauce, if you do too, make more sauce by increasing the recipe to 1 and 1/2 times the original. ie. 3 cups tomato sauce, 3 T. xylitol, 1 1/2 T Worcestershire, 3/4 t. cinnamon, and 6 whole cloves.

I decided to make some Perfect Baked Potatoes (recipe on this blog) to go along with it. Served along  with a green side salad, it makes a simple yet delicious meal.


Porcupines Recipe:

1 lb organic hamburger
1/2 cup RAW rice (brown Basmatti or Jasmine rice tastes great)
1/4 c. finely minced onion
1/4 c. finely minced sweet red or green bell pepper
1 t. BioSalt or sea salt
1/2 t. celery salt
2 c. tomato juice
2 T. xylitol or Lakanto zero-cal sweetener (or sugar)
1 T. Worcestershire sauce
1/2 t. cinnamon
4 whole cloves (or a pinch of ground cloves)
Tapoica starch and water slurry, to thicken if desired (I usually do not use)


Method:

Rinse the rice well in a strainer and drain.

Combine the rice with the hamburger, onion, bell pepper, salt, and celery salt. Mashing everything together with your hands works best.

Form into meatballs about 1 1/2-inch in diameter.

Mix the tomato juice with the xylitol, Worcestershire sauce, cinnamon, and cloves.

Heat the sauce in a skillet and place the meatballs into the sauce.

Cover tightly and simmer 50 minutes, turning meatballs over half way through the cooking time.

After the meatballs are done and the rice is tender, serve them with the juice as-is, or remove the meatballs and thicken the juice with tapioca starch (a corn starch replacement) to make a sauce.

Serve hot.


Note: I find that the rice in the meatballs thickens the sauce enough.

Variation: You may substitute bouillon for tomato juice and spices (not the way I think it tastes best).



My family really liked this dinner, I hope yours will too.

Enjoy,

Leila.


Saturday, May 2, 2015

Comforting Ham & Potato Casserole


This "Meat and Potatoes" casserole is
traditional American comfort food. 


Our family is having company over for dinner tonight. They are young missionaries with hearty appetites, who have been away from home for a while, which means they have been missing out on home-cooked meals. So, I'm cooking homey food that I hope will fill them up.

The rest of my menu is steamed butter & chive carrots seasoned with onion salt and fresh ground pepper and a green jello salad (a corny Utah tradition) with crushed pineapple. For dessert, I'm serving banana pie pudding which is vanilla pudding with lots of fresh bananas and sweetened whipped cream, poured over a graham cracker crust. We usually don't eat this way. But I don't have an issue with it every now and then.

This casserole is a good way to use up leftover ham. It is hearty and delicious. I hope you enjoy it.





Ham & Potato Casserole Recipe:

Serves: 3 

4 T. organic butter
1 small onion, diced
2 1/2 T. flour (or gluten-free flour)
2 c. organic milk
1/4 t. garlic powder
1/2 t. onion salt
1/2 t. BioSalt or sea salt, totaste
30 grinds fresh black pepper, to taste
3 c. chopped ham
3 c. boiled diced potatoes
1 cup grated cheese, divided


Method:

Brown the onion in the butter.
Sprinkle the flour over the onions and stir and saute until it starts to brown.
Slowly stir in milk and gently simmer, with stirring until thickened. Do not boil hard or it may curdle.
Season with garlic, onion salt, salt and pepper, to taste.
Add the ham and potatoes and gently stir to combine.
Add 3/4 c. of the shredded cheese and stir to blend in.
Transfer the mixture to a small baking casserole and sprinkle the top with remaining 1/4 c. cheese.
Cover casserole with a lid or foil and bake in a 350 degree oven for 30 minutes, or until hot.
If you want to bake the casserole later, cover and refrigerate. Bake for 45 minutes, since it is cold.


Tip: This casserole doubles well and will fit into a large casserole dish (I always double the recipe).



Photos of the process:


Prep the the casserole ingredients.

Saute onions in butter.

Add flour to the cooking onions.

Cook the flour and onion mixture to brown and develop more flavor.

Add milk.

Add seasonings.

Cook gently until sauce thickens.

Add the ham.

Blend in the ham.

Add the potatoes and mix in.

Add most of the cheese.

Mix well.

Transfer to a baking casserole.

Top with the rest of the cheese.

Bake in a 350 oven.

The finished casserole along with the sides.

Dinner is served.



Banana Pudding dessert.

The dessert plate.

So dinner was served and the Missionaries were happy. We really enjoy having them over. I sent them home with all of the banana pudding dessert. Like we need to eat more of that!

Enjoy,

Leila.