Showing posts with label circle-slash celery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label circle-slash celery. Show all posts

February 13, 2012

Chef-ing it up in 2012!

Blog, while I've stepped up my crafting and mixology games lately, it's been at the cost of neglecting my cooking. A true Renaissance woman cannot subsist on making crock pot pork loin and lemon pepper tilapia alone.

So the new year brought with it a sudden burst of creativity of the culinary kind. In other words, I've been making up my own recipes! This has dovetailed nicely with certain changes in my diet (fewer carbs, more proteins and veggies, better grains) that have done wonders for my blood sugar levels, weight, and general well being. But let's not make it sound too healthful...the point is, EATING YUMMY STUFF!

Let me share with you, Blog (and more importantly our readers who are not non-corporal beings and actually consume food) three of my original recipes from January and February 2012....

Really Tasty and Not-Too-Bad-for-You Chicken Wings


Recipe for 12-14 chicken wings/drummettes

3T olive oil
1 T prepared mustard
dash cayenne (more for hotter wings)
1 t garlic powder
½ t salt
½ t pepper
1 T lemon juice

Combine all ingredients above, toss chicken to coat and marinade for at least 1 hour.

Prepare large pot with steamer basket or strainer and lid, with water level below bottom of basket or strainer.  Bring to a boil.  Shake excess marinade off wings but do not wipe them off; put in basket, put lid on pot and steam for 10 minutes.

Blot wings dry with paper towels.  Toss in

1 T peanut oil

until coated.  Then add rub:

2 T brown sugar
2 t salt
1 t pepper
2 t garlic powder
1 T onion powder
½ t thyme
½ t sage
2 t paprika
½ t cayenne (or more for hotter wings)

Evenly coat wings with rub, set on cooling rack over paper towels on a cookie sheet.  Chill 1 hour.

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Place wings on cookie sheet, sprinkle over them any excess rub that fell off onto the paper towels.  Bake 20 minutes, turn over, then bake an additional 20 minutes.



Comfort Food Turkey Barley Soup

1 cup pearled barley
2 cans chicken broth
1 t salt
½ t pepper
½ white onion, chopped
2 cups mushrooms, chopped
1 T butter
1½ lbs ground turkey
1 can cream of mushroom soup
2 t dried thyme

Wash and sort barley. Bring to boil in large pot 1 can of broth plus one can of water. Add barley, boil 2 minutes. Remove from heat, put lid on pot and let sit one hour. Add salt and pepper, simmer covered for 1½ hours or until barley is tender and water is absorbed (may need to add more water).

Saute onions and mushrooms in butter. Remove from pan. Saute ground turkey, breaking up into small chunks. Add turkey, sauteed vegetables, cream of mushroom soup, and thyme to barley. Add water to make soup desired consistency. Stir and simmer 10 minutes, correcting seasoning as needed.

Best made a day ahead and reheated for dinner! Makes a TON (approximately six dinner sized servings).



Cream of Asparagus Soup

1 lb. fresh asparagus
1/2 chopped onion
1 1/2 T butter
1 can chicken broth
1 cup milk
1 t lemon juice
salt
pepper
1 t cornstarch

Remove tips from asparagus and chop into 1/2” pieces, set aside. Chop remaining parts of asparagus also into 3/4” pieces. Bring chicken broth plus 3/4 cup of water to a boil in a large pot, add non-tip pieces, and simmer covered for 15-20 min. till tender.

Meanwhile, melt butter in a small sauté pan, add onions, and sauté until translucent. Add to pot with asparagus, mix, and let cool partially.

Meanwhile, in small saucepan add 3/4 cup of water and tips, simmer covered for 5 minutes.

Put asparagus/onion/broth mixture in blender and puree on high until uniform in color. Return to pot, stir in lemon juice, milk and asparagus tips. Salt and pepper to taste. Mix cornstarch with a little water, pour mix into soup, bring to a boil, and stir and simmer until slightly thickened.

Serves 2 generously.


I do believe, Blog, that I may have another cooking post or two in my apron pocket in the coming weeks/months. I know as a non-corporeal anthropomorphized being you aren't really a recipe clipper, but a blog can dream of culinary delights, can he/she/it not?

July 1, 2011

Stuff I wouldn't buy even if I were filthy rich

Hey Blog, ever daydream about what you'd buy with your lottery winnings? I know, what can an anthropomorphized disembodied being use, really? Well, this week a person in my life spent a carpload of money on a luxury item and it got me to thinking about the Two Categories of Luxury Stuff. You know, "Stuff I would buy only if I were filthy rich" and "Stuff I wouldn't buy even if I were filthy rich."

See, Blog, to each of us there are some things that people get all hepped up about that we don't covet at all. Things that make a person say to herself, "Jeez, imagine the great stuff you could buy with the money you threw away on that lame thing!" I'm sure everyone in the blogosphere is wondering what luxury items just leave me cold, so here are a few:

1. Jewelry that features giant diamonds.

2. Memorabilia items owned by famous celebrities.

3. Sets of super expensive matching furniture, and/or stainless steel appliances.

4. A luxury car like a BMW.

5. An iPhone and/or a Mac. Yeah, I'm that way.

6. Front row seats to a concert by some hugely popular artist/band.

7. Designer clothes, shoes, and/or purses.

8. Celery. I really don't like celery at all.

9. A private plane.

10. Tickets to the Super Bowl for life.

So, because everyone in the blogosphere really wants to know, here are some things I would buy only if I were filthy rich:

1. A boat and a lake property where I could keep it. And also someone to take care of said boat.

2. Some really awesome art like maybe a glass piece by Dale Chululy.

3. A rock wall and water feature built into my living room.

4. A private seminar on polymer clay art with Christi Friesen.

5. A home theater system with leather recliners and stuff.

6. Lobster for dinner on a regular basis.

7. A wing in my house that I could convert to a home for a couple dozen shelter cats.

8. A ton of advertising in every possible medium for my books.

9. A vacation home in a warmer clime where I could live in the winter when Wisconsin sucks.

10. Two weeks in NYC and tickets to every show on Broadway and to the Tonys. Annually.

So readers, what do you think? Is there a luxury item you can't see ever wanting to own? What would be your first luxury purchase after the windfall?

Oh, and I would not keep the Chululy in the part of the house with the couple dozen cats.