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Salad with Bacon, Pear and Berries

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Chicken Mustard Cream Sauce & Bacon Pear Berry Sa

 

Does this look familiar?  You may recognize this picture from when I shared my recipe for Chicken with Mustard Cream Sauce.  Today I’m sharing the salad I served with it.  It’s a simple recipe, not really a recipe at all, but it’s SO good. 

 

Salad with Bacon, Pear and Berries

Yield: 4 servings

 

INGREDIENTS

8 cups salad greens (I usually serve spring greens and spinach)

6 bacon strips 

1 pear, sliced

2/3 cups blueberries

4 Tbsp sliced almonds

balsamic dressing (my favorite store-bought is Ken’s Balsamic Vinaigrette)

 

PREPARATION

  1. Cook your bacon until crispy and crumble.
  2. Spread your almonds on a baking sheet and bake in a 350F oven for about 8 minutes or until toasted.

     3. Toss your salad greens with your dressing.  Top with pear, bacon, blueberries, and              almonds. 

 

 

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Chicken with Mustard Cream Sauce

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Chicken Mustard Cream Sauce & Bacon Pear Berry Sa

 

When I have time I love to prepare a big meal.  You know the kind – a Thanksgiving type of meal where something is roasting in the oven throughout the day and you’re putting together sides, rolls, and ending it all with a delicious dessert.  I enjoy the process and it brings a wonderful sense of satisfaction when you see everyone savoring their dinner.  But who can make meals like that on a week night!? We need quick meals but we don’t want to sacrifice flavor and the sense of fulfillment.  This meal definitely qualifies. It’s fast enough for a week-night meal, good enough for company, and most importantly – eaten by kids (aged 2-14) without a single complaint. Serve with a salad and your meal is complete.  

Chicken with Mustard Cream Sauce

 

INGREDIENTS

4 skinless, boneless chicken breasts – cut in thirds

2 Tbsp olive oil

1 Tbsp butter

3 shallots, finely chopped

3 garlic cloves, minced

1/2 cup white wine

1/2 cup chicken broth

1/2 cup heavy cream

3 Tbsp Dijon mustard

1 Tbsp coarse/grainy mustard

1 tsp dried tarragon

salt and pepper to taste

1 lb angel hair pasta

 

PREPARATION

  1. Rinse and pat dry chicken breasts and pound them to an even thickness.  Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
  2. Over medium heat, melt olive oil and butter in a skillet (preferably non-stick so the chicken browns well).  
  3. In a large pot start begin boiling well-salted water for your pasta.
  4. When your oil and butter are shimmering add the chicken pieces to the skillet.  Don’t move the chicken until it lifts easily and has a brown coating.  Brown the other side until the chicken is just barely cooked through.  Be careful not to overcook as the chicken will continue to cook as it rests.  Remove chicken, set aside and cover with foil.
  5. Add garlic and shallot to the hot pan and stir into the brown bits for about 30 seconds.  Deglaze with wine and chicken broth.  Boil rapidly and reduce for about 5 minutes.
  6. If your pasta water is ready add the pasta and cook according to pkg directions.
  7. To your skillet add cream, mustards, and tarragon.  Stir together and add the chicken breast back to the pan.  Let it simmer gently until just heated through and then serve over pasta.

 

 

 

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Plantain and Corn Stew

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Tonight was Disney Dinner Night!  We were watching The Lion King so of course the cuisine needed to be African.  I chose to use recipes from the African-inspired Boma Restaurant at the Animal Kingdom Lodge Resort in Disneyworld.  Though I’ve never been to Disneyworld myself I have heard so many good things about this restaurant and I’ve been anxious to try some of their food.  I have to say that it did not disappoint.  The stew was thick and delicious and the salad a perfect blend of sweet and tart.  The only disappointment is that I didn’t try making one of their desserts.  I definitely recommend you try both of these and if you really want to spoil yourself make some of Pioneer Woman’s The Bread to accompany it. 

 

 

Plaintain and Corn Stew

Plantain and Corn Stew

 

Boma, Animal Kingdom Lodge Resort

 

Yield: 8 servings

 

INGREDIENTS

2 cups Coconut Milk

2 cups V-8 Juice

1 tsp Crushed Red Pepper

2/3 cup Sugar

1 cup Soy Sauce

1/4 cup Ginger, chopped fine or pureed

1 tsp Ground Turmeric, toasted

1 tsp Ground Coriander, toasted

1/2 cup Water

1 cup Cornstarch (no, it’s not a typo, it really is 1 cup)

2 cups Sweet Potato, diced chunky

2 Carrots, diced chunky

1 small Onion, diced chunky

2 cups Corn Kernels

1 Red Bell Pepper, diced chunky

2 cups Green Plantains, diced chunky

1 Jalapeno, sliced

1/4 cup Parsley, chopped

 

PREPARATION

  1. Heat coconut milk, V-8 juice, soy sauce, ginger, sugar, crushed red pepper, turmeric, and coriander in a pot over medium heat.  Mix cornstarch and water together to make a slurry.  To the slurry add 1/2 cup of the stock.  Whisk together and then whisk into the pot.  Let simmer until the stock thickens.  
  2. Add red bell pepper, sweet potato, onion, corn, and plantain*.  Cook on low for an hour.  Add jalapeno** and parsley and cook 15 minutes more or until the vegetables are softened.

 

*If you are using frozen plantains, add last when you are ready to serve.

**If you’re making this for children I suggest leaving the jalapeno out of the pot and adding to individual bowls. 

 

 

 

Apple and Jicama Salad

Boma, Animal Kingdom Lodge Resort

 

Yield: 8 servings

 

INGREDIENTS

salad

4 apples (I used Gala)

3 Tbsp olive oil

salt and pepper to taste

1 Jicama, peeled and julienned

1/2 cup red onion, diced

1/2 cup radish slices

4 cups spinach or mixed greens (washed and spun)

dressing

2 Apples (puree)

1 Tbsp Dijon mustard

1/3 cup Cider Vinegar

1/2 cup Lemon Juice (fresh squeezed)

2 cups Olive Oil

1 1/2 Lemon Zest (fresh)

Kosher Salt to taste

Fresh Ground Black Pepper to taste

 

PREPARATION

dressing

  1. In a stainless steel bowl mix the apple puree and Dijon mustard. 
  2. Whisk in the cider vinegar and the lemon juice, and slowly add in the olive oil.
  3. Sir in the lemon zest and mix well.
  4. Adjust the seasonings with kosher salt and fresh ground black pepper.

salad

  1. Wash apples.  Cut in half and remove seeds.  Cut all halves into slices.  Place in a mixing bowl and drizzle with olive oil and sat and pepper.
  2. Place apples on a grill on low heat to caramelize and impart some of the smoky flavor.  Chill grilled apples and set aside.
  3. Wash and peel the jicama.  Cut into slices, the julienne.  Place in a large mixing bowl.
  4. Add the red onions, radish slices, and spinach.  Remove the apples from the refrigerator and cut into large dice.  Add the apples to the salad and toss with the dressing.

 

 

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Peanut Butter Pie Recipe

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Before we get into the good stuff, I wanted to jump in and do a mini introduction.  This recipe is from one of the new guest bloggers I mentioned before, Leah.  She’s the Mary Poppins to my Morticia Addams and is so incredibly creative that her hands are seldom ever idle.  She has themed meals or days for the kids to enjoy, can DIY pretty much anything in my opinion, and has the most generous spirit.  And if you read the Motherhood Shower post, then you know she’s the incredible friend that took time out of her busy life to come and host my Shower.  Without any more of my babbling, I introduce you to her first blog post (and yes, it deserves a bigger picture than usual because it’s amazing)! — Georgia

–*–

 

PB Pie

 

Pies are one of my favorite desserts.  I normally lean toward fruit pies with delicious flaky crusts but today it was all about chocolate and peanut butter.  This is one my 10 year old requests often.

 

Peanut Butter Pie

INGREDIENTS

1 (14.3 oz) package Oreos (about 36)

1 cup butter, divided

1 1/2 cups + 2 Tbsp creamy peanut butter, divided

1 cup powdered sugar

1 cup semisweet chocolate chips (I prefer Ghirardelli as it melts well and maintains a good consistency)

1/2 cup heavy whipping cream

 

PREPARATION

  1. Crush the Oreos until fine in a food processor or blender.  Stir crumbs together with 8 Tbsp melted butter until fully combined.  Press into the bottom and sides of your pie dish.  Freeze crust until set, about 10 minutes.
  2. Add the remaining 8 Tbsp of softened butter, 1 1/2 cups creamy peanut butter, and 1 cup powdered sugar to a large mixing bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer.  Beat on low speed until smooth and creamy. Pour the peanut butter mixture over the crust and smooth.  Place back in the freezer.
  3. In a large heat-proof bowl place the chocolate chips and remaining 2 Tbsp of peanut butter.  In a saucepan, bring heavy whipping cream to a fast simmer over medium-high heat.  Pour the cream over the chocolate chips and peanut butter and let sit for 5 minutes, then whisk until smooth.  Pour the chocolate layer over the peanut butter layer and refrigerate, covered, at least an hour or until ready to serve. 

 

And finally, thank whoever the brilliant person was that invented the deliciousness that is peanut butter!

 

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Crockpot Peanut Clusters

Crockpot Peanut Clusters

I actually found the original recipe on Pinterest (I may have an addiction *laugh*), and the original printable recipe is here, but there weren’t any pictures of the process and there were a couple of hard learned tips that will make your experience much better, so I thought I’d share the recipe. I am not claiming any credit, it belongs to the original blogger. I simply want to share an easy recipe that is truly easy when you don’t make the mistakes I did. *grin*

First off, you need a 5 quart crockpot, a sturdy spoon or spatula, parchment paper, cookie sheets, a scoop, and a little over two hours.

For ingredients you will need 34.5 oz of honey roasted dry roasted peanuts (**My note: Larry said that he doesn’t like the flavor of the honey roasted in the peanut clusters, so I’ll definitely be using plain dry roasted from now on), 32 ounces of vanilla flavored almond bark (in the baking supply aisle and contrary to the name doesn’t have any nuts), 12 ounces semisweet chocolate chips, and 4 ounces Baker’s German Chocolate bar (found near the almond bark and the bar itself is the full 4 ounces).

Now, I’m going to admit that this is where things started going wrong. We were trying to make the peanut clusters and another candy at the same time, and ditched the other one because so much was going wrong, but found that there was a snafu with this one too. It was the first time I had bought or used almond bark, so silly me didn’t pay attention to the size and notice that the recipe would need part of a second package, so instead I compensated for the missing eight ounces of almond bark by adding that much more of semisweet chips. I liked the results, so I’m not sure that I’ll do it the correct way the next time I make this, but I want to be honest about what went on in case you have the same problem or want to go that way.

Pour the peanuts into the crockpot – it will seem like there’s an insane amount of peanuts in there, but I assure you, you’re doing it right. Next is one key tip that the original didn’t mention. Before layering the almond bark over the peanuts cut that bar up!! I can vouch that the blob of almond bark may soften, but won’t fully melt in the allotted time, so cut it on those scored lines please. You will have a very hard clump that you’ll have to pull out of the pot, chop up, and put back in, all while trying not to make a huge mess, which is nearly impossible, if you don’t chop it at the beginning. *sigh* Anyway, lay the bits of almond bark over your peanuts, and then scatter the chocolate chips over that. Next is the Baker’s bar, which will melt just fine without cutting (it isn’t nearly as bulky as that bark *grin*). Put the lid on it, turn the crockpot to low, and walk away for one whole hour. Don’t stir, don’t lift the lid to peek, nada. Dance around that Christmas tree, pull the cat out of the said Christmas tree, or fall into the black hole of Facebook until your alarm goes off. Whatever floats your boat, but hands off!

Now you can stir and look how yummy it all ready looks!

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Put the lid back on, set the alarm for fifteen minutes, and stir the mixture every fifteen minutes for an hour. It won’t be the prettiest girl at the prom, but it’ll be the one with all of the personality, so don’t worry if the sides look a bit icky like mine.

After the hour of stirring intervals it’s time to scoop. The original recipe just calls for laying out parchment paper, but I don’t have a very big kitchen with tons of cabinet space, so we lined cookie sheets and swapped them out. I tried one batch without a cookie sheet and it was pure misery with some of the candies oozing together into big blobs when I tried to move them a little, so I strongly recommend cookie sheets. The flat AirBake sheets worked best for us. Now, I have no idea what makes parchment better than wax paper for these, but I didn’t want to risk trouble by experimenting to figure it out. Parchment paper it is. *grin* Don’t forget to turn off the crock pot! If it’s really cool in your kitchen you can keep it at warm, but you’ll have a little trouble with the mixture staying runny once you get to the bottom. That’s better than a solid mass though, so I’d definitely do it if I felt it was necessary. You just don’t want to keep it on low the whole time you’re scooping.

We used a tiny cookie scoop for scooping the peanut clusters. While the mixture was fresh and hot, it was more runny and didn’t need the little sweeper arm. As the mixture set up a little more the little arm was quite useful. Make sure to drop the scoops apart from one another.

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Once we had scooped it all (and licked the spoons *grin*) I noticed that the chocolate wasn’t setting up and realized that my house was too warm for them to set up. I must have accidentally grabbed a log of hedge when I loaded the woodstove, so it was nearly as hot as the face of the sun, while it was 30 degrees outside. *laugh* Some creative thinking resulted with utilizing our standing smoker as a refrigerator. Let my amusing substitution show you that if your refrigerator is full of Christmas meal prep, you just need to think outside of the box. Literally. *smirk*

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I left them to cool for about four hours and then brought them in.

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They were good and hard, so I was able to pop them into some zipper bags, and fit those bags into the remaining gaps in the refrigerator then. Even with samples left out (or happily melting in our bellies) I filled an entire gallon bag and a quart bag! Oh, by the way, don’t forget to let these chocolates sit out at room temperature for a little bit before serving, since you don’t want anyone to break a tooth on cold peanuts. Those suckers are hard when they’re cold!

Hopefully this little feature for Serve It Sunday will help if you’re looking for one more item to round out your Christmas dishes. These would also make a great gift, since it’d be easy to put the clusters into decorative mini muffin or candy liners, and then into a festive cellophane bag. The recipe is easy enough that you could cook dinner while it’s melting, too. Just don’t try to make a complicated dessert while making these for the first time. *laugh* They are so worth giving a shot and the original blogger even added decorative candies, so there is a lot of room to put your personal touch to these.

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Enjoy!

Homemade Sloppy Joes

Homemade Sloppy Joes

Hi there! Did you miss me? I figured y’all could use a little break from my rambling after the whole daily blogging challenge. I couldn’t resist sharing a recipe though, so for Serve It Sunday I’m sharing my homemade sloppy joes. I adapted it from a recipe for Sloppy Joe Casserole that I found on Pinterest, original recipe is here, but after having the original we decided to tailor it more toward our taste. The original recipe was good (although I admittedly omitted two ingredients because I had to), but it had a bread topping that neither of us cared for that soaked up almost all of the sloppy joe mixture. After some experimentation this version was born.

I’ve mentioned before that I have some food sensitivities and sadly canned sloppy joe mixture became off limits due to the spices and additives. I’d honestly never seen homemade sloppy joes before, so when I found out it was this easy AND especially that with a little adjustment it doesn’t make me sick, I was tickled pink. The recipe in an easy to copy format will be at the bottom.

First, on the stovetop you brown some ground beef (I vary the amount of meat depending on the mood honestly lol) over about a medium high heat. I use the 92% lean ground beef and it makes for the least greasy sloppy joes I’ve ever seen.
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While that’s cooking I found that if I mix the spices into a paste first and then coat the cooked meat with that before adding the tomato products, the flavors distribute much better, so in a small bowl mix brown sugar, Worcestershire Sauce, ground mustard (it’s powdered, found in the spice aisle), and garlic salt. If you gather the cooked meat into a small circle and pour the spice mixture over it, it’s easier to coat the meat. Stir well to coat the meat (second picture).

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Add tomato sauce and ketchup (yep, two tomato based ingredients) to the coated meat, then stir it in and reduce heat to medium. (Don’t put a lid on it unless you like runny sloppy joes.)

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We’re are some cheese loving folks, so in goes a generous helping of shredded cheddar cheese.

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After awhile the cheese mixes in and it gets all ooey gooey yummy. It may not look it, but this sloppy joe mixture is so thick that it doesn’t drip through the slats in my wood spoon once the mixture is heated well. *grin* It’s not quite “stand a fork in it” chili thick, but it’s pretty dang hearty.

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Use whatever bread vessel you prefer or have on hand (this go around I had leftover sub rolls from French Dips).

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It was so yummy and best of all it’s not overly acidic, so it shouldn’t bother sensitive stomachs! It comes together in about thirty minutes all in one pot, with minimal utensils to wash. Busy weeknight cooks can use the extra time to do a happy dance or kick their feet up. *grin*

Homemade Sloppy Joes (adapted)

1.5 lbs lean ground beef
2 tablespoons brown sugar, packed
1 tablespoon Worcestershire Sauce
2 teaspoons dry ground mustard
1 teaspoon garlic salt
1 (15 oz) can tomato sauce (no salt added can)
3/4 cup ketchup
Optional: grated cheddar cheese, to taste
Preferred type of bread

1. On the stovetop over medium high heat brown ground beef in a large skillet.
2. While meat is cooking, mix the brown sugar, Worcestershire Sauce, mustard, and garlic salt into a paste.
3. Once the meat has cooked gather the meat in the center of the pan and pour the spice mixture over the meat. Stir to coat the meat well.
4. Add tomato sauce and ketchup to the mixture and reduce the heat to medium. Do not cover.
5. If desired, add a generous amount of shredded cheese to the mixture and stir it in.
6. Once the mixture is completely warm it is ready to be served on your preferred bread (I recommend a bun or roll, since regular bread may become soggy and fall apart.)

Note: This is a thick version. If you prefer more liquid, cover the skillet after the fourth step. This should keep a bit more of the moisture in.

I hope you enjoy! 🙂