Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Skillet Chicken Manicotti

Usually manicotti recipes usually call for some ricotta,  but the hubs is anti-ricotta and interestingly enough, this recipe didn't call for any.  A win for him, for sure.  And usually you have to boil the pasta, combine all the filling, stuff the shells, and bake.

Tonight's dinner, however, is another one of those simple meals made in one skillet.  Granted, you need two small bowls do some mixing and get your hands pretty messy, this is as easy as mix-stuff-boil.

Taking some help from store-bought sauce and dressing, combined with cooked chicken and a couple pantry staples and you have a simple meal in 30 minutes... again.

Top it with a little cheese and away you go!

Skillet Chicken Manicotti
Skillet Chicken Manicotti

What You Need:
  • 1 1/2 c spaghetti sauce
  • 1 can diced tomatoes, undrained
  • 1/2 c water
  • 2 c diced cooked chicken
  • 1/4 c Italian dressing (I used this)
  • 1/4 tsp dried basil leaves
  • 1 c shredded Italian blend cheese (I used this)
  • 8 manicotti shells, uncooked
How You Do It:
  1. Combine sauce, tomatoes, and water.
  2. In separate bowl, combine 3/4 c sauce mixture, chicken, basil, dressing, and 1/2 c cheese.  Stuff into manicotti shells and place in rimmed skillet.
  3. Top with remaining sauce and bring to a boil.  Reduce heat to medium, cover, and simmer 8 minutes.
  4. Turn, recover, and simmer an additional 8 minutes.
    Top with remaining cheese and let stand until melted.
Skillet Chicken Manicotti recipe adapted from Kraft.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Slow Cooker French Onion Meatballs

Tonight brings you installment #2 of meatballs for the week.  And, the hubs and I deemed tonight's better than Tuesday's.  And the best part is, they were so easy, it's not even funny. 

Enter: slow cooker!

I literally dumped the meatballs into the slow cooker, topped them with two cans of soup, and set them on their merry little meatball way. 

That's it folks. 

Now, if you like your sauce a little thicker as I do, 30 minutes before you want to eat, crank the slow cooker up to high and whisk in a little corn starch.  Cover and while you boil some noodles to soak up the sauce, the slow cooker, once again, does the work.

Meatball Night #2: Success.

Slow Cooker French Onion Meatballs
Slow Cooker French Onion Meatballs

What You Need:
How You Do It:
  1. Dump frozen meatballs into slow cooker.
    Top with soup (do not add water).
  2. Set slow cooker to low for 4 hours (or high for 2 hours).
  3. To thicken the sauce, whisk in corn starch 30 minutes before serving, set the slow cooker to high, and cover.
Slow Cooker French Onion Meatballs recipe adapted from Six Sisters' Stuff.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Turkey Meatballs in Spicy Tomato Basil Sauce with Fresh Mozzarella

I have come to really love meatballs.  And this week, I will try not one, but two new meatball recipes.  Tonight's recipe I found just a few days ago on Pinterest and it went right into rotation.  I had to try it - maybe because the photos on the blog where it was originally posted showed the melted cheese or maybe the red sauce or maybe, just maybe, the combination of all three.  Either way, I took to it tonight.

Let me start with the meatballs themselves.  I almost always use ground turkey when making my own meatballs.  Just healthier.  The uniqueness of these turkey meatballs comes in the seasonings - there is a distinct cumin flavor that really shines, and surprisingly makes the dish.  Don't skip the cumin.

Then there's the sauce.  Simple, five-ingredient sauce:  garlic (of course), red pepper flakes, a touch of oil, tomato sauce, and a little sugar to cut the acid.  Top it off with fresh mozzarella and fresh basil, and you've got yourself an awesome meatball dish, super easy to make in under 30 minutes, to satisfy your Italian/meatball fix.

Turkey Meatballs in Spicy Tomato Basil Sauce with Fresh Mozzarella
Turkey Meatballs in Spicy Tomato
Basil Sauce with Fresh Mozzarella

What You Need for the Meatballs:
  • 1 package ground turkey
  • 2 eggs (I used the equivalent of two egg whites)
  • 1/4 c seasoned breadcrumbs
  • 1 tsp dried oregano
  • 2 tbsp fresh basil, minced
  • 1 tsp cumin (the secret ingredient!)
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
What You Need for the Sauce:
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 3 large garlic cloves, minced
  • 2 8-oz cans tomato sauce (I used no-salt added)
  • 1 healthy pinch red pepper flakes
  • 1 tsp sugar (I used one packet of Splenda)
  • Salt, to taste
  • 6 oz fresh Bocconcini
  • 2 tbsp fresh basil, chiffonade

How You Do It:
  1. Combine all ingredients for meatballs.  Using a 1-inch scooper, form meatballs and place on rimmed baking tray.  Bake 15 minutes at 400*.
  2. While the meatballs are baking, add oil to a large saute pan.  Saute garlic and red pepper flakes until fragrant, but without browning the garlic.  Add tomato sauce, sugar, and salt.  Turn heat to medium-low and simmer until meatballs are cooked.
  3. Once meatballs are fully-cooked, add to sauce pan and turn to coat.  Scatter bocconcini throughout and cover until cheese is slightly melted.
  4. Top with fresh basil.
Turkey Meatballs in Spicy Tomato Basil Sauce with Fresh Mozzarella recipe adapted from Alaska from Scratch.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Southwest Tortilla Bake

"Don't mind that this looks like mush," I said as we sat down to the table for dinner tonight.  Yep, tonight's meal didn't make the best of presentation, and frankly, I should have snapped a photo before I cut into this puppy, but alas, I did the best I could.

Ok, I digress.  Yes, tonight's dinner looks like a mess on the plate, but the flavor was awesome.  I love Mexican food, as I believe I have mentioned previously.  And while I don't make it all that often, when I do, I do.  This recipe was so easy to make - really, it only has six ingredients, most of which you can purchase from the store and use as-is.  Food Network's Sandra Lee has coined this a "semi-homemade" dish.  And you know what, they are good and sometimes better than making something 100% from scratch.

This one is ooey and gooey and cheesey and delicious.  A deep pie pan is totally recommended - I used my not-so-new-but-first-time-being-used Pampered Chef deep dish pie pan I got for my - gulp - wedding shower.  It was perfect.  And don't be alarmed about how full the pin pan is - mine was to the rim and didn't make a mess of the oven.

My only suggestion - which I will do on the next go-around of this recipe - is to really let this sit for a solid 5-7 minutes before you attempt to cut and serve.  I think this would have helped it stay togheter and not look like mush on the plate.

Yet again, another Mexican fiesta on a plate!

Southwest Tortilla Bake
Southwest Tortilla Bake

What You Need:
How You Do It:
  1. Combine cooking sauce and salsa in bowl.
  2. Combine corn and chicken in separate bowl.
  3. Spread 1 cup sauce on bottom of pie pan.  Top with 1 tortilla, 1 cup sauce, 1/3 chicken mixture, and 1/3 cheese.  
  4. Repeat tortilla-sauce-chicken-cheese layers until the pie pan is full, ending with cheese.
  5. Bake 350* for 30 minutes until the center is warm and the cheese is lightly browned.
  6. Let sit for 5-7 minutes to set before serving.
Southwest Tortilla Bake recipe adapted from Pillsbury.com.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Creamy Chicken Ramen with Spinach and Mushrooms

Tonight's dinner brought me back to the days of Freshman Year in Territorial Hall when the best - and only - heat source for cooking in your room was the microwave sitting atop your mini-fridge.  And there really were only a couple things one would make, or frankly could afford:  Easy Mac and Ramen Noodles.   So when I saw this recipe for a different take on Ramen noodles, I was totally interested.  I mean really - when is the last time you had Ramen noodles?

But this was more than just your freshman-dorm-room ramen.  This is what I'll call "adult ramen" - loaded with veggies and chicken, combined in a creamy sauce.  The flavors are far more than the salty packet of seasoning packaged with the noodles.  It's creamy and light and really complements the veggies and noodles well.

While it's been quite some time since the days of dorm-room-ramen and the "Adventures of Liz and Molly" (who would have thought a two-story Target would have a cart escalator?!), this ramen dish was a nice remake of a college staple.

Creamy Chicken Ramen with Spinach and Mushrooms
Creamy Chicken Ramen
with Spinach and Mushrooms

What You Need:
  • 3/4 lb. boneless, skinless chicken breast, sliced thin
  • 1 package sliced mushrooms
  • 1/2 onion, diced
  • 1 c water
  • 4 oz light cream cheese (1/2 package)
  • 1 3-oz package chicken-flavored Ramen noodles
  • 2 handfuls fresh spinach
  • 1/4 bell pepper, thinly sliced
  • 5 grinds fresh black pepper
How You Do It:
  1. In a large skillet, cook chicken until lightly browned and cooked through.  Remove from pan and set aside.
  2. Add mushrooms, onion, and bell pepper and cook until onions are translucent.
  3. Add water, seasoning packet, and cream cheese.  Bring to a boil, stirring until the cheese has melted and the texture is smooth.
  4. While the sauce cooks, boil water, break noodles in half, and cook until done.  Drain.
  5. Add cooked noodles, chicken, and spinach to sauce.  Add pepper and stir to combine.
Creamy Chicken Ramen with Spinach and Mushrooms recipe adapted from Costco Connection.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Corey's Honey Garlic Meatballs

Well, it's been a while friends!  After a quick jaunt to Florida for a business conference (including soaking up the sun and hanging in the pool with my childhood BFF and her parents) and a week-long vacation back to Wisconsin to visit my family for Passover and a couple days away with the hubs in Baltimore, we're back at home, which means I'm back in the kitchen!

Not only are we back, but top on the cooking docket is my husband's favorite meal:  Honey Garlic Meatballs.  I'm not sure if it's the honey or the garlic or the meatball he likes best... but he sure does love these.  It's one of the few meals I make every-so-often. 

The sauce is sweet and tangy, combining garlic, honey, ketchup, and soy sauce.  Combine that with a basic meatball recipe (I suppose you could use store-bought, but to me, that's just cheating), and you have the perfect combo. 

Trust the hubs... they might become your favorite too!

Corey's Honey Garlic Meatballs
Corey's Honey Garlic Meatballs

What You Need:
  • 1 lb ground turkey
  • 1/2 c seasoned breadcrumbs
  • 6 tbps milk
  • 1 1/2 tbsp minced dried onion
  • 1 egg (I used egg whites)
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 3 cloves garlic, pressed
  • 3/4 c ketchup
  • 1/2 c honey
  • 1/4 c soy sauce
How You Do It:
  1. Combine turkey, breadcrumbs, milk, onion, and egg.  Shape into 1-inch meatballs.  Place in a single layer on a jelly roll pan and bake  at 425* for 12-15 minutes.
  2. While the meatballs cook, melt butter in a deep pan.  Add minced garlic and saute until tender.
  3. Add ketchup, honey, and soy sauce.  Bring to a boil, then simmer until meatballs are cooked through.
  4. Add meatballs to sauce and gently stir to combine.
Recipe adapted from my mom.