Thread Number: 77208
/ Tag: Recipes, Cooking Accessories
Chilly Weather Comfort Food |
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Post# 1011616   10/21/2018 at 01:00 (2,014 days old) by Launderess (Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage)   |   | |
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Well it seems finally (praise the Lord)hot and humid weather for our area is gone. Has been chilly all last week and forecast evening temps beginning Sunday though much of next week shall be down in the 40F to high 30F.
Having avoiding cooking anything really heavy and or that required using the oven for the duration, it's now time to get out those recipes and enjoy foods that warm the insides. Steak and kidney pie. Marconi and cheese Pasta fazool Chile con carne Beef stew Pot roast Cassoulet Anyone else? |
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Post# 1011618 , Reply# 1   10/21/2018 at 01:18 (2,014 days old) by ea56 (Cotati, Calif.)   |   | |
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Post# 1011627 , Reply# 3   10/21/2018 at 04:06 (2,014 days old) by Launderess (Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage)   |   | |
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Basically a type of French slow cooked casserole made with beans, bits of meat and other goodies.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassoulet... cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1018... |
Post# 1011629 , Reply# 4   10/21/2018 at 06:18 (2,014 days old) by askolover (South of Nash Vegas, TN)   |   | |
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Post# 1011647 , Reply# 5   10/21/2018 at 09:27 (2,014 days old) by fan-of-fans (Florida)   |   | |
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Those sound good. How about some chicken noodle soup and a grilled cheese sandwich? Simple but good. |
Post# 1011650 , Reply# 6   10/21/2018 at 10:06 (2,014 days old) by appnut (TX)   |   | |
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I cannot relate to relegating foods to certain outside temperatures. I made two different pork roasts this summer. I took a week of staycation two weeks ago and made a pot of chicken noodle soup to have for lunches for something different as well as cheesy cornbread and cheddar whole wheat biscuits to go along with said soup. Last night made a meat loaf. And baked pork chops last weekend. And a baked pasta and meatball casserole while off two weeks ago too. Earlier this week made a pot of beans for another source of protein dinners. My partner and I both enjoy chili or soup made any time of year, even the summer. Baked cookies for work function in early September. |
Post# 1011652 , Reply# 7   10/21/2018 at 10:18 (2,014 days old) by spacepig (Floridas Emerald Coast)   |   | |
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Post# 1011657 , Reply# 8   10/21/2018 at 11:02 (2,014 days old) by firedome (Binghamton NY & Lake Champlain VT)   |   | |
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Post# 1011658 , Reply# 9   10/21/2018 at 11:05 (2,014 days old) by JustJunque (Western MA)   |   | |
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So many of these dishes sound absolutely wonderful.
But you caught my attention with mushroom soup chicken in the Crock Pot. We both work full-time, and never seem to have time or energy to make anything creative. I'm imagining that as something that doesn't require a lot of prep time. And I love things with mushroom soup! Can you share the recipe? Little story about mushroom soup. Growing up, it was known as "white sauce" in our house. My mom did all of the cooking, and used mushroom soup over meatloaf, spinach pie, and a couple of other dishes, I believe. My dad loved it. But...he wouldn't touch a mushroom. If he ever found out that he was eating mushroom soup, all hell would have broken loose! And he would have never touched it again. So, until the day he passed, it was "white sauce!" Barry |
Post# 1011659 , Reply# 10   10/21/2018 at 11:11 (2,014 days old) by Joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Make your favorite legume (split peas, lentils, red or black beans) in one but leave out the meat. Combine the meat in the other pressure cooker with 2 cups of brown rice, a quart of beef broth, an envelope of onion soup mix, 2 heaping tablespoons of garlic powder and 2 tablespoons of olive oil (extra virgin preferred). Bring to pressure and hiss or jiggle for 20 minutes followed by a natural pressure drop. Dump the rice into the legume and there’s a meal in a bowl. Thin the leftovers with more broth. It really tightens up when it cools |
Post# 1011661 , Reply# 11   10/21/2018 at 11:22 (2,014 days old) by appnut (TX)   |   | |
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Post# 1011682 , Reply# 12   10/21/2018 at 15:21 (2,014 days old) by joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Pound for pound, match the meat to the legumes. |
Post# 1011688 , Reply# 13   10/21/2018 at 17:09 (2,014 days old) by joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Post# 1011695 , Reply# 16   10/21/2018 at 18:07 (2,014 days old) by twintubdexter (Palm Springs)   |   | |
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Post# 1011703 , Reply# 18   10/21/2018 at 19:00 (2,014 days old) by Sudsy (Fort Worth Tx. 76105)   |   | |
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I have never heard of chocolate cobbler how do you make it? |
Post# 1011753 , Reply# 19   10/22/2018 at 03:32 (2,013 days old) by askolover (South of Nash Vegas, TN)   |   | |
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3/4 stick butter 1 cup self-rising flour 3/4 cup sugar 3/4 cup milk 1 1/2 T cocoa 1 T vanilla Preheat oven to 350F Melt butter in 9x13 pan (I just put the stick in the pan and let it melt as the oven preheats). In a bowl, mix flour, sugar, cocoa, vanilla, and milk together. Drizzle this mixture over the melted butter but DO NOT STIR! In a separate bowl, mix another 1 cup of sugar and 1/4 cup of cocoa. Sprinkle this dry mixture over the butter and batter but DO NOT STIR! Now pour 1 1/2 cups of boiling water over the top of it all but DO NOT STIR! Bake 30 minutes and serve warm. Great with vanilla ice cream or by itself. |
Post# 1011762 , Reply# 20   10/22/2018 at 05:21 (2,013 days old) by appnut (TX)   |   | |
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Post# 1011776 , Reply# 21   10/22/2018 at 08:20 (2,013 days old) by norgeway (mocksville n c )   |   | |
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Mine makes a 8 X 8 serve this with a scoop of vanilla ice cream and boy is it fantastic! |
Post# 1011814 , Reply# 22   10/22/2018 at 17:13 (2,013 days old) by mrsalvo (New Braunfels Texas)   |   | |
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I'm trying the Chocolate Cobbler, definitely. Reminds me of Chocolate Gravy over biscuits. Thank you Greg!! Barry |
Post# 1012137 , Reply# 23   10/25/2018 at 23:48 (2,009 days old) by askolover (South of Nash Vegas, TN)   |   | |
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Post# 1012155 , Reply# 24   10/26/2018 at 06:03 (2,009 days old) by JustJunque (Western MA)   |   | |
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Post# 1012174 , Reply# 25   10/26/2018 at 12:25 (2,009 days old) by kd12 (Arkansas)   |   | |
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Cuban burgers, with a garlic mojo sauce. |
Post# 1012196 , Reply# 26   10/26/2018 at 17:57 (2,009 days old) by whirlykenmore78 (Prior Lake MN (GMT-0500 CDT.))   |   | |
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Winters can be very cold and hard here in Minnesota. I keep plenty of "Old Standbys" in my recipe arsenal:
Beef Stroganoff Lasagna Spaghetti with meat sauce Tater Tot Hotdish (It's a MN thing. Just ask if you want to know about it) Italian Meatballs with Penne Pasta Swedish meatballs Beef Stew Turkey Dinner Pot Roast Meatloaf Chili con Carne Hamburger Gravy over mashed potatoes. Beef Burgundy Chicken Noodle Soup Beef Barley Soup Cream of Chix Wild Rice Soup Clam Chowder Ham and Bacon Chowder Hamburger Goulash Cream of Tomato Soup Baked Rigatoni With Meat Sauce Thanksgiving in a bowl "Turkey Rice Soup thickened with roux and leftover gravy added" I have more but that's all for now. Comfort food recipes are a must up here just like a good snowblower. LOL! WK78 |
Post# 1012211 , Reply# 27   10/26/2018 at 20:52 (2,008 days old) by Xraytech (Rural southwest Pennsylvania )   |   | |
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Some of my cold weather favorites
Beef stew Hamburger pie Beef burgundy Pot roast with onions and carrots Stuffed cabbage with mashed potatoes Stuffed peppers with mashed potatoes and creamed peas Vegetable soup Baked ham with bourbon glaze or raisin sauce Meat sauce with meatballs and percatelli #12 Porcupine balls Chicken cacciatore Chicken paprikash with grated noodles And of course the stuffed cabbage soup that is cooking away in my 6 qt electric Presto cooker This post was last edited 10/26/2018 at 21:13 |
Post# 1012218 , Reply# 28   10/26/2018 at 21:56 (2,008 days old) by norgeway (mocksville n c )   |   | |
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A pressure cooker is a great cooking tool,i cant live without one. |
Post# 1012220 , Reply# 29   10/26/2018 at 22:44 (2,008 days old) by Launderess (Quiet Please, There´s a Lady on Stage)   |   | |
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Crock Pot/slow cooker chicken with mushroom soup is one of those staples that evolved along with that device.
lmgtfy.com/?q=... As such there are many variations but two main staples; cream of mushroom soup and a crock pot/slow cooker. What happens afterwards is only limited by one's creativity. IIRC mushroom soup chicken may have been one of those original recipes for "busy housewives", working mothers and anyone else seeking a fast and easy meal that made use of the new kitchen gadget, the Crock Pot. On a very basic level you just take some chicken, a can of cream of mushroom soup, and water. Dump the lot into slow cooker and set then forget. |
Post# 1012224 , Reply# 30   10/26/2018 at 23:31 (2,008 days old) by JustJunque (Western MA)   |   | |
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I figured it was probably something as simple or as "souped up" as one wants it to be.
I was just curious to know if Greg did anything special/specific with his take on it. We've been talking about breaking out the Crock Pot more often. There may be some version of mushroom soup chicken in our not too distant future! Barry |
Post# 1012229 , Reply# 31   10/27/2018 at 00:01 (2,008 days old) by ea56 (Cotati, Calif.)   |   | |
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Here’s something that my Grandma and Mom used to make, a midwestern dish, String Beans, Ham Hocks and Red New Potatoes. You cook it all together until the meat on the Ham Hocks is tender. Also, use some black pepper to taste. The String Beans will be WAY done, definitely not the way we are all used to eating them today. But it is a really delicious, old time family meal. They always served it with cornbread, to sop up the “pot liquor”.
I haven’t had this in years, and frankly, I could never do it the justice that Grandma and Mom did for the dish. But I need to give it a try again. Its good old country cookin. I believe that this would also be good made in a crock pot. Eddie This post was last edited 10/27/2018 at 00:36 |
Post# 1012237 , Reply# 33   10/27/2018 at 01:58 (2,008 days old) by askolover (South of Nash Vegas, TN)   |   | |
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Barry, my mushroom soup chicken in the crock pot is just a whole chicken or chicken breasts with soup smeared over them. Nothing special. I do the same thing with pork chops. But My pork roast is a little different....I add a chopped onion to the cooker with the mushroom soup. I made a chocolate cobbler tonight....there's saran wrap over it in the picture. It's only about an inch thick when cooked using White Lily self-rising flour.
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Post# 1012249 , Reply# 34   10/27/2018 at 13:11 (2,008 days old) by joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Post# 1012250 , Reply# 35   10/27/2018 at 13:15 (2,008 days old) by luxflairguy (Wilmington NC)   |   | |
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Having my church supper club group over tonight. Temps in the 50's, so having a Tuscan Minestrone soup with salad, bread and others are bringing dessert! Greg |
Post# 1020699 , Reply# 36   1/9/2019 at 21:09 (1,933 days old) by DaveAMKrayoGuy (Oak Park, MI)   |   | |
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Post# 1020725 , Reply# 37   1/10/2019 at 08:02 (1,933 days old) by joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Post# 1020756 , Reply# 38   1/10/2019 at 19:09 (1,933 days old) by appnut (TX)   |   | |
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Post# 1020762 , Reply# 39   1/10/2019 at 20:01 (1,932 days old) by joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Split Pea Soup with Smoke Bratwurst and Brown Rice
1 lb. dried split peas
Feel free to vary the ingredients as desired. |
Post# 1020793 , Reply# 41   1/11/2019 at 05:16 (1,932 days old) by appnut (TX)   |   | |
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Post# 1020797 , Reply# 42   1/11/2019 at 08:25 (1,932 days old) by joeekaitis (Rialto, California, USA)   |   | |
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Post# 1021017 , Reply# 43   1/13/2019 at 11:36 (1,930 days old) by DaveAMKrayoGuy (Oak Park, MI)   |   | |
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Old dish out, in with the NEW...!
AMKrayoPrime-Rib: -- Dave |
Post# 1022680 , Reply# 44   1/27/2019 at 15:09 (1,916 days old) by DADoES (TX, U.S. of A.)   |   | |
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I made the Chocolate Cobbler for a gathering yesterday. Caesar Chicken Roasted Vegetables (frozen mix of brussels sprouts, butternut squash, onion) Baked Potatoes Tea (my iced mix of regular and earl grey) GW brought a sweet-vinegar cabbage slaw with carrots, shallots, red and green bell peppers, cranberries, and he said a tinge of jalapeno. Tony brought a multigrain bread loaf.
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