Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Lavender-Rosemary Roasted Potatoes.
(copied from a search for cooking with lavendar)

They are great and easy to make!
Cut up about 6 big potatoes, or about 15 if they are the small red or yellow kind.
Put the potatoes in a bowl and toss with Lavender, Rosemary, Garlic Powder, Salt, Pepper, and olive oil.
I didn't really measure anything, but I would eyeball the oil...enought to coat the potatoes well, and I used about a handful of lavender, and a little less of rosemary since it's dried.
I roasted them in a foil pack for about 45 minutes. Yummy!

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Creamy Zucchini Pasta

Used this Fast Creamy Pasta Sauce recipe from Cooks.com.  Added 1cup shredded zucchini.  I was short on parmesian so also added salt and pepper.  Yummy! 

Tossed part of the sauce with bow tie pasta and the other part with brown rice penne pasta.  I think we unanimously liked the brown rice noodles better, but both were pretty good.  Would definately use this recipe again!

July 17-23

Sunday-travel back from Idaho trip
Monday-Frozen Taquito's (compliments of Aubrey), Green beans
Tuesday-Creamy zucchini pasta, cheesy biscuits, carrot strips, canned peaches
Wednesday-Spaghetti, green beans
Thursday-
Friday-Date night
Saturday-

Thursday, May 26, 2011

May 22-28

Sunday:  Roasted vegatables with hamburger, yellow cake
Monday: Shepherd's Pie
Tuesday: Macaroni and Cheese with hamburger, Milano melts
Wednesday: Frozen Lasagne
Thursday: Pizza Hut
Friday: Taco Bell (girls), Hot dogs and S'mores (boys)
Saturday:

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Roasted Vegatables.

We really like the flavor of these roasted vegetables.  It helped that I pointed out that they taste like french fries.  Last time I used baby onions, stems and all.  They fried up toasty and crisp and are pretty tasty.  This time I tried including the stems of a leak and they turned out yummy too.  Lydia loves to pick the "french fried onion stems" out of the whole pan.

This time we used 2 potatoes, small zucchini, small crookneck, some sort of lemon-shaped yellow squash, a little cauliflour, a yellow onion, and a small leak.  I cut the vegatables a little smaller than last time (about 1 1/2 inch cubes) and they cooked up just right (according to Nathan, anyway.)  I also added 3/4 lb browned hamburger to the vegatables when they were half done cooking.  I'm sure I could have added it at the beginning, but I didn't have it browned yet at that time.  That turned out good too.

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Hash Brown and Egg Casserole

http://allrecipes.com/Recipe-Tools/Print/Recipe.aspx?RecipeID=87013&origin=detail&&Servings=6

Substituted ham for sausage and used 8 eggs rather than 5.  It was really potatoe heavy.  I would only use one pound of hashbrowns next time.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Artichokes

How to Cook and Eat an Artichoke

This is the second time I've used these instructions from simplyrecipes.com to cook artichokes whole.  Last time we had three baby artichokes from Abundant Harvest.  They were so tender and yummy, but there wasn't much of a heart.  Lydia thought they were absolutely delicious.  She could have eaten all 3 of them herself.  It was so hilarious to see her so intense excitement about pulling off her artichoke leaves and dipping them in butter.  Rachel Farnsworth suggested cooking them like this and freezing for later use, but I soon realized their weren't going to be any left-overs for later use.  Nathan had some (on Lydia and I's prompting.)  I don't think Anna or Sam even tried them.  It's very easy to fix them this way.  Takes time eating them.  All worth it just for Lydia to get all those veggie serving in.

This time I bought 2 large artichokes at the grocery store.  They were tasty too, more tough, but maybe a bit less bitter.  (I think the first ones were getting a little old by the time I finally figured out what to do with them.)  Today I used the pressure cooker for somewhere between 15-20 minutes.  I think they were a bit overdone.  I'd probably prefer using  a regular pot next time so I can test for doneness. 


I also used the Sloppy Joe recipe from Betty Crocker cookbook for our shredded beef sandwiches.  Pressure cooked beef last night (was afraid the meat would be too old if I left it in the fridge any longer.)  The sandwiches were good, a hit for all the kids (even Lydia who won't touch barbecue beef any more.)  A little dry--could have used a larger sauce recipe for the 2 lbs of beef.