|
|
Choice or combination of meats main dishes | The Busy Parents Cookbook |
Meaty main dishes: Pork & beef | Turkey & chicken | Seafood | Meat combinations
Vegetarian main dishes | Side dishes | Appetizers
Weights, measures, temperatures | Substitutions
|
Toad in the Hole from Maryann Esh Link sausage Brown sausage & cook until partly done. Pour off some fat & put in oven. Mix the flour & milk until smooth. Add eggs & salt. Pour over hot sausage. Cook in a 425F oven until brown & puffed up.
Kalico Beans from Maryann Esh Good for a potluck Brown: Add: Put everything into a 9" x 13" pan and bake in a 350F oven for 40 minutes. (I bet it would also work in a crock pot!)
Six-Bean Chili from Kathy Gomez 1 - 2 lbs chopped meat (You can use ground turkey breast to eliminate
quite a bit of fat) 1 can green beans - drained Brown ground meat (until cooked all the way through), and drain off excess fat. Add diced onions (and garlic if desired), and sauté until tender. Add tomato paste and ketchup, and simmer for 10 minutes. Take off heat and combine with rest of ingredients and put in dutch oven (I don't have one -- I used a Mexican paella dish). Bake uncovered at 350F for 1 hour. Enjoy.
Egg Casserole from Kelly Johnson 8 slices french bread, cubed 1 can cream of mushroom soup Grease a 9"x13" baking dish; put bread in dish. Top with cheese and then meat. Beat together the eggs, milk, and dry mustard, pour over the top. Cover and refrigerate overnight. In the morning, mix together the cream of mushroom soup and milk, pour over the top, bake in 300F oven for 1 1/2 hours. Good with fruit salad and English muffins.
Parmagiana in Minutes from Anne Kruppa For a quick (& affordable) dinner, that tastes like you went to lots of trouble, and it's cooked in one pan! It also calls for canned staples and prepared patties, so you can do this at the last moment! Total time: 25 minutes, TOPS. Breaded veal or chicken patties (tofu would work too) Adjust the amount of sauce, etc., for how many portions you're cooking (and for how much you'd like with your meal)! In a large (oven-proof preferably) skillet, sauté onion and garlic (use as little oil as possible) until onion is transparent. Push to sides of pan, add meat patties and lightly brown. To the pan add sauce, tomatoes, and any other vegetables; cover patties with the mixture. Continue heating until the sauce is bubbly. Sprinkle lots of cheese over all. Cook until cheese begins to melt. If your pan is oven-safe, you can pop it in the oven to brown the top a bit. Sprinkle with parmesan and serve. You can add a few chopped green onions over the finished dish for color and looks. If you put this on a really nice platter, no one will guess you didn't use fresh-from-scratch ingredients. (Fools the in-laws every time they drop in unexpectedly!)
Arabic Meat Pies from Dawn Doleh 2 pkgs store-bought pizza dough Cut up onion and peppers into small pieces and fry with meat until meat is done (you can also add mushrooms). Drain grease from mix. Flatten out into a square shape a small handful of dough to about 1/3-inch thickness, and put 2 tablespoons of mix in center. Fold bottom 2 corners up towards top to make smaller squarish shape. Then take right lower corner and fold up so it is even with upper left corner (now it's triangle shaped). Then fold the upper right corner to the lower left corner and the triangle is now smaller and the meat mix is contained in the dough. Put triangles on Pam-sprayed cookie sheet and bake at 400F for 30minutes or until dough is golden brown. You can freeze them when cooled and reheat in the microwave for a quick lunch.
Kefta an Arabic main dish from Dawn Doleh 2-3 lbs ground sirloin (any type ground meat will do) Put parsley and onion in food processor and chop very fine then mix into ground meat so it's evenly distributed. Add bread crumbs and curry plus milk and mix well. Spray cookie sheet with nonstick cooking spray (like Pam) and roll meat mix into log shapes. Initially the individual meat ball turned log should be about 1" in diameter. Sprinkle meat logs with seasoned salt to taste and bake at 450F until done (be sure to turn them over once first side is browned). Take cooked meat and put into roaster with potatoes. Add tomato paste mixed with 5 cups water so no chunks of paste are left and pour over meat and potatoes. Bake at 400F for 45minutes. Serve with pita bread.
Anne's Everything Under the Sun Meatloaf from Anne Kruppa (this is what the dh calls it!) (lb.=pound) 1 1/2 lb. lean ground beef The spices are approximate, I go by feel/taste/look. Adjust as you'd like. I've also thrown in italian seasoning, etc., depending on what's on hand. The soup will make a broth/sauce after cooking, and any fat can easily be taken off when it's chilled in the fridge. It's even better the second day and can be sliced to make awesome sandwiches. Mix everything together (by hand works best, imo). Place into a loaf pan, bake at 375F until brown. It will be very juicy and will shrink from the sides of the pan.
Jambalaya from Kathleen Pitts Here is my mother's New Orleans recipe for Jambalaya. It is a mixture of many different recipes from friends and family. Enjoy. 1 lb bulk breakfast sausage In a large skillet over medium high heat, brown and crumble bulk sausage. Remove sausage with a slotted spoon, leaving the grease. Put sausage in 5- or 6-quart heavy sauce pan or Dutch oven. Cover and keep warm. In skillet, fry the little sizzlers. Remove them and cut into bite-size pieces, then add to other sausage. In remaining grease add spam, pork chops, and chicken. Heat for a few minutes. Remove with slotted spoon and add to Dutch oven. To skillet, add onions, bell pepper, and garlic. Sauté on low heat about 20 minutes. Do not brown. In the meantime, prepare rice as usual -- do not add salt to the water. To skillet, with veggies, add chopped tomatoes, Italian seasoning, and cayenne. Stir to blend. Dump all a' dat (Mama's words :) into the Dutch oven. Mix well. Pour rice on top, then tomato sauce on top of that. Using a large spoon and a strong arm, stir together very well. Add salt to taste. Put your arm in a sling and serve with hot french bread. Note: If you can make this dish one day ahead, it is always better the second day.
Meaty main dishes: Pork & beef |
Turkey & chicken |
Seafood |
Meat combinations
Vegetarian main dishes | Side dishes | Appetizers Weights, measures, temperatures | Substitutions |
|
|
Comments? Suggestions? Email the editor, Barbara Laufersweiler bpeditor@laufers.com You're a Dec95er and have
another recipe to submit? Created 14 April 1997 URL: http://www.cookbook.org/busyparents/varmeats.html |