Anything from mundane to magical - let us know what you’re eating this week!
I prepped and froze a bunch of smash burger patties last week so we’ll be having burgers at some point. I like bacon and blue cheese on mine. Might do some tater tots on the side.
Oh I love mushroom mac and cheese (mac and cheese made with canned condensed cream of mushroom soup). My go to cheap meal used to be eggs baked in frozen diced potatoes with cheese but the price of eggs went up so much.
Not too sure if I have tomato soup but I Do have a kinda gross (in that "this is probably not healthy for me, im eating it anyway" way) can of spaghetti that is calling my name, so thank you for the idea!
It's an absolutely scorching 26 degrees here on the West coast of Scotland and it's an obscene heat for here and I am currently struggling to think of things to make that are suitable for this weather.
I made slow cooker chilli on Saturday as that didn't require slaving over the cooker, so didn't mind. Next night was 5 spice chicken salad and then BLTs last night, which went down a treat.
It was 26 here yesterday and let me tell you, I have never regretted my decisions more than I did 20 minutes after putting that pasta bake in the oven.
The amount of turkey in the recipe was not enough and the flavor isn't super strong. I'm gonna try a different recipe next time and add some more spices.
It’s garlic scape season so I’m trying to include that in everything I cook lately. Last night was added while making pasta sauce with stuffed shells and meatballs.
It's not a dish but I love making garlic puree as mise en place and I did that today :) it's super convenient to have a soft, non pungent garlic that practically doesn't spoil. I can't recommend it enough! And definitely will keep doing it even though no one asked!
Recipe
Requirements
peeled garlic (I don't mind doing it myself but buying it pre- peeled will save you a lot of time)
your choice of neutral cooking oil
immersion blender
small pot or saucepan with a lid
optional sieve
I like to use about 8 bulbs of garlic on ~0.4L of oil and that lasts me about 2 months in a 2 person household.
Steps
Put garlic into a pot and add oil until almost covered. The oil expands during heating so use a little less than you think you need.
Heat up the oil on low-medium until you see bubbling.
Cover the pot and turn the heat to low. Let it cook for about 45 mins or until your garlic is golden brown and completely soft (try with a fork).
Drain the oil from the pot into it's own container. Congrats you got yourself some bonus garlic oil that you can use to fry stuff in :)
Puree your garlic with your immersion blender.
Wait for everything to cool down before covering and refrigerating. This prevents condensed water dripping into your garlic which forms kinda gross grayish spots.
Tomorrow is pasta primavera, inspired by another post on this community. Later in the week my boyfriend is making tater tot casserole with chicken bacon cheese sausage homemade by his family. Friday is blackened tilapia with roast potatoes and I’m roasting a chicken Sunday because it was on sale. I’ll probably do broth with the carcass sometime next week. We had originally been planning to enchiladas Sunday, but those got crowded out by the unexpected chicken.
I picked up a 3lb bag of frozen filets from Costco. Ended up being 6 USD/lb which isn’t bad at all considering ground beef is at least $4/lb. I was looking for something a little healthier, and fish cooks up really quickly. The lemon garlic one from last week turned out pretty well, picture below. The recipe also called for paprika and thyme, not sure I would add those in the future.
I bought some BBQ pork from an asian grocery store this weekend so I'm going to be adding it to ramen, rice bowls over the next couple days along with enoki mushrooms and lots of green onions
I made sort of a "pizza" on sourdough with salami, jalapenos, and cheddar but without marinara. I guess it was more like a sandwich the way I folded it once it was done. Not bad.
I made a thai vegetable curry the other day with chickpeas that was so good. There's a thai restaurant in town that does a curry dish that is topped with raw red onion, and I've been super into doing that and tons of lime when I make it too
Chickpeas (and really anything dried larger than lentils) can be a bit tricky. Definitely check the instructions on the ingredient to see if it lines up with the recipe. We had one attempt where the chickpeas were still inedibly tough when everything else was cooked. I've never actually managed to get dried beans to properly rehydrate with less than multiple hours of cooking so I stopped bothering.
undefined> What kind of hot sauce? I’ve thought about making my own but never tried it
Basically, here is what I've done. Diced roughly 2 tomatoes, Diced roughly 5 small thai chilli, added a carrot which was aging in my fridge, some vegetable stock, garlic and parsley (would be even better with cilantro) pre-cook everything in a pan, I put in a blender and added vinegar.
Like a home-made industrial hot-sauce that you can eat with nachos, nuggets, nems, fries or whatever