Pages

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Creamy Cornbread


My first cookbook

(This cookbook is mostly all I used when we first got married). 



Before I was married, our church back in Jacksonville, Florida, First Baptist, handed out these nice recipe books one year for mother's day to all the ladies.  I was fortunate enough to receive a copy.  The recipes were complied by women in the church and is filled with fabulous recipes.  I have been using this cornbread recipe for over 20 years and it is still the best.  I always get rave reviews and there is never any left!  The best part is that is it so easy!



This is the best cornbread recipe I have found!


There are a couple of modifications I have made the the recipe above.  I do not use corn oil, but 1/2 stick of butter instead.  Also, I do not use the self-rising corn meal.  Just a box of Jiffy will do.

Preheat the oven to 400 and melt the 1/2 stick of butter in the pan that you are going to be using.
While that is melting, mix all remaining ingredients together.
When butter is all melted, pour butter into the batter and stir.  Then pour the batter into the buttered pan.   Bake 25 minutes.


One reason I like this cornbread so much is that is is not dry.  A lot of cornbread I have tried is very dry and it crumbles.  This is very moist!  Give it a try and let me know what you think!

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Baking Bread

My house smells so good right now!  I just baked some homemade french bread and it turned out wonderful.  It was so easy!  I have never made bread before and I was a little nervous.  This is a great recipe to use if you want to try making bread.


This is what the dough looked like before baking



After it was a beautiful golden color.


I couldn't resist trying the fruits of my labor.  


I found this recipe on Pinterest and knew immediately I wanted to try it for my customers.  Boy, are they in for a treat!

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Meal Planning

How I Plan My Meals


I often get strange looks when I tell other moms that I plan my menus out a whole month at a time! It does take some time at first, but the time you will save is so worth it. I have been following this meal planning technique for 15 years, just shortly after my second child was born. Here's how I do it:

What you will need:

Binder
Dividers
Notebook paper
Pen
Meal Ideas (cookbooks, Pinterest, other sources)



Step 1

Label a sheet of notebook paper like this: "Monthly Menu - November, 2012"

Next number your paper 1-30



Start filling in the lines. You are coming up with 30 meal ideas. This is not by date - meaning November 1st does not correspond with line #1. These are just 30 meal ideas so you will already know what you will be fixing the month of November.

If you already know 4 days in November you will be eating out, then on four lines put "out to eat". Leave one line, or two, open for "Thanksgiving".

Scour cookbooks and Pinterest to get meal ideas if you need some. Make sure you print out the recipe when you find one or write it down on the line so you will know where to go back and find the recipe when you are ready to use it.

Also, add in a couple of "new recipes" to try out.  If they are not big hits, don't make it again.  If they are, jot down a quick note to make it again!

My monthly menu looks something like this:



There are standby meals we have every month. For example, my family loves tacos, so I know every month that will be on the menu. As well as breakfast for dinner one night.

If possible, write down a complete meal. Meaning something like this:

Meatloaf/mashed potatoes/green beans

That way you have a complete meal planned and it will be easier to grocery shop and have the items you need on hand when the time comes.

Step 2

After you have your menu sheet 1-30 filled in, make a grocery list on another sheet of notebook paper labeled "Grocery List, November, 2012". Check your pantry, cabinets and go line-by-line, meal-by-meal filling in on the sheet of notebook paper the ingredients you need.



Next, go grocery shopping. You do not need to buy everything on your list at once. Maybe you shop once a week, twice a week or even daily! Just pick out however many meals you are going to purchase at a time and buy for that.



Step 3

Place Menu and grocery list in the binder behind the "November" tab along with any recipes for that month you have printed out. When it is time to cook, get out your binder and everything is together.

Make sure to mark off on the sheet of paper when you have had the meal so you know you will not need to fix again that month.

It is handy keeping your meal plans because you can look back on them and see what you want to fix again or not.




A Step Further:

One thing that I do, is after I have my 1-30 meals listed, I take another sheet and rewrite the meals in date order. 1-30 and actually put what I plan on having on November 1, 2, 3, etc. SO, one sheet I have 30 meals, I take that list and put it in actual order of when we will be having those meals.



Final Thoughts:

I really hope this technique is easy to follow.  I usually take a 1/2 to a whole day to plan my menu.  If this is not feasible for you, find what works best for you, maybe a couple hours a day will work.  You will be so glad you took the time, because you will not have to give it a second thought for the rest of the month!  If you are like me, I don't mind cooking, it's "what to cook?" that's the problem.

When the kids or hubby say "what's for dinner?" I will be able to tell them, all month! No guess work.



Sunday, October 21, 2012

Sunday Dinner - Pork Tenderloin w/Pan Seared Gravy


I was so proud of myself!  I have been trying to perfect a gravy for my pork tenderloin for a very long time. After countless hours and recipes, I think I finally did it.


 Pork Tenderloin with Pan Seared Gravy


The Recipe:

For the Pork

1 Pork Tenderloin
Lowrys Seasoned Salt
Lemon Pepper
Garlic Powder

Sprinkle the pork with all the above ingredients

Heat 1 T of olive oil in a cast-iron skillet and sear meat on both sides

Add 1/2 C of water and about 2 T of worcestershire sauce to pan. 

Place meat in a 350 degree oven and bake for 45 minutes

The Pan Seared Gravy

1/2 C chicken broth
1 T cornstarch
1 tsp soy sauce
1/2 tsp bottled BBQ sauce
1/2 tsp Wright's liquid smoke
1 tsp worcestershire sauce
Salt, pepper, garlic powder to taste

When the pork comes out the oven, place the pork on a cutting board to rest.

Pour the chicken broth into the pan that had the meat, and heat on high, stirring and scraping the bottom of the skillet with a fork. 

Take some of the chicken broth out into a bowl and stir in corn starch, until well mixed.

Pour the cornstarch mixture back into the pan and stir constantly, until your desired consistency is reached.

Turn down to low and add remaining ingredients, stirring regularly.  

Slice Pork and serve with gravy.

Your finished tenderloin will look something like this:

I also made a side of easy creamy and cheesy potatoes to go with this along with green beans.




Thursday, October 18, 2012

Chocolate Sheet Cake

This dessert will be my dessert of the week soon, but today I just had to  bake one for my open house tonight!  It is a chocolate cake from scratch that is so delicious!  The homemade icing is something special.  I usually add finely chopped walnuts or pecans, but I was out.  Even without the nuts its still the best.  Recipe courtesy of Pioneer Woman: Recipe