Thursday, May 23, 2013

Lasagna Soup



This recipe is for a pressure cooker, but it would be super easy to make in a regular pot too.

  • Lbs. Spicy Italian Sausage (You can also use lean ground beef or even ground turkey)
  • 2 16oz. Cans of Chopped Tomatoes (Omit one can if you want less calories)
  • 1 8oz. Can of Tomato Paste (Omit completely if you want less sodium and calories, which I did so I don’t have a photo of it)
  • 1 Whole Yellow Onion, chopped
  • 3 Cloves of Fresh Garlic, minced
  • 2 Tbsp. Italian Seasoning 
  • 4 Cups of Chicken Broth
  • Package of Mafalda Pasta, which look like cute little pieces of lasagna (You can use broken pieces of lasagna as well, which is what I did. Or fusili pasta)
Cheese Balls:
  • Shredded Mozzarella
  • Low Fat Ricotta Cheese
In your handy dandy pressure cooker’s inner cooking pan/pot, put a bit of olive oil and heat up the browning feature if your model has it.  Otherwise you can do it on the stove in a saucepan.
Crumble the sausage or whatever meat you are using and brown the meat in the pot.  Add the Italian Seasoning and lightly saute everything together.  Turn off the browning feature.
Add in the minced garlic and chopped onions.  Also the cans of chopped tomato and tomato paste.  Give everything a good stir.
Now pour in the Chicken Broth or water.  I did a mix of broth and water until my pot was at the MAX line full capacity.  Make sure not to over fill pass this line or you’re going to have a mess.
DO NOT ADD THE PASTA YET!  We’ll do that later.
Close the lid and lock it.  Set the pressure valve to Airtight.  Program your pressure cooker to cook for 10-minutes.  Or if it has a pre-set SOUP function, go ahead and press that.
That’s it.  It’s all ready to go.
Now, I want to make sure everyone knows that when you’re making a large pot of soup that has a high liquid content, the pressure cooker will take longer to come to pressure because it has to take time to heat up the liquid inside it.  Once it is all heated and the pressure has been reached, the cook time will then begin and count down.
While the pressure cooker is doing its thing, you can make the cheese balls!  Lasagna is known for all its cheesy goodness.  And I know cheese is really not the way to go if you’re trying to watch your calorie count.  But it’s okay, you’re just using a little bit of cheese.  It’s nothing compared to the baked lasagna that’s loaded with gallons and gallons of thick fattening cheese in layers and layers.
To avoid making a mess, use a clean plate and put some shredded mozzarella cheese onto the plate.  Then scoop out about 2-3 tablespoons of ricotta cheese and mash it onto the plate and mix it with the mozzarella.  Mash and roll until both cheeses are incorporated and roll it into a nice tight ball.  You can choose to add some dry parsley and dry basil to the cheese balls too.  Make however many balls you want and cover with saran wrap.  Refrigerate until you’re ready to serve the soup.
Whenever the pressure cooker has finished pressure cooking, adjust the pressure valve to Exhaust to release all the pressure.  For a big pot of soup, it may take almost 2-minutes for it all too release completely.  Once all the pressure is released, open the lid.  The unit should also have gone to the Keep Warm setting automatically.
Give everything a good stir.
Add about 1-2 cups of pasta to the soup.  Don’t add too much because the pasta have the tendency to soak up a lot of the liquid and get really bloated looking.  Add just enough for the amount of servings you want.  Season with salt but don’t go overboard.  I always leave salting my food towards the end or when I’m actually serving it.  Shut the lid to the pressure cooker again and program it to cook for just ONE more minute.
Once that has completed, go through the usual cycle to release the pressure and unlock the lid.
Ladle a nice portion into a serving bowl and drop a cheese ball into the center of the soup.  Serve while it’s nice and hot!  The cheese will melt and make the soup sort of creamy. 

Friday, April 12, 2013

Devil's upside down cheese (or is it flan?) cake

I'm well aware that a half eaten cake is just not that beautiful, but I've come to accept that I'll never get a picture before we consume, so this is what I've got. 

This bad boy comes from www.everydayfoodstorage.NET. I saw it on TV a while ago, pinned it and forgot about it. I rediscovered it yesterday and had to make it. I love that it can be made with food storage items. I didn't love that it took 2.5 hours to make. However, it was still simple and well worth the time. My family raved about it!


Ingredients:

  • box chocolate devil's food cake mix
  • water (amount per cake mix)
  • oil (amount per cake mix) or bean puree (in the same amount as the oil-to learn how to use the bean puree for oil click HERE)
  • eggs (amount per cake mix) or 1 T dry egg powder + 2 T water for each egg
  • 1 (11 oz.) jar caramel sundae topping
  • 1 (14 oz.) can sweetened condensed milk*
  • 1 (12 oz.) can evaporated milk*
  • 1/2 c.. fresh milk*
  • 1 (8 oz.) package cream cheese
  • 1 t. vanilla
  • 5 eggs (powdered eggs can be used but it will change the texture a little-use a heaving 1/2 c. egg powder + 1/2 c. water
  • Or omit the sweetened condensed milk, evaporated milk and fresh milk and use:
  • 1 2/3 c. water
  • 1 c. sugar
  • 1 2/3 c. dry non-instant powdered milk or 3 1/3 c. dry instant powdered milk
  • 1 T butter

Method:

Heat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a large 12-cup Bundt pan with nonstick coating. Pour caramel into prepared pan. Prepare cake mix according to package directions and pour cake batter into the Bundt pan over the caramel topping.

To make the flan: Pour condensed, evaporated and fresh milks into a blender with the cream cheese, vanilla and eggs. (If using powdered milk, just add all ingredients to the blender.) Mix well.

Pour flan mixture very slowly over the cake batter. (You will see pieces of cake batter floating to the top-this is normal). Spray a piece of aluminum foil with non-stick spray and cover the pan TIGHTLY with aluminum foil. (This step is VERY important.)

Set the Bundt pan into a large pan and set on the oven rack and slide into the oven. Carefully pour hot water into the larger pan to a depth of 2 inches (The Bundt pan will be sitting in two inches of water).

Bake for 2 hours (Yes, I mean it TWO hours-don't worry, nothing will burn, I promise!). After the two hours, remove cake from water and allow to cool for 15 minutes. Peel off the aluminum foil. Invert cake onto a large plat with rim (or you'll have a caramel mess everywhere). Cool completely then refrigerate. Refrigerate leftovers.

NOTE: Even though the flan is poured on top of the cake batter, it will sink to the bottom of the pan.

Clam Chowder


3 (6.5 ounce) cans minced clams
1 cup minced onion
1 cup diced celery
2 cups cubed potatoes
1 cup diced carrots
3/4 cup butter
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
3 C. milk
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1 1/2 teaspoons salt
ground black pepper to taste

DIRECTIONS:
Drain juice from clams into a large skillet over the onions, celery, potatoes and carrots. Add water Just to cover, and cook over medium heat until tender.
Meanwhile, in a large, heavy saucepan, melt the butter over medium heat. Whisk in flour until smooth. Whisk in flour and stir constantly until thick and smooth. Stir in vegetables and clam juice. Heat through, but do not boil.
Stir in clams just before serving. If they cook too much they get tough. When clams are heated through, stir in vinegar, and season with salt and pepper.






Monday, April 8, 2013

Hamburger buns

I never have buns on hand and sometimes I just don't want to go shopping, so these are a good alternative. They took a bit of time to rise, but they were very easy to make overall.

Yield 10 buns:

13 1/ 4 to 3 3/4 cups flour
1 pack active dry yeast (2 1/4 tsp.)
1 cup milk
1/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup butter, margarine, or shortening
1 beaten egg

Sitr together 1 1/4 cups of the flour and the yeast. In a saucepan, warm the milk, sugar, butter, and 3/4 tsp. of salt until warm and butter almost melts.  Add to the flour mixture and beaten egg. Beat with an electric mixer on low for 30 seconds. Beat on high for 3 minutes.

Turn out dough and knead in the remaining flour until you have a moderately stiff and elastic dough.

Place in greased bowl. Cover and let rise until double (about 1 hour).

Punch down and shape into 10 circles that you flatten into 4 inch circles. Place on greased baking sheet and let rise about 30 minutes.

Bake at 375 for 15-18 minutes.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Coconut Cupcakes

1 box white cake mix
1 can coconut milk
4 egg whites

Frosting:
8 oz. cream cheese
1 cube butter
3-31/2 c. powdered sugar
1 tsp. coconut extract

Combine cake mix, coconut milk and egg whites then mix as the box directs (no oil or water). Bake 18-20 minutes, according to box directions

Mix frosting until smooth. Smother cupcakes, then dip them in shredded, sweetened coconut to make them extra pretty.

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Chinese Orange Beef


Recipe taken from OurBestBites.com and slightly adapted from ATK Quick Family Cook Book

Ingredients
2-3 teaspoons grated orange zest (I just zest 1 whole orange)
1/2 cup fresh orange juice
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
2 tablespoons rice vinegar
2 tablespoons soy sauce
2 tablespoons Asian chili sauce
2 teaspoons grated fresh ginger
2 teaspoons cornstarch
vegetable oil for pan
1-1/2 pounds flank steak, trimmed and sliced thin across grain and lightly sprinkled with salt and pepper (to clarify: that’s one steak, that weighs about 1.5 pounds)
3-4 green onions, sliced
hot white or brown rice for serving

Instructions
Whisk orange zest and orange juice, brown sugar, vinegar, soy sauce, chili sauce, ginger, and cornstarch together in a bowl.
Heat a large nonstick skillet over medium high heat. Drizzle pan with oil and tilt to coat. Add half of beef, breaking up any clumps and let cook without stirring for one minute. Stir beef and continue to cook until browned, about 2 minutes; transfer to a bowl and cover. Repeat with remaining beef and transfer to bowl.
Whisk sauce to recombine, add to now-empty skillet, and cook over medium heat until thickened, about 2-3 minutes. Return cooked beef, with any accumulated juices, to skillet and toss to combine. Serve over rice and garnish with green onions.

Monday, February 25, 2013

Pizza Dough Part Deuce

Pizza Crust

1 1/2 cups warm water
2 tsp. yeast
2 tsp. sugar
about 2 3/4 cups bread flour
1/3 cup semolina flour (optional)
1 tsp. salt

Makes 1 large pizza (so I double it to make 2)

Mix warm water, yeast and sugar in mixing bowl.  Let the yeast bloom.  When it is foamy on top, add the salt, semolina flour and about 2 cups of the bread flour (if making a single recipe).  Let knead in the mixing bowl and then gradually add more bread flour until the dough pulls together.  It is better to err on the side of slightly sticky rather than too stiff for this dough.  Let is knead for a few more minutes and then let it rise for about 1 hour.  

For pizza, roll out dough and place on a greased pizza pan.  Also, I like to spray the edge of the dough with a little oil so it browns better in the oven.  Top with sauce, cheese and toppings.

Bake at 500 degrees for about 9 minutes.

Eat!