Showing posts with label fall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fall. Show all posts

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Veggieful Beef Chili

Background: I needed, as in, NEEDED a good, relatively easy chili recipe this autumn that had lots of veggies, so I checked out some of the best rated ones on allrecipes.com and made up my own.

Serves ~12  (I can usually get 12 out of it for our family of four eaters, including 4- and 6-year-old boys who eat like teenagers. They will eat us out of house and home in 10 years...)

Approximate time, from prep to table: ~1 hour, plus simmering time as desired

Ingredients:
2 lbs ground beef (I use ground round), browned (could also use leftovers from a pork roast)
3 big stalks of celery, chopped finely
3 huge carrots, chopped finely
1-2 green peppers, chopped finely
4 medium onions, chopped
1 tsp garlic
16 oz can of tomato sauce (2 8 oz)
30 oz can of diced tomatoes
2 cans rinsed beans (black, chili, navy, great northern--whatever)
15 oz can of pumpkin (not the pumpkin pie filling, which has added sugar)
(or, leftover sweet potato, mashed up)
1 tsp bouillon
4+ Tbsp chili powder
1 tsp cumin
1/2 tsp cloves
~1 cup of water
Shredded cheese to garnish
Serve with corn bread, tortilla chips, crackers, fritos, etc.

Directions:
Brown the beef in your stock pot, adding S and P to taste.  Transfer to a medium bowl.  Pour the grease back into the stock pot if you want your chili to taste good.  Any leftover bacon grease that you happened to save?  Add some! Those depression-era grandmas know what they're doin'! Yum!

before onions are added

Saute the celery, carrots, green peppers, onions, and garlic in the good stuff, or use coconut oil or butter or whatever.  I chop as I go on this step, but always chop from celery down to onions because of how long it takes the celery and such to cook.

sauteed veggies!

When your onions are translucent and even the celery seems soft, stir in the tomato sauce, diced tomatoes, beans, and pumpkin/sweet potato (optional).

just veggies so far

Stir in bouillon (or 1 cup stock, if you have it!), chili powder, cumin, cloves, and browned beef.

Better Than Bouillon Vegetable Base is my fave.

before adding water
Add water as needed so that you can simmer it properly for as long as you want.  I prefer a stew-ish chili.

De-liiiii-cious!

Serve with shredded cheese to garnish and corn bread, tortilla chips, crackers, fritos, etc.  I have to say, Jiffy Corn Muffin mix is easy, delish, and cheap!

Enjoy!

Note/Tips: This freezes well and is great for making to take to someone with a new baby because you'll still have dinner for your own family! Win-win!

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Indian Harvest Shepherds Pie



Background: I enjoy finding ways to incorporate seasonal ingredients and tastes into many of my dishes, replacing more common ingredients with new and interesting ingredients, and mixing themes from different cultures into the same dish. This recipe has all of those elements! The Indian Harvest Shepherds pie is a twist on a traditional shepherds pie, but uses ground turkey instead of beef, sweet potatoes instead of traditional, and it incorporates quinoa as a low carb/high protein grain. The spices are a mix of American harvest spices and traditional Indian Spices. The combination is a textural and palatable adventure that is low carb, low fat, and full of flavor.

Originally from: Inspired from plain ground turkey meatloaf!

Serves ~ 4 -5

Approximate time, from prep to table: 1:15

Ingredients:
- 1 to 1.25 lbs of ground turkey
- 4 large sweet potatoes
- 1 large red onion, chopped
- 2 cloves of garlic, chopped, or 1 Tbs garlic powder
- 1 pint grape tomatoes
- 1/2 cup of quinoa, uncooked
- 1 egg, beaten
- 1.5 cups of raisins (best if mix of golden and red)
- 2 Tbs finely chopped fresh ginger, or 1 tsp powdered ginger
- olive or canola oil
- 2 Tbs butter
- 1 cup whole milk, or cream
- 1.5 tsp cury powder
- 2 tsp salt
- 1 tsp red pepper flakes, or clancy's fancy hot sauce (optional)
- 1.5 tsp cinnamon
- pinch of nutmeg
- 2 cups of water

Directions:

Cut the Sweet Potatoes into quarters, or another chunky shape, and set them on a baking sheet drizzled with oil. You will be mashing or blending them later, so how you bake them is up to you. Bake the potatoes at 375 for 35 min.
In a large pan, saute on medium high heat 1/2 of the chopped onion, the chopped ginger (if powder add later), chopped garlic in oil. Saute until the onions begin to become translucent and the garlic is lightly browned. Garlic will brown faster than onions so you may wish to add it later. Once the onions are translucent, stir in the quinoa and 1 cup of raisins, and let them absorb some of the oil and flavors for 1 minute, then add the 1 cup of water and let it cook down on medium high heat - it should be bubbling. Once most of the water has simmered off, test the quinoa, if it is still hard, stir in 1/2 cup of water and let it simmer until the quinoa becomes softer but still somewhat firm (it will never be as soft as rice, it is more like couscous). Once the quinoa is ready and all water is simmered away, set the pan off the heat and to the side.

In a large glass mixing bowl, mix the ground turkey, egg, salt, cinnamon, curry powder, red pepper flakes or clancys fancy hot sauce (optional heat and yum). Now add the saute mix from the pan you set aside and stir until all is evenly mixed. Take out a 8x12 to 8x16 inch baking pan, lightly coat the base in butter or oil, and spread in the turkey mixture - it should be about 1.5-2 inches thick.

By now your potatoes should be done baking, and out of the oven. Place them into a blender or mixing bowl (I prefer a submersion blender for this part), pour 2/3 cup milk or cream, butter (optional), nutmeg, and a dash of salt and cinnamon. Blend or hand mash until nice and soft. Take the mashed potatoes and spread them evenly over the turkey in the baking pan. Bake for 20 minutes at 400 F, and then broil for 1-2 min on High, until the top of the potatoes have a very light browning on top.

While the shepherds pie is baking, saute the remaining 1/2 onion, pint of grape tomatoes, pinch of cinnamon and salt, and raisins in a pan with oil. Add a little cream or whole milk for consistency if you desire once the onions start to brown. Cook this until the grape tomatoes "pop" and their skin visibly breaks in one spot. This is your "chutney" base.

Once the shepherds pie is done baking take it out and allow it to cool briefly. Put a few scoops of the chutney in the base of a large bowl or plate, and place a few square of the pie on top and serve!