Showing posts with label Sunday Night Dinner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunday Night Dinner. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Sunday Night Dinner

This post is a little delayed, oopsie! 

Sunday, 1/4/10 Recipie: Chinese - Chicken Lettuce Wraps

This Sunday I made:

Sunday, January 31, 2010
From: Martha Stewart online

Farfelle with Smoked Salmon and Cream Cheese*
makes about 4 servings
total prep time: 10 minutes
total cook time: 20 minutes

Ingredients:
12 ounces farfalle (bow-tie pasta)
Coarse salt and ground pepper
1 small red onion, quartered and thinly sliced
2 ounces bar cream cheese, cut into small pieces (plan on using more)
1/4 cup fresh dill, coarsely chopped, or 1 teaspoon dried dill weed (I used fresh rosemary)
2 tablespoons capers, drained and rinsed
4 ounces smoked salmon, cut into bite-size pieces

Instructions:
Cook pasta in a large pot of boiling salted water until al dente, according to package instructions. Reserve 1/2 cup pasta water. 
Add onion to pot; immediately drain pasta mixture, and return to pot.  (I kept it on a low flame so the onion softened)
Add cream cheese, dill, capers, and salmon to pasta. 
Toss, adding reserved pasta water a little at a time to create a thin sauce that coats farfalle (you may not need all the water). 
Season lightly with salt and pepper. Serve. (I topped it with a little Parmesan!)

What I thought:
I think I'll use baked salmon next time.  The idea is on the right track and the flavors are great but the smoked salmon is a little over powering.  I didn't get seconds, lets put it that way!
You'll want to eat the dish right away - if it sits it becomes sticky, so you can either use more pasta water or more cream cheese to keep it saucy!  

*I was lazy and forgot to download my photo, so I used the one from the Martha Stewart website

Monday, January 25, 2010

New Series: Sunday Night Dinners

When I was in college I loved Sunday nights!  

Sunday usually meant recovering from Saturday's rugby game and Saturday night's rugby party.  In the evening when we'd come back to life, my roommates and few friends would join us as we made dinner and watched ABC's Sunday night lineup. At the time, the lineup included: Extreme Makeover: Home Edition, Grey's Anatomy, and Desperate Housewives.

These days, I simply reminisce about past Sunday Nights.  I continue to cook, not as often as I used to, but now the dinner is for one - maybe three if Jackie and Nolan are around.  Time to change that.  I've decided to venture into new cookbooks and find fresh new recipies to spice up my Sunday nights and enjoy them as much as I did once upon a time! 

For Sunday Night Dinners, I'll include a recipe, a photo, and a critique!  Enjoy!

Sunday January 24, 2010
 From Magazine: Cuisine at Home: Slow Cooker Menus


chinese-chicken lettuce wraps 


makes 6 servings - great for an appetizer or meal
Total prep time: 20 minutes
Total cook time: 3ish hours



Ingredients:
Chicken:
1 Tbsp. sesame oil
2 lbs. ground chicken or turkey
1 Tbsp. minced gingerroot
1/4 cup dry sherry
1/2 cup hoisin sauce (where you'd find soy sauce)
2 Tbsp. soy sauce
1 Tbsp. chili garlic sauce (I just used chili sauce)
1 8oz. can of sliced water chestnuts (drained and coarsely chopped)
2 Tbsp. rice vinegar
Salt to taste

Wrap:
1/2 cup diced red bell pepper
1/4 cup minced chives (I used green onions because I am more likely to use them than chives in the future)
2 Tbsp. toasted sesame seeds
12 small Bibb lettuce leaves (I used butter lettuce)

Instructions:
Heat oil in skillet over med-high heat.  Add chicken, cook for 10 minutes, breaking up chunks.  Add gingerroot, cook 2 minutes. Deglaze skillet with sherry, cook until liquid has evaporated.  Transfer to slow cooker.
Combine hoisin sauce, soy sauce, and chili sauce and stir into meat mixture.  Cover and cook on high heat for 2-3 hours or low heat for 3-4 hours.  Stir in water chestnuts, vinegar, and salt.
To serve, spoon 1/2 cup portion of meat mixture into lettuce leaf, top with red pepper, chives, and sesame seeds.
ENJOY!

What I thought:
I ate 3 leaves of Asian goodness and was full.  A serving is 2 leaves which according to the magazine equals 306 calories, 15g total fat.

It was more effort than I would have like to put into a "crock pot" meal but it turned out delicious.  I like that you can prepare it early and have time to do other things while it absorbs flavor!  The meat is really tasty - sweet and tangy.  The red pepper and chestnuts give it a satisfying crunch.  Overall I give it a B+.

I also used our new food processor to make ground chicken - I used 2.5 lbs of chicken thighs and it was fun to make such a fresh ground meat!  Plus, it was cheaper than ground meat!