Showing posts with label tomato sauce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomato sauce. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Enchilada Casserole With Home Made Red Sauce


Last night I wanted Mexican for dinner.  I was cooking, so it was my choice right?  Right!  If you follow this blog, you know my love for Mexican food and flavors.  They are my favorite, hands down anytime.

I had all the ingredients to make enchiladas which are also my favorite next to tamales.  I have never had the gumption to make tamales as they are quite a process, but one of these days I'ma gonna do it.  Really I am.  You will be the first to know if and when I do.

Enchiladas are also a process.  Have you ever tried to fill and roll corn tortillas?  They split unless you heat them in hot oil or you can dip them in the warm red sauce before you roll them.  It is messy and I am not very proficient at this technique or very patient. (Uh oh, cat's out of the bag).   If you don't do one of these two, then your enchiladas are cracked and all the filling is spilling out and they don't look very pretty.  Remember, I am not a chef nor have I ever worked in a Mexican restaurant, so I go for the easy way - better known as my way.  Hey, it works!  If you love enchiladas too, you are going to be SO happy I showed you my fake enchilada recipe.

I do make my red sauce from scratch.  It is a recipe from Allrecipes.com and it is easy, takes 10 minutes and is fabulous!  Doesn't take much longer than opening a can of prepared sauce and heating it up.

Here is what you need for the sauce:

1/4 cup vegetable oil
2 TBSP flour
1/4 cup chili powder (I use Mexene which is my personal favorite)
1 8 oz can tomato sauce
1 1/2 cups water
1/4 tsp cumin
1 clove garlic, pressed or minced super fine
salt to taste

Heat oil in a skillet or deep saucepan over medium high heat.  Stir in flour and chili powder, reduce the heat to medium.  Cook until lightly browned, stirring constantly so the flour doesn't burn.

Gradually stir in tomato sauce, water, cumin, and garlic until smooth.  Cook over medium heat approximately 10 minutes or until thickened slightly.  Season with salt to taste.

This sauce is as good as any you will get in a restaurant.  We LOVE it.  Now, to make the enchilada casserole, here is what you need.

12 corn tortillas (use flour if that is your preference, but enchiladas are made with corn tortillas)
2 pounds ground beef
1 large onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, minced.
2 packages taco seasoning
1 8 oz block cheddar cheese, grated

Brown the ground beef and onions in a large skillet.  Add taco seasoning and garlic. Mix thoroughly.   Drain ground beef if necessary.  (I use grass fed local beef and there is nothing to drain.)

Now to assemble the casserole.  You need a 9x13 baking dish.  Line the bottom of the dish with 6 corn tortillas.
Cover the tortillas with the browned ground beef mix.
Cover the ground beef with 2/3s of the grated cheese.
Drizzle with some of the red sauce.  Now, cover this with 6 more corn tortillas.  (Forgot to take a picture, oops).

Pur the remaining red sauce over the corn tortillas.
Look how beautiful that red sauce is and it tastes absolutely divine!

Sprinkle the remaining grated cheese over the red sauce.  If you want more cheese, go for it!
Bake at 350 degrees for about 30 minutes, or until the cheese is melted and the sauce is bubbling.  Remove from oven and serve!

We had 4 grown men here for dinner last night and me.  This casserole got RAVE reviews.  Get that?  RAVE reviews!  Dan declared it better than our favorite Mexican restaurant's enchiladas which is quite a compliment.  We had this with black beans and Mexican rice.  Delicious.

Give this recipe a try the next time you are hungry for South of the border/Tex Mex flavors.  It will hit the spot.  You could easily halve this if you wanted, just use half the red sauce and refrigerate the rest for another meal.  Yum.  Yum.  Yum.  All I can say.

Everyday Donna

Things to Remember:

When cooking, sometimes it is okay to do things a little differently, especially if the end result is basically the same, takes less time and is easier to accomplish.  That's my philosophy.   donna




Friday, January 13, 2012

Hey Gillian - Here's Your Vegetable Soup Recipe

So let's talk about vegetable soup and all the ways it can be made.  I had a request from my friend Gillian yesterday asking if I had a recipe for vegetable soup that I would be willing to share.  Why yes, Gillian.  I am more than happy to discuss the beauty of vegetable soup and tell you how I make it.  There are so many ways to make it actually and they are all good.  For me, it just depends on what I have available.
You can make vegetable soup vegetarian style with no meat, or you can use beef, chicken, Italian sausage, hamburger, turkey or kielbasa.  I have used all of the above.

The most important feature of vegetable soup is the stock you start with.  You can make it from scratch (which is a lot of work) by using beef bones, chicken bones, a ham bone, turkey bones - whatever you have available and then you simmer it in water with onions and spices to get a nice, rich broth.  Or, you can use "stock in a box" which is so much easier and available in so many flavors at really reasonable prices.  Trader Joe's has lot of different flavors and so does Whole Foods.  I get mine at Aldis.  Theirs is MSG and gluten free  and low sodium which is very important to me - especially no MSG!   I either use my 12 quart stock pot or my dutch oven, depending on how much soup I am making.  This vegetable soup I made in my stock pot.   I made it almost full to the top so I could share it with some "sickly" family.  That left enough for us to have here at home also.

Here is a sidetrack, which may happen several times during this post.  If you are making soup, make a lot!  You can put some in zip lock bags and freeze it for later without having to go to the trouble to make it all over again.  It keeps very well and is just as good when thawed and reheated as when you first made it.  Or, share it with a friend or family - even co workers.  Soup is a really budget friendly meal and everyone loves soup!

Okay, back to where I was.  If I am making chicken vegetable soup (like in the picture above) I put in two boxes of chicken stock and an equal amount of water.  So that is about 8-10 cups of stock and 8-10 cups of water.  I add 3 skinless, boneless chicken breasts and cook them for about 30 minutes until done through.  Remove the chicken breasts, cut into bite sized pieces and add back to the soup at the end of cooking to heat through.

While the chicken is cooking, I peel and cut up potatoes (about 4-5), carrots (about 4-5 whole carrots), 2 medium sized onions, and 2 ribs of celery.  This is the "vegetable" base for my soup.  I also add a 32 oz can of whole tomatoes with juice and an 8 ounce can of tomato sauce.  (Right now, I am using the quart bags of frozen tomatoes I put up this summer.  Yum.)  I also like to add a couple of diced turnips or some cabbage that I have cut into bite sized wedges.  The turnips and/or cabbage give the soup a really delicious, delicate flavor that we love.   Cook all these vegetables first, since they take longer than the frozen vegetables and beans that you may add.

After you have removed the chicken breasts from the pot, add the tomatoes, tomato sauce, onions, celery, potatoes, carrots, and turnips or cabbage.  Let them cook until the potatoes and carrots are beginning to get soft.

Now, you can add any vegetables that you want or have on hand.  Be imaginative.  Use things you like. I added  frozen green peas, frozen corn, frozen green beans, a can of kidney beans, and some kale which I had chopped into bite sized pieces.  You can use cannellini beans (which are white kidney beans), great northern beans, black beans, butter beans, black eyed peas, or everybody's favorite - lime beans.  (not)  I also added some zucchini which we love.  At this point, it's your vegetable choice in any amounts you choose.  You may need to add a little more water as some of it evaporates during cooking.

Sometimes I add spinach toward the end because it cooks very quickly.  You can also use some turnip greens or collard greens cut into small pieces.  How about some asparagus cut in bite sized pieces?  There are so many vegetables to choose from.  Be inventive!

Now, here is my secret for really flavorful soup.  Add the end piece or "rind" from a parmesan cheese wedge.  Don't EVER throw those lovely pieces away.  Save them in a baggie in your fridge for special events like soup making!!  I learned this trick from my son in love Todd and it is well worth passing on.  The parmesan adds a lovely saltiness  and flavor without making the soup too salty and you won't really taste the parmesan!  The stock in a box is salty (I use low sodium) already so I rarely have to add much additional salt.   Salt to your preference.  Vegetables can soak up a lot of salt, but be careful and don't over salt.  If you do, add a whole potato for a bit and then remove.  It will soak up the extra salt.  Also, use lots of fresh cracked black pepper.

Now, my other secret.  I like to add macaroni or rice to the soup.  Usually, I use elbow macaroni. I throw in several hands full and let it cook until done.   If you like alphabet soup, use the cute little alphabet pasta you can buy in a box.  Your kids will love it!  The pasta takes on the wonderful tomato/vegetable flavors and is soooooo good.  It may be my favorite part of the soup.  If you eat gluten free, just use gluten free pasta.  If you want to use rice, add about 1/2 cup to 3/4 cup depending on how much soup you are making.

Now, it's time to add your meat back into the soup.  I cut the chicken breasts into 1 inch bite sized pieces and put it back into the pot just to warm it up.  Ta dah! You are done.  Ladle into a serving bowl and eat. Oh my goodness good!

If you are using left over beef - say from a roast - now is the time to add it back in.  If you are using beef bones or beef ribs, use beef stock in place of chicken stock, add the bones or ribs to the stock and cook them until done like the chicken breasts.  Remove them from the soup when they are done, dice up the meat and add it back in at the end.  If using sausage like kielbasa, it is already cooked, so add it in about halfway through so it flavors the soup.  Italian sausage is uncooked.  Remove the casing and cut into 1 inch pieces, add it at the beginning with your "core" vegetables and let it cook all the way through.  Italian sausage makes a really tasty soup.

 This is what I have been trying to say through this whole post.   Vegetable soup is an individual thing.   Ours is a little different every time I make it, depending on what I have to throw in.  The base is always the same  - otherwise, who knows?  You can add vegetables in any quantity you want - make as little or as much as you want.  You always want enough for the second day. because soups always taste better the second day!

If it is as cold where  you are as it is here, it's a perfect day for vegetable soup!  Allow yourself a couple of hours for the whole process, but it is more than worth it.  The chopping and cooking is sort of Zen.  It's relaxing and who doesn't love the final outcome?  Delicious, nutritious, cost effective vegetable soup.  Yum.  Yum.  Yum.  You may want to add some hot, crusty bread, or a grilled cheese sandwich and you are good to go!  For me, the soup is all I need!

So Gillian, I don't know if this helps or answers your question, but I hope so.  If you make some soup, let me know how it goes and how much you like it!  Everyone else,  you let me know too.  Now, I am dreaming of soup.  Oh look, it's lunch time.  Yay!

Everyday Donna

Things to Remember:

Soup is soul satisfying in so many ways.  Make some and share it!  donna

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Italian Sausages With Rigatoni - A Great Pasta Dish

Our youngest son, Tyler,  and his girlfriend came to dinner Sunday evening and I fixed a recipe that I have had since about 1973.  I found it in a magazine when our oldest daughter was just a baby and we had moved into our first house.  It is rigatoni with Italian sausages and it is so good I think I could eat it about every day. It's also easy to make and makes about 8-10 big servings.

The recipe came from an actress by the name of Olivia Hussey.  Anyone know who she is?  She was 15 years old when she starred in Romeo and Juliet in 1968 which was directed by Franco Zeffirelli and produced by Dino DeLaurentis (grandfather of Giada DeLaurentis).  Dan and I saw it at the theater when we were dating.  I know that was a long time ago, but it is still one of the most beautiful movies I have ever seen to this day.  If you have never seen it, try to find it.  The cinematography is beautiful, the story is so moving and Olivia Hussey made the most beautiful Juliet ever.  She also must be one good cook, because I love this recipe.  Another bit of trivia, she was married to Dean Martin's son Dino of Dino, Desi, and Billy.  Dino was killed in a plane crash while they were married.  Anybody out there old enough to remember Dino, Desi and Billy?  They were a very popular musical trio back in the day. Yikes.  I am certainly showing my age here.

As for the recipe, it is really, really good and is another variation on a pasta dish when you have grown weary of the same old, same old.  Here is what you need.

Ingredients:

1 pound Italian style sauge (sometimes I use sweet, sometimes hot, depends on my mood)
1 medium onion, chopped
1 large clove garlic, chopped
1 green pepper, seeded and chopped
1 8 oz can tomato sauce
1 large can tomatoes undrained (32 oz) (I used tomatoes I put in the freezer this summer - yum)
1 cup water
1 tsp dried organo leaves  (I also add 1 tsp dried basil and 1 tsp dried thyme)
a pinch of red pepper flakes optional
1 tsp salt
1/8 tsp black pepper
Fresh parmesan cheese (or grated will do)

1 pound rigatoni pasta

Take casings off sausages and cut into 1 inch pieces.  Cook in a large pan (I use my dutch oven) over moderate heat stirring occasionally until browned.  Remove sausage and set aside.  Add onion, green pepper, and garlic to saucepan - cook until tender stirring occasionally to keep garlic from burning.  Add tomato sauce, tomatoes, water, spices, salt, and pepper.  Add cooked sausage.  Stir and bring mixture to a boil.  Cover and reduce heat to low.  Simmer for 1.5  hours stirring occasionally.

Rigatoni

About 20 minutes before serving, add 2 tbsp salt to 6 quarts boiling water.  Gradually stir in rigatoni so that water continues to boil.  Cook about 20 minutes or just until al dente.  Drain thoroughly.  Serve sauce over rigatoni.

I add fresh grated parmesan cheese or you can use grated parmesan from a can if that is what you have.  The rigatoni is so perfect with this sauce because it is a fat noodle with lots of ridges in it to hold the sauce.  It is one of my favorite pastas to use because it has a nice "bite" to it.  Chewy and delicious.

This is one of my all time favorite recipes.  The sauce is just thin enough that it is excellent for dipping hot crusty bread into.  The bread soaks up all the flavorful juices and yum!  Makes my mouth water just writing about it.  Tyler ate about half a loaf of bread by dipping it in the sauce.  Yes, it is that good.  The Italian sausage gives it so much flavor.  It also makes great left overs.  I just pour the remaining sauce over the remaining rigatoni, stir it up to coat the pasta and store it in a covered bowl.  Stick in the microwave the next day and, boy howdy, you have another great meal.

Serve this with a green salad and your dinner is complete!  Your family will ask for this again.  Give it a try - and maybe serve it while watching the 1968 version of Romeo and Juliet.  Just keep some kleenex handy.

Everyday Donna

Things to Remember:

“The less you open your heart to others, the more your heart suffers.” Deepak Chopra