Saturday, August 11, 2012

chicken wing afritada


i don't usually brown chicken when i make soups or stews.  i know that it enhances flavor with all the brown stuff after you deglaze the pan, blah blah blah...perhaps i think there's enough flavor already, or perhaps i'm just too lazy.  i don't ever remember my mom browning the chicken first, especially when making afritada.  but, i digress (side note: is it a digression if i started with this topic?  eh...).

anyways, thanks to melissa for getting me off my bum and back onto this blog.  i needed a reason to make afritada...although i'd usually use a whole chicken or thighs, i had a bag of chicken wings in the freezer, so i just used that...why not?

 
chicken wing afritada (serves 6) 
12-20 chicken wing pieces
1 8 oz can tomato sauce
1 medium onion, chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
2 medium carrots, chopped
1 head cauliflower, chopped
1 medium bell pepper, chopped
2 medium red potatoes, cubed
12-20 cherry tomatoes
1 can green peas
1 cup chicken stock
1 cup water
2 tbsp vegetable oil
2 tbsp patis
2 bay leaves
salt & pepper to taste

-heat dutch oven over medium heat and add oil
-saute onion and garlic until soft
-add tomato sauce, chicken stock, bay leaves and patis
-add chicken wings; bring to a simmer
-add potatoes, bell pepper, cauliflower, and tomatoes
-add remaining vegetables and cook until tender
-spice as you like
 

Friday, February 17, 2012

dessert grilled cheese

not the best picture, but i was inspired to make a dessert grilled cheese after 1)my boss made a grilled panino, and 2) remembering that episode of chopped with the lunch ladies, where winner cheryl barbara made a dessert grilled cheese.  now, this one is nowhere as amazing, but mmm...good.  whole wheat bread slices, each slathered with cream cheese, and strawberry preserves in the middle, grilled on the stovetop and eaten with a side of almond milk!

Sunday, December 4, 2011

How do you fattie up green apples? With cheese and bread, of course!

Erica and her brother Ellery found something wonderful to do with the delicious, nutritious green apples in our classroom:  make triple decker gruyére and apple triple decker sandwiches!  Whole wheat bread, of course...oh, and I Can't Believe It's Not Butter Lite...


I would've taken pictures of the end product, but they were eaten and gone by the time I was able to.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

maybe no more spam for my kiddies...

the long holiday (some call it "thanksgiving," other the national day of mourning...i'll go with the latter) is coming up, and i figured it'd be a good idea to cook off some of the stuff that won't be as good (or not good at all) post-holiday.  among those things was a whole tray of eggs.  what better way to get rid of eggs than fried rice?  ok, maybe i'm the only one who thinks that way...

anyways, today i fed my childses garlic fried rice with spam and eggs.  just minutes after DEVOURING the dish, the kids were off-the-wall wild.  maybe it's the holiday.  maybe it's the spam.  i'm gonna chalk it up to the spam and not serve it for awhile...

Monday, November 14, 2011

whole wheat oatmeal chocolate chip pancakes

i gave gabe a recipe for whole wheat oatmeal pancakes about 2 years ago, and told him when it was perfected that he'd was ready to be a husband (or something like that).  we make breakfast at the youth center every other month, and each time, gabe grows a step closer to perfection with the pancakes!
this time around, erica aided gabe in the breakfast-making, and we had a trinity of whole wheat oatmeal pancakes: pineapple, banana, and chocolate chip.  obviously, the chocolate chip pancakes were the highlight of everyone's day.  erica made a special one for joe that looks like a bear.  see?
whole wheat oatmeal chocolate chip pancakes (serves a bunch or a little, depending on how big your pancakes are!)
3/4 c oatmeal
3/4 c whole wheat flour
1/2 c chocolate chips
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/3 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 cups vanilla soymilk
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 large egg, lightly beaten
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tbsp sugar



-soak oatmeal in soymilk.  set aside
-whisk all dry ingredients together

-slowly incorporate sugar and other wet ingredients, including oatmeal mixture.  do not overmix
-cook pancakes on greased skillet, approximately 1 minute on each side
-top with peanut butter and other such delicious things.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

yellowfin tuna deliciousness

my kids ate fish.  fresh fish.  real fish.  fresh fish from the ocean.  AND THEY LIKED IT.  joe's friend caught a grip of yellowfin, and he brought a few slabs in and we had the kids cut it up, season it with a bit of salt, pepper, and chili powder, then i fried it up on the sides and kept most of the mini steaks raw and delicious in the middle.  some of the kids were not so into that, so i cooked most of them up well done.  hey, at least they ate real tuna!
one of the kids asked that I take a fancy food picture.  i know that the above photo is not exactly quality food photography, but whatever...one of my childses designed the plate and put the parsley leaves on top for added prettiness.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

(healthy) spam hash!

ok, maybe "healthy" is the wrong word.  can spam ever be healthy?  to say that there's a "healthy" way to serve spam, or a "healthy" version of spam seems moderately blasphemous.  the low sodium and turkey versions are still pretty bad for you, but fellow fatties like to say it's "healthy" to legitimize consuming the loveliness that is spam.  we might as well have the regular kind, yea?  whatever...
erica was craving spam, but we didn't have any regular ole' white potatoes.  i pointed out that we had a plethora of sweet potatoes left over from our last diabetes-friendly dinner, but she wouldn't have it.  "NO!" she exclaimed to the offensive thought of sweet potato invading the perfection of spam/egg/white potato.
i went ahead and made it anyways, with both of my present co-workers (erica and joe) saying that they'd at least try it.  the same recipe as the spam hash with white potatoes was used, except (obviously...) the papas were replaced with the lovely orange camotes.  to bring out the savory aspect of the sweet potatoes, i added a tsp each of chili powder, black pepper and cumin.


the result?  i thought it was pretty good.  the co-workers noted that it wasn't amazing, but it sufficed.  hey, at least you got the beta carotene, vitamins C&E, and ate a food lower on the glycemic index than white potatoes, yea?  yea...