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More Comfort Food-Mexican Chicken Casserole

So the core foodnuts had an Academy Awards Night last week, and I made my Mexican Chicken Casserole. One pound of cheese for 7 people? But of course it was great!!! And I won the pool too. Be warned- this is not gourmet food. It has actual cans of soup like your grandmother used to use!!

Mexican Chicken Casserole

4-6 chicken breast, cooked and cut or shredded (I boil mine in water for 20 min)
12 corn tortillas, medium or large
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 can cream of mushroom soup
1 cup milkMexican Chicken Casserole
sliced olives, or mushrooms, or onions- 1 or 2 cups
14-16 oz green chile salsa- mild
1 lb cheddar cheese- shredded

Cut torillas into 1 inch strips. Mix soups, milk, salsa, olives/mushrooms/onion.
Grease large shallow casserole dish. Add 2 Tbls water. Place ½ torilla strips covering bottom. Cover with ½ the chicken and then ½ the sauce. Repeat layers. Top with the cheese. Cover and refrigerate 24 hours. Remove from fridge and let sit 1 hour before baking.
 Cover with tinfoil and Bake at 350 for 1 ½ hours. Remove the tinfoil for the last 45 minutes.

Minestrone Genovese

Genoa, Italy

This is just a fabulous soup, and worth a little effort.

Buy a container of basil pesto from the deli section, fresh, not canned. 6-8 oz
For the soup:
3 T olive oil
¼ lb spinach washed and coarsely chopped
¼ lb beet greens washed and coarsely chopped
¼ lb dry lima beans, soaked for an hour in water, then drained
½ savoy or other cabbage coarsely shredded
2 potatoes, peeled and cubed
2 T or more chopped onion
1 leek, white part only, cleaned and sliced
2 t. salt, or chicken bouillon for 8 cups water I use “Better Than Bouillon” a paste
½ t. pepper
½ lb linguine broken into 1 inch pieces

Heat the oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add the spinach, beet greens, soaked lima beans, cabbage, potatoes, chopped onion, leek, and bouillon or salt, and pepper. Stir and cook briefly 2-3 minutes. Cover with the 8 cups water and simmer gently covered for 1 ½ hours. Raise the heat, bring to a rolling boil, and break the pasta into the soup, and cook until just cooked according to package directions. Taste, adjust seasoning.

Blend in the pesto with a wire whisk, and cook for a minute to blend flavors. Serve with shredded parmesan cheese.

Comfort Food – Part 2

Super easy … and kinda hard (lots of choices!)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Salsa Chicken
1 package taco seasoning mix
1 lb. chicken breasts strips
2 Tbsp. oil
14 1/2 oz. can diced tomatoes
1/3 c. apricot or peach preserves
Empty the taco seasoning on a plate or into a plastic bag. Add chicken strips and toss to coat.  Heat oil over medium heat in a large skillet. Add chicken and sauté 5-7 minutes or until done. Stir in tomatoes and preserves. Cover and simmer 10 minutes.
OR

This is a VERY complicated dish but an absolute favourite of everyone!!!
SOOO worth the time … and can easily be made “less caloric” if you so desire with milk instead of cream, etc!


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seared Duck Breast Pasta
Sauce
1 finely diced large onion (Vidalia is best, white will do)
¼ c. butter
¼ c. flour
1 ½ cups duck or chicken stock (hot)
1 ½ cups 18% cream
2 tsp. freshly ground pink peppercorns
1 tsp. salt
¼ c. fresh minced tarragon

Enough cooked linguine or pappardelle noodles for two servings.

2 large duck (or chicken) breasts, skinned
1 pound assorted mushrooms (shitake, morel, and oyster), cleaned and thinly sliced.
1 large thinly sliced zucchini or yellow winter squash
Garnish: more chopped fresh tarragon and cracked black pepper.

 Sweat the onions in the butter over medium heat until clear, no colour achieved, and then add the flour slowly and cook until you have a blonde roux (4-5 minutes). Remove from the heat and cool the bottom of the pan in water and add in ¼ of the stock and make into a thick paste. Slowly incorporate the rest of the stock, then the milk, constantly stirring so that no lumps form (or you will get a crappy pasta sauce!). Add in the pink peppercorns (black will do if you don’t have the pink), salt and tarragon and simmer on low heat for a minimum of 20 minutes to cook out the starch in the flour. Stir occasionally to make sure it is not sticking to the bottom of the pan. Keep the sauce uncovered, as it will probably reduce which is fine.
 Cook the pasta until al dente and keep warm until ready to serve while sauce is simmering,
 Heat a skillet with olive oil in it and cook the breasts. If it is duck, make it rare (dark pink in the middle) so it is its best flavour and consistency — overcooked duck is horrific. (140 degrees is an accepted temperature for rare. Duck should reach an internal temperature of 180º F and it should not be pink in the middle. Remove and keep warm on the side, add zucchini and mushrooms and cook until al dente.
 Check taste of sauce, season to taste. Slice the breasts into 6-8 slices or serve whole on the bone.
 Assembly:
Place pasta in two large bowls and cover with sauce (the more the better!). Mix a little in the bowl but don’t make it sloppy (pretend you are serving it in a restaurant and it has to look good!)  Layer half of the mushrooms and zucchini in each bowl. Place a breast in each bowl and pour some more sauce on top of the breast/veggies. Garnish with a little more tarragon and cracked pepper.
Eat with gusto and smile and your dining partner. This is not a dish to add grated cheese to, as the flavour will overwhelm the dish.

Comfort Food!

It’s been a long winter here in Canada and comfort food has been the focus of many a meal here. Aside from hundreds of bowls of home-made soup, there are a few “go-to recipes” that get made over and over and over!  As so many people have asked for those recipes, I am sharing them here!!

One of our favourite meals is CHILES RELLENOS CASSEROLE – this recipe is an adaptation of a recipe I have had and have used for 15+ years…no idea where the original came from. There is always one in the freezer ready to defrost and cook, as it is a favourite meal in this house!

CHILES RELLENOS CASSEROLE
8 oz ground turkey or chicken
1 cup chopped onion
2 tsp. ground cumin
2 tsp. dried oregano
1 clove minced garlic
1 / 4 tsp. salt
1 / 4 tsp. pepper
16 oz can fat-free or vegetarian refried beans
2 x 4oz cans chopped green chiles: drained
8 oz / 2 cups shredded Colby-Jack cheese, divided (to be honest, I use Kraft Shredded Cheese with jalapenos as I like it the best!)
1 cup corn niblets (cooked)
1 / 3 cup whole wheat all-purpose flour
1 / 4 tsp. salt
12 oz fat-free/skim milk
1 / 2 tsp. (++ to your taste) hot sauce
2 large eggs, lightly beaten
2 large egg whites (only) lightly beaten
Red onion slices (optional)

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. Cook turkey and onion in a non-stick skillet until browned, stirring to crumble. Remove from heat and add the cumin, oregano, garlic, salt, pepper and refried beans: stir well to mix. Set aside.
3. Spread half of the chiles in bottom of an 11×7 inch-baking dish and top with a half of the cheese. Spoon turkey mixture on top of these chilies and spread gently, leaving a half-inch gap from the sides of the pans. Top with corn, then rest of green chiles and sprinkle the rest of the cheese on top of that.
4. Combine flour and salt in a bowl: gradually add milk, hot sauce, eggs and egg whites stirring with a whisk until well blended. Pour over casserole. Bake for 65 minutes in oven: remove and let sit 10 minutes before serving. Garnish with onion slices.

(I pre-bake the entire dish before freezing it … then I only have to defrost and heat it through!)

Potato and Gorgonzola Soup


This, I have to say, is a truly great recipe. I always offer good ones — what use would I be to you if I didn’t??? But some are admittedly more stellar than others. And if you’re a fan of blue cheese, I cannot urge you strongly enough to make this. Yes, I know I sound conceited! But trust me — I was told by a loved one who shared the meal with me, “This is a 10 in my book!”

I made the soup on my snow day last week — the day that 15″ of snow had been predicted with warnings of an apocalyptic snowmageddon. 8″ later, with the roads clear by the afternoon because it turned out to be just an above-average dumping for a Michigan winter rather than a life-altering experience to tell the grandkids about decades later, my 4-wheel-drive Suburban and I were ready to go on an adventure to the grocery store. Sure, I’d stockpiled to be prepared; I didn’t need any groceries at all. But while watching the snow fall, I’d had a vision that needed to be realized: potato soup with blue cheese swirled into it.

So I plodded along a snow-covered side street until reaching a main road that was clear, and then I meandered into the grocery store that had maybe a dozen employees and half as many customers. I found my Yukon Gold potatoes, I found some good Gorgonzola, and I already had vegetable stock at home. But some good crusty rolls or nice bread or some sort of accompaniment was still needed.

But none of the lovely things in the bakery section had any kind of kosher certification (which I now need to seek, since I’m staying at the home of a friend who keeps kosher), with the exception of two choices that had been baked in one of the Detroit area’s most noted observant bakeries; they cost $5 for a dozen small rolls that appeared to have been sitting around for awhile waiting for someone to show them some love. I looked in the frozen section and found kosher challah dough — whole wheat, even — but it would have needed to be defrosted and then baked. So I settled upon a package of mini whole wheat pita breads, $1.79/dozen, and bearing a proud seal of passing kosher inspection. Nutrition and fiscal responsibility!

I started making the soup as soon as I got home, and it came together perfectly as though it had been pre-ordained by the universe. No wishing that I’d added this or that, no regrets that I’d added that or this. It was perfection on the first try.

So if you need a quick, simple, rich and luscious bowl of comfort to get you through a cold winter’s day, this is it … truly.

Potato and Gorgonzola Soup

3-1/2 cups diced Yukon Gold potatoes (peel ‘em if you want, but I never bother)
1 cup water + water to cover potatoes
1 cup vegetable stock
1-1/2 teaspoons salt
1/4 teaspoon lemon pepper
2 ounces crumbled Gorgonzola, plus extra for serving

Place potatoes into a medium saucepan and cover with water; bring to a boil, and cook for 15 minutes or until potatoes are tender. Drain, then return potatoes to the saucepan and mash them. Place the saucepan back on the burner, and turn the heat down to medium.

Slowly whisk in the vegetable stock and the 1 cup of water until well blended. Add the salt and lemon pepper. Whisk in the Gorgonzola, and cook for 10 minutes until heated through.

Place soup into serving bowls and top with a bit more Gorgonzola.

Serves 2-4.

“floo·zie \ˈflü-zē\: a usually young woman of loose morals.” Thus a Food Floozie is not a woman who can be seduced by virtually any man, but rather a woman who can be seduced by virtually any food (other than sushi).

For more blathering about recipes, restaurants, beverages, ingredients, and anything else even tangentially related to food, please come visit me Monday through Friday at Food Floozie or check out my mostly-regular Tuesday posts on AnnArbor.com.

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