Showing posts with label Menus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Menus. Show all posts

Monday, January 7, 2008

Menu-plan Monday


Hello! Back to a newly-scheduled week! (more on that later) Anyways, here is my plan for our meals for this week.

Monday -- hot dogs (the healthy kind), baked potatoes, fresh green beans, corn on the cob (a new product at Whole Foods), and salad
Tuesday -- Lentil soup w/sausage, homemade croutons, salad
Wednesday -- Chicken rice bake, cornbread, salad
Thursday -- Spaghetti, homemade garlic bread, broccoli, salad
Friday -- Rice and beans, spinach, salad
Saturday -- turkey w/gravy over rice, Swiss chard, salad
Sunday -- roast, potatoes, carrots, frozen green veggie, salad (notice a pattern here!)

Friday, December 7, 2007

Frugal Fridays: Millet for Breakfast! *important update added*


For those of you wanting to eat healthy and are worried about pesticides, herbicides, hormones, antibiotics, etc. in your food, frugality in your grocery shopping may seem like something of an oxymoron. For our family, we have chosen to sacrifice in other areas rather than sacrifice in the quality of the food that we eat. For this reason, I'm always thrilled when I can find a very healthy, inexpensive meal that my children love.

Enter millet.

What a versatile grain! It can be used as a side dish or main staple, just as rice can. In fact, you can be just as creative with millet as you can with rice. But for our family, millet is a staple for breakfast.

It was the first cereal for my oldest two, Reader Rabbit (RR) and Energizer Bunny (EB). Since Goofy Boy (GB) has had some unusual health issues, I just started him on it this week. He's 15 months old. Thankfully, he loves it too!

If you can do cream of wheat or oatmeal, you can easily do cream of millet. And it's extremely yummy to boot! My mother-in-law visited my sister when she was quite ill about a year ago. (They lived in the same town.) She made a pot of this for her to help nurse her back to health and my sister loved it! She now makes it often for her own family. Sometimes she even gets a craving for it!

I have the privilege of having a grain grinder, so I can crack my millet to give it a little more texture. But if you have a blender, you can grind it to a flour or even slightly less for a more textured cereal.

You may want to experiment with the water to grain ratio. I have my own little formula that I will share, but that's simply because it's the consistency that I like.

1 c. whole millet/4 c. water
1 c. whole millet = 1 1/4 c. cracked millet
1 1/4 c. cracked millet/5 c. water
1 c. cracked millet/3 1/2 c. water

If I'm grinding only 1 c. of whole millet, it makes about 1 1/4 c. cracked millet. That cracked millet will simmer with 5 c. water. Sometimes though, I'll cracked lots and lots of millet at one time. Then I will cook 1 c. cracked millet with 3 1/2 c. water.

Now that GB is eating this, I'm going to have to figure it out for 1 1/2 c. cracked millet. It's really not an easy math problem, in my opinion. I've tried simply doubling the amount of water or cutting it in half from what I know works, but it doesn't work for me. So, I'll go back to experimenting. The good thing is that it's edible no matter what!

So, how's it done? I thought you'd never ask.

1. Combine millet and water. *Add a pinch or a dash of salt (whichever you think is more). The salt really does affect the flavor.*

2. Turn burner to medium heat.

3. Stir frequently (very important!) until it begins to bubble.
-- This is the tricky step. You begin to think that it will never come to a bubble, so you decide to stop stirring it. DON'T!!!!!!! I've had to clean more millet scorched onto the bottom of my pan than I care to admit. Sure, you can do some things around the kitchen. Just make sure that every time you walk by the stove, you stir a little. That's all. :-)

4. When it begins to bubble, it will look grainy. This is good! Take it off the heat and cover. Wait 5-10 minutes and your breakfast is ready.



Our family likes it in a variety of different ways. I'll mention some of them to start your creative juices flowing!

--mixed with applesauce


--mixed with mashed banana and milk

--mixed with honey (or sucanat, or Rapadura) and milk

--with butter, salt and freshly cracked pepper (similar to grits)

--for my little babies, I've often used millet as a base for their mashed veggies. Sounds gross, I know, but babies have no idea!

Enjoy and return next week for more Frugal Fridays hosted by biblicalwomanhood.com!

Monday, December 3, 2007

Menu-plan Monday



Monday -- Turkey/rice bake, Kale, Salad
Tuesday -- Potato soup, Salad, Cornbread
Wednesday -- Turkey Tetrazzini, Asparagus, Salad
Thursday -- Beans & Rice, Leftover Cornbread, Kale, Salad
Friday -- Turkey Squares, Steamed Broccoli & Cauliflower, Salad
Satuday -- Hamburgers, Roasted Potatoes, Frozen Veggie, Salad
Sunday-- Brisket, Potatoes and Carrots in the Crockpot, Frozen Veggie, Salad

We'll see just how close to this I stick as my husband will not be eating dinner with us on several evenings. It's soooooooo tempting not to cook when he's not here, but I'm really trying to strengthen my children's immune systems for this cold/flu season and one of the best ways is having food prepared from scratch.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Frugal Fridays: Chicken Stock



One of the very most frugal things one can do is to use ALL of the chicken. Yes, even the neck and gizzards! We only buy pasture chicken (free-range and organic), so I find it even more important to get my money's worth out of it. As an aside, our Wild Oats is switching over to Whole Foods since they were bought out. The Whole Foods brand chicken does not include the neck and gizzards, so I have informed them that I will be getting my chicken elsewhere in the future.

I used to worry about making my chicken stock because I didn't have leeks or fresh herbs for a bouquet garni. My mother-in-law said that I didn't need all of that. Onions and celery work perfectly by themselves. So now I just throw in celery, quartered onions and some salt and pepper and voila!--chicken stock for pennies!

Here is how I do it. FYI, the neck and gizzards make a much more rich stock, but since this was my first Whole Foods chicken, I didn't have that luxury!

First, I stewed 2 chickens all day in the crockpot. I find it best only to cook until it's done, then the carcass isn't falling apart as mine will be, but it works either way!



Separated into meat, skin and bones.



In the pot with celery and onions.



Add water to cover, along with salt and peppercorns or freshly-cracked pepper.



Straining the chicken parts from the broth.



I then had the lighter stock(right) from the chicken stock and the more concentrated broth from the crockpot during the actual cooking.



Simmer together for a short time for yummy chicken broth!



Check out here for more Frugal Friday ideas!

Monday, November 12, 2007

Menu-plan Monday


Hello, all!

Plans have changed slightly since last week and since my husband is on a business trip, I will get to save myself a little cooking (and money) and my children and I can eat leftovers! On to my plan...

Monday -- Leftover Italian Beef Bake, spinach, salad

Tuesday -- Leftover Italian Beef Bake, Leftover Spaghetti Squash/Sauce, kale, salad

Wednesday -- Rice & Beans, Kale, Salad

Thursday -- Baked potatoes with ground turkey, cheese, sour cream, Frozen Green Beans, Salad

Friday -- Bean soup, Cornbread, Salad

Saturday
-- Chicken Rice Bake, Leftover Cornbread, Salad

Sunday -- Nothing! We're eating at my husband's great-aunt's assisted living place to celebrate Thanksgiving with her. (Did that make sense?)

Very easy week for me. No complaints here!

Monday, November 5, 2007

Menu Plan Monday





Alright, this is very new to me, but I feel like I'm learning a lot (during the time I'm supposed to be dusting, vacuuming, folding laundry, etc.)! I do teach one piano lesson in about 30 minutes, and I have about 1 hrs. worth of folding to do, but ... I know where to hide it! Also, my husband's working on his MBA and he has school tonight, so he won't be home. That means that we can have leftovers (clearing out some more of the fridge) and I don't have to panic about the way the house looks. At least until 10:00 pm. So...back to blogging. I will post here (and hopefully every Monday), the menu that I have planned for the week. Here goes...

TONIGHT-- leftover lentil soup, apple slices
TUESDAY-- split pea soup, salad

Actually, I won't be here Tuesday night, but my kids will. They will have a babysitter for the first time in at least 2 years. My husband and I are attending a banquet for our alma mater. My husband also grew up on campus, so this is an unusually exciting event for me. I get out of the house, sans kids, and get to fellowship with old friends for about 2-3 hours. I'm very excited! But back to menu planning, the kids will still eat healthy. We'll have to see what the babysitter's willing to eat!

WEDNESDAY -- Italian Beef Bake, broccoli, cornbread, salad
THURSDAY -- Spaghetti Squash w/spaghetti sauce, salad
FRIDAY -- Rice & beans, asparagus, salad
SATURDAY -- Turkey burgers, baked potato, kale, salad
SUNDAY -- Roast, potatoes, carrots, green veggie, salad

Well, I've finally guilted myself into folding at least a few items before my student arrives. So more from my house later!