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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: In the Kitchen

Creamy Tomato-Bacon Fettucine

30 Friday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, In the Kitchen, Life at Home

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Arthur Andersen, Café Annice, Creamy Tomato-Bacon Fettucine, In the Kitchen, Pasta, Quick Meals

Blog_09_1030_01For years, we served our  ‘big’ meal at supper.  We had no choice, what with our family of six going their separate ways every morning.  But in the evening, when we’d reunite around the supper table, I promised myself that one day our ‘big’ meal would become lunch, just like at Granny’s house.

That promised “one day” is often my everyday reality now, what with children living elsewhere and my husband telecommuting from the smallish former servant’s quarters out back.  So yesterday allowed me to make good on that old promise, even though this pasta  dish I served for lunch wasn’t a ‘big’ meal production.

Blog_09_1030_02

Prepare the Sauce while bringing the Pasta Water to Boil

This recipe is my own, as much as any recipe can be.  I adapted it from one found on the internet, during an in-between phase when I had time on my hands.  The space didn’t last long; what opened up shortly after I entered early retirement — after I’d lost that long-held identity of international tax consultant by day  —  closed by the time I’d been found by organizations hungry for volunteers.  It was a rare six month interlude of time to play and read and pray and cook and anticpate next steps while remembering my past with gratitude.

I’ve always loved pasta, ever since a young girl.  I was lucky to have a mother who made her own home-made marina and meatballs, what in child’s English, I called her spaghetti and light bulbs.  By the time I lived through my twenties, I had discovered other pastas to love;  I recall my first tortellini covered with a white cream sauce, that I happened onto while working at Arthur  Andersen’s training headquarters near Chicago, where I wrote training curriculum for  “the firm’s” tax staff.

But the best variety of pasta dishes I ever ran into came from Café Annice, a little upscale restaurant in downtown Lake Jackson.  My search for a different pasta sauce (that evolved in today’s shared recipe) was somewhat inspired by all the home-grown recipes created by the restaurant’s owner; Janel’s pasta dishes are wonderful, on par with any served at the finest restaurants in Houston.  And though this recipe is not like any pasta I’ve ever tasted at one of Janel’s tables —  its uncommon taste and common style reminds me of those she served  —  in the same way that our common first name is spelled uncommonly differently.

From this Janell’s life to yours.

Creamy Tomato-Bacon Fettucine

Serves 2 – 3;  Preparation Time:  30 Mins

8 oz dried fettucine, cooked al dente in salted water (follow package directions)

Sauce:
5 slices of bacon fried crisp, then crumbled
1/2 cup of diced onion, sauted in 2 Tbsp olive oil
2 to 3 minced garlic cloves
14.5 oz can of petite chopped tomatoes
1/2 to 3/4 cup of hot pasta water
1/2 cup half & half
1/4 cup whipping cream
1 cup freshly grated parmesan
1/2 tsp. fresh ground pepper
Add salt to taste, just before serving (using salted water, I rarely add salt)

Directions: In a large pasta pot, put water onto boil.  The rest of the recipe is prepared in the time it takes water to boil and cook pasta.  In a skillet over medium heat, fry bacon crisp.  Drain on paper towels and then crumble.  Drain bacon fat.  Add olive oil and saute onion over medium-low heat, stirring occasionally; when onion is soft, add garlic cloves and cook for 2 minutes; then add tomatoes, cook for ten minutes until tomato juice cooks down.  Do not let vegetables cook dry.  Add 1/2 cup pasta water from the boiling pot of water .  Then set sauce aside until pasta is done.

Drain pasta, reserving 1 cup of pasta water.  To the vegetables in skillet, stir in half & half and heat over medium-low heat;  then quickly add hot pasta, whipping cream, pepper and parmesan.  Combine all ingredients with fork and spoon (like a light tossing of  salad) until pasta is evenly coated with sauce.  Thin with additional salted pasta water until you achieve desired level of creaminess.

Broccoli-Cheese Soup

23 Friday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home

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Broccoli-Cheese Soup, Cooking, Everyday Life, Heritage Hills, Home Tours, In the Kitchen, Overholser Mansion, Soups

Guests will be descending into our neighborhood this weekend because, once again, it’s time for the Historic Heritage Hills Home & Garden Tour.  This annual treat offers an inside peak of six private historic residences and the Overholser Mansion with one ticket — the cost is $12 in advance — $15 at the door of any property on the tour.  While Saturday promises to be clear and sunny and Sunday its dreary rainy opposite; the tour will be fabulous no matter what.

Three years ago, when my husband seemed to be taking up residence in Asia, my daughter Kara and I ventured out into a cold rainy Sunday to experience our first Heritage Hills tour.  The rain kept most visitors away that day; but being right next door so to speak, the two of us bundled ourselves up to brave the elements.  Just like an undeterred mailman carrying out his unofficial oath, the weather was not going to keep either of us from our appointed rounds.  But unlike the mailman, we did choose to drive a car rather than travel the short distances by foot.

A few wet hours later, we arrived home in awe, with visions of what historic living could become in its best state.  Truth be told, I also came home a little intimidated.  At that point, I had a month or so to get  my own historic house ready to receive guests as part of Mesta Park’s Holiday Home Tour.  And having just moved in a few months earlier, my house was a mass of painting projects in progress.  Yet the tour did its work in inspiring me toward completion; and in Kara, it sowed a feed seeds that two years later, had her and her new husband living in a historic home of their own.

In awe, we also came home to thaw.  Wet, cold and hungry, I began rummaging through my freezer and cupboards for something quick and nourishing to eat.  My eye lighted on a small bag of frozen chopped broccoli and the staple of storage bags full of  frozen chopped onions and celery, a time-saving tip passed along years ago by my Aunt Jo.  Encourages, I opened the refrigerator to find I had Velveeta Cheese, whipping cream and butter; and my cupboard also proved to have plenty of chicken broth.  It was a mental check, check, check.  Turing around to Kara, I said, “It looks like we have all the ingredients on hand to make a quick Broccoli-Cheese soup.”

This soup has been a family favorite for years, ever since we first tasted the signature soup of Apple’s Way, a little tea room in Lake Jackson, Texas.  My version of the soup is adapted from a recipe of another tea room of my life that once held court in Eureka Springs.  I’m grateful to have their collection of recipes –Victorian Sampler Tea Room Cookbook — that while no longer in print, may be available in a secondary market.

Sitting at the counter that cold October Sunday, Kara watched me like I once watched Mom whip up a miracle meal out of nothing so many times before.  From freezer to table in thirty minutes, we were soon eating our simple but hearty supper with a few saltine crackers.  Whether rain, or sleet or gloom of night, you’ll find this soup just right.  From my life to yours.

Broccoli-Cheese Soup

Serves 4
 
4 Tbsps of butter (1/4 cup)
1/4 cup flour
One quart of vegetarian or chicken broth
1/2 cup diced onion
1/2 cup diced celery
2 cups chopped broccoli, parboiled, then pulsed fine in a food processor (can be cooked in a microwave instead of using stovetop)
16 ounces of Velveeta Cheese, diced 
2 cups of half & half
Fresh Ground Black Pepper

In a bowl, prepare broccoli and set aside.  Sauté celery and onion in butter in a large sauce pan over medium-low heat, until soft and translucent. Next, stir in flour to make a roux, cook for a minute…. then, slowly add broth, continuing to stir until smooth.  Finally, add parboiled, chopped broccoli.  Simmer for twenty minutes.  Reduce heat to low, melt cheese, then add half & half and fresh ground pepper until just mixed.  No salt is usually necessary, but taste before serving and season to personal taste.  Serve with crackers.  Or quiche. Or even a sandwich or salad.

Jack’s Beef Enchiladas

16 Friday Oct 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home

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Tags

Beef Enchiladas, Entertaining, Everyday Life, In the Kitchen

blog_jacks beef enchiladasMy first husband’s parents were wonderful hosts.  Tom’s father Jack was a great cook who would give up his entire Saturday afternoon to prepare some fine meal for his large expanding family, who at that time, was in the process of adding spouses and children to the fold.

I remember the first time I met Jack and Betty.  And their children:  Linda and John and Mike and Don.  And their current spouses or signficant others.  It was a full house that Saturday evening in a tiny cottage:  full of people, full of love and full of hugs.  I came home telling my mother that I’d never been hugged so much in my life.  And I wasn’t sure I liked it.

But the food.  What can I say but that I’ve never tasted food in the way they prepared and served it; while I was no stranger to good food, Jack and Betty served foods that eventually had me asking for every recipe, foods that today are staples on my table and in my life.  Big weekend breakfasts and every Saturday night supper with family featuring a menu that changed with the season — if good weather, we were treated to an outside grill featuring  barbequed chicken and roasted ears of corn — if rainy or cold, it was homemade beef tacos or these beef enchiladas.

Jack and Betty’s weekly gatherings of family inspired my own weekly family gatherings when we first returned to Oklahoma three summers ago.  But like me, their gatherings were skinnied down to what eventually became do-able for all the families involved.  Jack and Betty had five children while I have four;  the larger the family, the harder it is to pull everyone together.  But I’ve found it easier when I offer to cook homemade calzones.  Or fry some chicken with all the sides with some home-made rolls.  And I think Jack and Betty found it easier when they offered to feed their frenzy as well.

Betty taught me how to make their grilled corn and her stove top baked beans and her birthday cake that we still serve to some members of our family.  Like Kyle.  But what Jack and Betty taught me most was how best to host a family get together by building a work and wait sandwich:  first you work hard to prepare something good to eat — second you get out-of-the-way and wait for love to make the dinner a party — and third you work hard to clean up the dishes and package up the leftovers, either for home or as a take-away.

I don’t possess Jack’s beef taco recipe.  It was a deep dark secret that Jack promised his source never to share.  And to Jack’s credit and our loss, Jack never did share that taco recipe.  But as for this beef enchilada recipe, Jack was all too glad to share.  I’d forgotten how good these enchiladas were until my husband and I sat down to dinner last night.

And one more thing: Now I say hugs all around.  From my life to yours.

Jack’s Beef Enchiladas

Serves 5 to 6

Ingredient List
1 large package of flour tortillas (Jack used 10 large ‘burrito’ size tortillas  — I opt for 16 of the smaller 10″ size),
8 oz package of mild cheddar cheese
2 lbs ground chuck
onion
2 8 oz cans tomato sauce
flour for thickening
Spices:  salt, garlic powder, chili powder, cumin

Enchilada Filling:

In a skillet, brown meat; then season and set aside
2 lbs of ground chuck, browned and crumbly
1 tsp salt
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1 to 2 Tbsp of Chili Powder (I use 2)

Enchilada Sauce

In a deep skillet or sauce pan, saute onion in margarine/oil over low heat.  When onion is soft and translucent, add spices, then stir in flour until mixed in good.  Immediately add tomato sauce and 2 cups of water.  Cook until thickened, about five minutes.  Then add more water to thin to the consistency you like.  Set aside.
5 Tbsp margarine (I use 4 Tbsp olive oil)
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1 Tbsp Chili Powder (I use 2 Tbsp and in addition, I add 1 tsp cumin)
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 cup flour
2 8 oz cans of tomato sauce
2 cups of water (I add more to thin down the sauce — at least another cup)

Assembly

Soften tortillas in a mircrowave for 60 seconds on high setting.  One at a time, spread tortilla with a little enchilada sauce, add meat (1/3 cup for large burrito size) and roll into enchilada.  Place in a greased 13×9 pan.  After assembling all enchiladas, cover with remaining enchilada sauce and 2 cups of grated cheddar cheese.

Cook

Bake in a 350 oven until cheese is melted, 10 to 15 minutes.

Serve:

Plain or covered with chopped lettuce and tomato
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