Monday, February 24, 2014

Tortellini Soup with Meatballs

My daughter's television watching consists of a couple hours of Food Network a week (and an hour of Psych, but we won't mention that - they're on their last season and she's crushed). She doesn't have time for any more than that, between working two jobs and playing in two symphonies! But she adds to her Food Network addiction by buying their magazine.

I love this addiction - after all, I get to read the magazine, too! And they always have such fabulous recipes.

Their version of this recipe, Meatball-Tortellini Soup, was in the January issue. I tweaked it to please our family, so what you're getting is the amended version. (If you want to see the original, go here.)

So what's so great about this soup?

First of all, it's quick.
Second, it's easy.
Third, it's delicious!
Fourth...well, you'll have to wait until the end for that one.

So here's how you do it.

Start with one pound of quality ground beef.

You could also use ground turkey, but I like the texture of the beef in these meatballs. Especially when it's the last, the very last, pound of good South Dakota grass-fed ground beef from the "half-of-a-half" we purchased last March. And we only had this one because it was hiding in a corner of the freezer. I thought we had run out in November!

(I ordered some more on Saturday. Things are looking up!)

In a large bowl, beat 2 large eggs. Add in your ground beef (or turkey), 1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese, 2 Tablespoons dried parsley, 1 teaspoon garlic powder, 1/2 teaspoon salt and 1/4 teaspoon pepper. Mix with your hands - just until it's all combined - and then form the mixture into 1-inch balls.


Wynter would NEVER consider stealing meatballs off the kitchen counter....

....this guy, on the other hand, wouldn't think twice. Do you see how innocent he seems? He's just waiting for someone to leave the room!

Oh, and a side note - notice the unfinished floor behind the dogs. We're still working on it!

Okay. You have your meatballs ready, so take a large pot (I use my 8 quart stock pot) and heat up a couple tablespoons oil over medium-high heat. I use refined coconut oil (I want the medium chain fatty acids in my food), or you can use olive oil. Add your meatballs - gently, because they're quite fragile at this stage - and cook until they're browned on all sides.

Take them out and let them drain on a clean paper towel. They aren't quite done cooking yet, so don't be concerned if the meat doesn't look done.

Notice how the meatballs are NOT all uniform and round.
They taste better that way, right?

While your meatballs are cooking, prepare some celery and carrots. 



You'll need 3 carrots and 3 stalks of celery. Dice them fine so they cook up quickly.


After you remove the meatballs from the pan, add another tablespoon of oil, and then add the celery and carrots. Keep the heat at medium-high.


Do you see all that brown stuff in the bottom of the pan? That's from the meat. That is what is going to give your soup the special savory goodness all chefs want in their soups!

Stir the veggies, and scrape up the brown crusties at the same time. Let them get all cozy, tasty and friendly. Stir some more, cook some more, until the veggies start to soften - about 5 minutes.

Now add 2 quarts chicken broth and 1 quart (4 cups) water.

This is 1 quart of broth - you'll need two of these.

When you add the liquid, be sure to scrape up the remaining crusties from the bottom of the pan. You want that rich goodness in your soup! (And it makes the pot easier to clean.)

Bring the soup to a boil, and once it's boiling, add the meatballs back in. Simmer for about 4 or 5 minutes to cook the meatballs thoroughly.

Next, add some refrigerated tortellini (1 9-ounce package), and cook until the tortellini rise to the surface of the broth.


For the last touch, add about 1/2 cup frozen chopped spinach to the soup, and let simmer for another few minutes before serving.

The final step: salt to taste.


Serve with more Parmesan cheese sprinkled on top. Add some fresh bread and a salad, and you have a great winter-time supper :)

Oh, and the fourth great thing about this recipe? It's less than 500 calories per serving. How can you beat that?


Didn't we all love the peek at spring our GAL Julie gave us over the weekend? And don't we all have spring fever now?

But don't be fooled. It isn't spring here, yet! As I overheard a guy say on Saturday (in the middle of a snowstorm), "Get used to it, folks. It's February in South Dakota. It's still winter!"

We just had to laugh. Yup. It's still winter here :)



Here's the recipe all in one place:

Tortellini Soup with Meatballs 
(serves 8)

Ingredients:
2 eggs
1 pound ground beef or turkey
1/2 cup grated Parmesan cheese
2 Tablespoons dried parsley
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper

3 Tablespoons oil

3 carrots, peeled and diced
3 stalks celery, peeled and diced
2 quarts chicken broth
1 quart water

9-ounce package refrigerated cheese tortellini
1/2 cup frozen chopped spinach
additional Parmesan cheese

Make meatballs: combine eggs (beaten), meat, cheese, parsley, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Divide into 1-inch balls.

Cook in 2 Tablespoons oil in a large pot over medium-high heat until all sides are browned.

Remove the meatballs, and add the diced carrots and celery, along with the remaining 1 Tablespoon oil. Cook, stirring often, for about 5 minutes.

Add the chicken broth and water, and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer and add meatballs. Cook for an additional 4 to 5 minutes.

Add refrigerated tortellini and cook until tortellini floats.

Add spinach and cook for an additional few minutes.

Serve with additional Parmesan cheese sprinkled on top.

Saturday, February 22, 2014

Need a Spring Break?

Last week we had the mother of all crazy snow and ice storms. This week, the temp was in the 70s. Welcome to North Carolina. Ever since I moved here, there has always been a week in the middle of winter that looks like spring, feels like spring and provides a welcome break from winter. Back in my college days, the girls (including moi) would put on our bathing suits and go down to "Tucker Beach", a green square in the midst of the guys' dorms. We'd work on our tans, attract wolf whistles from the guys looking out their windows, and play volleyball. Yes, ManO was one of those looking. No, you aren't getting pictures.

The problem is that warm weather is just a tease. Trees blossom, daffodils appear and then comes the wicked winter again. This year, I decided if my Spring Break outside wasn't going to last, I would at least make Spring come a little early inside the house and, more importantly, inside my soul.

Before with "iced" branches and a snowman. After with my garden baskets and hydrangeas.
Someone on Facebook mentioned people need to stop singing "Let It Go" from the movie Frozen, that every time they do so, the weather turns winter stormy again. That is what got me thinking I needed to put away my winter decor. No snow men, no snow paintings (Man O and I are big aficionados of any painting with snow), no winter quilts.  Let go of winter and bring on all things floral!
The frozen barnyard was put away and I am looking for a painting like this award winner from the State Fair. Lots of flowers AND wonderful characters!

My spring watercolors are out. Some vases are filled with forsythia and pussy willows, giving a nod to the earliest of Spring's pretties. (My mother was a floral arranger of the highest order but I think she would approve of my high quality silk flowers to brighten things.) Pinks, blues, yellows, lavenders are coming out of closets.     

I visit Springtime, thanks to my trip to Monet's garden in Giverney in April years back. If you don't have your own pics, Google and visit, especially Butchart Gardens in Canada.

It looks like Monet's painting because it is Monet's garden. One of the best trips I've had...Paris and Giverney in April!    
That gives me a boost to plan my own garden. Got to be inspired to think green with gray out there.




Notice I haven't led with food suggestions. When it comes to meals, this is the worst time of year for me. I am tired of winter stews. The farmers' market hasn't really started producing, still a few weeks to go. So I do what I refuse do the rest of the year. I buy "out of season," i.e. I get spring veggies from far away where the growing season is topsy turvy or there are no seasons, just growing season. I ignore the cost. I pretend it's already Easter. Asparagus, strawberries, new potatoes, and spinach salad appear on the table. I make deviled eggs. One meal and leftovers and I'm over the hump. I know I can survive til REAL Spring comes along.

Note: if you find these teeny tiny Simply potatoes in your grocer, get them. They're divine.
So what about you? Do you have a meal that reminds you of spring or signifies it's finally arrived? Do you rearrange or change your decor ahead of seasons? What says Spring to you? Is it daffodils, the arrival of certain birds or the temperature finally being above freezing?

Friday, February 21, 2014

Hankering for Thanksgiving in February!

Missy, here. A few weeks ago I got a hankering for Thanksgiving. And I just happened to have a small turkey breast in the freezer! I planned ahead so it would have time to thaw in the fridge for a couple of days.

I remembered someone mentioning doing a turkey breast in the slow cooker so decided to try that. I popped it in (using the wonderful slow cooker liners). Honestly, it turned out a little dry. So I'd suggest adding some liquid--water or chicken broth. I set to high until hot, then turned down to low for about 6-7 hours (until dinnertime). It may have been too long for such a small turkey breast. So I'd suggest 6 hours on low. Just make sure it's done!


When it was almost done, I made the dressing. I decided to play with it and do something fun.


I heated about a half to 3/4 stick butter and a handful of dried cranberries in the microwave.


In a pan, I mixed a couple of cups of Pepperidge Farms Cornbread stuffing with a couple of cups of Pepperidge Farms Herb Seasoned Stuffing. Then added the butter/cranberries mixture. Then dipped most of the broth out of the slow cooker. The dressing was still a little dry, so I added some chicken broth (because I like my dressing really moist!) and heated it through.

Let me tell you, it was SO GOOD! Very buttery and rich with those cranberries adding a nice sweet/tart accent and some texture.


I also cooked sweet potatoes in the microwave and served with brown sugar and butter, which was quicker than doing my traditional candied sweet potatoes or sweet potato soufflé.



When ready to eat, I sliced the turkey and poured any extra broth over it to help with dryness.


It was a yummy meal that really hit the spot! And next week, I'll share with you what I did with the leftover turkey. Turkey tetrazzini!

Do any of you have any experience doing a turkey in the Crock Pot? I'd love advice on keeping it moist.


Thursday, February 20, 2014

Chicken and Artichoke French Mini Movies!!!!! Bring Popcorn

Okay, this may be a complete waste of your time, because I'm not exactly a camera guru. I'm barely literate with the PHD systems: Push Here, Dummy!!!!

But I thought it would be fun to video tape the step-by-step of making chicken and artichoke French for Super Bowl Sunday. Therefore, you get to see my lame attempts, laugh at me, get HUNGRY when you hear that food sizzle, and if you're a Seattle fan, you're feeling mighty happy still!!!!

I'm feeling happy about THIS:

DEREK JETER PRACTICING!!!!!!!!

I'm not quite as happy about THIS:

DEREK JETER RETIRING!!!!!!

Okay, so I was looking for a dinner that wouldn't require me to be in the kitchen during the game.  All cooking/clean up was done pre-game.

SUHWEEEET!!!!!

Here we go:

5 lb. bag of boneless, skinless chicken breasts
2 large jars of artichoke hearts
Extra virgin olive oil
2 sticks butter
Marsala wine (or dry sherry)
1 Quart lemon juice

For dredging:

A bowl of flour
A bowl of 6 beaten eggs, thinned with 1/2 cup water (I don't measure this, of course!!!)  :)



Drain artichokes. Pat dry with paper towel. Dip in flour first, then EGG....




Slip into heated olive oil in large "chicken fryer" type frying pan and cook on medium- medium low until cooked on all sides, golden with a hint of brown.... Don't use too high a fire and turn them every few minutes.



Then, when they're ALL GOLDEN, CRISPY NICENESS, you add in two tablespoons of butter,  1/3 cup lemon juice, 1/2 cup wine. Let simmer for 5 minutes or so to blend flavors, then pour the whole thing into a big baking dish to be warmed up later...  Wipe down pan between batches to avoid burn spots.

Burn spots taste blech!!!!!

Repeat this until all artichokes are done.










When all the batches were done I put them into two BIG aluminum roasters and covered them with foil, kept them cold (in the car, LOL!!!!) until time to reheat... then all I had to do was boil water for pasta and burn the garlic bread.

Which I did, as usual.  :)

There are NO PICTURES of the burned garlic bread. None. I removed all cameras from the smoke-filled area.  Trust me. It wasn't pretty.

But there is a picture of THIS:  More to come on this amazingly delectable three-chocolate extravaganza delight!!!!

 And of course our signature Floating Island Punch made my Casey, my amazingly talented and beautiful helper!!!

This is Casey doing Crayon Art projects with kids this week... Yes, our kids are off this week, and some of my little ones are on cruises, one is in Florida, and the others are STUCK WITH ME AND CASEY.

Poor babies!!!!






We have now officially found the solution to KILLING OLD CRAYONS with no guilt or remorse!

Melt them!!!!


Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Fresh and Easy Five Minute Meal

Hello, everybody!! Fresh Pioneer is back and I have super quick little meal for those days when you just can't choke down one more slow-cooker stew or one more deep dish casserole.  I have to admit, that's almost never me. If someone delivered a home-made mac and cheese every day, I would eat it and be HAPPY. 

But every now and then, I want something else. This recipe is for those winter days when you don't need the comfort food, but you do need something that reminds you SPRING WILL COME. Not today, not tomorrow, but someday soon.



 Ingredients.
Yup, this is almost all we're going to use. Edna made unhappy noises, not completely sold on the idea of dinner made from four items out of the fridge and not even warmed up!

 OK, red cherry tomatoes and yellow mini tomatoes. I won't tell you how much these cost, but a little bit of me rebelled at the price because in the summer, we have so many that we feed them to the chickens. Mountains of them. And now I just bought a tiny plastic container for as much as a mocha grande. Horrors.
 I couldn't help eating a bunch, but I could almost hear the sound of quarters sliding into a vending machine slot with every bite. Ka-CHING. Ka-CHING. It was worth it.
 Good salami. (I'm not talking to the salami, that's a description. But I might have whispered a few sweet nothings to it.)
 Fresh mozzarella. Not the low-moisture kind you shred for lasagna. There's a woman in town that makes fresh mozzarella. I keep saying I'm going to learn, since she says it's so easy, but so far... I just eat it.
 Fresh basil. Just smelling it made me feel SO MUCH BETTER. This is aromatherapy for foodies.
 Olive oil.


 Small person roughly chopping basil leaves. Mmmmm, my toddler smells delicious.

                                          
Add a bit of olive oil and a pinch of salt. Mix and set aside.

 Take a toothpick, assemble tomatoes, a roll of salami, and small piece of fresh mozzarella. Repeat until you have the desired amount. This made an awful lot, but the good part is that you can adjust the amount to how many people you have.

 Now, sprinkle on the fresh basil/olive oil and enjoy!

I wish this came with a scratch and sniff button. It was heavenly!

 Until next time, my friends! (I have a crazy, incredible cheesecake recipe to share so diet now so you can enjoy it!)

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

A Casserole Classic and New Love

I have to ask... How was your Valentine's Day? Mine was stupendous. 
One filled with old love and new love.

You see, our family expanded on Valentine's Day 2014. 

Meet Maddie, the newest addition to the Obenhaus clan.

Maddie is an adorable 4 month old Schnorkie (Schnauzer and Yorkie mix) we adopted from an animal rescue.
Do you see the mischief in those dark eyes? 
It's showing itself just a little more every day.

Of course she is a puppy. And puppies like mischief.
But they can also be sweet and cuddly. 
Like when they fall asleep under my desk just to be close to mama.

Even though I'm basking in the glow of puppy love, life still goes on. Which means my family still demands to be fed.

Sigh!

So it's time to whip out a classic.

King Ranch Casserole is a staple here in Texas. And it's no wonder...
With a nod toward Mexican food, yet tame enough for the most sensitive of palates, King Ranch Casserole is a heaping helping of down-home goodness.

Here's what you'll need:
  • 1 rotisserie chicken (boned and chopped)
  • 1 onion, diced
  • 1 green bell pepper, diced
  • 1 1/2 tsp. chili powder
  • 1/2 tsp. garlic salt
  • 1 can cream of mushroom soup
  • 1 can cream of chicken soup
  • 1 - 1 1/2 cups Chicken broth
  • 1 can diced tomatoes with green chilies (Ro-tel)
  • 15 corn tortillas, quartered
  • 2 cups (or more) cheddar cheese (I used a blend of sharp cheddar and Monterrey Jack, because I like the creaminess of jack cheese)
Note:  I used a rotisserie chicken I picked up from the grocery store because I was in a time crunch. You know, playing with puppies takes up a lot of time. However, you can also boil your own chicken or use leftovers. Just so you have about 5-6 cups of chopped chicken.

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

Mix your soups, chili powder, garlic salt and diced tomatoes and green chilies together.
Kind of looks like queso, doesn't it?
I don't think I'd want to try a scoop of this on a chip though.

Saute your bell pepper and onion in some oil (I used olive oil).

Once tender, add the pepper and onion to the soup mixture and stir to combine.

Thin mixture to desired consistency with chicken broth. I used about three-fourths to a cup.

So you got your chicken, your soup mixture, your cheese and your tortillas. Now it's time to assemble.

In a greased 9 x 13 pan, layer tortilla quarters along the bottom.

Sprinkle with half of your chicken.

Spoon half of your sauce/soup mixture over that.
Doesn't that red and green look pretty?

Cover that with a layer of cheese.
Confession time...when I'm assembling casseroles like this, I never measure my cheese. I just add it until it looks right to me.

Repeat the layers, adding a final coating of cheese on top.

Bake for 30-40 minutes. You want it bubbly and the cheese golden.

While that's baking, play with puppy.
Maddie loves to play ball. And it's a good thing, too. All that chasing after it will wear her out.

Oops...there goes the timer.
Perfection. 
Though I couldn't hold the natives off long enough to get a pic.

Creamy, cheesy, chickeny goodness. 
Mmm, mmm, mmm...

Aren't casseroles like the greatest invention ever?
Of course, they were the invention of some poor, frazzled mother, frantically looking for something to feed her family for dinner. And there's nothing like hungry kids to spur us into action.

Right, Ruthy?