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Friday, May 31, 2013

Mediterranean Pork Chops Recipe


I haven’t made these in awhile, but they are so good! I just had to share the recipe. Recipe makes enough for two meals, make one right away, and freeze the other. Or, freeze them both!

Mediterranean Pork Chops
  • 1/4c olive oil
  • 2c chicken broth
  • 4 cloves of garlic
  • 2T paprika
  • 2T poultry seasoning
  • 2t dried oregano
  • 2t dried basil
  • 6-8 thick cut pork chops
Label 2 gallon sized bags, and split the ingredients between them. Remove air, lay flat to freeze. Put upright to store.

Cook on low for 8hrs. Serve with salad and rice. The sauce is really good with rice!

To save money on the pork chops, what I had on hand for these were thick cut chops I cut myself – from a whole boneless loin.  I buy a few whole loins when they are on sale and do various things with them.  I always cut some roasts, chops, and I cube up some too. Then prep for meals and freeze.

Monday, May 27, 2013

Cafe Rio Chicken Recipe


This chicken is so good! You can use it for many different things.  We usually use it for tacos or taco salads – but really it’d be good any time you need shredded chicken!

The name indicates it is a recipe from a restaurant, but it’s floating all over on many blogs.  Though sometimes there’s variation to it.  I prep this as a freezer meal for us to have at least twice a month, but easy enough to throw together in the morning too of course.





Cafe Rio Chicken
  • 2lbs boneless skinless chicken breasts
  • 1/2 a small bottle of zesty Italian dressing
  • 1T minced garlic
  • 1pkt ranch dressing mix
  • 1/2T chili powder
  • 1/2T ground cumin
If you’re doing this as a freezer meal, put all ingredients in a (labeled of course) gallon size freezer bag, lay flat to freeze.  This one doesn't stand upright as well because there’s not much liquid, but if you get it laid just right it’ll hold it all together.

If you used fresh chicken breasts, add 1/2c water when putting into slow cooker. If you used frozen, you don’t need to use the water – the ice from the chicken will be plenty.

Cook on high 5-6hrs or low for 8hrs. Remove the chicken from the juices.  Shred, using some of the liquid if needed but not all of it, just enough to shred and add extra moisture if you’d like, and serve.

Leftovers of this freeze really well if you’d like. More shredded chicken for whatever you’d like!

Tip: Use your mixer (hand or stand whatever you have) to shred the chicken.  So much easier than using forks!

Sunday, May 26, 2013

I miss you!

Corey in "his" tree
I miss you today. I missed you yesterday. I’ll miss you tomorrow.  Fact is I haven’t stopped missing you in nearly 15 years since you died – and I never will stop.

You were the one I could go to with anything. You were always there for me. You kept me safe. You helped me through so many things. I wish you were here to help me through more. I wish my kids could know you. Not just what they’ve been told, but YOU.

You were more than just a cousin. You were my best friend. My big brother.  And then, you were gone. It didn’t seem fair then, and it still doesn’t seem fair now.  It isn’t fair. You were too young. You could have lived for so many more years. A tragedy took you too soon. You’d escaped death before; I wish you could have escaped it again. But I know there must have been a reason that you couldn’t stay with us.  


It doesn't change how much I miss you though…
He was a Marine before his death

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Homemade Ranch and Italian Dressing mixes


Some of my recipes have “packet of ranch dressing seasoning” or “packet of Italian dressing mix” but I don’t use those store bought options!  I make my own. They taste better and are much better for you! And they are cheaper in the long run too!

Ranch Dressing seasoning packet mix
  • 1/2c dry buttermilk (found in the baking isle near other dry powdered milk)
  • 1T dried parsley, crushed
  • 1t dried dill weed
  • 1t onion powder
  • 1t dried onion flakes
  • 1t salt
  • 1/2t garlic powder
  • 1/4t ground pepper
Combine all ingredients in a blender or food processor, blend/process at high speed until smooth.

Store in fridge (buttermilk powder must be refrigerated once opened).

To make as a salad dressing: combine 1T mix, 1c mayo, and 1c milk.

For any recipe calling for an envelope of ranch dressing mix, use 3T of your homemade mix.

Italian Dressing seasoning packet mix
  • 1T garlic salt
  • 1T onion powder
  • 1T sugar
  • 2T dried oregano
  • 1t pepper
  • 1/4t dried thyme
  • 1t dried basil
  • 1T dried parsley
  • 1/4t celery salt
Combine everything and store in a tightly sealed container.

To make as a salad dressing: whisk together 1/4c white vinegar, 2/3c oil, 2T water, and 2T mix

To use in place of an envelope of store bought mix, use 3T of the homemade version

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Chicken Spaghetti Recipe

This is a recipe I use in the slow cooker, but I prep (not cook) and freeze it first. This one is a huge hit around here!  I found the recipe over at http://www.crockingirls.com/recipes/chicken-spaghetti/

Chicken Spaghetti
  • 1 ½ – 2 lbs boneless, skinless chicken, cubed
  • 1 bell pepper, chopped
  • 1lb American processed cheese
  • 1 1/2c sour cream
  • 2 cans cream soup (I usually just use 1 large can of cream of chicken – or you can use your favorite alternative)
  • 1/2c milk
  • 3 cloves of garlic (chopped or minced – I use ready minced from the produce dept)
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Spaghetti noodles (though we prefer linguine here)
Dump everything but pasta into a LABELED gallon freezer bag. Mix it up and remove all air. Seal the bag.  I double bag this one because the bags are FULL. So, you can label either the inside or the outside bag, but make sure whatever you do, the label is visible.  Lay flat to freeze and stand upright to store.

Night before serving, put in fridge to thaw – lowest shelf you can.

To cook it, cook low 6-8hrs in slow cooker. Before dinner time prep the pasta and mix it into the sauce.

Serve with garlic bread/toast/sticks and salad.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Our Food Allergy Experience


Up until my youngest started school, I didn't realize just how hard things could be for a food allergic child and the rest of us.  Because no longer was I 100% in control over what she ate or what she had access to.

When I was pregnant with her, I became allergic to pineapple. After she was able to start solids, we discovered she was allergic as well. Also to pineapple.  Our situation is a bit different I think from other situations.  Maybe a parent is allergic to peanuts, and a child is allergic to shellfish. Or maybe there’s no allergy at all in the child or parent.  But the exact same allergy is not something I hear about often.

My first reaction was bad, everywhere the pineapple touched, I felt like I was burned. I ended up very ill and terrified. My tongue started to swell.  Probably our combined reaction since I was pregnant with her.  Her first reaction was sores all around her mouth.  My reaction was after fresh pineapple; her reaction was after canned pineapple. We knew from then on we had to watch for pineapple in everything she would possibly eat or drink.

Fast forward to her starting school.  Pineapple is common on the school lunch menu.  But they ensured they’d make sure she’d never have pineapple – they would have an alternate item for her any time there was pineapple.  Some say “Just pack her a lunch every day.”  That’s not something we could financially do all the time.  And even if we just did it the days the menu outright says “pineapple” there are other things to worry about.

Like that one time the school made a major mistake. A mistake that could have taken her life. They soaked the apple slices in pineapple juice, and whoever prepped them didn’t tell the ones serving them. A major miscommunication that changed our lives.  We are forever grateful to her teacher who was sitting down to eat her own lunch and noticed that the apples had pineapple juice on them.  She wasn’t in the lunch room with her, she called her assistant teacher in the lunch room telling her to get the apples away from our daughter – they were soaked in pineapple juice.

It was too late; she’d already eaten all of her apples. They are her favorite food. The nurse called my husband. She didn't know what signs to look for. Her second ever pineapple exposure included her tongue swelling. If it wasn't for her teacher’s fast response, even after the apples were already eaten, her tongue could have swollen way more than it did.  But we were able to get to her in time with medicine. That prompted us getting her an epi-pen.  Hindsight, we should have gotten one sooner.

Her doctor here was reluctant at first to prescribe the epi-pen. But really with 2 exposures and the second one being so much worse than the first – he ended up agreeing.

The school takes her allergy much more seriously now, but the mistake never should have happened in the first place.  Her allergy is just as serious as a peanut allergy – which they are always on the lookout for.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Intro on freezer cooking and a recipe


I love freezer cooking! Most of my freezer cooking is tailored to the slow cooker. But recently I've branched out and started making oven friendly meals as well. Freezer cooking can take as little or as much time as you’re willing or able to spend on it.  If you don’t have much time, double up something you’re already making, but put half in the freezer. If you have a lot of time (like me…) you can set aside a couple days to do a whole bunch at once.

I've been doing about a month’s worth at a time – though generally broken up into 2-3 days total.  That’s to plan, shop, do prep work, get it all assembled, and into the freezers.  Even though I am a SAHM, I still only see my kids in the afternoon/evenings during the school week – so it’s a good way to make sure dinner is ready, and getting to spend time with them as well.

I have a lasagna recipe I used last month, that we've had numerous times, but this is the first time I've frozen it before baking.  I’m going to share that at the end of the post. It’s unique in the fact that it does not have a traditional sauce. And it’s not veggie lasagna either!

With slow cooker meals, everything gets dumped into labeled freezer bags, froze flat, and then I stand them upright for more space once solid.  I have my standard freezer on top of my fridge, but I also have a small deep freezer as well. That’s how I manage to make a month’s worth at a time.

Some oven or grill meals can get tossed into freezer bags as well. Sometimes it is something as simple as your meat with your favorite marinade.  Freeze it together and while it thaws it gets lots of extra time to marinate! Yummy!

Whatever way you plan on stocking your freezer with meals, it is a good idea to remember to pull it out of the freezer the night before you plan on making it allowing it to thaw. If it’s going in the slow cooker you need it to be able to fit when you put it in!  I will say I've forgotten a few times to pull something out. If it happens to be frozen solid and I need it into the slow cooker I will run it under some water to at least break it up. Some things don’t have a lot of liquid, those I can usually get to go into the slow cooker without a problem.

If you’re making lasagna or another type of baked dish that needs structure you don’t have to buy foil pans! Just make sure you have plastic wrap and aluminum foil.  I first line my pans with foil, with the foil extended on each side, then I line it with plastic wrap, again making sure it’s extended on all sides. You want enough that you can completely wrap your food. Then add all the ingredients how they need to be in the pan. Once it’s all assembled wrap your flaps over the top, and put it in the freezer.  Once its frozen you can take the package out of the pan and you’re pan will be available to use for other things!

Always remember to label everything! You want the date you put it into the freezer, what it is, and cooking directions for sure. I also like to add what sides need to be made/prepped to the label.

I need to make sure I take more pictures of the process I use, because right now I have very few pictures! But I hope that when I add more recipe posts, I’ll actually have pictures to post.

This recipe for the lasagna is intensive to make (like most lasagna), requiring a bit more time than just dumping stuff into freezer bags, but in my family’s opinion it’s well worth it!

3-Cheese Sausage Lasagna

  • 1 ½ lbs bulk Italian sausage, browned and drained
  • 6T butter
  • 6T flour
  • 1t salt
  • 1t pepper
  • 3c milk
  • 9 lasagna noodles, cooked and drained
  • 6oz sliced mozzarella cheese
  • 4oz sliced provolone cheese
  • 1/3c grated romano cheese

In a small sauce pan, melt butter. Stir in flour, salt, and pepper until smooth. Gradually stir in milk. Bring to a boil over medium heat; cook and stir for 2 minutes or until thickened. Remove from heat.

In a prepared (with foil and plastic wrap) 9×13 pan, layer a fourth of the sauce, 3 noodles, half the sausage and a third of the mozzarella and provolone slices. Repeat layers once. Spoon half the remaining sauce over the top. Layer with remaining noodles, sauce, and sliced cheeses; sprinkle with romano cheese.

Wrap it up with the excess plastic wrap and foil and put it in the freezer to well… freeze of course!

Remember you can take the whole thing back out of the freezer and remove it from the pan.

When you pull it out to actually cook it, grease the same pan you prepped it in, then completely unwrap the lasagna and put it in the pan. Let it thaw in the pan, without any wrapping on it.

Bake, uncovered, at 350 for 45-60 minutes (more or less depending on the temp it was when you put it in the oven) or until heated through. Let stand 10 minutes before cutting. Serve with garlic bread/toast/sticks and salad.

I am


I am a woman. I am a mom. I am a wife. I am a legal gun owner. I carry my gun with me.

You know, I never really considered getting my purchase/acquire permit or my carry permit. I hadn't thought I would want a gun. Then the gun control debate began. All of a sudden I wanted a gun. Not because I wanted to shoot someone. But because the 2nd Amendment is in jeopardy.  I have a right to own a gun. I have a right to carry a gun with me. But now there was honest fear that that right was going to be taken away.  

I don’t like being told I can’t do or have something, especially when it’s written in clear language that I have that right. Tell me I can’t have the house that costs $1 million, I can accept that – because I know I can’t afford it. Tell me I can’t have a gun? I’ll get one, legally, before anyone tries to take that right away from me.

My gun isn't “fancy”, but it’s mine. And nobody will take it away from me.  Not while I’m still breathing. 

Sunday, May 19, 2013

I'm Back!


I’ve had this blog for awhile, but it sat and I did nothing with it for years. I ended up finding myself on WordPress – blogging over there. But I admit I don’t like all the limitations I have there right now with what I have set up. I do like the rest of the set up, just not the limitations. If any of that makes any sense at all…

What I decided is I’m going to try to blog in two different places. There will be duplicate posts. Some things are going to be in both places. I think that’s okay!
This is my way of saying – I’m back!