Category Archives: Food Products

Sometimes you just need comfort…

I’ve got a little secret: I love Ramen. Sure, it’s poor, student food, but there’s something about the ultra-processed, super-salty soup that I love.

I was sick this weekend and so I reached for the Ramen. I added some frozen peas and corn to make it “healthier” and added some egg at the very end of cooking — this is a trick I picked up from my dad. It didn’t heal me, but it sure helped make me feel better for a little while.

Sean let me have the Ramen and he reached for his idea of quick, comfort food: Kraft Macaroni and Cheese (the Blue Box.)

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Posted in Comfort Food, Cuisine, Food Products, Misc. | 1 Comment

Creamy chowder without the calories?

Christine is full of good questions:

“Have you ever cooked with that milk that’s low-fat but supposedly tastes richer? I love chowder, but am trying to lose a few… I’m wondering if that milk would do anything weird when cooked.”

I’ve never actually used the richer-tasting lowfat milk, but I thought I’d try and create a chowder without all the fat. So I created this spicy corn chowder. I used Hood’s Simply Smart 1% Lowfat milk. I used cornstarch to help thicken the chowder at the end in order to knock out some more fat. The chowder came out thick, creamy, and delicious!

Spicy Corn Chowder
Serves 6.
250 cal., 3g fat, 4g fiber

2 lbs., frozen corn
1 tsp. olive oil
4 green onions, white parts minced and green parts sliced
4 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 large jalepeno pepper, seeds and membranes removed and chopped finely
2 roasted poblano peppers, skins and seeds removed and cut into 1/4 x 1/2 strips
4 cups Simply Smart 1% Lowfat milk
1 cup chicken or vegetable broth
2 tsp. cumin
1/4 tsp. chipotle chili powder
1 tsp. smoked spanish paprika
Salt and pepper, to taste
2 tbsp. cornstarch whisked with 1/4 cup milk

Preheat oven to 450 degrees.

Spread frozen corn in a single layer on a cookie sheet. Roast in the oven for 30-40 minutes or until some of the corn begins to turn brown. Stir the corn every 15-20 minutes for even browning.

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Roast the poblano peppers. You can do this directly over the gas burner if you are lucky enough to have a gas oven. Use tongs to flip the peppers as they get charred and the skin starts to bubble. Otherwise, you can put the peppers in the oven with the corn until they are charred. You’ll want to turn the peppers in the oven during the cooking process.

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Once roasted, put the peppers in a plastic container with a lid and let them cool. Once cool enough to handle, pull off the skin which should come off easily — this doesn’t have to be perfect, you might wind up with a little skin still attached to the pepper. Remove the stems and seeds and cut into 1/4″ x 1/2″ strips.

In a large pot over medium heat, sweat the white part of the green onion, jalepeno pepper, and garlic in the olive oil for 2-3 minutes.

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Add the poblano pepper strips and corn. Add a pinch of salt and a few grinds of pepper. Cook for about 2 minutes. Add the cumin, chili powder, and paprika.

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Stir in the chicken/veggie stock and milk. Bring to a simmer. Add the cornstarch and simmer and cook until the soup is thick — about 10 minutes. Add salt and pepper to taste.

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To get a creamier soup, use an immersion blender to blend some of the corn and liquid. This will give your soup a thicker body. If you don’t have an immersion blender, take about 1 1/2 cups of the soup and use a blender to blend until smooth. Add back to the soup.

Stir in reserved green onion tops.

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Posted in Advice, Appetizer, Comfort Food, Corn, Cuisine, Food Products, Main Dish, Recipe, Soup, Vegetables, Vegetarian | 3 Comments

Battle Thanksgiving is Ovah!

Sean the Taster and I just had leftovers for lunch and I think they might have been better the second time around. Thanksgiving was a success.

And it was actually a pretty easy day of cooking. I prepped all my vegetables the day before and stored them in ziplock bags in the fridge — so, just two hours before the turducken was finished cooking I just took them out and applied heat and things worked out easily.

Overall, dinner was tasty and the company was great. And that’s really what Thanksgiving is about: good food with good people.

The final menu, aside from the turducken, included the following:

Roasted Brussel Sprouts with Bacon
Caramelized Pearl Onions
Andouille & Crawfish Potato Casserole
Roasted Butternut Squash
Smashed Carrots and Turnip
Cranberry Champagne Coolers
Pumpkin Bread Pudding

Of course, my camera batteries ran out so I didn’t get any pictures, however, everyone at the table had seconds, so it must have been good.

How was the turducken? I was disappointed in the turducken. The white meat turkey was on the dry side which is never a good thing in a turkey. The bird(s) were also not as easy to slice as I thought it would be. Since there was a good amount of rice and sausage in the cornbread stuffing, the turducken didn’t slice into neat little rounds of turkey, duck, chicken, and stuffing. It fell apart and made it hard to see which meat you were getting.

The flavor was good, but I think we’ll probably stick to a brined turkey next year. And, we can have duck and chicken on their own. I mean, really, the best part of duck is it’s crispy skin — and in the turducken, you don’t get no duck skin.

Stay tuned for Turkey Day recipes.

Posted in Cajun, Cuisine, Food Products, Meat, Turkey | 1 Comment

Finally, hooray for Turkey Day!

Of course, what holiday could be better to a food blogger? Thanksgiving is right around the corner. Here’s a little secret: normally, I don’t really like Thanksgiving.

“What,” you ask, “How could someone who is going to culinary school not love the only holiday that truly revolves around food and cooking?”

I think it gets boring. Really, horribly boring. Every year is the same.

“Tradition,” you say.

Sure. Tradition is important. But for me, it makes the holiday stale. And by the beginning of the year, with Christmas only a month later, if I see another turkey, bowl of mashed potatoes, or green been casserole, I know I might scream.

I think there’s a way to be non-traditionally traditional. And this year, I get the chance. I’m cooking what I want in my own house. I’m finally excited about Thanksgiving!

What’s on my menu? Turducken. I’m doing a cajun Thanksgiving this year complete with andouille sausage, crawfish, and bread pudding. The recipes are still in my head for the most part, but hopefully I have a bunch to share on the 24th.

Of course, there are things I can’t live without. Shrimp cocktail is one. I’ll be doing that cajun style. Homemade cranberry sauce? Check. And I’m sure I’ll add some butternut squash to the mix.

What about you? What’s on your thanksgiving menu? Are you a traditionalist? What can’t you live without?

Posted in Food Products, Misc. | 1 Comment

It’s not always gourmet — or even good.

Occassionally people will ask me how I find time to cook after work. Usually, I say that cooking relaxes me. It helps me destress. I’m truly happy going home and chopping vegetables and throwing together a meal.

But, sometimes, that just doesn’t happen. Lately, more often than not, I’m working late and trying to figure out how to fit in a late workday, gym, and eating dinner — plus any school work that needs to get done by Sunday.

Last night, for example, I had tuna on an english muffin and “soup”. The “soup” was little more than pastina pasta cooked in chicken broth with a little frozen spinach tossed in. I finished it off with a beaten egg and some parmesan cheese. Not fancy, but comforting.

Tonight, I’m at work trying to get a good chunk of my paper done (at work due to computer issues at home) — I’m eating a SmartOnes pizza.

I bought the frozen pizza when I stopped at the grocery store for lunch (I love their salad bar). I saw that the SmartOnes were on sale. Usually, I’m a Lean Cuisine girl. But, I figured it was worth a taste test.

The verdict? Blah. Lean Cuisines rule and SmartOnes drool.

Now I know — and we all know that’s half the battle!

Posted in Food Products, Misc. | Leave a comment