Tuesday, March 3, 2015

Five recipes worth making

I have been super lazy about meal planning and cooking lately, doing lots of last minute, what do we have around meals. I am usually good to fix breakfast and I'm always up for baking something delicious, but when it comes to dinner, I just haven't felt like cooking, and I am struggling to eat very healthy.  All I want is anything sugary and carby.  The following recipes have all been hits, though, and bonus: they're all pretty easy and healthy.


1. 12-Minute Chicken and Broccoli from Gimme Some Oven.  This popped up on my facebook feed on one of those days when I hadn't planned anything. It definitely took me more than 12 minutes to make, but not by much and I have made it several times since. It is delicious and I almost always have chicken and broccoli around. I think I have used chicken thighs each time I made it just because they were on hand and they are delicious.

2. Creamy Cauliflower and Cheddar Soup found on Tasty Kitchen. After the initial chopping, this was easy, and soooo good. Preston and I ate the entire pot in one sitting. Yes, I know that means we ate a whole cup of cheese between the two of us, but it also means we ate a whole head of cauliflower between the two of us. It was worth it. I paid too much for cauliflower today so we can have it again tomorrow.

3. Bean Curry from Mel's Kitchen Cafe. I have made this a number of times and I like it every time. It is deliciously different from the usual stir fry or beans and rice dish.  It does have one expensive ingredient - garam masala - which cost me around $6 a jar, but it should last for years and you can't really just skip it. I think it is worth the investment. You could also make your own, but then you would have to buy a jar of cardamom, which is $15 a jar, so you choose. I always add the cauliflower and highly recommend it.

4. Pumpkin Bars from Pennies and Pancakes.  I knew I had to make these the first time I saw them and I finally did last week with cream cheese frosting. They were so good. Definitely the best way to use a can of pumpkin. I already want to make them again, but I'm trying to resist. Although with whole wheat flour, applesauce instead of oil, and a whole can of pumpkin, maybe I can convince myself that they are a healthy snack. I only frosted about half and even the plain bars were delectable.

5. Whole Wheat Bread from An Oregon Cottage. I got tired of the other bread I had been making and have been looking for a good alternative. I am still trying new recipes, but this is the one I keep coming back to. I sometimes use honey, but more often use brown sugar and up the water just a touch. I let it rise in a warm oven, then turn in on and bake for 38 minutes. I am planning to start baking several batches a week to fill up the freezer and this is probably the recipe I will use.