Posts Tagged easy recipe

Lightened Chicken and Wild Rice Casserole

I’m not sure why I’m on a casserole kick lately but I guess you could say I’m also on a “don’t waste food kick” too.  I prepare a lot of chicken in our house for our dinners (oven-fried and simple-to-prepare breaded cutlets are mainstays).  It’s definately a favorite with the kids and of course leftovers are generally a part of that as well.   I incorporated leftover broiled chicken into this casserole.

Casseroles offer a way to be more efficient with your food budgt by including leftovers into your recipes.  I approach soups in a similar way: using leftover veggies to make terrific vegetable soups.  Check out this version of a chicken and wild rice casserole.  I’ve tried to reduce the calories where possible.  It’s still bathing suit season after all.

Lightened Chicken and Wild Rice Casserole 003Lightened Chicken and Wild Rice Casserole

2 (6 ounce) packages long-grain and wild rice mix (I used Uncle Ben’s)

2 tbsp unsalted butter

1 tbsp vegetable oil

4 celery ribs, chopped

1 medium yellow onion, chopped

1 (8 0unce) water chestnuts, chopped

4 cups cooked chicken, chopped (I used only breast meat)

1 (10 3/4 ounce) fat-free cream of mushroom soup

1 (10 3/4 ounce) fat-free cream of chicken soup

1 (16 ounce) container of light sour cream

1cup milk (I used skim)

1/2 tsp kosher salt

1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper

1/2 cup homemade breadcrumbs

2 cups shredded cheddar cheese*

Method

Preheat oven to 350.  Lightly grease a 13-in x 2-in baking dish.

Prepare rice according to package directions.  Melt butter and oil in a large skillet over medium heat.   Add onion and saute for 3 minutes.   Add celery and continue to saute 7-8 more minutes or until vegetables are tender.   Remove onion-celery mixture to a large mixing bowl.  Add water chestnuts, cooked rice, and chicken.  In a separate large mixing bowl, blend both soups, sour cream and milk.  Add soup mixture to vegetables, rice and chicken.

Spoon mixture into prepared baking dish.  Top with breadcrumbs.  Bake for 30 minutes.  Sprinkle with cheddar cheese.  Bake 7 more minutes or until cheese is melted and bubbly.

*Although my goal was to lighten this casserole by using fat-free soups and light sour cream, I opted not to use reduced calorie cheese because it doesn’t melt very well.

Servings: 10

Kitchen Note:  This casserole is so simple that it adapts to changes well, such as changing the soups, using Panko breadcrumbs or additional vegetables.

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Wrapping up Thanksgiving with homemade stock

Everything but the kitchen sink.

Everything but the kitchen sink.

Now that Thanksgiving is over and your leftovers have either become new meals, ie, a tasty casserole or other concoction, it’s great to boil down those turkey bones to make stock that can go into your freezer and be added to dinners down the road. 

Frankly, there’s nothing like a well-made stock to add flavor to any meal that calls for it.  Of course, most of us have little time to prepare homemade chicken, vegetable or fish stock but if you’ve got the leftover items why not give it a try?

I also think you’re truly geting your money’s worth when you can use every last bit of your Thanksgiving turkey.  And, you paid good money for it and of course cooked it to perfection.  Making stock is a great way to stretch your food dollar a bit more. I didn’t want to start my post by saying, “In these uncertain times (how depressing), but still…it’s always good to save a few bucks!

Many of you may already have a good recipe, but I’ll share my method just the same.  You can also find recipes for stock on www.epicurious.com or www.foodnetwork.com.  And, I’ll be using my containers of turkey stock to flavor all sorts of recipes during December, like soups, stews, and various vegetable side dishes.

Ingredients

3 parsnips, whole

4 carrots, whole

4 celery stalks, cut in half (with leaves left on)

3 onions, quartered and unpeeled

1 garlic bulb, top cut off

1 1/2 tbsp whole, black peppercorns

2 tbsp coarse salt

turkey parts with meat left on (I used both drumsticks and wings)

1/2 bunch of fresh, flat-leaf parsley

5 sprigs, fresh thyme

Method

Place ingredients into a 16-quart stock pot and add 7 quarts of water.  Bring to a boil and then lower heat.  Simmer for four hours, periodically skimming the top.  Drain pot and discard solids.  Place pot of stock into an ice-bath to cool temperature, stirring contstantly. 

Chill overnight in refrigerator.  Skim any fat off of top.  Divide stock equally amongst freezer containers and store in freezer for two months. Note:  label containers with contents and date.

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Favorite Cranberry Sauce with Orange Zest – Easy & Versatile

About 11 years ago, I wandered into a small, family-owned sandwich shop and ordered a turkey sandwich with cranberry sauce on a hearty stone-ground wheat bread.  Wow, that was some homemade goodness.  I have to admit I’m a cranberry sauce addict.  Nothing against my friends at Ocean Spray…in a pinch I’ll get out the can opener and dive into a can of their cranberry sauce (might add some chopped orange just for good measure), but if you have a few minutes and I do mean just a few, you can make your own. 

I wanted to share a recipe I’ve been using for about 12 years.  It’s really very simple, so head to your favorite grocer and pick up the few ingredients you’ll need to make this traditional sauce.  By the way, it will keep in your fridge for  a couple of months, so any leftovers from Thanksgiving can be used for several more weeks.

The ingredients are tossed in the pot.

The ingredients are tossed in the pot.

Recipe

2 bags of cranberries (I used Ocean Spray; they come in 12 oz bags)

3/4 Cup cranberry juice

3/4 Cup orange juice

2 1/4 Cups sugar

zest from one orange

Method

Wash and pick through fresh cranberries.  Add cranberries and the remaining ingredients to heavy-bottomed stock pot.  Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and boil gently for 10 minutes, stirring gently.  You’ll see the cranberries “pop.”  Skim foam off top of pot.  Pour sauce into container and cool completely.  Cover and refrigerate for up 2 months.

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