About Me

I'm a full-time working mom of 3 in the IT industry, with a great husband. When not spending time with the family, I like to spend my time in the kitchen. I like to cook. I love to eat. I adore entertaining people. I prefer not to go by any particular recipe, but experiment on my own. I'm not professionally trained in any way and I don't claim to be correct on anything I might post. Meals are often tossed together at the last minute. Sometimes I think about them during the day, sometimes I browse my cook book library and compare ingredients of great chefs before me. Sometimes I scour the internet, and sometimes they are literally pulled from the freezer and tossed into a pan.

I also used to dabble in cake decorating. {shameless plug: Cakes By Jenn Facebook}

These are those stories. I play with my food.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Turkey Pot Pie for a Crowd

There's a pot luck for work tomorrow.  I always overdue it and cook too much.  Decided to make turkey pot pie and cornbread.  But the challenge here is getting it warm at work with no oven and staying away from the microwave.  Oh, and I've never made pot pie before.

So the plan became to make the pot pie insides, warm them in a crock pot for the day and serve up some flakey buttery pastry on the side to pour the insides over.  And that's exactly what I prepped. It smells SO FREAKING AWESOME in here tonight.  I've had a taste and it's oh so good!

But I didn't play with my own recipe, perhaps another time.  But wanted to share it.  A quick google search tonight landed me at the Food Network.


My 3yo helped me peel and slice tonight too.  Here's our hard work.

I'll update tomorrow with the final product.  Can't wait!

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Stir Fry Fun

It was mentioned to me the other day that I hadn't updated my blog in a while, so of course I ran home and decided to do something interesting for dinner to blog.  And wouldn't you know, about half way through I realized I wasn't taking any pictures.  So, I have a picture of this final product, but no step by step instructions.  But really, you don't need visuals for this, it's super simple and very quick.  I made this meal in under 30 minutes and 1 out of 2 kids enjoyed it, and even the husband took a second helping.

Inspiration for this dish actually came from my three year old.  Walking through the grocery store she finds Chinese Bean Thread, or what some may call Cellophane Noodles.  Any time the kids pick up something in the store that is "out of the ordinary" I jump at the chance to bring it home and try something new, or introduce them to something they normally would not have considered.  So of course I grabbed the bag and tossed it in the cart and banked it for a future dish.  And that dish just happened to be the other night.

Bean thread cooks quickly in a pot of boiling water.  Not 5 minutes and they're done.  So plan the associated dish carefully enough and you have a dinner that can be cooked in 20 minutes.  And I didn't exactly know where I was going with this meal until I started tossing items in the pan and started to play.  It made itself along the way.

Ingredients
  • Chicken, diced into small pieces (or Shrimp!)
  • Carrots, I used diced frozen
  • Peas, I used frozen
  • Broccoli, I used frozen
  • Mushrooms, fresh if you have them, canned if not
  • Bean Thread noodles
  • Sesame Oil
  • Sesame seeds
  • Soy sauce
  • Sugar, brown if you have it preferred, White if you're out (like I was)
  • Ginger, fresh is best grated 1/4t., I used powdered as I was out of fresh
  • Garlic, fresh is best, minced 1t, I used garlic salt as I was out of fresh
  • Scallions, 2 or 3 smalls one chopped, I used onion powder as I didn't want to go out in the rain and dark to find mine in the garden
Time to Play
  1. Fill pot with water, bring to boil, toss in bean thread.  
  2. Let boil for 5 minutes and drain.  
  3. Let sit until ready to use.  
Meanwhile, waiting for the pot to boil...
  1. Heat your frying pan (12" minimum, needs to be big), or wok to high.  
  2. Generously drizzle sesame oil.  
  3. Toss in your frozen veggies and saute until no longer frozen, but not yet cooked.  
  4. Then toss in the diced chicken.  
  5. Keep the food moving so it doesn't burn and all sides get cooked.
Meanwhile, waiting for the veggies to cook, and water to boil...
  1. In a small bowl, pour in about 1.5c of soy sauce
  2. Add to that 3T (roughly, I don't measure, ever, when making sauces, always TASTE) sesame oil
  3. Add the ginger, the garlic, the scallions, the sesame seeds, the sugar
  4. whisk together
  5. TASTE it.  needs something more, add it
Going back to your frying pan...
  1. When the veggies are cooked through and the chicken is done, grab the bean thread and dump into the pan
  2. Pour your sauce over the bean thread and start tossing everything together for 2-3 minutes allowing the sauce to permeate the noodles and soak into the chicken.
  3. Remove from heat
  4. Serve.

Friday, October 10, 2014

Time to Tumble

Well, I put myself on Tumblr today.  Different blog, pulling visitors from a new location.
There's nothing there. This will remain the home base for all content.  Just expanding horizons.

http://csg1rl.tumblr.com/

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

It's Rare, but occasionally the kitchen gets clean!

Say what you want about a good meal, but there's nothing more comforting than a clean kitchen.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Kielbasa Risotto

My girls and I watched Ratatouille the other night.  If you have never seen it, stop what you're doing now, buy/rent it and go watch it.  And of course, since it's a movie that involves food, and cooking, it follows suit that I was in the mood to cook.  Add to that someone in my Facebook feed talking about recently having made risotto, and top it with being hungry for kielbasa, then we have a match made in heaven.  The following week, I just had to play.

Up until 1994 I had never had kielbasa a day in my life, let alone even knew what it was.  I grew up on German, and Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine.  This delightful sausage is Polish, and until I met my husband, didn't even know where Poland was on the map.  Not that he's strong in his heritage or anything, but with a last name with 10 letters, one must assume homeland food runs in the family somewhere right?  I mean, I grew up with sauerkraut (YICK).  Well, eventually I learned it's actually a pretty common food in this area, eaten by more than just Polish heritage.  And it's freaking AWESOME!  So of course, I cook with it as much as I can.  And this time around decided to put it into risotto.  I present to you, Kielbasa Risotto.

Ingredients
  • Kielbasa, one link, sliced down the middle then diced so you have half moons
  • Chives, 3 or 4 stalks.  I prefer to use chive over onion as it's not so strong a flavor
  • Olive Oil
  • Garlic Cloves, 3 or 4 small ones, smashed and minced
  • Aborio Rice, 1 cup
  • Chicken Stock, or boullion/water, 6 cups
  • Sweet Vermouth, splash
Directions
 
1.  In an 8 cup pot, drizzle olive oil in the bottom and place in chives and garlic.  Saute on med heat until the garlic is brown and chives are softened.  Add to that your kielbasa and cook until browned, continuously stirring so as not to burn the bottom too much.  It's OK if some of it turns brown.  That's called "fond" and it's flavor.  Besides it goes away in this next step.

 2.)  Take meat out, retaining juices and oil in the pan.  Set aside in bowl for later.  Pour the rice into the pot.  Stir briefly then, then splash with the sweet vermouth.  If you HAVE to measure, it was probably 1/4 cup.  Keep stirring until the vermouth is absorbed into the rice.

 3.)  Pour 1 cup of chicken broth in and bring to simmer on low.  You don't ever want this to boil, just a soft simmer.  Continue to stir.  We don't want the water the boil away, we want the rice to absorb it.  Continue to add water at 1/2 to 3/4 cup at a time.  Wait until you have nothing but rice left before adding the next addition of water.  This WILL TAKE FOREVER.  Or approximately 30 minutes, of you standing there stirring rice and adding stock.  But it's SO worth it.  When you have just 1-1/2 c of stock left, dump the kielbasa back into the pot with 1/2 cup of water and continue to stir and let it absorb.

 4.)  With 1/2c of stock left, optional... dump in some frozen peas.  I'm a mom, gotta have that vegetable.  Oh hey, speaking of mom, this is also a ONE POT MEAL!  Score.  Let the last of the stock absorb into the rice and you'll notice that it has taken on a creamy consistency without actually having any cream in it.  Ta-da, you just made risotto.



AND... the kids and husband gobbled it up!









Serve and Enjoy!

Side Note:  This reheats well in the microwave.  Just be sure to re-heat after adding a splash of water for it to steam by.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Almost Like Green Bean Casserole but not...

School is back in session.  Dance classes have started up.  In another month or so, we will add swim class and Girl Scouts.  No mom has time for dinner after all that, let alone DISHES.  So finding something I can whip up in less than 30 minutes, ideally less than 20 minutes with as few dishes as possible is key.  Talk all you want about crock pot meals.  My family (not me) doesn't like them, they're a waste of food for us, they go uneaten... finding one they all love is rare.  So, if I can whip it up in one pot and make it look like it took all day, even better.

This particular meal is by no means gourmet, it's not "unhealthy" or "healthy" but it's grub, it's devoured, quick and less mess.  Once what took me 3 pots, is now 1.  It almost tastes like green bean casserole.  It almost tastes like tuna noodle casserole.  A good chicken substitute just might be tuna... but that could cause 2 pots since you'd want to toss that in LAST after just barely sauteing it.

Ingredients 
  • Egg Noodles
  • Frozen Green Beans
  • Cream of Mushroom Soup (condensed)
  • Milk
  • Chicken, diced
  • Olive Oil
  • Salt/Pepper

Directions
    • Bring a large (but not massive) pot of water to boil, toss in egg noodles and cook until tender.  Drain, let sit. 

    • Return empty pot to stove, pour in ~2T olive oil and toss in your chicken.
      • Heavily salt and pepper the chicken.  If you think it's enough, toss in a bit more, remember we're adding more to this pot later.
      • Saute the chicken until all sides are browned.

    • Toss in the green beans.
     
    • Dump in the can of mushroom soup and one can of milk.
     
    • Stir and bring to boil, don't let burn.
    • Turn heat down and let simmer for about 5 minutes.
    • Get your noodles.  Remove pot from heat, and dump in noodles and stir.
    • Serve.

    Optional components.. if your family really likes mushrooms, you can toss in some diced ones while you're sauteing the chicken.

    The recipe isn't rocket science.  It's not that "original" but it gets the job done.  But who knows, maybe you've never seen it before and now I've added time back into your evening.  And with that, I have a crying child to attend to.

    Wednesday, September 3, 2014

    One Pot Trickery

    I'm on fire tonight!  2 posts.  Wow.  Gotta make up for the last 8 months, so hopefully I can keep up some "steam" and get things "cooking" around here again.    This is by NO means a typical "Jenn Plays" meal, but this is a triumph for me.

    I LOVE spaghetti and meatballs.  It's a meal I could devour until it came out my ears.  It just doesn't get any better than homemade sauce, savory meatballs, and al dente pasta smothered in fresh Parmesan cheese.  Growing up in my house, Sunday night was spaghetti night.  Mom would make a giant bowl and we'd dip in.  All you can eat.  Spoons and forks clanking, napkins folded into shirts, the sound of thin spaghetti noodles being slurped up, and honestly, the familiar chatter it brought about between kids and adult. 

    --Excerpt from Today:
    I've recently learned it was a maternal family thing.  My cousins and I recently reminisced about it, apparently, the tradition held true in their households as well.  That's cool.
    --And now back to our story.

    Fast forward to marrying my husband and Sunday Spaghetti came to a screeching halt.  He doesn't like "red sauce" dishes.  Almost grounds for divorce right there.  STOP THE TRUCK, BACK UP.  There has to be a way around this.  No way.  I can't go without it.  But I did.  Spaghetti Sunday was lost, an ancient ruin in the memory of comfort foods. I learned to eat it when I could find it.  Make it in small batches when he wasn't home.  Buy... gulp... canned sauce just to get my fix.  Then one day, I learn he like lasagna, and then it's baked ziti.  Oh the joys!  I can have something similar to spaghetti, at least.  It's a glimmer.  Small hope that maybe someday Spaghetti Sundays could be back in my life again.  But alas, these escapades with sauce are still few and far between.

    Along comes baby #1.  Maybe I will have a partner in red sauce love.  Maybe I can raise this one as my own.  Perhaps she too, will share my love of this blessed meal.  Alas, no.  She's too smart for me.  She overhears the husband one night complain that I've made one to many baked zitis lately and he doesn't like red sauce. And I hear from the kitchen table... "Mommy, I don't like red sauce!" Nooooooooo... what have you done!? I didn't hear that! It's can't be true, it shan't be true!!!  But it is.  So begins my life with child #1 not liking "red sauce" and even pizza is ordered sans sauce.

    Along comes baby #2.  Could it be this time?  I'm not getting my hopes up.  I can't come crashing down like that again.  No, I won't let it.  I introduce it slowly.  Making spaghetti one night as butter/garlic only, I toss a batch of red sauce to the side for me and offer it with no other option to child #2.  And?  No hesitation!  We have a winner!!!  Angels sing, the people rejoice.  I have a friend in red at last!

    Being the stubborn mother than I am, do you have ANY idea how frustrating it is to have a 6 year old that doesn't eat pizza with sauce?  Go to a child's birthday party, what's served, pizza.  Sorry kid, too bad.  So my never ending attempt goes on.  "Try it" "Try it"  "Try it"  Which brings me to tonight's post. I'm forever looking for ways to ease child #1 into red sauce.  I KNOW she likes it.  She's just being stubborn.  WHO DOESN'T LIKE RED SAUCE!?  (Oh right, my husband, but I digress.)

    So tonight.  Tonight's dish is semi-homemade and done in ONE pot.  That's the best part and reason I'm really blogging.  One pot dishes are the best, easier to clean up, quick meals.  Watch me play.

    Ingredients
    1 box pasta, pick your favorite shape
    1 lb ground beef
    Broccoli
    1 pkt Knorr's Parma Rosa sauce mix
    1 T butter/margarine
    1.25c milk
    Water

    Boil pasta to almost desired tenderness, add broccoli finish boiling, drain, let sit
    Return pot to stove and brown beef
    Add Milk, Butter, and contents of Knorr packet.
    Follow directions to boil for 4 minutes
     Dump pasta/broccoli into pot and stir.

     

    So Jenn.  What does this have to do with red sauce and child #1?
    Well... Parma Rosa... hello, red sauce!  She ate it.
    Gobbled it right up, like it was going out of style and even had seconds!!
    Tasted like tomato sauce but lighter in color
    Genius.
    Score one for mom.

    Maybe Spaghetti Sundays aren't too far off in my future to return....


    Back to School Apples Made Easy

    So much for updating sooner than later. I see my last post is around New Year's.  Well, 2 kids, lots of after school activities, mix in some summer months of being hot and lazy, add a little work and a woman gets busy.  The sad part about that statement is that I haven't been cooking enough "interesting" enough dishes in 8 months to warrant a post.  Don't get me wrong, I've had a few, but I don't think about it until "oh em gee I should have blogged this" as I put said food in my mouth.  And why blog about it if there are no pictures to prove it?

    So here I am today and I really don't have a "wow" dish for you.  But as I sit here on the eve of the first day back at school, I felt compelled to share this awesome wisdom with you.  I figured out how to slice apples for school lunch and keep them from browning without using an acid (lemon, lime juice) to keep them from oxidizing.  Wow, right?  You're thinking, "geez Jenn no way!"  But yes, it's true.  Not only that, but the kids actually EAT them, without even having to peel them, they eat the skin.  What is this sorcery??  It's no magic I tell you.  It's just a puzzle!

     
    Cut apple with core as square, don't lose track of the order.
    Cut each section into 2-4 slices
    Put it back together
    Rubber band it

    Put it in a baggie

    2 kids, 2 apples

    Wednesday, January 8, 2014

    Where oh Where....

    Where oh where have I been?  Life gets busy.  Holidays take a toll.  Putting a new floor on the house, busy schedules going here and there and everywhere, and frankly, I just haven't been cooking much, and what I have been cooking has been old staples.  Most exciting thing I've made recently was shepard's pie. But, did not take pictures.

    Hoping the new year brings new inspiration to cook again.  Until then, hang in there.