Sunday, June 12, 2011

Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious Seafood Louie Salad

This yummy salad is just a thrown together piece of art!  


I bought a bag of salad mix (just the easy iceberg mix). 


 I added tomatoes, black olives, sliced cucumber, sliced vidalia onion, sliced avocado, halved egg, about 2/3 of a package of fake crab and some shrimp (I bought the already cooked with tail on shrimp - eight shrimp per salad).  


Top with Thousand Island dressing ... So delicious!

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Mexican Breakfast

Migas



Ingredients:


¼ cup chopped onion
3 inches of spicy sausage (Mexican or Italian) cut into slices
3 corn tortillas cut into 1 inch squares
4 to 5 eggs
½ cup shredded cheese
Oil

Saute onion and sausage in skillet with a very small amount of oil.  Add tortillas and cook until soft (doesn’t take long).  Add eggs and cheese and stir.  Cover and cook at medium until eggs are almost cooked. Stir and serve.  Add garnish (tomatoes and/or avocado is good).

Mexican Cotija cheese is great for this breakfast dish.

Serves two.


Monday, February 28, 2011

Salad enchiladas

This is a vegetarian dish, and adding meat to it is not needed.



Small amount of chopped lettuce
Chopped onion
Chopped tomatoes
Chopped black olives
Shredded cheese (either Mexican Cotija, cheddar, or already mixed & grated cheese)
Enchilada sauce (10 oz can of sauce for 8 enchiladas)
Corn tortillas

I serve three tortillas for most women, and five tortillas for most men.  I chop the ingredients before I prepare the tortillas.  I put each tortilla’s amount of onion, tomatoes, olives and cheese into a small dish (1 tsp chopped onion, 1 TBSP chopped tomatoes, 1 TBSP chopped olives, 1/8 cup cheese).  So for eight tortillas, I will have eight small dishes of loosely layered ingredients in the small dishes.  Each dish gets the measured small amount of all the ingredients. 



Some people prefer the Mexican Cotija cheese (shown on the right), but I prefer the taste of mixed grated Mexican cheese (shown on the left).

Spread a small amount of chopped lettuce on each plate. 

Heat oil in one skillet and enchilada sauce in the other.  I don’t use a lot of oil and it is all gone by the time I heat the last tortilla.

Warm the tortilla in hot oil for a short period, just to get it soft, then put it in the enchilada sauce to coat it. 

Put the saucy tortilla flat on the bed of lettuce and turn one of the small dishes of the mix (onion, tomatoes, olives, and cheese) on top of it. 

Back to the skillets, cook another tortilla and then coat it with enchilada sauce, then put it on top of the first tortilla with the ingredients on it.  Again, turn a small dish of the mix on top of it. 

Do this a total of three enchiladas for a woman’s plate and five enchiladas for a man’s plate. 

Finish the dish off with a bit of the leftover enchilada sauce.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Yummy Coffee Cake

We're having a potluck at work ... what we call "all day grazing" ... What to fix?  I decided to make a coffee cake for breakfast.



I found an easy start for it ... a box of Krusteaz Cinnamon Crumb Cake.  



The directions on the box say to use the package of cake mix, water and an egg to mix.  There is also a package of cinnamon in the box.  The directions also say to make it in an 8x8 pan.  Sometimes I do that.  This time I used a bundt pan.  Lightly spray any pan you use.  

After mixing the cake mix, use half of it in the bottom of your pan.  Then add a half can of apple pie filling (any brand), spooning the apples on top of the cake mix and around the ring in the bundt pan (or in your 8x8 pan).  

  
Spread two or three handfuls of pecan bits or halves over the apple pie filling.  

Using the cinnamon mix package from the Krusteaz Cinnamon Crumb cake spread about half of the cinnamon package on top of the apples and pecans.  Follow the cinnamon with the rest of the cake mix and the rest of the cinnamon.  Using a long toothpick, stir the whole mix slightly.  Top it all off with a few more pecans.

Bake in the oven for about 45 minutes at 350 degrees Fahrenheit.

Now comes the fun part.  I took my cake from the oven and inverted in on a dish.  How ugly.  All the golden color and pretty pecans were now on the bottom of the cake.  I like a nice presentation so I inverted it again on the plate.  Now the cake was beautiful ... all golden with pecans!

It is so tasty ... Try it!

Sunday, January 30, 2011

I LOVE TO CAMP!

Of course my idea of camping is to have all the comforts that I can.  I don’t insist on a washer and dryer, but I do like having most of the other stuff.

We started out with a camper on our 1970 truck.  In the mid 80s we graduated to a 24 ft Kit Companion fifth wheel trailer that we bought used.  What a difference from the camper!  Within a few years we traded up to a 29 ft Alpenlite fifth wheel.  Absolute pure luxury! 

We had so much fun with the Alpenlite.  The fun began when we went to Chehalis, Washington, to pick up our new Alpenlite.  We spent a couple of weeks “camping” back to our home in Napa, California.  The trailer had everything we needed ... air conditioning, heating, a solar inverter, a 25” tv, music system, room for wine storage, really large refrigerator/freezer, microwave, range and oven.  There was also lots of bedroom closet and kitchen storage.  A really dream trailer!

Over the years we went to lots of places in the trailer, from San Diego to Portland, Oregon.  We often took the parrots in small travel cages so they could enjoy a vacation too.  But as the years went on we slowed down in our use. 

One day a friend came through to visit us.  They were pulling this tiny, almost laughable, Casita trailer.  Then they asked if we wanted to see the inside.  Wow!  It was perfect for our needs at this time in our life!  We quickly sold the Alpenlite and ordered a 2008 Casita Freedom Deluxe 17 foot trailer.  The trailers are made as they are ordered and we had to wait for two months for our new Casita.

When the Casita was finished we took a trip to Rice, Texas, and picked it up.  The crew at Casita Trailers were so friendly.  They showed us how all the systems on the trailer worked and we were off to Fredericksburg, Texas, to visit with the kids and tour Admiral Nimitz’ Pacific War Museum and hometown.  That museum is the very best museum of World War II Pacific History that we have ever seen!

We had shipped a few larger items (like bedding) to my son’s house and he brought them to us.  We stopped at Wal-mart and stocked up on food and anything else we needed. 

 The Casita is a basic trailer but truly has everything we need.  However, what I need at this time of life has totally changed!  There is no oven, but I have learned to do without (or drag out the small toaster oven).  The bathroom is small but it works perfectly.  There is one small closet and a few storage areas, but whatever else we think we might need is stored in plastic boxes and put in the back of the truck.  I love the Casita Trailer ... http://www.casitatraveltrailers.com/index.html

After we picked up the trailer we visited family in Texas we headed for Ft Collins, Colorado, to the Walker Mowers celebration.  They were rolling out the 100,000th Walker Lawn Tractor and had invited all contractors and users to come to the party.  They set aside a campground area for those of us that were RVing it.  In the campground they set up two huge trailers ... first class restrooms for the campers.  We had a wonderful time with the visiting, the tours, the exhibits, and the fantastic outdoor music complete with Jumbotron!  We hope to go back when they have the next big celebration.  In the meantime we will run that Walker Mower in the summer, and in the winter we switch out the blade for a snow blower.  What a great ride-on blower, complete with cab and lights. 

We eventually headed for home and stocked up the trailer for the next holiday!

Don't know what to fix for dinner tonight ...

I think I want something easy to put together.  Something that won't take a lot of thought but will taste delicious.  Something that I can fix anytime during the day and just pop in the oven for 30 minutes before I want to eat.

I think I'll fix my Chicken Enchilada Casserole.  My husband loves it.  In fact I haven't seen anyone that doesn't eat it and ask for the recipe (except my husband ... he won't cook as long as he has me around, but I don't shovel snow so that may be a good thing).



Chicken Enchilada Casserole

2 to 3 chicken breasts, cut up
1 diced onion
2 cans cream of chicken-mushroom soup (or chicken or mushroom)
2 cans diced green chilies
1 cup (or a can about that size) of salsa
1 soup can full of milk
1 can (14 oz?) of ready cut tomatoes
½ can of black olives (cut into thirds)
18 corn tortillas cut into 1 inch squares
Shredded cheese (I use a bag, or more, of shredded Mexican cheese)

In a large pot, cook chicken and onion.  When chicken turns white, add soup, green chilies and salsa.  Blend in milk (use more if needed).  Add a can of diced tomatoes if there isn’t enough color in the mixture.  Add tortillas and stir them in so they are covered by the mixture.  Cook on low for 20 to 30 minutes.  Put into large baking dish and sprinkle with cheese.  Cook at 300 degrees for about a ½ hour.


Give it a try ... I'm sure you will love it too!

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Cooking for the Birds ...

We have a couple of parrots at our house.

One parrot is a 24 year old femaleYellow Nape Amazon named DeDe.  We bought her in San Diego.  The other is a 20 year old male Vosmaeri Eclectus named KalanaAnaOle (Ole for short).  Vosmaeri Eclectuses are from the Solomon Islands, but Ole was hatched on Oahu and was brought to California when he was about 9 weeks old.  We had to hand feed him for a few weeks.

Eclectuses eat fruits and veggies.  When we got Ole we were told not to feed him fatty things like sunflower seeds, so we developed a healthy diet for our birds.  The parrots are fed Rowdy Bush pellets and a fat free seed mix.  They also get a big scoop each day of fresh veggies.  They love the mix that we fix for them, corn, chopped zucchini and yellow squash, carrots, broccoli, and cilantro.

Our parrots are well loved and well cared for.  They each have a large cage.  They have a room to themselves.  The room has a picture window that looks out onto an acre.  Deer, fox, squirrels, and birds come by for their amusement.  Music plays to keep them company when we are away.  Our bloodhound wanders in to visit with them often.

Both parrots talk a lot.  DeDe cries like a newborn baby.  Ole blows me kisses and sneezes like I do.

When Ole reached maturity he did what a lot of caged Eclectuses do.  He plucked his feathers out.  His head is still the beautiful bright green.  He gets new feathers on his wings and chest all the time but quickly plucks them out.  He can't fly anymore but he can strut down the hallway to see where we are.  When he does that, Dulcie the bloodhound follows along behind him.

Have you seen an Eclectus?  The male is beautiful green and the female is gorgeous scarlet.  Here is a site that shows them.  http://www.avianweb.com/vosmaerieclectus.html

Many years ago we got an Umbrella Cockatoo named Katie.  She was beautiful!  She never talked but she was smart and would mind when I told her to get back in her cage.  She didn't fly but she also would walk around the floor if we let her.  I had to watch her though because she liked to chew on the piano legs!  She wasn't fed the great veggie and fat free diet that Ole and DeDe are.  She had a stroke when she was about 40 years old.  We miss her!