CLICK HERE FOR BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND MYSPACE LAYOUTS »

Monday, November 23, 2009

Thanksgiving Favorites

Every person, family has their own favorite dishes they look forward to each Thanksgiving. If you don't have turkey during the year, perhaps your favorite part of the meal is the turkey. Or maybe it is the yams. I personally love everything from the turkey & gravy to the dressing & yams. It is all good. Interestingly, I haven't always like dressing and yams. As a child my Mother made stuffing...the kind that goes into the bird. Blech ~ I never liked it. It was bland and mushy. I also don't care much for yams with marshmallows on top and crushed pineapple inside, again to mushy for me. I know many do like stuffing and the marshmallow topped yams. I just prefer something different.

Having seven children I dream of huge family gatherings when they are grown, married and having their own children. I know I may not have them all with me, each and every holiday and I am okay with that. Having half of them with their families will still give us a full house. A long time ago I came up with a plan that would help me to not stay stuck in the kitchen preparing our entire meal while everyone else was visiting. The plan: to teach each of my kids how to make one side dish for our Thanksgiving meal. Once all are grown I will have taught all of them one dish to bring and that will leave me with the turkey & gravy to make. Imagine how wonderful that will be for all of us! So far I've taught my three older children how to prepare one side dish to bring with them to my home for Thanksgiving, to their inlaws, friends home, or for their own meal at home. I will teach my younger four when they are old enough how to make a dish as well.

Having my children contribute to our meal has made each Thanksgiving special and they have really enjoyed making a yummy dish.

I've posted below two of our families favorite side dishes. Both are excellent to bring to someone else home and both get rave reviews!

Thanksgiving blessing to all of you.


Praline Yams
Serves 4-5 (I double this recipe for my family of 9)

29oz cut yams, drained
1/3 cup chopped pecans
1/3 cup firmly packed brown sugar
3 Tbls. flour
3 Tbls. butter, melted
1/2 teas. vanilla
1/2 teas. cinnamon

Heat oven to 350 degrees.

Place drained yams in ungreased 1.5 quart baking dish. In small bowl combine remaining ingredients; blend well. Sprinkle over yams.

Bake for 35-40 minutes or until bubbly.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Canned Cranberries
By Paula Deen

1 (8oz) can whole cranberries (not jellied)
1 (6oz) can mandarin oranges
1 cup walnuts
1 cup pecans

In a medium size bowl, gently fold together the cranberries, mandarin oranges, walnuts, and pecans. Serve.









Thursday, October 29, 2009

Whole Wheat Rolls

I love these whole wheat rolls. I got the recipe from a Fleischmann's website called Breadworld. They aren't difficult to do at all. Just make sure to plan your time accordingly because they take an hour to rise. Enjoy!

Best Whole Wheat Rolls
Recipe # 544

Ingredients:
3-1 / 2 cups whole wheat flour
2 to 2-1 / 2 cups all-purpose flour
2 envelopes FLEISCHMANN’S RapidRise Yeast
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 – 1 / 2 cups water
3 / 4 cup milk
1 / 4 cup molasses

1 / 4 cup butter or margarine

Directions:
In a large bowl, combine whole wheat flour, 1 cup all-purpose flour, undissolved yeast, sugar, and salt. Heat water, milk, molasses, and butter until very warm (120 to 130F). Gradually add to flour mixture. Beat 2 minutes at medium speed of electric mixer, scraping bowl occasionally. Stir in enough remaining flour to make a soft dough. Knead on lightly floured surface until smooth and elastic, about 8 to 10 minutes. Cover; let rest 10 minutes.
Divide dough into 32 equal portions; shape each into smooth balls. Place in 2 greased 9-inch square pans. Cover; let rise in warm, draft-free place until doubled in size, about 1 hour.

Bake at 375oF for 20 to 25 minutes or until done. Remove from pans; cool on wire racks.


Saturday, October 3, 2009

Prepare for flu season by making Chicken Soup

My friend Chloe has this amazing soup and it does the job at making you feel better if you are sick. Enjoy and may this flu season pass you by uneventfully.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Chloe's Super Virus Busting Chicken Soup

One chicken
Appx 15-30 cloves garlic, peeled and crushed
1 Tbs salt
3-4 Thyme sprigs
Cayenne pepper (to taste. I use about a tsp)
Fresh Rosemary sprigs
Fresh ground pepper

Place chicken and other ingredients n a soup pot (I use my pressure cooker) and cover with water or chicken broth (I really like those boxes of organic chicken broth). Cook on stove top until chicken starts to fall apart. Remove from heat. Strain out chicken and stuff and set aside until cool enough to chop. Reserve broth for next step.

1 large onion (coarsely chopped or sliced)
1 fennel bulb (sliced thin)
1 leek (sliced thin)
4-6 stalks of celery (coarse chopped)
large red pepper (coarse chopped
1/2 lb. carrots (coarse chopped)
2 tbs olive oil
1/2 C good White Wine
salt and pepper

Place oil in bottom of large pot and heat. Add onion, fennel, celery, pepper and leek and saute until onion just transparent. Add wine and simmer for 3-4 minutes. Cover the vegetables with chicken broth from chicken--add more broth from can or box if you don't have enough broth from chicken and simmer veggies until just tender.

Frozen green beans
Frozen peas
zucchini
flat leaf parsely (chopped)
1-2 cans chopped tomatoes with juice
salt and pepper to taste

Add these above ingredients and simmer until everything is tender. Add chopped chicken, salt and pepper to taste.

No virus can withstand this soup.

You can also add cabbage with the end ingredients if you like (I do!), or any other veggies your family likes. Sometimes I'll throw in whatever is in my veggie bin in addition to the above.

The next day add egg noodles and turn it into chicken noodle soup.


Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Creamy Chicken Enchiladas

Creamy Chicken Enchiladas

1 Tbsp olive oil
1/2 c onion, chopped
1-2 fresh roasted green chiles, chopped (or 4.5 oz can chopped green chiles)
8 oz cream cheese, cut up and softened*
3-1/2 c cooked, chopped chicken
8-10 flour tortillas
1 1/2 c green chile enchilada sauce
1-2 c Cheddar & Monterrey Jack cheese, grated (as desired)

Heat oil in large skillet over medium heat: add onion and sauté until softened, about 5 minutes. Stir in green chiles, chicken & cream cheese. Stir constantly until cream cheese melts. Remove from heat.

Spoon approx 3-4 Tbsp chicken mixture down center of tortillas. Roll up tortillas and place seam side down in lightly greased 13X9 baking dish. Repeat.

Pour enchilada sauce over enchiladas & top with as much cheese as desired. Bake in 350 oven for 35-45 minutes, until bubbly & cheese is lightly browned.

(When I am short on tortillas, I will make this into a casserole by layer 3 tortillas on the bottom of my 11x13 casserole dish, pour the chicken mixture on them and they cover with 3 more tortillas. Pour sauce on top, sprinkle with cheese and place in the oven.)


Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Old-Time Beef Stew (by Paula Deen)

I am a big Paula Deen fan. There hasn't been one dish of her's I didn't love. Most of the recipes are very easy and have basic ingredients so you'll see many of her recipes here. Here is on of my favorite Fall/Autumn recipes, that I serve with cornbread. I will double all the ingredients except the meat for my family of nine to stretch the meal. It is still wonderful and hearty. Enjoy!

Old-Time Beef Stew
Recipe courtesy Paula Deen

Prep Time:5 minInactive Prep Time:--Cook Time:2 hr 15 minLevel:
EasyServes:6 servings.

Ingredients

•2 pounds stew beef
•2 tablespoons vegetable oil
•2 cups water
•1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
•1 clove garlic, peeled
•1 or 2 bay leaves
•1 medium onion, sliced
•1 teaspoon salt
•1 teaspoon sugar
•1/2 teaspoon pepper
•1/2 teaspoon paprika
•Dash ground allspice or ground cloves (I use allspice)
•3 large carrots, sliced
•3 ribs celery, chopped
•2 tablespoons cornstarch

Directions

Brown meat in hot oil. Add water, Worcestershire sauce, garlic, bay leaves, onion, salt, sugar, pepper, paprika, and allspice. Cover and simmer 1 1/2 hours. Remove bay leaves and garlic clove. Add carrots and celery. Cover and cook 30 to 40 minutes longer. To thicken gravy, remove 2 cups hot liquid. Using a separate bowl, combine 1/4 cup water and cornstarch until smooth. Mix with a little hot liquid and return mixture to pot. Stir and cook until bubbly.



Monday, September 21, 2009

Fall is in the air...

I love fall. I love the smells that come from my kitchen during this season. Baked pumpkin bars, oatmeal bread, beef stew, shepherds pie and many other wonderful dishes.

I am going to be posting some of our families favorite fall/cold weather meals here and hope that you too will enjoy them as my family does.

Make sure to come back regularly to see what's new.


Monday, April 20, 2009

Beans...

I like to have a ton of beans on hand. I store my dried beans in 5 gallon buckets. I also have a lot of canned beans on hand. Plus, beans are cheap, full of protien and yummy! Here are some of my favorite recipes involving beans.

Tig’s Black Bean Chili
(Incredible, low-fat, 1-hour chili)(From the Sonlight forum)

2 T. olive oil
1 onion, diced
1 green bell pepper, diced
1-lb ground turkey (I omit this and use extra beans, instead)
1 16-oz can chicken broth
1 T. chili powder
1 ½ tsp. ground cumin
¾ tsp. dried oregano
½ tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. coarse ground black pepper
3 cloves garlic, crushed
2 (15-oz) cans black beans (I use dried beans that I have soaked and cooked for 2 hours)
1 (10-oz) can chopped tomatoes with green chilies (Rotel)
1 (14-oz) can plain diced tomatoes
1 (15-oz) can Kidney beans (I use dried beans that I have soaked/cooked for 2 hours)
2 T. cornmeal, plus extra
6 T. chopped, fresh cilantro
1 c. shredded cheddar cheese (I prefer Cabot’s Extra Sharp)

In a large soup pot, brown the ground turkey in 2 tablespoons olive oil. Add chopped onion and chopped bell pepper. Sauté and stir until the onions are clear. Add spices (except for fresh cilantro, which is an herb anyway), tomatoes, beans, and broth. Simmer covered for about 1 hour. Thicken by sprinkling and stirring in cornmeal. Add enough cornmeal to achieve desired thickness. It is not really necessary to measure; but, it will take at least 2 tablespoons to keep the base from being watery. When ready to serve, top each bowl with a sprinkling of fresh cilantro and cheddar. Now, I prefer to add the cilantro directly to the pot and then to have extra for people to use in their bowls. We also like to provide lime or lemon slices for people to use if they wish to squirt some over their individual serving. A dollop of cream fraiche or sour cream is nice, too, on top of each serving (of course, that adds fat, which makes it no longer a low fat dish, as does the cheese).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I got this recipe from a forum I frequent...

1-Hour Ham and Bean Soup

2 Tbsp veg oil
1 C diced or sliced carrot
1 C diced celery
1 C chopped onion
2 C diced ham
1/2 tsp minced garlic
3 1/2 C ham stock or chicken broth (water can be substituted)
2 (15 1/2 oz) cans great northern beans, not drained
1 (8 oz) can tomato sauce
pepper to taste

Heat oil in soup pot. Add carrots, celery and onion. Saute for about 4 minutes or until onion starts to soften. Add ham, saute for 2 mins. Add garlic, saute one more minute. Add remaining ingredients, bring to a low boil, cover and simmer 30 mins stirring once or twice.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Another recipe for black beans. I use canned black beans and they work just fine in this recipe. It also takes less time to prepare as well. Enjoy!

Black Bean Soup from Dairy Hollow House Cookbook
(From my friend KayKay)


Bring to a boil 2 1/2 quarts water or vegetable stock (I use vegetable stock)

Stir into it:
2 cups black beans
2 bay leaves

Let simmer for a couple of hours until the beans start to get tender.

Heat 1/2 cup (you can use less) olive oil and cook in it until tender but not browned:
2 onions chopped
2 green peppers chopped (I use one red and one green)
1 fresh jalapeno pepper chopped (or more or none)
4-6 cloves garlic

Stir this mixture into the black beans and let cook until quite tender and flavorful. Add salt to taste at this point. If the soup is made a day ahead it is even better. We like to puree half of it and mix it all together. Serve over rice with a dollop of sourcream.

This freezes well, too.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bethany’s Pinto Beans
(from the Sonlight Forum)

1 onion, peeled and halved
3 c. dried pinto beans
1/2 fresh jalapeno, seeded and chopped
2 T. minced garlic
5 t. salt
1 3/4 t. pepper
1/8 t. cumin
9 c. water

Combine all ingredients in crockpot; stir. Cook on high for 8 hours. Strain, reserving liquid. Remove onion halves. Mash beans, adding reserved liquid to desired consistency.

Notes: Use this recipe as a starting point and tweak to your liking. It freezes well. I always double it, but make sure your crockpot is big enough first. There are several options with this dish. Beans - all pinto, half pinto & half black. Jalapenos - none, one, half diced & half intact, all diced. Water - all water, half water & half chicken or veggie broth (use less salt if you add broth!!). Onion - all diced, half diced & half intact. Cumin - as directed or way more. I don't measure the water either. Instead I just make sure the beans are submerged in liquid, adding more water if/when necessary. I also freeze the extra liquid and use it when making rice. If you choose to use it in rice, then add a little more water to your rice than normal because the bean liquid is partly solid.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Instant Cocoa, 3 different recipes to choose from!

I am sorry I've not posted in a while. I've just been very busy. I hope to get back on track regularly posting recipes. Thanks for sticking with me.

Cocoa (I got this from a friend on the Sonlight forum I frequent)

Ingredients
2 cups powdered sugar
1 cup cocoa (Dutch-process preferred)
2 1/2 cups powdered milk
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons cornstarch
1 pinch cayenne pepper, or more to taste
hot water
Directions

Combine all ingredients in a mixing bowl and incorporate evenly.
Fill your mug 1/3 full with the mixture and pour in hot water. Stir to combine. Seal the rest in an airtight container, keeps indefinitely in the pantry. This also works great with warm milk.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hot Cocoa Mix (again,I got this from a frined on the Sonlight forum I frequent)
(serves 18)

1 1/2 c unsweetened cocoa
1 1/4 c sugar
6 oz semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped (or use choco chips like I did)
1/4 t salt

Whiz all in a food processor until almost smooth. Store in a tightly sealed container for up to 6 months. Makes 3 1/2 c.

Variations: Add to base recipe before running food processor
Mocha: 1/3 c instant coffee granules (or powdered coffee)
Mexican Spice: 2 t ground cinnamon and 1/4 t cayenne
Vanilla: 1/2 vanilla bean (pod and seeds)

Directions for making cocoa:
Put 3 T in a cup. Add 1 c milk. Cook on HIGH for 1 1/2 to 2 minutes in your microwave.
Or, put desired amount of milk into a pan (1 c per serving), heat to nearly scalding, stir in cocoa mix (3 T per serving) and whisk until smooth, pour into mugs.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Bulk cocoa mix from Hillbilly Housewife

4 cups instant nonfat dry milk powder
1-1/2 to 2 cups sugar
1 cup powdered non-dairy creamer (coffee lightener like Creamora)
2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 package of instant store-bought chocolate OR vanilla pudding mix (optional, but very good)
Measure all of the ingredients into a dry clean bowl. Use a whisk to sort of stir everything together. If the cocoa clumps up, smash the little balls with a fork. When everything is evenly distributed, transfer the Hot Cocoa Mix to a clean coffee can, or a sealed canister. Use 2 cups of sugar if you are making this for kids. The extra sweetness makes it especially kid-friendly. For grown-ups you could add 1/4 cup of instant coffee for a nice mocha flavor.

To Prepare: Spoon 1/3 cup of the hot cocoa mix into a cup or mug. Add boiling water to the top, stir and serve.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Enjoy these! I've enjoyed trying all three of them...yum! By far, my favorite is the last recipe...I think it is the pudding in it that makes it so good! I also really liked the second recipe, the chocolate chips in it is a nice treat! The first one is good but it isn't as sweet as I like my cocoa.


Friday, January 23, 2009

Apple Cinnamon Cake

Apple Cinnamon Cake (Bethany)

1 pkg. spice cake mix
1 21-oz. can apple pie filling
3 eggs
3 T. sugar
1 t. cinnamon
whipped topping or Cool Whip (optional)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease bottom only of 9x13-inch or 11x7-inch pan. Beat dry mix, pie filling and eggs. Spread half of batter in pan. Mix sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle half of mixture over batter in pan. Repeat layers. Bake 30-35 minutes for 9x13-inch pan or 40-45 minutes for 11x7-inch pan, or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean. Cool. Serve with whipped topping if desired.


Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Meatballs...

I love this meatball recipe I got from a friend. I make a ton of these meatballs to use in spaghetti, meatball subs or as an appetizer. They are great!

MAKE-AHEAD MEATBALLS
Ruth Andrewson – Quick Cooking Collector’s Edition


4 eggs
2 c. dry bread crumbs
1/2 c. finely chopped onion
1 T. salt
2 t. Worcestershire sauce
1/2 t. white pepper
4 lbs. lean ground beef

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. In a large bowl, beat eggs. Add the next five ingredients. Add beef; mix well. Shape into 1-inch balls, about 12 dozen. Place in single layers in ungreased 15x10-inch baking pans. Bake for 10-15 minutes or until no longer pink, turning often; drain. Cool. Place about 30 meatballs each into freezer containers. May be frozen up to 3 months.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Instant Oatmeal...

I got this recipe from a friend on the Sonlight forum I visit regularly. It is great! You can adjust the amounts of sugar and spices to your liking. Add in some raisins and nuts if you like. It is quite good and supper easy!

Instant Oatmeal Mix

12 c (one round container) quick oats
1 2/3 heaping cups powdered milk
4 tbsp cinnamon
1 1/2 tbsp salt
5 Tbls. Sugar
2 Tbls. nutmeg

Run half the oats through the food processor or blender - but do not powder them completely. Combine with the rest of the oats and the other ingredients in a large bowl.

Mix together. You can store this in the original oatmeal container. Shake up the container to mix each time you are going to make oatmeal.

Use 1/3 c oatmeal with 2/3 c boiling water. Add your raisins and nuts, if desired.

To cook in the microwave, mix the oatmeal with water and cook for 90 seconds. Adjust to your desire consistency.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Pizza dough and sauce...

Here's the crust recipe:

1 cup warm water
1 Tablespoon yeast
1 teaspoon sugar

Combine those three ingredients and let stand for 10 min.

Then, stir in
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon onion powder
1/4 cup oil
2.5 cups flour.

Knead well. Let rest for about 15 min. Spread into baking sheet. This makes enough for two regular size round pizza pans, or one large baking sheet. We usually triple this recipe. We then will get 2 large pizzas and 3-4 small pizzas that we para bake for 8 mins, let cool and then place then if a large freezer bag. They freeze very nicely. You can also use whole wheat flour if you'd like for all the flour or just half of the flour.

Once you've put on your toppings, bake the pizza at 425* for about 20 min.
===================================================================================


Pizza Sauce (Cat Cora on Food Network)

Ingredients
1 (4-ounce) can tomato paste
1 1/2 cups water
1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
2 cloves garlic, minced
Salt and pepper
1/2 tablespoon chopped fresh oregano leaves (I use dried)
1/2 tablespoon chopped fresh basil leaves (I use dried)
1/2 tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary leaves (I omit this)

Directions
Mix together the tomato paste, water, and olive oil. Mix well. Add garlic, salt and pepper, to taste, oregano, basil, and rosemary. Mix well and let stand several hours to let flavors blend. No cooking necessary, just spread on dough. Add toppings and bake!

This makes enough for 2 meals for us...that would be 4 large pizzas and 2 small. I just put the leftovers in a storage container and it stays fresh for about 5-7 days in the fridge.


Saturday, January 17, 2009

Muffins for breakfast or snack

Apple Muffins

3/4 C canola oil
2 C sugar
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla
2 C unsweetened applesauce
4 C all purpose flour (half whole wheat flour)
2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp allspice
1/2 tsp cloves

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Place the sugar in a large mixing bowl. Pour in the canola oil and stir until creamy.
Add the egg and the vanilla. Stir until mixed well. Gently fold in the applesauce.

In another large mixing bowl sift together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, allspice and cloves. Slowly add them to the sugar mixture and mix just until moistened.

Spray the muffin tin with a non stick cooking spray. Pour each cup 3/4 full of batter.
Bake 20 minutes and test with a toothpick before removing.
==================================================================================

Plain/Chocolate Chip Muffins

1/4 cup oil
1 medium egg
1 cup milk
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon baking powder (3 teaspoons)
2 cups flour
1 cup chocolate chips

In a large bowl combine the oil, egg, milk, sugar and salt. Mix it very well with a fork or wire whisk. Measure in the baking powder and flour. Mix again until all of the dough particles are moistened. Do not over mix. The whole thing should take about 20 to 30 strokes. Spoon the batter into a dozen well oiled muffin cups. Bake at 400° for about 20 minutes. Remove from the oven and cool slightly before removing from the pan.
===================================================================================

Lemon Blueberry Muffin

2 C all purpose flour
3/4 C sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1 C skim milk (from powder is fine)
1/4 C canola oil
2 T lemon juice
1 egg white
1 tsp grated lemon rind
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/3 C frozen blueberries, unthawed

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
Spray muffin tin cups well with a non stick cooking spray.

In a small mixing bowl stir together the milk, canola oil, lemon juice, egg white, lemon rind and vanilla extract.

In a large mixing bowl combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt and cinnamon.
Pour the liquid mixture into the flour mixture and stir until just moist.
Fold in the blueberries. Pour batter into the muffin cups filling each 3/4 full.
Bake 20 minutes or until golden brown.

Using extra large eggs can cause your muffins to be a little runny. If using extra large eggs increase the flour by adding 1 T to the batter. This will ensure the muffins turn out just right.
===================================================================================
These muffins are our favorites! They freeze really well. Just let them cool and put them in a freezer bag. Take out however many you need/want and pop in the microwave for 15 seconds...hot and fresh they come out...yum!

I got the above recipes from The Hillbilly Housewife.

Enjoy!

Friday, January 16, 2009

Welcome to Cookin' Cheap

I've started this blog because I think it will be helpful for me to have all of the recipes I use regularly in one place. This blog is a spin-off of my No Spend Month blog where I am blogging about becoming debt-free whilst not spending money. You should check it out.:)

I am not planning to actually blog here. Think of this like a cookbook, except in a blog format. The recipes I'll post will be economical and yummy. Having 7 children ages 6mo-15 years old has made me learn how to prepare healthy, cheap meals that are yummy all at the same time. Some of the recipes are mine that I've created and others are from friends or websites that I like.

Enjoy Cookin' Cheap...