Recipes

Spicy Black-Eyed Peas

I love Black Eye Pea, and this recipe a Paula Deen Recipe is excellent! It’s full of flavor unlike a lot of Black Eyed Pea Recipes. You can’t go wrong with this one!! It’s kicked up!

Ingredients

  • 4 slices bacon
  • 1 medium onion, chopped
  • 1 (16-ounce) package dried black-eyed peas, washed
  • 1 (12-ounce) can diced tomatoes and green chiles
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon chili powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 3 cups water 

Directions

  1. In a large saucepan, cook the bacon until crisp. Remove the bacon, crumble, and set aside to use as a topping for the peas. 
  2. Saute the onion in the bacon drippings until tender. Add the peas, diced tomatoes and green chiles, salt, chili powder, pepper and water. 
  3. Cover and cook over medium heat for 45 minutes to 1 hour, or until the peas are tender. 
  4. Add additional water, if necessary. 
  5. Serve garnished with crumbled bacon. 

Recipes

Pan Fried Cabbage


If you don’t like cabbage this is a great way to eat it. Not only is it super easy, practically fail proof the flavor is really great. Simple, and excellent what more do you need? I am not much of a cabbage person, but my husband is so I am always looking for ways to make it eatable for me. This recipe is one of my favorites!


Ingredients:
  • 8 oz of bagged cabbage (coleslaw is what I use then you get carrots too)
  • 4 ounces of bacon
  • Salt (if desired)
  • 1 onion

Directions:

  1. Thinly slice 4 ounces of bacon. It’s easy to slice when it’s partially frozen, and on a medium high heat begin to pan fry the bacon.
  2. When the bacon is cooked through, but not crispy add thinly sliced onion once the onion is cooked add 8 ounces of bagged cabbage. Mix all together
  3. Cooked until cabbage becomes limp.
  4. Add salt as needed

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Recipes

Feed a Family of 4 on $10 a Day

I found this article on Yahoo and thought it was pretty interesting. It’s amazing what you can do when you get short on money and creative with food. I think you can actually do better than $10 a day!

When I was growing up, my mother would serve something she called “economy dinner.” Pasta, sauce, maybe a quarter-pound of hamburger meat mixed in and a little cheese sprinkled on top, baked together in the oven. We didn’t understand the name, but we loved the dish.

I was thinking I need to find my own “economy dinner,” as I had yet another supermarket freak-out while watching my grocery receipt print out and curl down two feet behind the register. At home with the receipt in front of me, I decided to crunch some numbers to see if I could feed my family of four for less than $100 a week.

Would it be possible to do 84 meals for less than $100? With room to spare, it turns out. According to my calculations, we could do it on $72.38. We’d be crying of boredom after Day 2. But we wouldn’t be hungry.

If we ate cereal and milk for breakfast, a PB&J and an apple for lunch, and protein-enriched pasta with store-brand marinara and a couple of carrots sticks and broccoli or green beans for dinner, we could get by on $10.34 per day.

I won’t bore you with the math, but this meal plan cuts out all the extras. No snacks, no OJ, no organic milk at $5.99 per gallon, no Parmesan cheese sprinkled on top of that pasta, no frozen yogurt at night in front of DWTS. The husband brown bags it to the office. I’ll admit I included my coffee, at $2.15 per week, because I consider it essential, along with milk for the kids at every meal.

This exercise has been an eye-opener for me. Now that I know our family’s bargain-basement dinner costs $3.40, I see the foods I thought were cheap (like a large pizza for $10) are pricey in comparison. And the foods I knew were expensive, such as a $10 steak, fish that’s $14 per pound, or deli meat at $8.99 per pound, now seem top dollar.

Some of the splurges, like the organic milk, I’d opt to add back in. But that package of Pepperidge Farm Nantuckets does more to the bottom line (both bottom lines, really) than I’ve cared, up until now, to realize.

To get out of our pasta rut, I consulted with Leslie Bonci, a dietician at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, about other nutrient-rich foods that pack a lot of bang for the buck. Here’s what she suggested:
Eggs:

  • 99 cents per dozen, can be breakfast, lunch, dinner or hard-boiled for snacks.
  • Canned beans, like kidneys or chick peas: 79 cents for a 16-ounce can.
  • A five-pound roasting chicken ($5) could yield two dinners. For the first meal, roast with potatoes and carrots and eat half of the chicken. For the second meal, make a stir-fry with the leftover chicken and a bag of frozen mixed veggies ($1.29 for a 16-ounce bag) and serve over brown rice (99 cents for a 16-ounce bag).
  • Oatmeal costs $3.69 for a 42-ounce canister and has 30 servings. That could replace at least $7 worth of boxed cereal, and the oatmeal is more filling.Bananas, at 49 cents a pound, cost less than most fruits, especially those “select” peaches and nectarines at $1.99 per pound. 
  • Bananas are definitely cheaper and healthier than the sugary granola bars I send in my daughter’s lunch.
  • Texturized Veggie Protein, a lean meat substitute that’s a lot like ground beef and can be added to pasta sauce or tacos, is $2.69 for 10 ounces.

Recipes

Crisyp Onion Straws


On occasion we take unhealthy to a whole new level and make our own onion straws. They are so yummy and so fantastic that it’s really had to pass them up.

They are simple and delicious, and I don’t make them often enough, but they are worth the time and effort you have to put into them.

Ingredients:
  • 2 large onions
  • 1 cup flour
  • 1 tsp. garlic powder
  • 1 tsp. paprika
  • ½ tsp. salt
  • 1/8 tsp. pepper
  • Oil for frying

Directions:

  1. Begin heating oil in a frying pan on medium high heat (adjust as needed). By the time your prep work is done your oil should be hot enough to fry (test your oil to make sure before frying)
  2. In a zip plastic bag add flour, garlic powder, paprika, salt, pepper, zip up and shake all together
  3. Slice onion as thin as possible. I use a boning knife to get the onions super thin.
  4. Add sliced onions to the zip bag close and shake.
  5. Add onion a handful at a time to the oil (do not over crowd your frying pan) and fry until they are golden brown.
  6. Drain on a paper towel
  7. Repeat until onions are all cooked.

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Recipes

Pan Fried Turnips and Potatoes

My husband is from Minnesota and told me he had never tried turnips. I am very much a southern girl and grew up with turnips. I always had them in stew and that’s pretty much it. I decided to take a turnip and turn it into something I thought he would like. I know him well enough to know he wasn’t going to like turnips, and I was right. I made this recipe because it’s a combination of both turnips and potatoes I wanted to break him in easy. It turned out great, but it was very evident when you had a turnip in your mouth because they have a much stronger flavor than potatoes. If you like turnips I have no doubt you will like this recipe. 

Ingredients:
Directions:
  1. Cook cubed potatoes and turnips in boiling salted water until fork tender; drain well.
  2. In a large skillet over medium heat, melt the butter. Add the chopped onion and garlic and saute for about 3 – 4 minutes.
  3. To the skillet, add the cooked drained potato and turnip cubes.
  4. Add the salt and pepper.
  5. Continue to cook and stir until potatoes and turnips are lightly browned (or browned to your liking), adjusting heat as necessary.
  6. When done, sprinkle with the parsley and serve.