Sunday, March 8, 2015
The Recipe Box: Homestead Yeast Dough
One of the ways my family helps with budgeting is by hand down kitchen and household items that are no longer in use. My mother gave me a bread machine that she just didn't like. I tried several bread and dough recipes and none of them came out the way I wanted. They were either too dense or they just didn't bake up well. A few years ago, while searching for another recipe, I found a channel on YouTube called Homestead Acres. She did a video on dinner rolls and that turned out to be the perfect recipe for me.
Here is the video that gives the recipe and walks you through the process. Before you put it into action, let me share a few key points that I found with this recipe.
1) I don't bake it in the bread machine. I let it mix and rise, but remove it and bake in the oven.
2) You can freeze this recipe! If you want to freeze the dough, just separate it, let it rise again (it even rises great in the fridge) then oil the ball of dough, flour a freezer bag, and toss the dough in there. When you are ready to use it, let it thaw during the day and use it with dinner as normal.
3) We use this for bread as well as pizza dough. It makes the most amazing pizza dough.
4) This recipe makes 2 medium loaves of bread, 2 dozen dinner rolls, or 2 medium sized pizzas.
Labels:
freezer cooking,
freezer dough,
pizza dough,
recipe,
yeast dough
Wednesday, February 4, 2015
Freezer Cooking Meals: Buffalo Chicken Pasta
Buffalo chicken pasta can be a quick, filling, and flavorful addition to your monthly freezer meal menu. This recipe makes four large batches and can easily feed a family of 4 to 6. Here's what you'll need and how to make it. (Remember, this recipe makes 4 large dinners. If you want to do it for one night to give it a try, you'll need to adjust the ingredient amounts.)
Ingredients:
- 4 bottles of Louisiana Supreme Chicken Wing Sauce (you can find this at Dollar Tree)
- 2 family size (4-5 lb trays) of boneless skinless chicken breast
- 4 boxes of bowtie or penne pasta
- Ranch or Blue Cheese dressing (this is used on top of each serving, so the amount you need depends on your family size and dressing tastes)
1) Put your boneless skinless chicken into your crockpot. If you only have one standard size crockpot, you may need to cook up one tray of chicken at a time. If you have two crockpots, like we do, then you can put one tray in one pot and one in the other.
2) Cover your chicken with the Louisiana Supreme Chicken Wing Sauce. We use two bottles per crockpot or tray of chicken.
3) Cook the chicken on low for 8 to 9 hours or high for 4 to 6 hours. The chicken needs to be tender enough that you can break it apart with a fork.
4) Place the cooked chicken on a serving platter or in a large bowl and begin shredding the chicken.
5) Place your shredded chicken equally into 4 quart size bags and place in the freezer.
6) Take the frozen chicken out of the freezer to thaw the night before or morning of the day you plan on serving the pasta.
7) Cook your box of pasta as normal, drain, add the shredded chicken, and serve.
The shredded chicken also works great for crockpot shredded chicken sandwiches or sliders! Just follow steps 1-6. After the meat has thawed, warm in the microwave and serve on buns.
Labels:
chicken meal,
freezer cooking,
frugal cooking,
frugal meal,
recipe
Tuesday, January 6, 2015
Aldi Find: 3 Bean Chili Dry Soup Mix
I don't usually go for the all in one soup mixes for stews or chili. Mainly because they tend to leave something out or the flavor just doesn't seem right. Well, I have been proven wrong by Aldi. We found a 3 bean chili dry soup mix and decided to give it a try. It was $2.49 for the mix and we got the 4 pound roll of hamburger for $8.99. We only used 1 pound for the chili and it was amazing. We added nothing to it but the hamburger. So, we are using this again as a January meal.
I did do a few things that were not shown on the package instructions that may have added to the flavor. Here is how we did it.
- Brown the ground beef in the stockpot you'll be cooking the chili in.
- Add the can of tomato paste to the beef as it cooks.
- Do not drain off the hamburger!
- Add 6 cups of water instead of 7 and add it directly to the cooked hamburger and tomato mix
- Bring to a boil
- Add the chili mix
- Turn the heat down to simmer
- Allow the chili to simmer for one hour on low stirring occasionally.
That's all there is to it. I served it with cornbread but you could use biscuits, crackers, or anything else really. We also added cheese to each bowl.
It made enough for us to have dinner and 2 lunches. Not bad.
***picture from Pillsbury and does not reflect the actual chili that was made*
Labels:
budget,
food,
frugal,
frugal cooking,
recipes
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