Last 25 Recipes

Friday, April 9, 2010

Awesome Tomato Basil Soup/Grown-Up SpaghettiO's

When I was a kid, I was succumbed to eat different varieties of the Chef Boyardee and SpaghettiO's line of canned spaghetti in tomato sauce. I was particularly fond of the spaghettiO's with meatballs. Of course, as a child you never realize the quality of food you are eating just as long as it was quick to make and tasted somewhat decent. I have forgotten the days of those canned spaghetti products until a few days ago when Laura and I were experimenting with a recipe for a Tomato Basil soup. A friend gave us about 20 leaves of fresh basil and we needed to find a way to use them before they went bad. We made this soup and it was pretty good. However, then next day we had a stroke of genius and added some pasta to the soup and made our own amazing "grown-up version" of SpaghettiO's. So here is the Tomato Basil soup recipe along with the optional step to make it the Grown Up SpaghettiO's.

Tomato Basil Soup

Ingredients:
1 28oz. can of whole peeled tomatoes (or 5-6 fresh tomatoes)
4 cups of tomato juice (1 quart can)
15-20 leaves of fresh basil
1 cup of heavy whipping cream
1-2 tsp. of chicken bullion to taste
2 cloves of garlic
7 tbls. of butter
1/3 cup of Parmesan cheese
Salt and Pepper to taste

Optional:
1/2 pound of rotini pasta

In a large stock pot, place tomatoes and tomato juice and heat on medium. Simmer for 25-30 minutes. Add the garlic, bullion, and chopped basil leaves to the tomatoes and puree with a immersion blender or remove and puree in a stand blender and return to pot. Keep on medium heat and add the heavy cream, parmesan, and the butter. Season with salt and pepper and stir until the butter melts. Simmer for 10-20 minutes and serve.

To the Grown-Up SpaghettiO's, cook the rotini pasta until done and add to the soup. It is so amazing and even better the next day!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Sweet Pork and Creamy Tomatillo Ranch Dressing

While living in Provo a few years ago, we became friends with a really fun couple, the Noordas. They, like us, were major foodies. One day they shared this recipe with us and we were blown away. They have since moved to Chicago but we still think of them every time we make these recipes. (and we hope they don't mind us sharing their recipes with everyone on our blog)

There has been an explosion of Tex-Mex type restaurants in the past 5 or 6 years around us. They all pretty much serve the same type of food, large salads, burritos, and tacos. They are all pretty much known for their sweet pork and Creamy Tomatillo Ranch Dressing. Laura and I spent a while trying to find a replica recipe for these and failed to recreate them. Then the Noordas shared their version with us and we have been making it ever since. So thanks to the Noordas for this awesome recipe!

Sweet Pork

1 big hunk of pork butt (again we highly recommend the pork roasts available at Costco, if there is one nearby)
2 cans "el pato" (green or yellow cans in the Mexican aisle by the salsas & enchilada sauce. Just an FYI: the yellow can is milder than the green can)
3 cans of tomato sauce
2-3 cups of brown sugar
1 cup of water

We like to cook this on low in the crock pot for up to 8+ hours. By that time it should be really soft and easy to pull apart with a fork or tongs. Put the shredded meat back in and cook for a little longer to get the flavors to penetrate the shredded meat. Serve in any of your favorite styles of Mexican dishes. We really like it with taco salads and large burritos, but our new favorite is making large nachos.

Creamy Tomatillo Ranch Dressing

3 fresh tomatillos, peeled and quartered
juice of a lime
1/2 c. buttermilk
1/2 c. mayo
1/2 c. sour cream
a pkg dry Ranch Buttermilk Dressing mix
1 c. fresh chopped cilantro
6 stalks green onions, with ends
2 cloves crushed garlic
3-4 tsp sugar
5 cross-section slices of a jalapeno pepper(optional if you want a kick)

Mix well in blender or food processer. Refrigerate for at least one hour before serving.

Saturday, January 2, 2010

Bruschetta

So the other night we watched Julie and Julia which made us really want to cook again. And of all the dishes cooked in the movie, Laura was fascinated with the Bruschetta. So we had to try it out the Julia Child way. We first tried this recipe over the holidays in Seattle with my family and have made it almost twice a week since then, they are that good! Here's the recipe:


Easy (but addicting) Bruschetta


5-6 Roma tomatoes (or plum tomatoes)
Olive Oil
Garlic Cloves
Fresh Basil
Parmesan Cheese
Bread (traditional Baguette or we used French bread and really liked it)
Salt and Pepper
Italian Seasoning

Cube tomatoes and finely chop about 5-7 leaves of basil and place in a mixing bowl. Also add about a 1/4 cup of shredded Parmesan cheese to the bowl. Pour about 2 tablespoons of olive oil over the tomato mixture and combine. Sprinkle some Italian Seasoning and Salt and pepper to taste. Let that sit in the fridge for a while so the tomatoes will take on some of the flavor of the basil. Next, slice the bread in 1' slices. Coat the bottom of a skillet with olive oil and place on med-high heat. When hot, add the bread and brown on both sides. You may have to keep adding more oil to make the bread crispy. Peel a garlic clove and cut it in half. Rub the garlic clove on one side of the toasted bread. How much garlic you rub is up to your taste in garlic, but 5-6 rubs works good for us. Place the tomato mixture on the garlic side of the bread and enjoy!