Wednesday, February 10, 2010
OAMC - Beans, beans and more beans!
This is to make the main dishes. I will post another OAMC plan for the side dishes.
Makes 7 meals and 8 side dishes
Meals:
1. Southwest enchiladas with salad and veggies
2. split pea and yam soup with rolls. (Yes, I know it’s not technically a bean, but it fits in here.)
3. Rice and Bean roll ups with salad and rice and beans
4. Baked Beans - goes with marinated chicken, roast sticky chicken, chicken skewers, and oven fried chicken strips.
5. Vege Mexican deep dish pizza with salad (one with meat will be in the beef OAMC plan)
6. Vege Pot Pies - served with veggies (one with meat will be in the beef OAMC plan)
7. Empanadas - served with salad and rice and beans. (One with meat will be in the beef OAMC plan)
8. Bean Burritos for a quick lunch or eating on the run
9. Refried Beans for side dishes
Master List of Ingredients:
1 can 14.5 ounces whole tomatoes, undrained
6 small green peppers chopped, 3 c.
2 med. roma tomatoes chopped
6 med. onions, chopped, 3 c.
2 small yams peeled and cut into ½ inch pieces
1 med. Potato, peeled and cut into ½ inch pieces
1 clove garlic, finely chopped
¼ c. chopped fresh cilantro
1 t. ground cumin
¾ t. salt
½ t. Italian seasoning
2 c. brown sugar
4 T. molasses
4 T. Worcestershire sauce
1 t. chili powder
¼ t. pepper
1 t. honey
1/8 t. crushed red pepper
16 ounces dried yellow split peas.
5 cans kidney beans, rinsed and drained or 2 lb. dried kidney beans (save out 1 can or 2 cups cooked for beef plan), cooked + 2 can or 4 c. kidney beans for chicken plan (chicken chili and cowboy chicken) total 3 lbs dried
5 cans refried beans or 10 cups of homemade + 10 cans or 20 cups for side dishes
8 cans small white beans, rinsed and drained or 2 lbs. dried small white beans cooked.
1 can black beans with cumin and chili spices (or add your own spices if you use dry beans)
3 cans pinto beans, rinsed and drained or 6 cups cooked dry beans – 6 lbs if also making refried beans, 1 lb, if not. Set aside 4 cups or 2 can for beef plan
1 c. ricotta cheese
28 flour tortillas (8 inches) - I always get extra tortillas because I tend to stretch out how many enchiladas and roll ups I can make.
2 ¾ c. shredded cheddar cheese - 11 ounces
4 c. shredded cheese any kind – 16 ounces
¾ c. margarine or butter
8 oz. unsalted butter + 5 T unsalted butter, chilled
¾ c. shredded Monterey jack cheese - 3 ounces
6 ounces sliced Canadian style bacon, coarsely chopped
1 ½ c. thick and chunky salsa
1 c. cooked rice
1 - 8 ounce can of corn or 1 c. frozen corn
3 c. tomato sauce
7 ½ c. biscuit baking mix
1 ½ c. cornmeal
1 can chopped green chilies
2 c. flour
1 egg
Baking Dishes needed:
2 - 13x9x2 casserole dish
10 - Storage containers for split pea soup and 4 for beaked beans and 5 for refried beans.
2 pie plates
Processes: I am listing these out in a way that economizes time and effort!
First, do any chopping or shredding as indicated in ingredient list.
Cook any rice that needs to be cooked.
If using dried beans, soak your pinto beans the day before you plan to cook. Throw them in the crock pot overnight and in the morning they will be ready for cooking or mashing. Take 29 cups of soaked and cooked pintos and mash into refried beans. Divide as follows: 5 parts of 2 c. each, set aside for meals. 5 parts with 4 cups each, place in storage containers and freeze for side dishes. To eat, defrost in fridge, and heat in a pan on the stove until hot all the way through.
Also soak and cook black beans, kidney beans and small white beans. Beans can be cooked ahead and stored in fridge for up to 4 days.
Make empanada dough - Combine 4 c. flour, 8 oz. + 5 T. butter, 2/3 c. ice water, 2 beaten eggs and 1 t. salt. Mix lightly with your fingers until it starts forming small, pea-sized pieces. Stir in the ice water, a little at a time, until it forms dough. (A fork works well for this) Knead lightly until the dough comes together in a ball. Divide dough in half and wrap the dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 - 12 hours. One half is for bean empanadas and one half is for the beef plan.
Split Pea and Yam Soup - Mix in the crock pot: 7 c. water, ¾ t. salt, ½ t. Italian seasoning, ¼ t. pepper, yams, potatoes, ½ c. onion, split peas, and Canadian bacon. Cover and cook on low for 8 to 9 hours. This can be cooking while you prepare all the other dishes. Spoon into storage container. Let cool, and freeze. To reheat, heat in a pan on the stove, stirring occasionally until heated through.
Southwest Enchiladas - In blender, mix 1 can 14.5 ounces whole tomatoes, ½ c. chopped onion, 1 clove of garlic and blend until smooth. Cook blended mixture, 2 T of cilantro, 2 t. honey, 1/8 t. crushed red pepper in 2 quart saucepan over medium heat for 3 minutes, stirring occasionally. In a medium bowl, mix 2 cups or 1 can pinto beans, 1 c. ricotta cheese, ½ c. bell pepper, 1 t. cumin and 2 T. cilantro. Spread ½ c. tomato sauce in the bottom of a 13 x 9 x 2 baking dish. Spoon ½ c. bean mixture down the center of each tortilla. Roll up tortilla and place seam side down on tomato sauce in dish. Spoon remaining tomato sauce over filled tortillas. Sprinkle with ¼ c cheddar cheese and ¼ c monterey jack cheese. Cover with foil and freeze. I use a food saver once the food is frozen. On eatin’ day, defrost in refridgerator, then cook in a 375 oven for 25-30 minutes, or until it is hot and bubbly.
Rice and Bean Roll Ups – Spread ½ c. salsa in an ungreased 13x9x2 baking dish. In a medium bowl, mix rice, roma tomatoes, ½ c. bell pepper, black beans, corn. Spread about 1 c. rice mixture on each tortilla. Roll up tortilla. Place seam sides down on salsa in baking dish. Spoon remaining 1 c. salsa over tortillas. Sprinkle with ½ c cheddar and ½ c monterey jack. Cover and freeze. To reheat, defrost in your refridgerator and then cover and bake in a 350 oven for 30 to 35 minutes or until hot and bubbly.
Baked Beans - In large skillet, saute 2 c. onion and 2 c. green pepper together until onion is cooked (5 minutes). Transfer to a HUGE pot or bowl. Add remaining ingredients, adding salt and pepper to taste if desired. Cool to room temperature and divide into 4 portions in storage containers. Freeze. To serve, defrost in fridge, and then reheat on stove until hot.
Mexican Deep Dish Pizza – In large bowl, combine the following: 7 ½ c. biscuit baking mix, 1 ½ c. cornmeal, 1 ½ c. water, ¾ butter or margarine, melted. Divide dough into 3 parts, and set 2 aside for Pot Pies. Grease 2 pie plates and divide 1 remaining part of dough into 2 pieces. Pat the pieces down into the pie plates, on bottom and sides. Bake for 10 minutes, remove from oven. In a med. Bowl combine, 8 oz. tomato sauce, green chilies, 1 t. chili powder, ¼ t. cumin. Spread 1 can or 2 c. refried beans over the crust. Top with tomato sauce, and then sprinkle with 1 ½ c. shredded cheese. Freeze. To reheat, defrost in fridge and then bake in a 350 oven for 10 minutes or until hot and bubbly. Garnish with tomatoes, lettuce, olives or sour cream.
Pot Pies – Grease a muffin pan. Using one part of set aside dough, line the bottoms and sides of the muffin pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Fill cavities with 2 c refried beans and 1 ½ c. shredded cheese, evenly distributed among cavities. Roll out remaining dough and cut out circles slightly bigger than muffin tin cavities. Place “lids” on the cavities, and pinch sides to close. Freeze. Pop the pot pies out of the tin, and store in a zip lock freezer bag. To serve, microwave for a few minutes.
Empanadas – Roll out pre-made empanada dough to ½ inch thick. Using a biscuit cutter or a cup, cut out smallish circles. Using 2 c. of refried beans, place a teaspoon of refried beans in the middle of each one. Top with a pinch of cheese. Brush edge of one side with a little water. Fold edges together to seal. Bend to resemble a crescent mon and crimp edges with the side of a fork. Freeze on a cookie sheet. Once frozen transfer to a freezer bag. To eat, bake with out thawing in a 400 degree oven for 5 – 10 minutes or until lightly browned. OR bake first and then freeze.
Bean Burritos – Warm tortillas slightly. using 2 c. of reserved refried beans, place ¼ c. refried beans in center of tortilla. Sprinkle with 1/8 c. of shredded cheddar cheese. Roll into a burrito. Repeat for 16 burritos. Freeze on a cookie sheet and then transfer to a zip lock bag. To eat, microwave on high for 1 minute. Turn over and microwave for another 1.5 minutes or until heated through.
Friday, January 15, 2010
Why I love raw food...
Early last fall, I quit the raw food and went back to the conventional american diet. There were lots of reasons, including stress, but the main reason was my school schedule. It was difficult to carry my food in with me to school, and I was getting some crazy looks. So I caved, and started eating chips instead of peppers and tomato wedges.
3 days ago, I officially renewed my commitment to a better diet. I just love how quick the results come rolling in! 3 days of mostly raw and some pants that haven't fit me in a couple months are back on my hips. 3 days and my skin is clear. Literally... no more blemishes at all. You go to bed with those little bumps, and maybe one or 2 pimples, and you wake up and it's smooth... I would say like a baby's butt, BUT, baby's butts aren't really that smooth, and I have problems comparing my face to an ass. so.. smooth as something really smooth. For me this always happens the night after my 3rd day raw. You go to sleep your same old self, and wake up with a fresh new complexion! Love it!!
Monday, January 11, 2010
Year in review? Not here!
All over the place I am seeing people look back on their accomplishments of the last year. Their favorite books, highlights, recipes, vacations and more. You won't be finding any of that in the Arevalo household. 2009 was a black swirling vortex that sucked me in. 2009 wasn't all that I wanted it to be. 2009 was hard, and grueling, and sometimes cruel. There were moments that I did not think I would make it through. But I did. 2010 is my first step in a different direction. 2010 is my fresh start. And every fresh start needs a theme song.
(So damn easy to say that life’s so hard
Everybody’s got their share of battle scars
As for me I’d like to think my lucky stars that
I’m alive, and well
It’d be easy to add up all the pain
And all the dreams you set and watch go up in flames
Dwell on the wreckage as it smolders in the rain
But not me, I’m alive
And today you know that’s good enough for me
Breathing in and out is a blessing can’t you see
Today is the first day of the rest of my life
And I’m alive, and well
I’m alive, and well
Stars are dancin’ on the water here tonight
It’s good for the soul, and there’s not a sole in sight
But this motors caught it wind and brought me back to life
Now I’m alive, and well
And today you know that’s good enough for me
Breathing in and out is a blessing can’t you see
Today is the first day of the rest of my life
Now I’m alive, and well
Yeah I’m alive, and well
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Garden Planning
Yes, I know, it is negative a bijillion degrees outside and the ground is covered in snow. I am spending my days dreaming of fresh veggies right from my yard. I have decided that gardening is something that I will be handing down to my kiddos so I am starting a garden journal.
In the first section I have calendars with planting dates, transplanting dates, harvesting dates and such. I also have a detailed garden layout plan, where I will be planting each item and how many will go into each square.
The second section has info about each type of seed. Latin names, sun requirements, how to know when it is best to harvest, When and where it was purchased and what I spent.
The third section is the section for lists, logs and recording. In no special order
- Purchase Log
- Weather Log
- Catalog Wishlist
- Seed Starting Log
- Planting Log
- Pest Log
- Harvest Records
- Preserving Records
Next will be the diary section where I will record my thoughts and views and gardeny actions, followed by a page for "What I want to do differently next year."
I think this is really going to help me track changes and trends and get better at gardening!
So I am planning an even bigger garden this year. Adan is going to have to build me 7 more boxes. Hopefully he is cool with that! It is going to be tricky to find a place for such a big garden this spring. Our yard is bordered in the back by a tree line. In the morning, our yard will be shaded by the house, and in the afternoon, the trees will be shading the yard. There is a place were the house shadow won't reach, but there is another tree in the yard that will shade the space at this time. I am going to have to offset the garden a bit so that maybe that tree won't shade everything. The rub with all this planning is that I won't know how it's going to work out until the trees have filled in and everything is already planted. I guess I am just going to have to use my guess as to how it will work out!
If you want the garden layout for this season, post in the comments and I will email it to ya!
This year we will be planting:
Early Snowball Cauliflower - 3
Farmer's Extra Early Cauliflower - 3
Red Russian Kale - 3
Cherry Belle Radishes - 32
Lettuce Blend Lettuce - 4
Green Magic Broccoli - 2
Green Sprouting Calabrese Broccoli - 2
Coronando Crown Broccoli - 2
Green Arrow Peas - 144
Purple Pod Beans - 144
Blue Lake Beans - 72
Sultans Beans - 72
Strawberry Popcorn - 24
Yellow Dent Corn - 24
Golden Cross Corn - 24
Boston Pickling Cucumbers - 2
Japanese Climbing Cucumbers - 4
Listada de Gandia Eggplants - 3
Bell Boy Peppers - 2
Sweet Pepper Mix - 4
Chocolate Beauty Bell Peppers - 2
Napoleon Sweet Bell Peppers - 2
Tolli's Sweet Italian Peppers - 2
Mortgage Lifter Tomatoes - 6
Roma Tomatoes - 6
Golden Rave Tomatoes - 6
Gurney Girl Tomatoes - 6
Sweet Baby Girl Tomatoes - 6
Aunt Ruby's German Green Tomatoes - 6
Yellow Pear Tomatoes - 6
Green Tomatillos - 2
Burpee Golden Beets - 16
Danvers Carrots - 64
Nantes Carrots - 64
Envy Carrots - 64
Paris Market Carrots - 64
Yellow Crookneck Squash - 1
Black Magic Zucchini - 2
Anna Swartz Hubbard Squash - 1
Burgess Buttercup Squash - 1
Waltham Butternut Squash - 1
Bibb Lettuce - 8
Iceberg Lettuce - 8
Jack o Lanturn Pumpkins - 2
Lumina Pumpkins - 2
Gurney's Giant Magic Pumpkin - 2
Black Seeded Simpson Lettuce - 8
Buttercrunch Lettuce - 8
Bright Lights Swiss chard - 4
Crimson Sweet Watermelon - 3
Aunt Molly's Ground cherry - 1
America Spinach - 9
Teton Spinach - 9
Gurney's Giant Cantalopes - 3
Bidwell Casaba - 1
Charantais Melon - 1
Boule d' Or Melon - 1
Strawberries - 72
Holy beans, that is a long list!! Can't wait for harvest time!!!
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Fun with fabric!
Since we have moved into the new house, I have been trying to go room by room and finish any sewing decorating projects, like curtains or rugs or whatever. I finished the kitchen today!
I had purchased some coordinating fabrics for the old house, greens, and purple and pretty, and never got around to putting up the curtains or making the rug... I had that fabric for a year!!
I feel super proud of my self for finally using it up. I made 2 curtains for the entry way, in an olive green leafy print. The ties are in purple. I made a fabric strip version of a hanging curtain for the doorway to the kitchen and I made a woven rug. I even have enough fabric to make a rug for the laundry room!
So the story about the fabric strip curtain: From our front door you can go to your left and go down a short hall to the living room or you can go to the right and in to the kitchen. The door way to the kitchen is wide, and I hate that people entering our house are going to stare right into the kitchen! BUT I love the openness and the view right out to the street. So my compromise was this version of a beaded curtain.
The rug was also super easy. Same basic principle as the woven placemats you made in elementary school. I just cut strips out the length of the rug, and then more for the width, and wove them, under, over, under, over. Then i put on a binding, with mitered corners, like you would for a quilt. I am NOT good at sewing a straight line. That is my goal for this year. Figure out how to sew straight. Entonces, my binding doesn't look super great, but you can't tell unless you look close. Also this was my first time with binding and with mitered corners. All in all, super easy and a fun learning event. I finished it in 2 days, so definitely a weekend project.
I have embraced my mother's advice that perfection is in the little details, so my iron has become my best friend. I ironed all my seams, and measured them to make sure they were uniform. Yes, mom, I measured. All the fabric strips were ironed in so no raw edges would show. My ironing board is feeling a little worn. I think I may need to replace him.
It feels super good to be able to sew and to be tackling these projects that have been on the books so long! Entry way, done! Kitchen done! Next project, laundry room rug! Then on to the Living Room!!
Pics!
Curtains in the entry way.
Fabric Strips laid out on the craft table
View of the fabric strip curtain from the front door.
Close up on the fabric strips
Weaving the rug
The finished product.
My sad, sad ironing board.
Friday, December 25, 2009
Christmas!
I made them all pose prior to opening presents. :)
Christmas in the Arevalo household was really nice. Adan was home for once so we got to do all the santa chores together. I did not make it to be until about 2 AM, but the kids let us sleep in until 8 AM, and then only one was up.
Santa was very nice to us this year! The boys got bikes from Santa, and Lucy got a lap table with art supplies from Santa. I got a brand new digi camera and a wireless printer. From us, AJ got his first cell phone, and Alex got a PSP. Lucy got a tag reader and 4 books. We also do a secret santa in our family. Everyone draws a name, even the kids and everyone has a chance to pick something and give it to another person. AJ got $20 bucks from grannie, Lucy got an easy bake oven from me, Alex got a transformers game for his PSP from AJ, I got a tote bag that says I grow my own food from Katie, and Adan got a bunch of tool sets from Jerry. All of the secret Santa gifts were perfect and suited the receiver so well!
We had a really relaxing day. Mom and Jerry and Grannie came over about 11:00. We ate homemade cinnamon rolls for breakfast and had chicken, ham, potatoes, jello salad, green salad and rolls for a late lunch or "linner" as we like to call it. The boys and Adan took a bike ride. Lucy made us all some itty bitty, teeny weeny little easy bake sugar cookies. Grannie took naps in the "box room". My mom and I sat and knitted and crocheted while we watched various Christmas movies... of the muppet variety. I lurve me some muppets.
I haven't blogged in foreeevvvveeerrrr, my imaginary readers won't know, but in the intervening months we have moved again and are in a new house. More on that later.
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Want some trashy jelly?
http://grammie710.vox.com/library/post/apple-waste-jelly.html