BBQ Slow Cooker Ribs

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Background:

You can make these as a main course ( double or triple the amounts) or as a starter. You could use Beef or Lamb Ribs if you don’t eat pork.In this recipe as in many others, I use the slow cooker- the best invention since sliced bread! I just love putting stuff in – and forgetting about it for 10-12 hours. This used to be a huge help for me when I was working full time – since I would prepare it before I left in the morning ( or even the night before and put it into the fridge to marinade) and then popped it into the slow cooker for 10-12 hours. This type of cooking is very forgiving – 10 or 12 hours – gives you a pretty large margin for being held up at work. And then you come home to the lovely smell of stewing meat – yum! And if you prepare the salad fixin’s the night before (the Cilantro-Jicama salad is a great one – keep the dressing separate until just before serving) – and refrigerate – your dinner is complete with some last minute bread rolls popped into the oven for browning/heating. OK – I agree –  the main course here is not the healthiest meal – but once in a while – why not?

Preparation time: 10 minutes – yes, really!

Cooking time: In the slow cooker about 10-12 hours

Ingredients:
1/2 cup of white vinegar

1 cup of white sugar

1/2 cup of ketchup

1 Tbsp of  chopped red onion ( I love onion so add about 4 tbsp)

1 cup of water

1 lb of pork ( or beef or lamb) ribs trimmed of excess fat and separated into portion size pieces ( or if you are using this as a starter, into single rib pieces)

Description:
Add all the ingredients except the ribs into the slow cooker and stir. Add the ribs and stir once more then cook on low for 10-12 hours or on high for 5-6 hours.Could this be any easier? I don’t think so!

Enjoy!

 

 

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Samples of Rockin’ Grandma 14 Songs

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audios-mixed-3

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Starters – Red Pepper Dip

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Background:

We grow wonderful peppers as you can see from the photo above, at The Little Farm and this is a quick and easy dip that tastes great with Pita chips (which I confess I buy from the stores, since they taste so good, I think they are worth a short cut!)

Preparation Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 15 minutes for both peppers and breadcrumbs

Ingredients:

2 large red peppers

1/2 cup of fresh breadcrumbs

1/2 cup of chopped nuts ( I like almonds, walnuts or pine nuts work too)

1 chili pepper seeded and chopped ( if you don’t like spicy food – leave this out)

1 Tbsp of honey ( we use organic honey from our bees – any organic honey will do – the non organic is often just sugar water)

1/2 tsp salt

1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper

1/2 tsp of cumin ground

2 Tbps of olive oil

2 Tbsp of finely chopped garlic ( about 2 cloves)

2 Tbsp of chopped Italian parsley

Directions:

Take the red peppers and score them a few times on each side. Place on a foil lined cookie pan and pre heat the oven to broil or 500 degrees. Put the tray under the broiler and watch it VERY carefully. I don’t leave the kitchen when this is happening. Turn the peppers when they start to brown. This should take 15 minutes or so.

In the meantime take day old bread, cut off the crusts, and crumble onto another foil lined pan and place in a pre heated oven at 350 degrees for about 15 minutes. Of course its great if you have two ovens as I do – you can do this simultaneously.

Take out the peppers and let them cool for a few moments. Then put them into your blender or Cuisinart, and add the nuts, the honey, the cumin, salt , pepper, chili pepper ( if desired) and blend away for a few moments.

Finally add the olive oil and then the garlic.

You can keep this in a sealed container in the fridge for a few days – certainly cool it for a few hours.

Just before serving add the parsley, mix well and there you have it!

 

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Mulberry Pie

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Background:

Ok I must admit – I took the short cuts on this one. But its SOO easy to make a pie when you use a ready made pie crust. And there are lots of really good ones on the market. You will need to try a few – and see which ones you like the best. Once you have that, its a matter of obtaining fresh mulberries – we grow them so its easy to do for us – however other kinds of berries work fine too (like Blackberries or Blueberries). With vanilla icecream or even low cal whipped cream, you will enjoy every mouthful.

Preparation Time: One hour

Cooking Time: 45 minutes ( or whatever it says on the package of the pie crust)

Ingredients:

3 cups of cleaned berries ( I use mulberries and snip off their stems)

1 1/4 cups white sugar

1/4 cup all-purpose flour

1 – 9 inch double crust pie

2 tablespoons butter

1 tablespoon milk

1 egg, lightly beaten for the finish

 

 

Directions

 

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C).
  2. In a large bowl, mix berries with sugar and flour. Place mixture into bottom pie crust. Dot with butter and then cover with top pie crust. Crimp edges, cut slits in upper crust, and brush with lightly beaten egg. Let pie rest in refrigerator for 30 minutes.
  3. OR ( as depicted in the picture above), for a more sophisticated look – thaw the frozen top crust until the dough is pliable. Then cut the dough into strips and braid them across the berry filled lower crust. Use the lightly beaten egg to brush the strips of crust, that will make them a nice light brown color when baking.
  4. Bake pie in preheated oven for 15 minutes. Lower oven temperature to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) and bake for an additional 30 minutes. Remove pie from oven and let sit on wire rack until cool.
  5. Serve with vanilla ice-cream, or low cal cream. Yum!

 

 

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All-Fruit Smoothies

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All-Fruit Smoothies

Background:

When it is the middle of summer, all we want are cold drinks. But trying to avoid the sugar filled sodas and carbonated drinks, means going to the fresh and natural. Bottled fruit juices are full of added sugar – just what we don’t need in our diets! So we came up with this wonderful fruit smoothie – all natural and yummy.Filling too!

Ingredients:

Any fruit that you like – fresh only ( not canned – too much sugar) cut into pieces that will fit into your blender – no pits, skins or peels e.g. peaches, plums, pears, nectarines, bananas, berries of all kinds ( blueberries and blackberries will make the color of the drink darker but taste yummy) oranges, tangerines etc.

A blender

Preparation time: 10 minutes plus an hour or two for refrigeration of the fruit

Cooking time: None

Directions:

  1. Place the chilled pieces of fruit into the blender and whiz away until its as smooth as you like it
  2. No need for ice cream or milk – great for those who are lactose intolerant – and also keeps the calorie count down without losing any flavor
  3. Put the unused smoothie into the fridge and whiz it once before serving at a later stage since the liquid and fruit will separate.

 

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Jujube Jam

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Jujube Jam

Background:

Jujube’s are available in specialty markets – and since they are relatively rare in the USA but not so in Asia where they are plentiful and inexpensive – to my readers and visitors from Asia you will want to stock up on these delicious fruit and make lots of jam to enjoy when the season is over – that is what we do – and we only have two trees! The painful part of this is cutting the fruit in half and taking out the pit. I take half the fruit, pit it and boil it with some lemon juice and sugar to taste ( remember since my jams are not sold commercially, I do not need to add the huge amount of sugar that the FDA requires to call these jams/fruit butters etc – so I only add enough sugar until the sample tastes sweet enough to me – which may be different from you! So do not be afraid to experiment. Remember that when the fruit mixture cools it will taste even sweeter and be thicker without the use of pectin. Once the mixture has cooked slowly for a number of hours – and tastes good – I will rub it through a strainer ( another time consuming part of this jam) and what comes out is the most divine fruit butter you have ever tasted. Truly – I can stand and eat it with a spoon as if it were candy! Another option is to NOT strain the fruit mixture but to eat it like that – which means that although it has no pit, it will have its skin on – and so adds a lot of roughage but is definitely an acquired taste – i.e. you may find that you do not like the rough taste of the skins despite the delicious flavor of the fruit around it.

Ingredients:

Jujube fruit pitted

Juice of one lemon for 3 lbs of fruit (no pits)

Sugar to taste – approximately one cup for 6 cups of cooked softened fruit ( no pits)

1 cup of water for 6 lbs of fruit

Preparation Time: 5 hours

Directions:

  1. Pit the raw jujube fruit.
  2. Place the pitted fruit into a bowl to which you have added the juice of one lemon for each 3 lbs of raw fruit ( no pits).
  3. Put the fruit and lemon onto the stove and bring to a boil then reduce to a low or medium low heat and cook until the mixture softens.
  4. Add sugar to taste – approximately 1 cup of sugar for 6 cups of cooked softened fruit
  5. Continue to cook at a low heat until the mixture darkens – stir occasionally to avoid any sticking or burning.
  6. Take off the heat and rub through a strainer – discard what is in the strainer ( we give it to our chickens) and take the buttery mixture which is your jujube butter – and pour into canning jars and seal.
  7. Alternative is to take the entire mixture with the skins and put that into a canning jar and seal.

 

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Grapefruit Marmalade

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Background:

We grow lots of citrus – that is how we got started in fruit growing for ourselves in our small holding Little Farm. Citrus loves California weather, and we planted orange, tangelo and grapefruit trees some 30 years ago and they have been so good to us for decades. We have lots of produce and now have more citrus of the exotic type – like Hand of Buddha ( the Citron fruit – inedible alone but incredible in jam), the Cara-Cara Navel Orange – the best in the world – once you have tasted this you will want no other, Meyer lemons (I promise a recipe for this too) and Pomelo’s – I will have some pictures on the site of these – they are humongous but delicious with pink flesh and lots of juice. Take a look at some of the pictures of our laden orange and grapefruit trees from which the fruit was taken for this recipe.

Ingredients:

6 Grapefruit

6 Oranges

6 Sugar

1 box Pectin

6 cups Water

1 tsp Butter

Preparation Time: 60 minutes

Cooking Time: 240 minutes

Directions:

  1. Peel the zest off the oranges with a vegetable peeler, making sure that there is no white pith with it.
  2. Put the zest in a large pot.
  3. Then peel the orange, discard the pith and pits, and cut up the fruit and add it to the pot.
  4. Peel the grapefruit and discard the skin, pith, zest and pits, and cut the fruit up adding it to the pot as well.
  5. Add the sugar and the water.
  6. Let it come to a boil and then simmer for 3 hours. Yep, three hours.I know, that’s the pain of this recipe which is otherwise really easy. You have to hang around the kitchen to make sure that the liquid reduces but that the mixture does not burn on the bottom of the pot – sometimes I will increase the heat to medium or medium high, and stand right there, stirring fairly regularly – with the TV on as a distraction, or chatting with family members, or even making dinner while stirring. That way, the time passes fast.
  7. When you have reduced it about one third, add the box of pectin by putting the pectin powder into a measuring cup, adding about an ounce of hot water and stirring until it dissolves, then adding it to the marmalade mixture and stirring again till dissolved.
  8. Note: adding a teaspoon of butter will reduce the foaming that occurs. Once it has boiled, reduce the heat again to simmer and continue until it reaches a consistency that is thick and feels like marmalade!
  9. While this is happening, put about 4-6 one pint canning jars (Kerr makes a good one) into your dishwasher to clean thoroughly. Put your tongs in there too so that when the cycle is done, you can lift out the can tops with the tongs, not touching them with your fingers, to keep them sterile.
  10. Keep an eye on that pot!
  11. Skim off the foam if you like – my husband hangs around the kitchen at that point, and mixes the foam I take out with non fat plain yogurt – yummy!
  12. Once you like the thickness of the marmalade, turn off the heat and using a ladle, pour the mixture into canning jars until full, then screw on the tops (be careful not to burn yourself – hot sugar is very dangerous – I speak from experience and now I wear oven gloves for this part), and when they are cold the next day, screw the tops on tighter.
  13. I like to refrigerate my canning jars and have an extra fridge for the purpose, since we like our jams and marmalade’s cold.
  14. Enjoy over ice cream, yogurt or just eat it out of the jar with a spoon!
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Peach Crumble

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Background:

I love easy recipes and this is the easiest dessert I can make fast. Also its a great way to use up fruit that is about to go off and doesnt look good but still tastes good. We have so much fruit that I have to think up a dozen ways to cook it and we have a plethora of lemons too. So this is a way to throw something together on a Sunday morning to serve with brunch or even as part of a Sunday afternoon tea. Enjoy!

Ingredients:

8 large Peaches and Nectarines 4 each

I cup of flour

I cup of sugar

I cup of almonds sliced

Juice of one lemon

Two extra tablespoons of sugar

I tsp of salt

One and half sticks of cold non salted butter

Preparation Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 30 minutes

Description:

Heat the oven to 400. Put the almonds, salt, flour and sugar into a Cuisinart and pulse until all mixed and until it resembles rough sand. Add the butter cut into small cubes and pulse until mixed. Slice the nectarines and peaches and discard their pits. I keep the skins on. Add the juice of one lemon and the two tablespoons of sugar and mix well. Add to a large baking dish. Pour the flour mixture on top of the fruit, and put in the oven to bake for 30 minutes or until light brown on top and crunchy. Serve with Vanilla ice cream – yummy!

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Passion-fruit Dessert

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Background:

Passion-fruit or Granadillas are a fruit that grew in my garden in South Africa and is a very popular fruit there for drinks ( add sugar and water) and desserts. This dessert is one that my mother used to make for me as a little girl and it is so good that it is tempting to eat the whole bowl at one sitting! When we started to grow this fruit on our little farm in the US, it brought back many memories and smiles to our faces. The aroma is tantalizing and fills the kitchen and refrigerator. In addition when its the height of the season, I will take out pulp from many of the ripe fruit and freeze it in plastic lunch baggies, ready to be removed later in the winter months when I add it to fruit salad along with papaya, pineapple and banana – a traditional South African Fruit Salad. Your children will love this! Passion-fruit grows well in Southern California – and makes a very attractive trailing creeper that we have all over our little farm as hedges separating the Vineyard from fruit trees and so on.

Ingredients:

One packet of yellow jello powder

14 ounces (1 can) sweetened condensed milk

12 fresh passion fruit (Granadilla) ripe, pulp only

Serving dish

Preparation Time: 30 minutes

Cooking Time: 10 minutes

Directions:

1. Make up the jello using 1 cup boiling water, stir to dissolve the powder, and then add about 3/4 cup cold water, i.e. less water than stated on packet since you want it to be thicker than normal

2. Leave jello in a cold place until it starts to set and has the consistency of raw egg-white.

3. Using a whisk or electric beater, whisk jello until frothy.

4. Add sweetened condensed milk and whisk in well.

5. Add pulp and juice from the passion-fruit, stir in well, and let dessert set.

6. Serve as is, or with whipped cream, ice cream or custard ( I like Birds Custard)

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Guava Compote

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Background:

This is a real comfort food for our family – we grow our own guavas at Little Farm and used to grow them in South Africa. Eating this compote for dessert with warmed custard is something that we did regularly – a few times a week. It brings back memories of warm kitchens, loving families, and my favorite (first) pet, a cocker spaniel who lived to the ripe old age of 15 and was buried under the large oak tree that I could see from my bedroom. I was born and married from the same home. How blessed was I…

Ingredients:

3 lbs 12-16 Guavas ( depending on size) peeled and sliced in quarters

Juice of 4 lemons ( no pits)

2 cups of sugar

Preparation Time: 30 minutes

Cooking Time: 30 minutes

Directions:

  1. Peel 12 guavas and slice into quarters.
  2. Place in a pot.
  3. Add the juice of 4 lemons.
  4. Add 2 cups of sugar.
  5. Place on the stove at medium low until the mixture starts to boil then reduce to low until the mixture reduces to a thickness that you like – some like it less liquid and some more.
  6. Serve with custard ( you can buy it in sachets and make it up with milk – best brand is Bird Custard, or in small boxes which is already constituted as liquid) that has been warmed slightly. Delicious!
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Bread and Butter Raisin Pudding Little Farm Grandma

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Background:

This is a comfort food that my family used to make – and since we baked our own bread ( as I do twice a week) its a great use of stale bread. In our little farm we take all leftovers or stale food and add it to our home-created compost – which gets recycled again into the plants we grow and back onto the table. Very eco-friendly and also makes us have a good feeling that nothing is really going to waste even if we do not eat it. This can be served as a dessert with vanilla ice cream or if you are watching your calories, with cool whip which is pretty low in calories and tastes good but be sure to serve immediately.My favorite accompaniment is custard – in the old country we made it from scratch – but there is no need. You can find Birds Custard in many markets or on line and mix it with milk – and you have a lovely rich hot sauce. I must admit that I cannot resist this dessert – so be forewarned – it is addicting!

Ingredients:

4 slices of light wheat bread or stale white bread, crusts cut off

4 tablespoons of butter

Half cup of sugar

1 teaspoon of salt

2 large eggs

Half to one cup of raisins or currants

Preparation Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 30 minutes

Directions:

1. Remove crusts from bread slices

2. Butter thickly

3. Place butter side down in a greased casserole or baking dish which is oven proof

4. Sprinkle raisins or currants over the bread

5. Beat the eggs well and stir in the sugar, salt and milk.

6. Pour the milk and egg mixture over the bread and set aside for 30 minutes to let the liquid soak into the bread.

7. Bake the pudding covered at 350 degrees F for 30 minutes.

8. Uncover the pudding and bake a further 10- 15 minutes or until the top is golden.

9. Serve the pudding hot with golden syrup honey or jam.

ALTERNATE:

After step 2, add jam to the bread and place jam side down. I use our home made preserves ( see Grapefruit Orange Marmelade) and that adds a lovely edge to this dessert.

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Banana Apple Dulce de Leche Pie

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Background:

My husband loves Dulce de Leche – we only learned about it in Los Angeles since there is a large Spanish cultural influence here. In the ‘old’ country South Africa, we used to boil up canned Carnation Sweetened Condensed Milk until it became Dulce de Leche – but of course we didn’t know what to call it then! So this is another newly acquired comfort food addiction for us.

The biggest upside in this recipe is that it is fast and easy to make. The two downsides are that its very high in calories, but there again many comfort foods are, and second that it does not keep well since the bananas tend to brown regardless of the lemon juice after about three days. Which has not been a problem for us since we generally finish this off in two days!

Ingredients:

Three ripe bananas sliced lengthwise

I can of dulce de leche

One store bought pie crust (unbaked)

Juice of one lemon ( no pits)

I fuji apple, peeled, cored and sliced thin

Sugar two tablespoons

All purpose flour two tablespoons

Butter 1 tablespoon

Preparation Time: 30 minutes

Cooking Time: 30 minutes

Directions:

  1. Bake a store bought ready made pie crust as instructed on the label ( normally at 400 degrees for 10- 15 minutes until very light brown. Be sure to prick the crust with a fork all over so that it does not puff up unevenly.
  2. Leave the oven on at the same heat. You will need it for baking the pie one more time.
  3. Slice three bananas lengthwise.
  4. Add the juice of one lemon to the slices along with two tablespoons of all purpose flour and two tablespoons of sugar, so that their color will not change and a little sauce will form.
  5. Slice a peeled and cored Fuji apple and add to the banana and juice mixture.
  6. Place a can of Dulce de leche ( Carnation makes this delectable mixture)in a pot of hot water for about 10 minutes.
  7. Remove it from the water, and open the can. The mixture inside should be quite easy to spread now.
  8. Spread it on the warm ( even hot) baked pie crust making sure to cover the whole bottom and if possibly without breaking the crust, spread it up the sides of the pie crust.
  9. Then pour the banana-apple mixture on top of the Dulce de leche along with some of the sauce; do not overfill.
  10. Sprinkle a little butter ( 1 tablespoon) on top and bake in the already hot oven, 400 degrees, for about 10 minutes or until slightly browned on top. Watch it carefully – if its not browning – put the oven on broil, and stand at the oven watching the pie carefully – it will definitely brown in a few minutes or less!
  11. Remove and cool.
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Apple Crisp

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Background:

When I make jam, I often have some syrup left in the pot which would make the jam too runny – so I skim it off. However there are lots of good uses for that syrup – pouring it on pancakes or ice cream and also this wonderful recipe that I got from the Prepared Pantry Website ( www.preparedpantry.com) from whom I buy lots of bread mixes for my bread machine. Yes I believe in short cuts – which work marvels for working moms and dads ( and grandparents too!). Of course my grandchildren LOVE to cook with me.

Ingredients:

 

Filling:

8 medium baking apples peeled, cored, and cut into chunks (about 6 cups)

1/4 cup flour

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 cup brown sugar, packed

1 cup fruit juice concentrate – I use my leftover syrup from jam making – any kind – which I store in the fridge or in ice-trays in the freezer!

1 teaspoon vanilla or other flavor

Topping:

1 1/4 cups Panko bread crumbs

1/3 cup granulated sugar

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

1/3 cup all-purpose flour

1/2 cup butter, cut into small pieces

Directions :

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

  1. Peel, core and cut apples into 1/4-inch thick slices.
  2. In a large bowl, mix the 1/4 cup flour, brown sugar, and cinnamon together.  Add the apple pieces and toss.  Melt the concentrate and add that and the flavor or extract to the mixture.  Stir to coat evenly.  Spread the apple mixture evenly into a greased 9 x 9-inch pan.
  3. Combine the Panko, remaining cinnamon, the 1/3 cup granulated sugar, and 1/3 cup flour in a medium bowl. Cut in the butter with a pastry knife until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs.  Sprinkle the topping evenly over fruit.
  4. Bake for 35 minutes.  The apples should be tender and the topping crisp.  Cool in the pan on a wire rack.
  5. Serve hot with ice cream or whipped cream.
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Chicken Breasts with Potatoes, Onions, Peppers, Garlic and Paprika

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Shopping with children can be a very pleasant and educational pastime. Truly! Years ago when my son was little, grocery shopping was a matter of how fast I could get into and out of the grocery store. I missed all the goodness that can be gained  for my child from the contents of the supermarket. I am wiser now – and will share these tips with you while we gather ingredients for this tasty dinner recipe.

Ingredients:

4 large chicken breasts skinless and boneless

3 potatoes any kind

3 peppers ( you can mix the colors of the peppers – red, yellow, orange, green)

2 onions ( you can mix the kinds of onions – red, white, yellow)

4 cloves of garlic ( if you don’t like garlic leave this out)

4 Tablespoons of olive oil

Couple of sprays of Pam Spray

2 Tablespoons of Paprika ( you can reduce this if it is too spicy for you)

2 teaspoons of Ground Cumin

2 teaspoons of Salt

1 cup of Chicken Stock ONLY If you are using a slow cooker – I use Better than Bouillon but if you cant find it any stock will do – just dilute it as instructed with water.

Preparation Time: 20 minutes – yes even if your child is helping you!

Cooking Time: 1 hour if in oven ( you can give the children their baths while it is cooking) and 10 hours if in slow cooker

Directions:

My grandson loves to push a chair up to the counter where we will be cooking and to stand on it. The other option is to put the child up on the counter so that they can actively help you cook. Watching you do things is no fun. Doing it with you is great fun.

1. Turn on the oven to 350 degrees – hold your little one up to show your child the numbers and how the dial works so that he or she can count 1, 2, 3 -you can fill in the hundreds if the child is too young to count that high.

2. Peel the potatoes using a potato peeler. Have your child collect the peels to put in a garbage bag ( we recycle all cuttings and give them to our goats or chickens or quails) but you could put them into the disposal or in with your garden cuttings if you have one. Cut the potatoes into thin slices – using the ‘doing adult tasks while cooking’ hint in the Tips Column. Put the sliced potatoes into cold water on the side.

4. Slice the onions– cut the ends off first, then one big cut down the middle to cut the onion in half — put the cut side down, and slice quickly into pieces. I always tell my grandson that onions make me cry – but then since he pretended to cry too ( really cry!) I had to explain that it made my eyes water which was not really crying. So we do this part very fast and slide those cut onions into cold water really fast and throw away the peels so that all that fresh onion juice is under control!

5. Slice and core the peppers pulling out the seeds ( the children love to do this part) – add to the onions. Now drain all the vegetables through a colander – that means that the children can pour the veggies into the colander and see how it works with all the liquid running out. A grand experience!

6. Take out the cloves of garlic– I repeat every ingredient each time I handle it so that the children can repeat after me. (Which reminds me that last week I forgot the garlic at the supermarket so I took off with my grandson in the basket and we ran and pushed the cart fast through the aisles singing loudly – we forgot the garlic, we forgot the garlic. The other shoppers thought it was weird and funny – and we had a good giggle! He told his mother later – Grandma forgot the garlic – as if that was the funniest thing he had heard in a month – I thought it was pretty funny too – being silly is another one of the benefits I have earned through age). Anyway back to our cooking! Press the garlic with a big knife ( I wrap a dishtowel over the children’s hands for this one  to prevent them smelling of garlic) and then chop it finely and add to the bottom of a large casserole into which you have sprayed PAM spray which will make it easier to clean later ( or if you prefer and are doing this in the evening for dinner the next night, into a slow cooker which you will plug in the next morning before you leave for work).

7. Add one tablespoon of olive oil to the garlic in the bottom of the casserole or slow cooker.

8. Mix all the spices ( paprika, cumin, salt and the rest of the olive oil) together and put half of it over the vegetables and mix well – let the children mix with their hands – which are clean – remind them not to touch their faces once done but to use the baby wipes to clean off their hands before going to the next step. if they are sitting near a sink I will use paper towels and warm water to wash their hands off once they have mixed it all together.

9. Take the chicken breasts out of the packet – the kids find the texture a bit slippery and yucky but my grandson handled it with a shudder. We cut the breasts into large pieces and put them into the casserole with the garlic and olive oil and then added the rest of the spice mixture and made sure that all the pieces were covered with the paste. Then we cut them into smaller pieces in the casserole and left them there.

10. Now pour all the vegetables over the chicken, garlic, olive oil paste mixture.

11. Put the casserole in the oven and let it bake for one hour.

12. If you are using a slow cooker – then place everything into the cooking casserole including the chicken stock – and put it in the refrigerator overnight.  The next morning before you go to work, turn the slow cooker on low – and 10 hours from that time it will be ready for you – a lovely one dish meal when you come into the house – with the aromatic smells of cooking too.

A low fat, low calorie and wonderfully good tasting dinner. And the best part is – if you doubled the recipe – you will have chicken leftover to create at least two more meals for the week – Little Farm Grandma’s Scrumptious and Easy Leftovers!

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Rosemary Roast Chicken – A Simple Chicken Favorite

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Background:

This is my son’s absolute favorite – I only use Organic Chickens – they really do taste better and are healthier – and this is one of the easiest main courses there is. Truly! Just try it – you need 2 hours – and its ready!

Ingredients:

1 Organic Chicken for Roasting

Fresh Rosemary ( the dried one doesn’t do the job)

4 Cloves of Garlic ( or if you dont like Garlic leave this out)

Sea Salt

Olive Oil

Yukon Gold Potatoes – one for each person

Roasting Pan

Optional: Stuffing

1 Packet of Packaged Stuffing ( Mrs. Cubbisons is great)

1 onion

2 Cloves of Garlic

2 Sprigs of Rosemary

Sea Salt to taste

1/4 cup of raisins – to taste

Olive Oil and Water according to Package Instructions

Preparation Time: 10 minutes

Cooking Time: Approximately 2 hours

Directions:

1. Take the chicken out of its packaging and remove the giblets inside it.

2. Wash it in cold water and wash your hands well before and after touching the raw chicken.

3. Drizzle some olive oil into a roasting pan and place the chicken in the pan. Then chop the garlic and rosemary greens ( remove the twigs) and push them under the skin of the chicken at both ends and slide your fingers with the mixture as far under the skin as you can towards the wings and legs, without tearing the skin.

4. Then salt ( or use a seasoned salt for poultry or Lawries Seasoned Salt or your favorite seasoning salt) all over the chicken and replace it into the roasting pan, breast side down.

5. If you like stuffing – you could use a packaged stuffing ( I believe in short cuts for busy folks). First you add some olive oil to a frying pan on medium heat then  fry onions, garlic and possibly raisins in your pan before adding the stuffing according to the packet instructions. I tend to add much more olive oil than the recipe calls for as well as garlic and rosemary to the pan mixture before adding the dry stuffing and liquid. Stuff your chicken and then salt and season it as described above.

6. Place your stuffed or unstuffed chicken into the roasting pan

7. Drizzle olive oil on the chicken all over and put it into an oven that has been pre heated to about 395 degrees C.

8. Cook for 1.45 hours depending on chicken size – that is until the chicken legs pull easily away from the body and when you poke a tester into the chicken only clear liquid comes out. Check the chicken towards the end in the last half hour to be sure that the skin is not burning and if it is browning too much then cover just the breast part with  foil.

9. Making the roast potatoes is fast and easy – first peel the potatoes and place them into cold water.

10. Boil water for the potatoes ( half fill the pot) and once all the potatoes are peeled and cut into 3pieces each, place them all at once into the boiling water. Boil them while you are preparing the chicken until they are almost soft ( al dente) then drain them and put aside.

11. After the chicken has been cooking for about 45 minutes, take it out and place the potato pieces around the chicken trying to be sure that each piece touches the bottom of the pan. Drizzle a little oil onto each potato and a little salt or seasoning.

12 After another hour, take the chicken out again and turn over the potato pieces. They should now be browning nicely.

13. Once the chicken is done – remove the potatoes and put them into a serving dish. Carve the chicken and serve with Zucchini Vegetable Medley and a Green Salad. (No need for gravy with this dish.)

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Ground Beef with Paprika, Peas and Potatoes in a Wok

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Background:

Wok cooking is easy and very fast. This is standard fare for us – I basically throw into the wok anything I have around with some protein staple like ground beef or chicken or turkey. It is a healthy way to cook and dinner will be on the table in 10 minutes at most. Great when you have had a long week and just want to fall into bed but have a table full of hungry small people who need dinner along with another tired adult!

Ingredients:

6 Yukon potatoes peeled and chopped fairly small

2 tbsp of paprika

1/4 cup of fresh hulled peas

2 tbsp olive oil or pam spray

salt and pepper to taste

1 lb of Ground beef (lean)

Italian parsley for decoration

Optional sweet Thai Chile sauce 2 tbsp

One large white or yellow onion chopped

Two cloves of garlic chopped small

Preparation time: 10  minutes

Cooking time: 15 minutes

Directions:

  1. Heat one tablespoon of olive oil in a hot wok.
  2. Add the garlic and saute for 30 seconds
  3. Add onion and saute until translucent.
  4. Add the paprika and blend well.
  5. While this is cooking, put the chopped potatoes into boiling hot water and bring back to a boil for about 5 minutes until al dente ( almost tender).
  6. Then drain the potatoes well, and toss them into the mixture in the wok.
  7. Add salt and pepper and cook until well blended and the potatoes cook until nearly soft ( but not soft yet).
  8. Add the peas and toss together for about 3 minutes.
  9. Remove the whole mixture and set aside.
  10. Add to the empty wok another tbsp of olive oil, and heat.
  11. Add the ground beef which you must crumble with a fork until well distributed across the wok.
  12. Brown the beef until cooked ( but not overcooked – I like my meat rare so I brown it until medium rare or slightly pink).
  13. Add back into the wok, the vegetable mixture and mix well together.
  14. Put the lid on the wok and let it cook on medium heat for about another 5 minutes until the potatoes are tender and the mixture is blended.
  15. Season with salt and pepper to taste and serve with a salad ( see Salad section)
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Jicama, Peppers and Cilantro Salad

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Background:

We grow our own citrus as well as allspice, cilantro and chili’s. And we raise our own honey from bee hives on our Little Farm. So this salad is a very special one that we like to use all year round. It is refreshing and the citrus dressing is surprising.

Dressing:

  • 1/2 cup unsweetened orange juice (or 3/8 cup lime juice with 2 tablespoons rice vinegar)
  • 1 small garlic clove, smashed peeled and finely minced
  • 1-2 chilies, chopped
  • A pinch allspice
  • 1 teaspoon orange zest, chopped fine
  • 1 teaspoon honey
  • 2 tablespoons cilantro coarsely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • salt and pepper

Salad Ingredients:

  • 1 jicama, peeled and cut into thin slices ( you can buy this already cut up in some markets)
  • 2-3 oranges (or other citrus)
  • 1 red onion, peeled rinsed and thinly sliced
  • 1 yellow sweet pepper, seeded and thinly sliced (optional)

Directions:

  1. Combine all of the dressing components 15 to 30 minutes before serving.
  2. Arrange the salad in a bowl or serving plater.
  3. Drizzle the dressing over the salad to cover.
  4. Serve cool, but not overly chilled for the best flavor.
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Salad with Avocados, Red Peppercorns, Tomatoes, Basil, Peppers, with Croutons

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Background:

Simple food is sometimes the best. The delicate flavors of the lemon, red peppercorns, fresh avocado, tomatoes, peppers and crisp greens blend so well together and then the delightful combination of Parmesan and olive oil makes the most delicious dressing. The nutty flavor comes from the pine nuts or the croutons – but if you are looking to save calories, they really are not necessary to make this work – it will taste wonderful without those added ingredients. We eat salad with every meal except breakfast. And we are blessed that we pick it from our Little Farm fresh every day. On the rare occasion that we do not remember to pick the salad, and use that which I stored in a plastic zip lock back left OPEN the day before, we are always amazed at how fresh it still tastes. There is truly nothing better that nature can offer and it is healthy too!

Ingredients:

Organic lettuce mix – various kinds

Red Peppercorns fresh if possible 1/4 cup

Two Avocados pitted and peeled, chopped chunky

Baby red and or yellow cherry tomatoes

Peppers of different colors

Basil – Green or Black -about 8 leaves

Dressing made with a good olive oil and fresh lemon juice

Juice of one lemon

Finely grated Parmesan cheese 1/4 cup

Preparation Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: None for salad

Directions:

  1. Put the cherry tomatoes in a salad bowl with the sliced diced peppers
  2. Take the avocado which has been cleaned and chopped chunky, and add the juice of 1/2 a lemon and salt and pepper to taste.
  3. Mix gently.
  4. Add the avocado mixture to the tomatoes in the bowl.
  5. Add the red peppercorns.
  6. Then put the mixed greens along with the basil leaves that you have torn into very small pieces, on top. The reason we put the greens on top is to prevent them from wilting with the weight of the other ingredients, and the liquid in the avocado mixture.
  7. Now mix together the rest of the lemon juice with a good olive oil ( one part juice to two parts oil, and add the finely grated Parmesan cheese to the dressing. Whisk it well.
  8. Set aside until ready to serve the salad.
  9. You are even better off not adding the salad greens to the tomato avocado pepper mixture until you are ready to serve the salad.
  10. I add a few croutons on top – home made – or pine nuts that have been briefly browned in a little Pam spray or olive oil.

Home Made Croutons: A great way to recycle stale bread.

Ingredients:

Day old or older bread

Olive oil to taste and/or Pam Spray

Garlic or herbs to taste

Salt to taste

Frying pan

Preparation time: 5 minutes

Cooking time: 15 minutes

Directions:

Take day old ( or older)  bread and cut it into pieces. Add olive oil to a frying pan and when medium hot add the bread pieces. Add garlic salt if you like it – or herbs. Saute on a very low heat until browned on all sides. You may need to add more Pam Spray or olive oil to taste. Cool and add to salad just before serving. Keep in the fridge – keeps for weeks.

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Gazpacho Soup

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Ingredients:

1 medium Cucumber

4-5 inch squared of bread crusts removed

3 large beef steak tomatoes

1 red pepper cored seeded and chopped

1 clove of garlic

1/3 cup of olive oil

2 tsp of red wine vinegar

1/2 tsp of salt

Directions:

Soak the bread for 10 minutes in a small amount of cold water. In the meantime put the garlic into a blender and blend until smooth. Squeeze the bread so that most of the water is out, and add to blender. Add a little olive oil if needed to help it blend. Add the cucumber ( chopped) then the peppers, then the tomatoes. Then add the oil, vinegar and salt and blend till smooth. Taste and add more vinegar and salt to taste. I normally triple or quadruple this recipe since we have a lot of fresh tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers, and then freeze it so that we can eat gazpacho ( chilled of course) all year around. Serve with home made croutons ( see recipe on this site).

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Tomato Soup

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As you can see from the photos, we have a plethora of tomatoes – multiple varieties, shapes, sizes and tastes. So when tomatoes are in season, I have to become immediately creative to find recipes using fresh tomatoes – lots of them – before they lose their freshness. Homemade tomato soup is a great option.

I also freeze soup when cold in plastic bags, and then re- season with salt and pepper when defrosting since they lose some of their taste no matter how careful so one is to freeze them without excess air or heat in the bag.

My husband has managed to keep our tomato crop going throughout the year, although it reduces to a paltry few in the winter, but nevertheless still enough for our home use. Of course in the summer we are pretty much overwhelmed hence soups, salsa, sauces for pasta and more. Delicious!

Ingredients:

2 Two boxes of Pomi tomatoes in juice OR 32 ounces of skinned chopped fresh tomatoes

4 cups Vegetable Stock – Better than Bouillon 4tbsps in 4 cups of water

2 Two chopped onions

4 tbsp 1 stick of butter

Pinch Salt and pepper to taste

1 tbsp per serving Non fat sour cream ( Optional)

Sprinkle per serving Chopped chives (Optional)

Preparation Time: 10 minutes

Cooking Time: 35 minutes

Directions:

  1. Melt the stick of butter in a pot.
  2. Add the chopped onions ( 2). Let them saute on medium until transparent.
  3. Add the two boxes of Pomi tomatoes chopped in sauce ( they come that way!).
  4. Add the vegetable bouillon (4 tbsp of stock in 4 cups of water) and bring to a boil.
  5. Reduce to simmer and let it cook for 20 minutes.
  6. Let it cool a bit then puree in a blender – and BE CAREFUL to only puree about a half a cup at a time. If not, while it is still hot, it will cause the blender top to pop off – so hold the top down hard while you press the ‘on’ switch.
  7. Return the pureed mixture to the pot and reheat on low until ready to serve.
  8. Serve in warmed bowls – very important – if not the soup will cool while you are serving and end up luke-warm – which doesn’t make the most of the taste.
  9. If you like, you can add a dollop of non-fat sour cream to the soup in each bowl.The sour cream (one tbsp per serving in the middle of the soup in the bowl) will also cool it down. So hot bowls are a must. Use a warming oven, or heat your oven to 200 degrees, then turn it off and put your plates in there after about 15 minutes.
  10. You could add chopped chives in the center of the cream for color – optional.
  11. If using fresh tomatoes, place them in a dish of boiling water and let them sit for 15 minutes. Then the skin will come off easily. Chop them coarsely in another bowl and save the juice and flesh. Use at the point in the recipe which calls for chopped tomatoes.

Variations:

Adding different herbs to taste will change the soup completely – for example, use fresh chopped basil instead of chives, or add oregano while the soup is cooking. Remember the rule regarding herbs is, ‘don’t overwhelm the dish with too much of anything’ – use just enough e.g. a couple of teaspoons.

Adding Homemade Croutons instead of cream:

Making Croutons – take day old bread, cut the bread into small pieces and fry the pieces in seasoned olive oil on low, turning them often so that the croutons don’t burn. I like to add garlic salt – but that’s a personal taste preference.

Making Seasoned olive oil:

Put some garlic and herbs into your olive oil container and never let the level get lower than the herb mixture. Mine keeps for months and I keep refilling the glass bottle with olive oil from my pantry. Yummy!

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