Saturday, November 26, 2016
Friday, June 19, 2015
💚 Microwave Zucchini Chips 💚
So I wanted to make some zucchini chips but I don't have a dehydrator. Then I remembered I bought a microwave potato chip maker from a 'well known kitchenware'company. The instructions say don't use any other veggies besides potatoes, sweet potatoes, yuca?? and apples but hey I'm a REBEL. 😝
I got a zucchini squash and sliced very thin. Placed on paper towels to dry as much as possible.
Place on chip maker and brush with olive oil. You can sprinkle any spices on top but do not overlap. The recipe said use spices sparingly since the slices will shrink and wowzers she was right- my 1st batch was salty!!!
Place tray in microwave and start with 5 minutes. After the 5 mins, cook in 30 second intervals until the chips start to brown and crisp. Nom Nom Nom 😎
Saturday, April 25, 2015
Wednesday, February 11, 2015
That Dorito Casserole Thing
So when I ask what I should make for dinner, I sometimes get "That Dorito Casserole thing." That's fine by me 'cause it is super easy to make. 😃 I love the fact that the recipe calls for a rotisserie chicken. Although you could cook chicken and it would be just as good. I took a picture of the ingredients and left out the most important thing of all... CHEESE (an offense that is punishable in my house HA)
I don't like chunks of tomatoes and peppers from the RoTel so I chop it in a mini chopper before adding to other ingredients. Weird I know :) My former boss is one of the best cooks I know. She got me this awesome mini chopper. It is one of my favorite gadgets!! Combine everything but the chips in a bowl.
Spray a casserole dish and crush 1/2 bag of Doritos with a...wait for it...potato masher. It works great.
Top the Dorito layer with the chicken mixture. Add the rest of the Doritos (give or take a few if you need a snack) and crush. Cover and bake @350 degrees for 30 mins.
Ingredients
1 Rotisserie Chicken (2 cups)
2 cups shredded cheddar cheese
1/2 cup sour cream
1 can of cream of chicken soup
1/2 cup of milk
1 can of RoTel
1 bag of Doritos
1/2 pack of taco seasoning packet
Instructions
Grease casserole dish. Crush 1/2 a bag of dorito's and place them on the bottom of your greased casserole dish. Combine ingredients above minus lettuce in bowl and then top your dorito layer with the above combo. Add the rest of your crushed doritos and bake covered at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Enjoy 😄
Monday, January 19, 2015
Budget Schmudget
It's that time of year when Christmas is forgotten but reality hits with the aftermath of bills. This year we decided to do stocking stuffers only so I totally kicked hiney on how much I spent. Whoop 😝
I love this sweet girls face. Total deniability hehe.
Last year, my boss told me about this awesome budgeting website called mint.com. It is completely safe and is run by Intuit. He told me that you can download all your accounts and set up budgets for tons of categories. I signed up and the rest is history. This site is beyond awesome sauce. You get emails when you get close to your budgeted amount on each category. You can also get the app on your phone which I love ❤️!!! This is the app icon
You can add every account you have. I have PSP, 401k and ESOP at work as well as life insurance set up. It also takes your mortgage loan and compares it to the value of your house listed on Zillow. So you add accounts and set budgets and it basically keeps you in line.
And hey what's a couple of threatening emails to help you stay within your budget??? I kid I kid 😉 Actually the bill reminder emails are great for forgetful gals like myself.
www.mint.com 😃👍💳💰
Saturday, November 8, 2014
Southern but not Old School Southern
Below is an article by Jenny Bradley published on Country Outfitter's website. I will add my 2 cents ** at the end of each rule :)
There are rules upon rules in the South. Some spoken and some unspoken. It can be hard to keep up with all of them, and depending on where you live in the South (ahem, Mississippi), you might adhere to some rules more than others. Here’s a list of some old school Southern rules you may not know or have forgotten.
1. Miracle Whip is tacky. Only Yankees eat it.
If you’re going to make chicken salad for a luncheon, you might want to avoid the Miracle Whip if you’re in the South. While this unspoken rule is fading out of relevancy, it’s one many Southerners espoused a couple generations ago. I’d never heard this rule till recently. I blame that on the fact that I’m one-fourth Yankee since my grandmother grew up in the North. Gramma may not have been born here, but as the saying goes, she got here as fast as she could.
** I love salad dressing. I also love to use the very Southern word TACKY. No Duke's mayo for this tacky girl.
2. Never reply to a formal invitation in anything other than black ink.
I know it’s tempting to pull out the 24-pack of multi-colored gel pens you bought at Target to reply to that wedding invitation of your younger cousin, but please don’t. Just because you’re relieved she’s not going to be an old maid (since she’ll be 23 next year) doesn’t mean you can throw etiquette out the window. She probably would’ve told your grandmother anyway. Save yourself that phone call.
** I learned this lesson very early!! I handed my manager a blue pen and he 'threw' the offending stick at my big Southern hair and said "Don't ever bring me anything but a black pen!" Bless his heart.
3. Don’t dress your baby in anything other than pastels for the first year.
Babies should look like babies, so avoid solid bright colors and stick with the light blue or light pink, depending on gender. If I’m honest, I don’t adhere to this one with my own kids. I think I have an aversion to pastels, but this one is still good to know for situational purposes. If I didn’t know it, I might buy my best friend (who has deep Mississippi roots) a bright red and blue Ole Miss onesie for her baby shower this month. She’d act pleasantly surprised and thank me (after all I crossed football lines since I’m an Arkansas Razorback fan and she’s an Ole Miss fan). Inwardly, though, she’d make a mental note to take it back and get something hand-smocked and, preferably, something monogrammed with her baby’s initials.
Side note: She might keep a bright red and blue onesie if it had the traditional mascot, Colonel Reb. It’s hard to find anything with the traditional mascot ever since the black bear replaced Colonel Reb in 2010.
** I don't have kids but found the whole exception to the rule as long as we are dealing with SEC football hilarious
4. When approaching a door at the same speed as another person, it’s polite to step back and let the other person go first.
Men give deference to women with this one, and younger people stand back for older people. However, if two people of the same age and gender are walking towards a door at the same speed, this rule could cause a politeness standoff with neither party wanting to be rude to the other. Time to stick your boots in the ground, make that other person go first. Always win a politeness war. Always.
**Big one for me. I have been known to hold the door for someone that is still a mile away. HA. Nothing ruder than someone slamming a door in your face or a man not knowing elevator etiquette. Look it up if you have no clue or you were raised by the hair of your head.
5. Younger people should stand up when older people enter a room.
I can’t say I’ve always stood up when my grandparents left the kitchen and joined me in the living room. But, I’ll say this. If my Grandaddy ever asked me to stand when he entered the room, I’d do it. He fought for our country in World War II, raised three kids on a cotton farm, learned to fly an airplane after his kids were raised and makes his own fishing jigs. For all that and so much else, he has all my respect.
** I have never done this but maybe I should. I can see where it is a sign of respect.
6. When walking as a couple, the man should always walk between his woman and the street.
This one probably has its history in days of old when the man would walk on the side closest to the street, protecting his woman from getting muddied by passing buggies or hit by vehicles. This rule has probably been lost with the invention of the sidewalk. Now, perhaps these days as the genteel Southern belle spirit is fading away a lot of men don’t want to put themselves between traffic and an angry woman. Do you remember the Dixie Chicks song “Goodbye Earl?” Yeah, it’s just not safe anymore.
**LOVE this one! Even when walking with male friends, I notice it when they do this. My husband always walks on the outside and my Daddy did too ❤
7. Chewing gum in public is tacky.
Keep the Bubblicious at home. Chewing gum is especially rude at business meetings, church, school, or really anyplace where someone might see you. Cows chew the cud, not good Southerners.
** There's that tacky word again but this is very true. As a gum smacka from way back, it is extremely rude.
8. Southern women don’t gossip.
If you are going to talk about someone’s less desirable traits, always precede your remarks with “bless her heart” then you can pretty much say what you want. For example, you might say, “Bless her heart, her Mama never taught her not to chew gum in public.”
** I always quote Clairee from Steel Magnolias, "If you can't say anything nice, come sit next to me."
9. Men should take their hats off when they come inside
Taking your hat off is a good personal hygiene rule. This one I get. Southern men love their hats, and when you wear your hat every day in the Southern heat, it tends to get sweaty and smelly. I kid you not; my husband has worn the same hat for the last 15 years. His sister gave it to him in high school, and he wears it all the time. My 3-year-old calls it “Daddy’s stinky hat.” I’m fine with him only wearing it outside.
** Totally agree. Especially during the National Anthem!
10. Wait until everyone is served before eating
Our family’s rule growing up was similar to this. We had to wait until after the prayer before we could serve ourselves each other. The five of us kids waited like ravenous wolves to hear that “amen” before digging in. It felt like a matter of survival with that many kids. We were just too unruly; bless my Mama’s heart.
** The running joke in my family is if you eat before the blessing you will have either heartburn or diarrhea.
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Funeral Sammiches
I have made these sammiches so many times, I have memorized the recipe. The first time I had them was at a work. They were one of the best things I had ever eaten!!! My friend used Sister Schuberts rolls in the aluminum circular pan. I immediately tried to make them but it was an epic FAIL. ;-p I could never get the butter to roll ratio right and the rolls were always soggy.
A couple of years later, I was looking for football party recipes and saw one using hawaiian rolls and it was titled Funeral Sandwiches??? I read the article and the recipe submitter said that they went over well at funerals (bad choice of words- hers not mine :) She also said there was nothing mournful about them. HAHA
We do birthday celebrations one day a month for the coworkers whose bdays are that month. The last time I made them, one of the bday honorees had just had surgery. When I said I was bringing Funeral Sammiches, she said "Because I had surgery??" She's a hoot.
They are simple to make. Course the men folk at work say that the only thing that could make them better would be bacon but they would add bacon to anything.
Ingredients:
24 hawaiian rolls (2 packages)
1 pound thinly sliced ham
1 pound sliced swiss cheese
3/4 cup melted butter
1.5 tbl dijon mustard
1.5 tbl poppy seeds
1.5 tsp worcestershire sauce
1 tbl minced onion
A couple of years later, I was looking for football party recipes and saw one using hawaiian rolls and it was titled Funeral Sandwiches??? I read the article and the recipe submitter said that they went over well at funerals (bad choice of words- hers not mine :) She also said there was nothing mournful about them. HAHA
We do birthday celebrations one day a month for the coworkers whose bdays are that month. The last time I made them, one of the bday honorees had just had surgery. When I said I was bringing Funeral Sammiches, she said "Because I had surgery??" She's a hoot.
They are simple to make. Course the men folk at work say that the only thing that could make them better would be bacon but they would add bacon to anything.
Ingredients:
24 hawaiian rolls (2 packages)
1 pound thinly sliced ham
1 pound sliced swiss cheese
3/4 cup melted butter
1.5 tbl dijon mustard
1.5 tbl poppy seeds
1.5 tsp worcestershire sauce
1 tbl minced onion
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a large rectangular baking pan. Recipe calls for 9X13 but I used a larger cake pan.
- In a small saucepan, mix together butter, dijon mustard, worcestershire sauce, poppy seeds and dried onion.
- Cut the tops from the bottoms of the rolls and put the bottoms in the greased baking pan. Make sure you know how the tops go back on so that you can cut them correctly once they are baked. I used a serated knife which cuts through the rolls better.
- Layer about half the ham onto the rolls. Arrange the cheese over the ham, and top with remaining ham.
- Place the tops of the rolls onto the the sammiches and then pour the mustard concoction evenly over the rolls.
- Bake in preheated oven until the rolls are lightly browned and cheese has melted. Original recipe called for 20 mins but my oven only takes 10 mins. Slice into individual sammiches through the ham and cheese layers to serve.
These are soo good. I can't decide if it is the minced onion or the dijon mustard that make them so scrumptious. NOM NOM NOM
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)