Weekly menu (1.10.10)

A day late and it looks like this week will be fairly light on leftovers (which means bring on the sandwiches for lunch). We expect to be getting home later than normal on Tuesday night for sure – thus the quick and easy corn dogs.

Monday Dinner
Tacos (ground beef)

Tuesday Dinner
Corny Dogs

Wednesday Dinner
Pot Roast and Mashed Potatoes

Thursday Dinner
Frozen Pizza
Corn

Friday Dinner
Dinner with friends

Saturday Dinner
Small group

And for those of you who are interested, we’ve found a couple keepers over the last two weeks.

Southwestern Turkey Chili (a lot like Taco Soup)

And

Beefy Cheesy Pasta (similar to the boxed meat and pasta meals without the dry cheese/seasoning package)

So what are you planning to eat this week?

This week’s menu (01.03.10)

Here’s the menu for this week…

Sunday Dinner
Baked Potatoes & Salad (cereal likely for Laurie ;-))

Monday Dinner
Beefy Cheesy Pasta

Tuesday Dinner
Homemade Pizza (gluten free dough mix)

Wednesday Dinner
Chicken Crockpot tacos – one of the best finds of late, especially on Wednesdays when I’m at home and can start it around lunch time

Thursday Dinner
Beef Lasagna

Friday Dinner
Dinner @ friends

Saturday Dinner
Small group

What are you planning to eat this week?

Homemade salisbury steak

Salisbury steak

Got a craving to cook Sunday night and decided to give my hand at some salisbury steak — aka the poor man’s steak and one of my favorite cafeteria meals while growing up.

Yup. I’m the odd one that actually enjoyed salisbury steak from the school cafeteria. It was one of the top cafeteria meals, alongside the rectangular slices of pizza and the giant fried burritos.
Continue reading Homemade salisbury steak

Spicy corn dip

From the recipe exchange last month:

Sorry this took so long but here is my recipe for some corn dip. Whenever I take this somewhere, I’m always requested to bring it again the next time!

2 11 oz. cans of white shoepeg corn (Green Giant) drained
¼ cup chopped white onions
8 oz. package of shredded Colby Jack cheese
5-6 FRESH jalapenos (seeded and chopped fine)
1 cup of mayo (I use the reduced fat)
½ cup of sour cream (I use Daisy Light sour cream)

Mix all together and serve with big scoop Fritos. I save one jalapeno and put in center of dish as a decoration.
Hope you enjoy this.

Sharon Hunter

Gorge yourself in 2007


From the February 2007 issue of Texas Monthly.

Eating Myself Alive

Jim Atkinson cures what ails us.

I’M A BIG BELIEVER in New Year’s resolutions. Nine years ago I decided to quit smoking, and while it took me a few months, in March of 1998 I stamped out my last butt. At the same time, I resolved not to gain any weight after giving up nicotine—a more difficult challenge—and began exercising at least an hour a day. Nearly a decade later, I weigh the same thing. This year? I’m attacking my diet. And I’m not just referring to cutting out the fries. Healthy eating is proactive: It means consuming more of those foods whose properties prevent such life shorteners as heart disease and cancer. With the help of Lona Sandon, an assistant professor of clinical dietetics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, I’ve settled on ten things I’m going to gorge on in 2007. Try my plan yourself—and see how many years you can add to your life by eating more.

Here are Jim’s top 10 things to gourge on. Read more in this month’s issue.

1. Go upstream: salmon.
2. A tomato a day keeps the Big C away.
3. Synergy, baby: garlic.
4. Brown power, part I: whole-grain pasta.
5. Brown power, part II: whole-grain bread.
6. The new mayo: avocado.
7. Say yes to red meat.
8. Pintos with that?
9. Fig out.
10. Room for dessert? Cave to cantaloupe.

So, you may say, resolutions are good and well. But are there any caveats to this healthy feeding frenzy? Well, yes—two. The first is that I’ll still allow myself a cheeseburger or soft tacos once a week. It’s not that the human body can’t handle any cholesterol or fat; it just can’t take too much of it. The second is that, even if I falter at incorporating one or two of my ten foods here, I’m intent on, uh, staying the course. Because proactive eating is not just a year-long project—it’s a lifelong one.