August 8 2019

Take Five for Bengal Spiced Iced Tea

Take five and enjoy your favorite cold beverage. A couple of times a week, at least every four or five days, I make a gallon and a half of iced tea. I don’t just make plain brewed tea, I make Bengal Spiced iced tea. So you probably are wondering how I make this delicious tea.

I put ten regular tea bags and two Bengal Spiced tea bags in the eight-cup Pyrex measuring cup. Then I pour boiling water over the tea bags until the water level is about half and inch from the top of the large measuring cup. Then I cover it with a glass plate and leave it on the kitchen counter until it cools completely. Once it cools, I fill a half-gallon jug two-thirds full of cold water and then pour tea concentrate into the jug until it is full. The rest of the concentrate gets poured into a one gallon jug and I rinse the tea bags and pour it into the jug until the jug is full. I then add the tea bags I just used to the compost bin.

This is the iced tea that I take to work with me every day. I don’t sweeten it in any way. I have been complimented on its spicy unique flavor.

What is your favorite home-made beverage? Can you make it instead of buying it and thus save some money? I like to take five minutes to sit down and relax with a refreshing glass of this wonderful iced tea.

       

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Five
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

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This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I may receive an affiliate commission. 
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June 13 2019

Tuna Salad

I recently made an old favorite that we haven’t had in quite a while. What did I make you ask? Tuna salad. Nothing special, you say? I beg to differ. Mine is not quite the usual recipe. I refrigerate the tuna before I make it still in the cans so it is cold and ready to serve right away. You don’t have to do this, but it is best to refrigerate for at least a couple of hours after making it if you don’t so everything gets cold and the flavors have a chance to mingle.

Karen’s Tuna Salad

6 cans tuna packed in water (not oil)
1-1/2 cups diced celery
1-1/2 cups diced green pepper
sweet pickle relish to taste
Light mayo to creamy texture

We (my daughter and I) figured out it doesn’t matter how many cans of tuna you use, the magic ratio of crunchy green stuff to tuna is 1/4 cup each of celery and green pepper for each small can of tuna you use. My daughter and I disagree on what type of relish needs to be used, she likes dill relish, and I can’t imagine it without sweet relish.

We drain the water off the tuna so it doesn’t make the final product all watery. I usually dice the celery to 1/4 inch or smaller, the tuna is fairly smooth and not as chunky as chicken for chicken salad would be, so I think it works best to have the veggies diced small, but you do what you want. Some times I get lazy and hurried and cut them bigger just to speed things up. I usually mix it all up in my 8-cup Pyrex glass measuring cup.

Stir in the light mayo and relish until you get the right combination of texture and taste.

Then I store it in small, single-serve plastic containers about 1 cup in each. This makes it quick to grab a container when packing lunches. We just take the bread or wraps we want to use with the tuna along in a separate bag or container.

We enjoyed it so much we ate it all up before I could take a photo to show you how yummy it looks, but if I remember to take a picture the next time I make it I will add it in. Obviously, you can use the tuna from a pouch or larger cans, but the small 5 or 6 oz cans are usually what they sell at Aldi, so that is what I use. So just adjust the recipe to fit the amount of tuna you are using.

Please let me know how you like this special treat. Remember that making meals at home and packing your lunch for work or school are great ways to save money.

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April 18 2019

Organizing Recipes and Cookbooks

When the kids were getting ready to go off to college, I thought they might want to have copies of the recipes they had learned to cook during their teen years. I began typing recipes into the computer a few at a time and sorting them within the Word doc so that all the beef recipes were together and the chicken recipes were in another section. I listed the recipes in the table of contents under the correct heading. Someday when I consider it finished, I may add page numbers, but for now, everything is just sorted into the correct section in the order they appear.

I decided that the cookbook I was amassing needed to be printed out and inserted into sheet protectors. I started each new section on a new page so that if I needed to update a section I could just print a new copy and replace the old one. I also decided that each copy needed to be put in a binder and so each one also needed a custom cover to match up with its new owner.

One of the perks of having the recipes I use all the time already typed into the computer is the ease with which I can share them electronically with someone. In fact, if I take something to a pitch-in that I think might be popular, I often email the recipe to myself before leaving home to make it extra easy to share while on the go. All I have to do is forward the email to someone if they want the recipe, or if they want to write it out, I can simply let them copy it from the email on my phone. This saves me having to remember to do it later and they get the recipe right away.

Once in a while, the old ratty recipe card is of historical significance, so I type the recipe AND include a scan of the original so I have both preserved. You may ask why I bother typing it in if I am going to include the scan. Easy, it is searchable that way. I can search my entire computer based on some unique word in the recipe and find it quickly.

The other thing I have done in the past to organize recipes is to buy a Rolodex that uses three by five cards and alphabet tabs. I found that I could use a hole punch and then scissors to make preprinted recipe cards work in this system. Only occasionally was it a problem because it would cut into the type on the bottom of the card. You might be wondering how well that worked for organizing the recipes. Well, what can I say, C is for cookie and cake and cheese and casserole and…let’s just say that sometimes you have to check behind more than one tab to find what you are looking for and often you have to search through all the recipes filed behind a specific tab until you find the one you want.

The is my Rolodex. It is a little cracked on the right front of the lid and as you can see I don’t always punch the cards and don’t always file them back where they belong either. I have a clear acrylic recipe card holder that I put them in while I am using them and then, in theory, file them away when I am finished with them.

I have included scans of two recipe cards from my Rolodex to show you what they look like. The colored card was hand-written by me and punched and cut many years later to make it fit the filing system. I put it behind the white one that came in the Rolodex so you could see how I knew where to punch and cut it and also so you could see the pre-punched cards and what they look like. Feel free to try the recipes too.

I also am guilty of tearing entire pages out of magazines because there was a recipe I wanted to try on it and I was ready to throw the rest of the magazine into the recycling bin. These can easily go in sheet protectors in the binder also, and if you test the recipe and love it you can type it up in the correct section in the cookbook with a proper source citing of course. If you don’t care for it, no problem, just add it to the recycle bin too.

Every so often, I go through the recipes I’ve kept because they sounded good and I wanted to try them and decide that I’ll never actually make it because it contains unusual ingredients or too many ingredients. If you know you won’t make it, just chuck it. No need to let it clutter your recipe filing system.

Do you have a system that works for organizing your recipes?

 

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April 11 2019

Green Smoothie Recipes

My favorite green smoothie recipe these days is one born of trying to avoid the plague that is always going around work. I have been making this one a few days each week in an attempt to keep Hubby ( and myself) healthy.

Lazy C Green Smoothie
2 cups Orange Juice (with Calcium)
2 cups Spinach
3 cups Mixed Frozen Fruit Blend (peaches, mangoes, pineapple, strawberries)

These were created out of boredom with the recipes I usually use or because I needed to make a smoothie out of whatever was on hand.
I usually try to follow the basic recipe of 2 cups liquid, 2 cups greens and 3 cups fruit (some frozen, preferably). I find this recipe works best if at least one of the cups of fruit is a sweeter fruit such as mango, banana or grapes.

Purple Passions Green Smoothie
2 cups Kale (or Spinach)
2 cups Coconut Water
1/4 cup Beets (roasted)
1 cup Blueberries
1 cup Grapes
1 cup Greek Yogurt (Fat-Free)

Cider-Berry Green Smoothie
1 1/2 cups Apple Cider
2 cups Spinach (or Kale)
3 cups Triple Berry Mix (frozen)
1 Banana

For all of these recipes, measure the liquid in the blender first, then add the greens and blend until smooth. Add fruit and blend again until smooth. Make sure the blender lid is on securely and that the buttons cannot accidentally be pushed while loading in more fruit. Guess how I know this is important?

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I make my blender full of smoothie at night before going to bed and put them in the refrigerator in my favorite Tupperware cups with lids that include a hole for the straw and are practically spill proof. These days I usually split them into two cups, but sometimes I have a little extra smoothie, which I pour into the tall skinny snack-sized zip-top bags. I then stand it up in the refrigerator and pack it into my lunch and drink it at work by simply opening the zipper just enough to insert a straw and then sealing it as much as I can around the straw. This works great because these bags are made of thicker plastic closer to a freezer bag than the storage bags. If there is a lot left over, I just split them into 3 cups instead of two.

I learned all about how to make green smoothies in 2014 on SimpleGreenSmoothies.com.
I participated in many of their 30-day Green Smoothie challenges and made a binder with all the recipes from those challenges. I also bought their book, Simple Green Smoothies, and use it regularly.

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March 28 2019

Crockpot Recipe Review: Chicken Stuffing Stew

With the weather being what it is during an Indiana winter, I am always looking for new ways to use my crockpot and have something warm and wonderful waiting when I walk in the door from work.

I have made this recipe twice now. The first time I didn’t have the frozen cranberries and couldn’t find them in the grocery when I was buying the rest of the ingredients for this recipe, so I left them out. Hubby and I both LOVED this recipe! It was awesome. The sage really makes it. It reminds me of my mother’s Dressing recipe.

I actually used 4 cans of the chicken because that is what I had on hand. I forgot to take the photo before I opened all these containers, so I saved them to show you after the meal was already in the crockpot.

I eventually found the frozen cranberries on one of my grocery trips, so I decided to make it again. I have to say I wasn’t crazy about the overall taste after the cranberries were added. The photo below shows what it looked like with the cranberries. Hubby helped me out by eating up all the leftovers. I will likely leave them out from now on but wanted to try it just to see how it would taste with the addition of the cranberries.

I highly recommend trying this recipe before the weather turns warm. It is a very hearty and satisfying meal. Makes great leftovers for dinner another night or lunch the next day.

Chicken Stuffing Stew
7-8 servings / 4 SP per serving

2 lb. chicken breast
2 cans chicken broth
1 pkg. Stove Top stuffing
2 cans turkey gravy (fat free gravy will lower the SP count)
2 cans corn
1 medium onion, diced
1 c. celery, diced
2 tbsp sage
1 bag frozen cranberries

Put all ingredients in slow cooker on low for 7 hours. Remove chicken and shred; return to slow cooker. Stir in cranberries; continue cooking for 15-30 minutes until cranberries are thawed.

Source: Living Large on Lifetime 11.14.2018 video:

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