You are currently browsing the category archive for the 'Sketchy' category.
I made this tonight. It was not a total success. I think it would be in a rice cooker.
Much Lazier and It’s From a Can Enchilada Sauce Rice
1 c mild red enchilada sauce
1 c white rice
1 c water
2 tbs oil
Warm the oil in a skillet. Add the rice. Stir to cook a bit and then add water and then sauce when you can smell the rice toasting. Bring to a simmer and let cook for 10 minutes, covered. Add 2 parts water for 1 part sauce to the mix if you need to. Cook for 10 more minutes, adding water and sauce, until cooked.
This never cooked fully for me.
What I will do next time? Cook the rice in the rice cooker with the same 2 parts water to one part sauce plus salt.
I will update! (Because we celebrate the failures here too!)
This is how I found an interesting recipe on another blog, Karma-Free cooking. Madelyn has very kindly given me permission to recreate her recipe with some Recipe changes. There are a few more steps than I generally like in a pasta bake, but the efforts are interesting. RockStar and I think that we’ve come up with some changes to the next incarnation of Madelyn’s brainstorm.
Karma Free Pasta Bake, Recipe version
1 onion, diced
3 tbs butter plus 1 tsp oil
1 box Barilla Plus pasta
1 box frozen chopped spinach, thawed
1 c chopped tomatoes OR 1 c chopped carrots
1 c shredded medium chedder
1 c shredded Monterey jack
1 quart half & half
2 tbs mustard
1/4 tsp grated nutmeg or mace
salt & pepper
Step One: Melt butter and heat oil in a small skillet. Add onion, sprinkle with salt, and saute until onion is transparent. Pour into the bottom of a 9 inch by 13 inch baking dish. Add pasta and stir in onions and fat to coat pasta.
Step Two: Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Press spinach in colander or twist in a towel to remove most of the moisture. Spread over pasta. Scatter tomatoes or carrots over spinach. Spread cheese over the top of the dish.
Step Three: Pour half & half into a bowl. Add mustard, nutmeg, pepper, and at least 1 tsp of salt. Whisk until mustard has incorporated into mix. Pour liquid over the pasta and veggies slowly. Cover dish with foil and bake for 40 minutes, covered. Uncover and bake for 10 more minutes.
This was good, but a bit, um, curdy. Here’s what we’re trying next time:
In a large saucepan, melt 4 tbs butter. Add onions & salt. When onions are transparent, add 4 tbs all purpose flour and saute for one minute. Slowly add 1 quart milk to make a bechamel (fully explained here). When bechamel coats a spoon, add mustard, nutmeg, pepper, and 1 tsp salt. You can also add the cheese to this sauce if you want it more uniform and less stringy.
You will have to boil the pasta for this version because the sauce won’t release enough moisture to cook the dry pasta. Otherwise, layer cooked pasta, spinach, tomatoes/carrots, cheese, cover with sauce, and bake as directed.
I will keep you informed about the version Recipe 2.0
I have no pictures of this, but I did find an old pic of RecipeDog looking like the camera is sketchy. So cute!!!
Canned tuna was on double deep discount this week so BabyDaddy and I stocked up. As I adore the Sabra brand Tuna Salad (and hummus – oh joy! the hummus), I decided to try to fool around with my basic Tuna Salad recipe. I don’t like it very much, but it will suffice when time and funds demand.
Old Skool Tuna Salad
2 cans tuna in water, dranied
1 big spoon mayo
1 big spoon sweet relish
salt
Mix. Die of boredom.
Now, my recent jaunt to the Mediterranean has caused me to try a radical thought – lemon juice and tahini in tuna. I also added some salt, some mayo, and a sprinkling of my secret shame, my secret love – smoked paprika.
Not quite there yet. It still needs something. Mostly something sweet to balance out the rest of the flavors. I’m not sure if this will involve sweet pickle relish or not, but I’ll keep trying until I realize canned tuna is a horror that cannot be saved. I PROMISE.

