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Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recipes. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2019

Fall Harvest Cooking, coming right up!

 USU Extension is kicking off their once a month cooking classes for the year by featuring recipes using fresh fruits and vegetables from the fall harvest on September 11th.
All classes are held at the Wasatch County Services Building at 55 South 500 East in Heber City.



Classes will begin at 10 am and go until noon. There is a $3.00 charge at the door. There is usually a demonstration, great information about the subject, a taster's table, recipes for you to take home and try, and a great time.

Get ready for fall, the cooler weather, and hopefully the desire to get cooking again!
Brought to you by Heath at HeathsHomes.com



Monday, March 4, 2019

Ready to make the easiest AND tastiest cheesecake, EVER?

One day one of our 4th grade sons brought home a cookbook from the school library. He wanted to make cheesecake, and so we did. That was a year or two ago and since then I think we have perfected the cheesecake.
Here is the latest and greatest.



PEANUT BUTTER CHOCOLATE CHIP CHEESECAKE
2 8 ounce packages of cream cheese, softened
1/3 cup peanut butter
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla
2 eggs
3/4 mini semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 ready-to-use graham cracker crust

Mix cream cheese, peanut butter, sugar and vanilla at medium speed with electric mixer until well blended.  Add eggs and mix until blended. Stir in 1/2 cup of the chocolate chips.
Pour into crust. Sprinkle the remaining 1/4 cup of chips on top.
Bake at 350 degrees for 40 minutes or until center is almost set. Cool. Refrigerate for 3 hours or overnight before serving.

It is so GOOD!


Brought to you by Heath @ HeathsHomes.com






Sunday, November 4, 2018

Community Cooking Demonstration This Week

This month's Wasatch County Extension cooking class is Lion House Rolls.


Come learn how to make the perfect rolls for the Thanksgiving table on Wednesday, November 7th at 10:00 am. There is a $3 charge.
Classes are held in the Wasatch County Community Services Building at 55 South 500 East in Heber City.

Brought to you by Heath @ HeathsHomes.com




Monday, October 15, 2018

Snickerdoodle Blondie Bars - pretty snacky!

A few weeks ago I tried these cookie bars at one of our kids' events. Thank you Leslie for sharing your recipe!
They were AMAZING!
We made them for an openhouse we hosted over the weekend. They were a hit there as well. So, I'm sharing this super simple, can't mess it up, make your mouth want more, delicious recipe with you. 


Ingredients:
1 cup of butter, melted
2 cups sugar
2 tbsp milk
2 eggs
2 3/4 cups flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp cream of tartar
1/4 tsp salt

Topping:
2 tbsp sugar
1 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon

Instructions:
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour a 9 x 13 pan (or line with parchment paper) and set aside.
In a large bowl, combine melted butter, sugar, and milk. Add in eggs, stir until combined.
In a separate bowl, combine flour, baking powder, cream of tartar and salt. Stir into the butter mixture until combined.
Pour batter into prepared 9 x 13 pan.
In a small bowl, combine 2 tbsp sugar and 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon. Sprinkle over the batter in the pan.
Bake at 350 degrees for 25-28 minutes.


You may be tempted to keep them in the oven a little longer because the middle seems a bit jiggly, but don't. The timing is perfect. Enjoy the simple way to have the goodness of a Snickerdoodle cookie with the ease of a cookie bar.

Brought to you by Heath Harvey @ HeathsHomes.com




Monday, October 8, 2018

JoAnna Gaines wants to share a meal with you

USU Extension cooking class educators are doing a COOKBOOK SPOTLIGHT this week with JoAnna Gaines' cookbook, Magnolia Table.


Come check out some exciting new recipes included in this highly anticipated cookbook.
Wednesday, October 10th at 10:00 am
55 South 500 East, Heber City
There is a $3.00 fee for this class.

Brought to you by Heath @ HeathsHomes.com




Friday, September 21, 2018

What's for Dinner?

This is Rachel today, and I make a sweet pot pie if I do say so myself, and since September 23rd is National Great American Pot Pie Day, I am sharing my recipe with you.


First of all, I use a real pie crust. On the top AND the bottom. I know, that seems so over the top, but that is the reason we love pot pies at our house so much! Its all about the crust.
This recipe was given to me about 20 years ago by a sweet lady named Ellen. She is a pie Goddess. This is her dessert pie crust recipe so it must be good for a main course!

Ellen's Pie Crust
In a tea cup mix really well:
1 tbsp vinegar
1/4 cup water
1 egg

In a medium bowl mix with a pastry blender:
2 1/2 cups of flour
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup shortening

When I first started making this pie crust, I tried to just blend it all with a fork. That pastry blender really is the kicker here. It cuts the shortening into the flour so much easier and faster!


After your egg solution is mixed well and your shortening is also mixed well, pour the contents of the tea cup into the larger bowl. Now use your pastry blender to mix this portion up. Here is your glorious pie crusts!


This recipe makes 2 crusts, one for the bottom of the pot pie and one for the top. So separate your bowl of crust into two even balls.  Preheat your oven to 375 degrees.


Roll out one of the pie crust dough balls on a floured surface (I use a thin kitchen towel because it makes it easier in the long run) with a floured rolling pin. My mistake when I first started making crusts was not enough flour. Then it sticks to everything, then you get mad.



 Once your dough is rolled out on your towel, flip it over, be an acrobat and balance that baby on your forearm and flop it in a pie plate, trying your best to center it. This is a practiced skill, I promise you will get better. 



Pat the crust down into the pie plate and fix any cracks if you have them. I use a knife to cut off the extra flopping over the sides. But save the crust and just set it aside - pie crust cookies are the best!



If you are like me, you have a few pie plates that are just a little different in size. Use your biggest one. You are going to want the extra space for this yummy recipe!

If you want to go buy a pie crust at the grocery store, that sounds awesome too. Don't sweat it. It will still taste great.

So here is the fun part.
I have made chicken filling, ground beef filling, beef steak filling (before Heath showed me what steaks should be cooked like!), and even ground deer meat filling.
They all consist of the same basic ingredients:
2 cans of veggies (drained)
1 jar of gravy
1 1/2ish pounds of meat (more if you like it meatier and thicker)
salt and pepper or other seasonings



That is it, really. I have used frozen veggies before but I prefer these canned veggies the best. The veggie-texture turns out the best, as well as the crust surrounding the veggies. Nobody likes a soggy pie crust, and that seems to happen when I used frozen veggies.
Use the kind of gravy that fits your meat - chicken for chicken and beef for beef. I'm not picky about brand, I just buy whatever gravy is on sale. You can make your own gravy of course, but most days I try to keep it simple. 



Heath has turned me into a chicken griller. I love chicken on the grill, in this recipe especially.  For the ground beef pie, just brown it and drain. Whatever kind of meat you decide to use, precook it.

Mix all your pot pie ingredients together in a large bowl and then pour into the crust you have placed in your pie plate. 





Smooth the filling out and then put the 2nd pie crust on the top after you have rolled it out as well. 
You will have floppy crust hanging over and this is when you take a knife and just trim off all the excess crust that extends over the edge. 



Your pie crusts need to be be sealed together. I used to be really self conscious about my pie sealing job, but I kind of don't care anymore. It's all good. The traditional way is to use your thumb and forefinger of your right hand and smoosh the crust into them with the forefinger of your left hand. It creates the traditional crimped pie look. Whatever you do is groovy.


Your pie is going to be chucker-block full, so it must be vented. Cut some kind of pattern into the top crust, and when you bake it, save yourself some tears and place a cookie sheet on the rack below the pie to catch the hot pie slobbers.


 Bake your pot pie at 375 degrees for an hour. You can brown the top crust for just a minute or two if you need to at the end of your cooking. It all depends on your oven.

Now for Ellen's famous Pie Crust Cookies!
Put the extra pieces of crust you cut off onto an ungreased cookie sheet, sprinkle them with cinnamon and sugar, bake for 20 minutes at 425 degrees and your kids will love you!



Remove your pies from the oven and let them rest and cool for at least an hour before eating. They need a little time to set up.
I didn't do the usual egg wash on the top of the crust because I forgot. It gives the pie a nice golden color but I was just so excited to get them in the oven, it slipped my mind.


So there you have it - delicious homemade pot pie. Not very spendy, full of goodness, easy to make, and a family pleaser. However, our 6 year old is NOT happy with this for dinner. The poor girl doesn't know what is good for her!


This pie filling is grilled chicken, chicken gravy, 2 cans of veggies, salt and pepper.


This pie filing is ground beef, beef gravy, 2 cans of veggies, salt and pepper.

Happy National Pot Pie Day
to you from us here in Heath's kitchen!

Brought to you by Heath @ HeathsHomes.com



Saturday, August 25, 2018

Another super simple recipe your crew will be happy about, and so will you.

We have a crowd at our house and when we cook, we get to cook for a crowd. Heath smoked some ribs a few nights ago as a little back to school treat dinner. He smoked 3 racks for our family of 8. There were a few left for him the next day, but just a few.



So, here is a killer delicious sloppy joe recipe for a big family I use all the time. 10 years ago my local friend Tracy Hill gave it to me, so it is aptly named.

Tracy's Sloppy Joes

4 pounds of ground beef
1/4 cup lemon juice
1/4 cup molasses
1 tbsp prepared yellow mustard
1/2 cup green pepper, diced
1 tbsp worshechire sauce
1 cup chopped onion
1 quart ketchup
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup water
1 cup diced celery
2 tsp salt
1 tsp pepper

Brown the ground beef and drain it.  If you want to throw the onion, green pepper, and celery in with the beef while it cooks, they soften up and cook well. I like to just brown the meat, throw it in the crock pot and add everything else and let it simmer for a few hours in the afternoon before dinner time. The veggies turn out great that way as well.

After a few hours of simmering all the deliciousness together, it's ready to pile on a bun and have some dinner. The kids love this recipe and so that means it is a winner at our house.

I know I should have put a sprig of something green or our delicious side dishes on the plate for the photo, but I quickly ate it after I took the picture and ran off to run a boy to boy scouts while Heath fed the rest of the family, side dishes and all (pasta and peas). Not very gourmet, but that is reality for us on some nights. This recipe was perfect for the night. Thank you Tracy!

Enjoy this recipe. I think it is so good. - Rachel

Brought to you by Heath @ HeathsHomes.com






Thursday, July 19, 2018

A delish recipe for those of us that don't like cooking dinner.

This is Rachel talking today. 
I love to bake delicious little treats for dessert and all kinds of breads but I don't love cooking dinner. Heath is really great at it. I am not. But I made this and we both loved every mouthful.


I am a pesto fan.  Anything pesto is fabulous. I was craving pesto so I grabbed the jar out of the fridge and some chicken out of the freezer to thaw.
This is what happened - a good looking dinner that tasted gourmet and was so so simple. 


There were only 3 of us home for dinner, so I didn't make the usual grundle to feed our family of 8. Here is what I used:

2 monster chicken breasts
3 tbsp pesto
2 roma tomatoes
1/2 cup mozzarella cheese
2 tbsp Parmesan cheese

I cut the 2 big chicken breasts lengthwise through the width to make 3 skinny chicken fillet-like pieces from each breast. I lightly salted and peppered them and placed them on my foil covered cookie sheet. (See, it's called a cookie sheet or sheet cake pan because baking cookies and cake is fun!)
I spread 1/2 tbsp of pesto on the top of each chicken fillet and put them into a preheated oven at 400 degrees. I baked them for 18 minutes (the time it takes for 2 batches of cookies!) and took them out of the oven. I sprinkled them with mozzarella cheese then placed a few slices of tomato on each one. (I would normally skip this fancy step but I was trying to impress Heath, and it totally worked! It was delicious as well. Truly.) Then I sprinkled the Parmesan cheese on the top and of the tomatoes and threw them back in the oven for 5 more minutes.

In the meantime I cooked up a few whole grain noodles and steamed some veggies. It was a killer dinner and it was much easier than I expected.
I think you should give it a whirl, tomatoes and all.

Brought to you by Heath @ HeathsHomes.com