Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
First one, Mandarin Orange Spinach Salad is always a hit..... Next one, with bacon & mushrooms....both can be altered to suit tastes. Ingredients
Ingredients
If you don't want the convenience of Stauffer's creamed spinach souffle, here is a good copycat recipe............I've made this with the frozen spinach from the freezer.....and tastes just as good.......just remember to thaw it and squeeze it dry............ Ingredients
I also add fresh spinach to my minestroni soup in the winter time. Also, I add it quite often to my lentil soup. It wilts down. |
|
#17
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
Gracie: When you have time to spare BEFORE the holidays and want to make something "ahead of time" to pop in the freezer but not bake until your family arrives from Ohio.........try this Spinach Pie. You need two nine inch spring form pans....the kind you make cheesecake in.....that the sides come off of. Makes TWO SPINACH PIES......you can bake one to eat now, instructions below......and pop the second into the freezer to bake LATER. This "SPINACH PIE" COMES FROM BOTH THE GREEK & THE ITALIAN CULTURE.... it's really excellent. This Greek-style dish can be assembled and then frozen for up to three months. When you're ready to bake, it can go straight from the freezer into the oven. To assemble the pie, press the spinach mixture into the pans, making even layers; then cover the filling completely with phyllo dough slices. Prep Time 25 minutes
Make the filling: In a large nonstick skillet, heat 2 tablespoons oil over medium-high heat. Add onions, and cook, stirring occasionally, until translucent, 3 to 5 minutes. Add garlic and 2 teaspoons salt; cook until garlic is tender, 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer mixture to a large bowl; stir in spinach, feta, Parmesan, breadcrumbs, dill, 2 teaspoons salt, and 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Fold in eggs until combined. Divide mixture evenly between two 9-inch springform pans or two 9 1/2-inch deep-dish pie plates; press firmly to flatten. Make the topping: In a large bowl, gently toss sliced phyllo to separate, then toss with remaining 1/2 cup oil until coated. Divide phyllo between pies, covering the tops evenly and completely. (To freeze, cover pies tightly with plastic wrap, being careful not to flatten topping. Bake within 3 months; do not thaw first.) Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Bake until heated through and topping is golden brown, about 1 hour 15 minutes for frozen pie (30 minutes for unfrozen pie). |
#18
|
||
|
||
![]()
All of these sound good, but Gracie, what is Villages PI? I have a feeling it is something I read already, but not sure where.
I already make a couple of these dishes, but also wanted to say that sometimes (depending on what's in the fridge) I just use spinach in place of lettuce - on sandwiches, in salads (lots of times mix spinach with other lettuces). |
#19
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
The simpler the better use of the fresh spinach....for sure. As you said, great on sandwiches, such as thin rare roast beef. We all love raw spinach. Simple. Mixing fresh raw spinach with fresh romaine makes a great salad... Now that strawberries are in season......they are GREAT on spinach salads as well....... |
#20
|
||
|
||
![]()
Honest to heavens Senior, I don't know what you did before in your life but what you should do now is write a cookbook or better still, take over one of the not too hot restaurants here.
and Ohiogirl, VillagePl is a person who writes a lot about health on here. It is confusing...I was thinking they were the same and they are not... There is a woman named VillagesFl and she has an avatar, a cute gal and sweet too and a guy named VillagePl which I take to mean village place and he has NO avatar and is concerned about the health or lack of it here in TV. So...I love vegetables even though I am not a vegan or a vegetarian and I thought that it would be fun to hear how other people fix their vegetables. Another one of my favorite vegetables and one that is sweet as sugar is Parsnips. They look like carrots but are light yellow and are always included in our yummy, over the top feasts as a side. Does anyone fix parsnips? I have never fixed collards. Would love to know more about their preparation. Are they like kale? Please continue on with spinach or add one of your favorite vegetable dishes.
__________________
It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#21
|
||
|
||
![]()
[QUOTE=graciegirl;522666]
Honest to heavens Senior, I don't know what you did before in your life but what you should do now is write a cookbook or better still, take over one of the not too hot restaurants here. So...I love vegetables even though I am not a vegan or a vegetarian and I thought that it would be fun to hear how other people fix their vegetables. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Actually, I never cooked at all until we were married in 1965. Worked as a private secretary but still had to commute home to make supper. At first, all I had was a Betty Crocker cookbook. If you can read, you can learn to cook. There were no processed foods back then except for t.v. dinners, which I did not use.........I cooked from scratch. I made my first Thanksgiving dinner as a newlywed......for my parents and friends, etc. We entertained a lot and I made all types of appetizers and desserts. Later, once the children arrived, you beginning cooking "family meals" and I added to my huge cookbook collection..........plus, remember the old "stained" recipe card box???? Mine was huge....shared by friends and neighbors and family members. Now, it's just the two of us except when they all come "home". I wouldn't want to own a restaurant at all. Once you go down to cooking for two, it really isn't fun anymore......but then a restaurant would be too much at our age. My generation was the "stay at home" mom, baking the cookies for when they returned on the school bus..........sending them off with a hot breakfast.......and a big supper at suppertime. We always ate together. Now, it appears that some families use the drive up windows a lot. I even learned to bake French bread (baguettes).........now the breads in the supermarket are awful..........but again, for just the two of us, it isn't worth the bother. We used to think that the delicious French baguettes at a local historical inn were made in the "kitchen" by some top chef baker.........then we found out he was using Schwan's frozen pre baked French Bread Loaves. They are really good........so now I cheat. You could have fooled us......they'd come out of the kitchen looking just like he baked them......and were excellent. Perfect outside crust and nice soft inside.....but not the gluey bread of today. They come in a bag of three for the freezer. Great "with dinner" or for a sandwich. Our pet peeve is all the GLUEY MUSHY bread in the supermarkets since they took the trans fats out.......whatever else they did to the bread, it is awful.........I buy "artisan" breads at the supermarket in the bakery section........they are peasant Italian breads, rough and crusty....have holes in them......but at least they have texture........ Anyway, anyone can cook if they can read...........however, nowadays, it seems everyone is either lactose intollerant or following some type of restricted diet..............but, like you, I've always loved my veggies and am not a vegan nor vegetarian.........everything in moderation. I married a guy who only ate corn and green beans and peas out of a can........so I introduced him to fresh and frozen veggies.......as I did all my friends........our kids eat everything, were never fussy, and are both thin and healthy..........they eat and enjoy all types of ethnic foods from all over the world..........again, I baked every single day as back in those days "it was what we did"..........it wasn't rationed, yet they grew up thin and healthy. It was fun going to parties and pot lucks in those days........again, no one was on any type of restricted diet....and we all shared recipes. A recent wedding we attended was super nuts as NO ONE could eat ANYTHING. The menu was huge for all the other meals as well, but nothing on the menus was acceptable. It's become quite a craze. Actually, it's taken the pleasure out of "dining out".....or "cooking in". You open the restaurant and we'll come by........... What I'd like from you is an authentic German Potato Salad recipe. Our dear friend who was like a grandmother to our children, would make the best "warm" German potato salad.....yes, it had bacon in it... I've tried to duplicate it over the years since she's been gone, but although good, the recipes aren't quite the same as hers. She had some type of "seeds" in it. It had vinegar and oil, but no MAYO. Onions, yes. |
#22
|
||
|
||
![]()
All sounds delish ! I love spinach.
All I do is wet it, cover in a pan and steam it. When it's done I put yummy butter and salt on it.
__________________
Troy, Rochester, Hazel Park, Harbor Beach, Grand Rapids, Michigan |
#23
|
||
|
||
![]()
Personally I don't think spinach CAN be fixed!
|
#24
|
||
|
||
![]()
Open the can and put in a sauce pan and heat. Put it into bowls and eat.
For variety add a little flour and butter and salt and pepper and make it creamed spinach. Put it into bowls and eat. For uncooked spinach, de-vein it, cook up some bacon and crumble it (save the grease), hard boil some eggs and slice them, add mustard and vinegar to the bacon grease and combine it. Mix it all together and put it bowls and eat. Love my spinach!!! Z
__________________
Jacksonville, Florida Andover, New Jersey The Villages Second star to the right, then straight on 'til morning. |
#25
|
||
|
||
![]()
If you like spinach, you may want to try Bok Choy. We steam baby Bok Choy and use a balsamic vinegar dip. Great for stir fry as well. The stem part of the leaves hold up better when heated than spinach.
http://www.delish-blog.com/2009/06/s...y-with-garlic/ http://steamykitchen.com/2112-bok-ch...ry-recipe.html |
#26
|
||
|
||
![]()
My husband's grandmother, from Cincinnati and very German, made great German warm potato salad. I did have her recipe, but I don't know where it is now! The seeds are celery seeds, and the dressing had vinegar in it, and I know there was onion and bacon in it. Should try to do it sometime soon!
|
#27
|
||
|
||
![]()
I have heard this quote so many times from talented cooks. Senior Citizen, I don't mean to be disagreeable, but it's not true for some of us. It's like someone saying if you can read you can draw realistic portraits... or drive a car... or swim in the ocean... Nope. Doesn't work for me. I've been reading cookbooks all my life & I have drawers stuffed with 'fool-proof' recipes, but my success rate is still way below normal.
Just sayin' Judy the Fool PS: I'll bring the cheese & crackers and the ice! PPS: I just put spinach in the steamer & steam it for a few minutes, then add butter.
__________________
Toledo, Maumee, Lima, Columbus & Sandusky, Ohio New Castle, Newark & Delaware City, Delaware Lewisville, Pennsylvania Bossier City, Louisiana Salt Lake City & Ogden, Utah The Villages, Florida Last edited by uujudy; 07-16-2012 at 03:12 PM. Reason: Fixed it |
#28
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
__________________
Les |
#29
|
||
|
||
![]() Quote:
Sounds like my friend's German Potato Salad........simple but delicious. My mom made her potato salad with mayonnaise but my dad had one particular fussy sister who would only eat her potato salad if it had vinegar in it.......she wouldn't touch mayonnaise. So, my mom made two versions, one for my aunt and the mayo type as well. Not sure if the Italians make their own type of potato salad...........but I did love the warm German variety. She was a great cook and the entire neighborhood misses her dearly.......she also made a mean saurbraten, which I have made in the past..........delicious. |
#30
|
||
|
||
![]()
Gracie, did you ever try this?
Peel and cut your parsnips into long french fry shapes and toss with oil. Season with coarse salt and pepper (and rosemary if you like that). Cover a baking sheet with foil and spray with cooking spray. Bake in a preheated 450 oven for about 15 minutes, turn and bake another 15 minutes or until browned and tender.
__________________
"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went." - Will Rogers "Heaven goes by favor. If it went by merit, you would stay out and your dog would go in." - Mark Twain |
Closed Thread |
|
|