Bad Food Blog

A bad blog about good food
  • About
  • Contact
  • Tag: slow cooker

    • Recipe: Slow Cooker Unstuffed Cabbage Soup

      Posted at 3:00 pm by Rachel, on March 4, 2019

      Unstuffed Cabbage Soup has been my family’s St. Patrick’s Day dinner for as long as I can remember. I could not tell you whether or not it is actually traditional Irish fare, although my Irish-American mother has always insisted that it is “more Irish” than corned beef and cabbage. I do know that cabbage is heavily featured in Irish food, and this is delicious. It goes well with potatoes; my personal favorite pairing is potato cakes, but mashed or even roasted potatoes would do the trick quite nicely.

      I adapted my mother’s recipe so I could make it in the slow cooker because, if you hadn’t noticed, I prefer to use my slow cooker when given the choice. The recipe just about fills my 6-quart slow cooker. If that’s too much for you, don’t worry, the leftovers freeze beautifully.

      The honey and raisins put this soup is on the sweet side – it is definitely the sweetest of any soup I make. If you prefer something less sweet, you could reduce the amount of honey. I suppose you could also reduce how many raisins you include, but then you would miss out on the joy that is plump little re-hydrated raisins.

      Ingredients:

      For the soup base:

      • 1 large onion
      • 2 lb head of cabbage, preferably Savoy
      • 1 8-ounce can tomato sauce
      • 1 28-ounce can crushed tomatoes
      • 1 cup water
      • ¼ cup honey
      • ¼ cup lemon juice
      • ⅓ cup raisins (or currants)

      For the meatballs:

      • 1 lb lean ground beef
      • ½ cup uncooked rice
      • 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
      • ½ tsp salt
      • Freshly ground black pepper

      Directions:

      1. Dice the onion. Core and dice the cabbage. Place both the onion and the cabbage into the crock of a 6 quart slow cooker.
      2. Add the other ingredients for the soup base into the slow cooker. Stir to combine.
      3. In a separate bowl, add all of the ingredients for the meatballs. Gently mix with your hands.
      4. Roll the meat mixture into small, bite-sized meatballs, adding them to the slow cooker as you go.
      5. Fold the meatballs into the soup, taking care not to break them apart.
      6. Put on the lid and cook for 8 hours on low. Serve with potato cakes, mashed potatoes, or whichever starchy carb you prefer!
      Posted in Dinner | 1 Comment | Tagged beef, cabbage, Dinner, holiday, recipe, slow cooker, soup, St. Patrick's Day
    • My February Menu Plan

      Posted at 4:03 am by Rachel, on January 26, 2019

      We have finally eaten most of the contents of our freezer and I am back with a monthly menu plan to share! I have really missed menu planning so I am excited to get back into the swing of things. Scroll down for recipe links and details on what I’m cooking this month.

      Eggs

      I would like to make a souffle again this month; I am specifically eyeing the Winter Squash Souffle from Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone. However, most egg nights we will be sticking to our traditional (easy) scrambled eggs and roasted veggies.

      Slow Cooker

      • Huli Huli Chicken – I borrowed The Complete Slow Cooker from the library recently and this recipe was one of our favorites. I highly recommend this book if you’re looking for some new slow cooker recipes.
      • Whole chicken in the slow cooker, sweet potato vegetable bake – I’m trying to expand my side dish repertoire and this recipe from You Have it Made is first up.
      • Pot roast – I usually make this recipe with 2 onions and about a pound of peeled, chopped carrots
      • Chicken thighs, Chili-Spiced Sweet Potatoes with Maple Pecans – This sweet potato recipe is also from You Have it Made. I made it for a neighbor recently and now I want to make it for myself. It’s freezer-friendly, but I have not personally tested that out yet.

      Soup

      • White bean and garlic soup
      • Chicken noodle soup
      • Creamy tomato soup – This recipe was another great find in The Complete Slow Cooker. My kids really enjoy helping me prepare it too.
      • French onion soup

      Pasta

      • Pasta and meatballs – My mom made us a bunch of meatballs on a recent visit, so we have a glut on meatballs in our freezer right now. If you need an excellent meatball recipe, I recommend checking out this one from Serious Eats (paired with this sauce).
      • Lemony broccoli pasta – The last time I made this, my kids gobbled it up with no modifications. Here’s to repeat success!
      • Butterflies with chickpeas – This is another recipe from Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone. It looks simple but delicious.
      • Gnocchi with chicken sausage and tomatoes – Truth be told I am not feeling too confident that I will find decent gnocchi to use in this recipe. If I can’t find the good stuff then I’ll probably sub in tortellini.

      Pizza – For our weekly pizza I use this crust recipe with this sauce.

      Stove/Oven

      • Pepperoni pizza quinoa stuffed peppers – I imagine that some people would say “no” to pizza two nights in a row… fortunately I am not one of those people. I haven’t made these for a while, but they have been on my mind and I’m already excited to eat them.
      • Veggie Stir-Fry
      • Beef tacos with Budget Bytes’s taco seasoning
      • Cheesy chicken, broccoli, and rice
      Posted in Menu Plans | 0 Comments | Tagged chicken, Dinner, kid-friendly, Menu plan, pasta, side dish, slow cooker, soup
    • Recipe: Easiest Slow Cooker Rosemary Chicken Thighs

      Posted at 1:50 am by Rachel, on March 8, 2018

      A few years ago, I used my slow cooker to make the majority of our dinners. That time period gave birth to this recipe, which might be the easiest slow cooker recipe ever. I wanted the rosemary chicken my mom made when I was a kid, but I wanted to use the slow cooker instead of the oven. At the time, we were living in Korea and had a tiny oven that could only fit one quarter sheet pan at a time. So using the slow cooker to cook chicken meant the oven was available for roasting vegetables, baking biscuits, etc. We are now back in the US with a giant oven, but I still like to cook these in the slow cooker. Not only does it keep the kitchen cooler in warm weather, but it also means I am not tethered to the oven for an hour before dinner, aka the time of day when small children are most fidgety. The slow cooker makes dinner and we can go to the playground.

      38656147260_87558b2b57_k

      I have made this with bone-in and boneless chicken thighs, and both turn out deliciously moist with a nicely browned exterior. The trick to getting that nice color is to arrange the chicken thighs in a single layer. I can get about 5-6 bone-in thighs (or 8ish boneless pieces) across the bottom of my slow cooker.

      20180222_180515.jpg

      Ingredients:

      • 1 1/2 – 2 lbs of chicken thighs
      • salt and pepper
      • dried rosemary

      Directions:

      1. Spray the interior of the slow cooker with nonstick spray.
      2. Arrange the chicken thighs in a single layer along of the bottom of the slow cooker. If you are using skin-on thighs, the skin side should face up.
      3. Generously sprinkle salt, pepper, and rosemary on the chicken thighs.
      4. For boneless skinless thighs, cover and cook for 6 hours on low. For bone-in skin-on thighs, cover and cook for 8 hours on low.

      That’s it! Occasionally I change up the seasoning and use herbes de Provence instead of rosemary, depending on what I have on hand. For a simple but delicious meal, serve these alongside quinoa and your favorite veggies (quinoa is especially yummy when you make it with a 50-50 mix of water and the juices that accumulate on the bottom of the slow cooker). If you have more time, this is also a great main dish to serve when you want to make a more involved side because it is so easy!

      Posted in Dinner | 5 Comments | Tagged chicken, Dinner, recipe, slow cooker
    • Food Journal #2

      Posted at 2:30 am by Rachel, on February 8, 2018

      Welcome back to the Food Journal, where I share the good and not-so-good of what I’ve cooked recently.

      1/30 Lemon Chicken

      My mom gave me a copy of The Asian Slow Cooker for Christmas, so I have been trying out some new recipes from there. My kids are not really fans of spicy food at the moment, so this week I tried the not-at-all-spicy lemon chicken to up the odds of them eating it. I think they each had one piece – small victories!

      The recipe itself was pretty easy to make. The week before I made cashew chicken from the same cookbook and managed to mess up before the end of the first step – I opened the cookbook to the wrong page and didn’t check which recipe it was before I started cooking – whoops! So this time I triple checked that I was on the correct page and it was smooth sailing.

      20180130_130153.jpg20180130_171144.jpg20180130_174740.jpg

      The texture at the end is a bit mushier than I would ideally like (especially as leftovers the next day), but that is the trade-off of cooking in the crock pot. I do wonder how easily these recipes could be adapted to be cooked on the stove top like Budget Bytes’s Easy Orange Chicken. Something to experiment with some day.

      1/31 Spaghetti Aglio e Olio

      This was my second time making this pasta dish, and it is solidly easy and kid-friendly. My older daughter likes that there is no sauce; I like that there is still a lot of flavor. But really, I peeled and sliced the garlic and prepped a salad while the water boiled, started cooking the garlic when I put the pasta in, and dinner was ready about 2 minutes after I took the pasta out of the water – you cannot get much quicker than that. I perked up lunchtime leftovers with a bit of parmesan and an extra sprinkle of crushed red pepper.

      20180131_175106.jpg
      20180131_175123.jpg

      2/2 Mini Garden Turkey Loaves

      These are so delicious – probably the most delicious meatloaves I have ever tasted. How delicious, you ask? I gave half of a muffin each to my 1-year-old and my 3-year-old. It took some persuading, but once the 3-year-old tried it, she ate her entire portion. After she ate her dinner (meatloaf and veggies), my husband gave her a cookie. She ate the cookie and then asked for more meatloaf. Actually, she asked for 3 of the muffins, but we started her off with just one more, which she and her sister shared.

      39352674104_46cbc1b4cd_k

      The first time I made them I did as directed, but this time I realized about 10 minutes before I started cooking that I didn’t have any bread in the house! I usually make my own breadcrumbs, so I don’t keep those on hand, and I started baking my own bread a few months ago, but forgot to bake a loaf in time for this recipe. Anyway, I had some ritz-style crackers on hand, so I tossed some into a plastic bag and crushed them with a rolling pin – they were a perfect breadcrumb substitute!

      If you wanted to save some time, I think you could saute the veggies ahead of time. I would wait to mix them with the meat, egg, breadcrumbs, and seasonings until right before cooking so that the breadcrumbs don’t get mushy. We did freeze these the first time we made them and they froze very well! A few minutes in the microwave and they were as delicious as right out the oven.

      2/3 Sicilian Pizza

      p1010004_25271118007_o.jpg

      I wanted to up my pizza game a few months ago, and my search brought me to the Serious Eats Pizza Lab. This dough recipe and this sauce recipe are my current defaults for pizza night. The dough is so easy – one thing about my previous recipe that I struggled with was stretching the dough, and this one stretches itself most of the way out. The little stretching that I have to do takes maybe 2 minutes tops. I like to lift the dough and stretch from underneath the center. I have found that bread flour works better than all-purpose flour, but all-purpose flour still does a decent job. I also like to use the mixer’s paddle attachment to mix the dry ingredients, olive oil, and water, and then switch to the dough hook to knead for the last 6 minutes. The sauce is so delicious, I eat it with a spoon right out of the pot. I usually make a double batch because we eat a lot of pizza and it freezes well.

      It sounds so obvious now, but the most important thing I have learned in my quest for better pizza is to use better quality ingredients. Pizza is a pretty basic food in that it is really only 3 ingredients – bread, sauce, and cheese. Just making my own sauce and switching to mozzarella that is not pre-shredded made such a huge difference. Making the sauce in double batches and using the food processor to shred the cheese keeps the workload more manageable.

      2/5 “Roasted” chicken & mashed cannellini beans

      Lately this has been my favorite way to cook a whole chicken. First I put a few balls of foil in the bottom of the slow cooker, put the whole chicken on top, throw in some onions, carrots, celery, salt, & pepper, and cook for 8 hours on low. When that is done, I transfer the whole chicken to a broiler pan (or a small cookie sheet) with a roasting rack and broil it for 4 or 5 minutes. It comes out nice and juicy from the slow cooker and nicely browned with a crispy skin from the broiler.

      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

      Mashed cannellini beans have been a favorite side dish in our house for a while now. I think they are a bit more nutritious than mashed potatoes or rice, and more flavorful as well. I suspected for a long time that these would freeze very well; in fact, back when I was pregnant with baby #2 I planned to make some and freeze them for a quick side dish, but I ran out of freezer space before I got the chance. So I finally decided to experiment. I made a batch of the beans a few months ago and popped the leftovers in a quart-sized bag in the freezer. At dinner time, I defrosted them in a bowl of hot water, transferred them to a bowl, and microwaved them for about a minute. The flavor and consistency were just as good as the freshly made mashed beans! This is a great option for freezer cooking!

      Posted in Food Journal | 0 Comments | Tagged Dinner, freezer friendly, side dish, slow cooker
    • Food Journal #1

      Posted at 8:10 pm by Rachel, on November 26, 2017

      Welcome to my new series, Food Journal! This is where I will write about different recipes I try, what was good, and what wasn’t. Let’s get started…

      11/20 Fast and Easy Pasta with Blistered Cherry Tomato Sauce:

      Fast, easy, pasta… this recipe is basically all of my favorite things 😛 It was really fast and really easy; like Kenji said in the video, the hardest part was slicing (and peeling) the garlic. The second hardest part was putting the tomatoes into the pan without getting burned by splattering oil. Note to self: dumping the tomatoes into the pan from a large bowl will probably work better than tossing them in by the handful. Next time I want to start on the sauce BEFORE I put the pasta in the pot. My pasta cooked and was done probably 10 minutes before my sauce. I guess I’m a slow cook. Anyway, this pasta was awesome and so were its leftovers.

       

      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

       

      11/21 Slow Cooker Balsamic Chicken:

      I had this recipe pinned for a while but never made it because it looked a bit more complicated than I care to take on for a weeknight (or any night). Well, I made it and it looked JUST like the pictures! I decided to modify the recipe a bit, partly to cut down on the day-of prep work and partly to take advantage of a good price on chicken. After searing the meat, I prepped the sauce, and threw them both into a gallon sized freezer bag. I let it all cool off completely and put it into the freezer until this morning when I took it out to defrost. Prep in the morning was easy – dump the pearl onions into the slow cooker, rinse the mushrooms and dump them into the slow cooker (I used pre-sliced so no chopping for me!), add pre-minced garlic, rosemary, and a bay leaf, then just dump out the contents of my defrosted freezer bag.

       

      20171121_121611.jpg
      20171121_122243.jpg
      20171121_122707.jpg

      The only things I wasn’t crazy about were having to use so many pans & dishes and deseeding the pomegranate.

       

      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

      A lot of slow cooker recipes end up tasting the same: they aren’t interesting or fresh. But this one is! I really loved the recipe, and am excited to eat it again in a few weeks. If you’re like me and tend to skip the fresh herb garnish, do yourself a favor and pick up the fresh parsley that the recipe calls for. It definitely added something extra and rounded out the flavors.

       

      11/22 We had leftovers for dinner (really a great idea for clearing out your fridge the day before Thanksgiving) but I still spent ALL DAY in the kitchen. I baked an apple pie, a pumpkin pie, and some dinner rolls, plus the normal endless snacks for my kids.

      The apple pie took the longest time of the three recipes. I recently gave up on trying to make pie dough in my food processor and decided to try out this pie dough recipe from The Smitten Kitchen. I used a large balloon whisk to cut the butter into the flour – somehow I still don’t have a pastry blender. The whisk worked just fine, but I think a pastry blender might do this job more quickly, or at least be more comfortable to hold. The first crust was either too warm or I did not use enough flour, because it stuck to the counter when I rolled it out. So I pushed it all back into a disc shape, refloured the counter, and rolled it out again. Somewhere in the world a pastry chef is cringing. Really the pie turned out fine despite over-handling the dough, although all the extra flour on that first crust made it hard to seal it to the second crust.

       

      20171122_110203.jpg
      20171122_110756.jpg
      20171122_152640.jpg

      The filling for the apple pie was made of a mixture of 3 pounds of Granny Smiths and 2 pounds of Pink Ladies. I don’t think I want to make another apple dessert until I have an apple peeler of some sort. I think I say this every I make apple pie. But really, peeling and coring the apples with my vegetable peeler and paring knife takes me FOREVER. Also, if you attempt this recipe, remember to use a POT of some kind with a lid and not a SKILLET. I tried using my large cast iron skillet and had to use a mixing bowl for a makeshift lid. It was also really hard to stir the apples because the skillet was too shallow for the amount of food in it. It still worked, but it was a pain.

      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

      Once the apple pie was in the oven, I started the bread dough. These rolls were light and fluffy, and the whole process was fast and easy thanks to my bread machine. One thing I learned while making this recipe is that you do not need to melt butter before adding it to the bread machine! Just cut it into smaller pieces and the machine will take care of the rest. Shaping the rolls was trickier than I expected because the dough was STICKY. So I just made basic pan rolls instead of the cloverleaf rolls I had originally planned.

       

      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

      This is my third year making this pumpkin pie recipe. The streusel topping makes it more impressive than the recipe from the canned pumpkin label, but it is about the same amount of work. My only modifications to the original recipe are 1) I double the crust and 2) I use all butter instead of butter + oil. It is a deep dish pie, but I use a deep cake pan and it works just fine.

      OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

       

      11/23 My mom hosted Thanksgiving at her house, so I didn’t do any cooking that day. However, she asked me to find a recipe for sweet potatoes with brown sugar and cinnamon, and I found this super easy recipe for roasted sweet potatoes that everyone loved. Like, I don’t think there were even any leftovers. I usually make savory roasted sweet potatoes with just olive oil, salt, and pepper, but this was a nice change for the holiday and all of the spices made them feel more special. If you want “holiday” sweet potatoes without the heaviness of a sweet potato casserole, I recommend these!

      Posted in Food Journal | 0 Comments | Tagged dessert, Dinner, freezer friendly, pie, recipe review, side dish, slow cooker, thanksgiving
    • My Menu Plan: 11/5-12/16

      Posted at 3:06 am by Rachel, on November 12, 2017

      Time has flown by this last month! This menu plan is coming about a week late, but better late than never.

      For this plan, I tried to find lighter ways to enjoy cold weather comfort foods. Slow cooked meats, delicious veggies, and a healthy dose of beans to the rescue!

      Menu plan 5Nov-16Dec 2017-1

      Download this menu plan as a PDF

      These are some of the recipes I will be cooking this month:

      Zoodles Marinara – We have already tried this recipe. It was fast, easy, and tasty! Next time I will probably add some chicken – on its own this recipe is VERY light.

      *Ginger Peach Chicken – I have made this recipe in the past and it freezes VERY well. Add the peaches during the last 30 minutes of cooking so they don’t get mushy.

      *Tuscan White Bean and Garlic Soup – Another recipe that I have made and frozen before. Elegant, delicious, and filling. This is a meal that I don’t feel bad about pulling out of the freezer for guests.

      Winter Caprese Beet Noodle Pasta – This looks like such a fun and unique way to eat beets. I learned my lesson with the zoodles and will be serving some chicken with these.

      Mashed Cannellini Beans – This is a quick & easy side dish, and a great alternative to mashed potatoes. I have made this recipe before and have always wondered if it would freeze well, so I will be experimenting with that this month.

      Autumn Harvest Salad – I will be making this with chickpeas and roasted beets.

      Potato Kielbasa Skillet – This recipe has a lot of traditional “comfort food” elements – potatoes, sausage, and bacon – but it balances them out with a good portion of spinach. I usually use chicken sausage, and it is still super delicious.

      Fast and Easy Pasta with Blistered Cherry Tomato Sauce – We love pasta, and all of J. Kenji López-Alt’s recipe are delicious.

      *Slow Cooker Balsamic Chicken – I pinned this recipe a while ago but this is my first time making it. I seared the chicken and prepped the balsamic sauce prior to freezing.

      *Pot Stickers – My husband helped me assemble a double batch of these last weekend (I could only find one pound packages of pork at my grocery store, so I doubled the whole recipe). I plan to serve them over this Sesame Slaw.

      Creamy Mushroom Ragu – A friend gifted us a Hello Fresh box over the summer and this was one of the recipes we got to try. I will be making the mushroom ragu and polenta, but not the salad (although the salad is delicious if you want to try it!).

      I will be back with more updates throughout the month! Happy cooking!

       

      Posted in Menu Plans | 0 Comments | Tagged Dinner, freezer friendly, Menu plan, side dish, slow cooker
    • My Menu Plan: 9/24 – 11/4

      Posted at 12:55 am by Rachel, on September 27, 2017

      I’ve been thinking about starting this blog for a while now, so I am just going to jump right in!

      I started using a six-week long menu plan several months ago when our second child was born. Prior to that I did use a meal plan, but only planned a week at a time. As it turns out, six weeks is a great length for my family.

      The first three weeks and the last three weeks in my six-week template are identical. If you’ve done any meal prep before, you know that doubling or tripling a recipe saves a ton of time! I love using this trick, but I don’t love eating the same thing over and over again, or forgetting about food in freezer purgatory. Having a one or two week plan that repeats over and over does not appeal to me. But eating the same meal again after a three week buffer? It feels fresh again. And including the doubled portion in my plan from the beginning means that it does not get lost in the back of the freezer.

      The side dishes on this menu plan are pretty vague. I like to make fresh veggies when I can, and usually wait to see what is on sale the week we will be eating them. Plain, familiar side dishes also make dinner time run more smoothly in our house 🙂

      Menu plan 24Sep-4Nov 2017-1

      Download this menu as a PDF

      Here are some of the recipes that we will be trying this month (I *starred recipes that I made ahead as freezer meals):

      *Pepperoni Pizza Quinoa Stuffed Peppers – I have made these before but never as a freezer meal. I hope they hold up!

      *Onion-Butter 2-Step Chicken

      Weeknight Skillet Lasagna

      *Slow Cooker Maple & Dijon Pot Roast

      *Roasted Butternut Squash Soup

      *Slow Cooker Jerk Chicken – This is a new recipe for me – the sauce smelled sooo good!

      Pumpkin Ravioli with Butter and Sage Sauce – I made this last year with some pumpkin ravioli I found at a local store. Hoping to score some at the same store, otherwise I will be making the trip to Trader Joe’s!

      *Mini Garden Turkey Loaves

      Polenta with Roasted Fall Vegetables and Pesto – I love making variations on this recipe during the summer. I’m thinking a mix of brussels sprouts, sweet potatoes, and onions would be great for fall.

      *Slow Cooker BBQ Cranberry Chicken – I use organic cranberry sauce & Annie’s BBQ sauce to unjunk this recipe. I’m also using chicken thighs instead of breasts because they hold up better in the slow cooker.

      *Quiche – I used this recipe for the crust and this one for the filling

      What are you cooking this week?

       

      Posted in Menu Plans | 0 Comments | Tagged Dinner, freezer friendly, Menu plan, slow cooker
    Newer posts →
    • Archives

    • Tags

      appetizer Augusta GA balakani beef Boston breakfast burgers cabbage cannoli chicken Christmas coffee Covid-19 dessert Dinner Earth Fare Easter Eataly eggs Finale food flops Founding Farmers freezer friendly Frog Hollow holiday hotel living inspiration juice kid-friendly kitchen tour Lent Life in Hawaii living small lunch Menu plan menu recap Mike's Pastry Navy Lodge Hawaii packing pasta pastry PCS pie pizza Prudential Center recap recipe recipe review Regina Pizzeria restaurant review salad sandwich side dish skillet meal Skywalk slow cooker soup St. Patrick's Day take out Tatte thanksgiving The Pie Hole travel turkey vegan vegetarian wok
    • Categories

      • dessert
      • Dinner
      • Food Journal
      • Menu Plans
      • Uncategorized
    • Creative Commons License
      This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • Bad Food Blog
    • Join 36 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Bad Food Blog
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...