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Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

That's funny, I always think of sweet potatoes as a vegetable, not a starch, since they are so good for you. We eat plenty of greens, trust me...just ask my long-suffering husband. Anyway, I think squash cut into slightly larger chunks would work, too. I'd have to experiment with roasting times. Is squash also a starch?

I buy free-range hormone-free blah blah blah meat, so it does tend to be expensive. That's why this column often features rice and beans.

Oh man, freekeh--I had never heard of this and now am excited to hunt it down. Thanks, teamgf!

From Talk

Brussels Sprouts

I'm a roaster, too--olive oil, salt, and pepper only, 400 degrees until they have some seriously brown and crispy spots--it's the easiest and yummiest way!

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

I keep hearing about Reef from my parents and sister, who love it...I did not know the chef was a blogger, too! I need to make a trip home to eat there.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

BigGirlPheobz, I think it would work fine with breasts. Unless they are super giant they should cook a little faster than legs anyway...although it varies so much that a thermometer really is handy. You could always cut the sweet potatoes a little on the large side and then continue roasting them when the chicken was done, if they weren't done yet. Or if your sweet potatoes end up getting a little overroasted, they should still be quite edible!

Sunbyrne, that combination sounds great!

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Eat for Eight Bucks: Cranberry Salsa Salad

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Sunday Brunch: Baked Eggs with Spinach

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Eat for Eight Bucks: Chickpea, Pumpkin, and Raisin Couscous

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Homemade "Pepperidge Farm Stuffing"?

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From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

That's funny, I always think of sweet potatoes as a vegetable, not a starch, since they are so good for you. We eat plenty of greens, trust me...just ask my long-suffering husband. Anyway, I think squash cut into slightly larger chunks would work, too. I'd have to experiment with roasting times. Is squash also a starch?

I buy free-range hormone-free blah blah blah meat, so it does tend to be expensive. That's why this column often features rice and beans.

Oh man, freekeh--I had never heard of this and now am excited to hunt it down. Thanks, teamgf!

From Talk

Brussels Sprouts

I'm a roaster, too--olive oil, salt, and pepper only, 400 degrees until they have some seriously brown and crispy spots--it's the easiest and yummiest way!

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

I keep hearing about Reef from my parents and sister, who love it...I did not know the chef was a blogger, too! I need to make a trip home to eat there.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

BigGirlPheobz, I think it would work fine with breasts. Unless they are super giant they should cook a little faster than legs anyway...although it varies so much that a thermometer really is handy. You could always cut the sweet potatoes a little on the large side and then continue roasting them when the chicken was done, if they weren't done yet. Or if your sweet potatoes end up getting a little overroasted, they should still be quite edible!

Sunbyrne, that combination sounds great!

From Recipes

Gluten-Free Tuesday: Millet

I have to pipe up because the first time I cooked millet, I really botched it (maybe overcooked?) and then stayed away from it for a few years. Then I tried it again for some recipe, got it right, and now I love it. (I think I usually prefer it chilled or cooled and then reheated for some reason--it never seems quite right to me straight out of the pot.) So, if you try millet and you don't like it...try try again!

From Talk

Snickerdoodle help!

This is an interesting thread. ALL of my cookies come out flat, and I've never been able to figure it out. I use only butter, always room temp, and I cream for 3 minutes with a handheld mixer. America's Test Kitchen FAmily Cookbok says you should no longer feel the grains of sugar in properly creamed butter, but I have never managed to make them disappear--does that sound right to you all?

My cookies TASTE great, but sometimes I wish they were a little thicker to bite into.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Sesame Scallion Tofu

Hmmm...you can definitely skip the sea green in the slaw. Bittman says it adds texture and flavor to the tofu, but I mostly tasted scallion and just a bit of sesame--the sea green did not stand out to me there. If I wanted to try substituting something, I would use some kale (or cabbage from the slaw), steamed until just barely crunchy and then chopped fine, or chopped cilantro. But I think you could simply make the patties without the seaweed, too.

I grew up in Houston, and although I haven't been to Kroger in a while, Kroger is so big--and Houston is so cosmopolitan--that it might have a little international section, no? Of course, the seaweed would probably be more expensive there. They should have it at Whole Foods and Central Market, too, if either of those is more convenient for you.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chickpea Soup and Carrot Salad

Cybercita, I have been meaning to read Edward Espe Brown. Those sound like great tricks. I am always resolving to use seaweed more often and never manage to do it...this sounds like a good first step.

My bouillon had "nutritional yeast extract" in it, not MSG, but apparently it is the same sort of glutamate and has the same negative effects on some people. I did not check the salt content...Breakfast, Lunch, Tea recommends Marigold brand vegetable bouillon. I think you can find it on Amazon in the USA. It, too, appears to contain glutamate, in the form of hydrolyzed vegetable protein.

Larley, I think that's what you would do. I meant to add that I thought this would work well with canned chickpeas, too. Good luck!

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili con Frijoles

Barley would be okay but not quite the same. Millet is kind of dry and crumbly with some small lumps (at least it is when I cook it), and it's the small grain and crumbliness that reminds me of ground beef. Barley has a larger grain and a viscous texture. Personally, I think I would try rice, white or brown, before I would try barley with this dish.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Simple Fennel Sausage with Lentil Salad

@dmcavanagh, I was just following the recipe (although I did omit a recommended 3 tbs red wine--does anyone think that would add a lot here?). I imagine toasting the seeds is supposed to bring out their flavor, but generally toasting herbs in a separate pan and getting the mortar and pestle is a bit fiddly for me. I'll follow your lead and skip it next time!

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Simple Fennel Sausage with Lentil Salad

I have not tried this with ground turkey yet but plan to. I don't think it would taste quite as delicious, but it should still be pretty good. You should probably use ground dark meat, since it's key to have some fat...but maybe white meat would work, too, if you fried the sausage up in fat instead of a dry pan.

Lamb would be another interesting alternative.

From Recipes

Seriously Italian: Zuppa di Farro

I love farro! In New York it was always very expensive--$8 or more a pound--but now that I'm in San Francisco it is easy to find the same brand for more like $3/pound. Now we get to eat it much more often. Looking forward to making this recipe.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Vegetable Enchiladas

I use canola oil. And it's true that you can cut way back on the cheese. Just a scant sprinkle over the top (and none on the inside) can be quite tasty.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Polenta with Broccoli Rabe

The polenta in the picture is leftover and fried (that's why it's such a clear-cut shape), but I actually prefer it right out of the oven, when it's more like mush.

I fried it after it had cooled completely and spent a night in the refrigerator. At that point it's an easily sliceable solid, so there was no danger of it falling apart. I just heated a generous amount of olive oil in a nonstick skillet over medium high flame until quite hot, and then I added slices of polenta and fried until lightly browned on both sides--about 2 minutes per side.

When you tried to fry polenta, was it freshly cooked? Because I can see how that would be much harder!

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Polenta with Broccoli Rabe

Hi...I live in San Francisco and buy groceries at a variety of places: farmers' markets, Whole Foods, my little local markets, the neighborhood cheese shop. I buy most of my groceries at a "natural foods" grocery with a really great selection of bulk goods. This broccoli rabe came from the market around the corner, which actually tends to be more expensive than the bigger grocery stores. It wasn't organic.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Hot Mushroom Sandwiches with Sweet Potato Fries

BigGirPhoebz, I go back and forth between canola and olive oil for roasting vegetables. I agree that olive oil also works very well.

Meleyna, I did not pass it along, but Nigel Slater actually attributes this recipe to Nigella as well!

Arabrab, how about a mushroom on a muffin with half a pound of sweet potatoes (as indicated but not as pictured)? That would do it for me; my husband might be looking for ice cream a few hours later. OK, I'd be looking for ice cream, too, but not because I was actually hungry.

From Recipes

Sunday Brunch: Potatoes Macaire

I actually wanted to make it with bacon fat but figured I should test it as written before posting it here. It is definitely delicious with plain old canola oil, but I do think bacon fat--or, even better, duck fat--would be fantastic!

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Soba with Mushrooms and a Side of Bok Choy

@hungrychristel, I think this would be good cold...but I will eat just about anything that is supposed to be hot cold.

@nithya at hungrydesi, There was a transcription error--my soba noodles actually cost $1.59 (you'll see that it has to be $1.59 to add up to $7.67). I bought them at a "natural grocery" store. At Pearl River I once bought a huge pack of soba that was super cheap, but the noodles seemed to be low quality to me-kind of slimy and not the right texture. On the other hand, there are some twice-as-expensive brands at conventional grocery stores that aren't anything special.

@thatgrrl, That sounds so good! I have been meaning to learn how to poach eggs but have not given it a shot yet.

From Recipes

Sunday Brunch: Sardine Sandwiches with Tomato Jam and Fresh Cheese

Juliebean, sardines in the can do not have heads and fins attached--at least, I've never seen them that way--even if they are skin-on and bone-in. And thank goodness, because that might be too freaky for me to handle. I prefer the milder taste of skinless-boneless but sometimes buy the other kind because the skin and bones are good for you, and if you mash them up well you usually don't notice the difference. Rawfoods is right, this sandwich would probably be nice with other fish, too.

NWcajun, I actually slice my crusts off after building the sandwich; that's why they're still on in that topless photo. But that gets the bread knife a little ooky, so I left the instruction to slice crusts off first...

BigGirlPhoebz, I have been dying to make ketchup! Any day now, I hope.

Clotilde, thank you for your lovely book. I have been cooking from it a lot lately and just yesterday made a beautiful batch of ratatouille-in-the-oven to share with my baby.

From Talk

The Life of Mashed Potatoes

Thanks, everybody...glad to know I'm not crazy b/c I like to eat them plain, although now I have extra incentive to make the fried patties I've been dreaming about when I have leftover mashed potatoes, which is not often & definitely not after this holiday. My mom makes a mean post-Thanksgiving shepherd's pie with everything layered in a pie plate. I like it at least as much as the meal itself.

@LoCo, thank you! She is a doll. I'm so eager to see what she likes to eat besides milk...but I'll have to wait a few more months.

From Talk

Food In Literature - What Has Inspired You?

Definitely the Little House books, especially Farmer Boy. When Almanzo's sisters made ice cream and pound cake while their parents were away I was so impressed and envious. In The Long Winter, remember the stacks of beautiful flapjacks Pa found Almanzo and Royal eating while everyone else was surviving on potatoes? And from Little House in the Big Woods, yes, the maple candy, and also the crispy pig's tail so delicious those well-behaved Ingalls girls squabbled over it.

I also loved Daisy's kitchen in Little Men. That was magical. I think of my bitsy NYC kitchen as its grownup equivalent!


From Recipes

Butterscotch Pudding: Searching for the Perfect Recipe

Oh, boy, I want to make this right now but have too much work to do. Can't wait. Thank you for the recipe.

From Recipes

Eating for Two: Lasagna with Eggplant and Chard

Thanks for all the good ideas! And good luck to those of you who are also waiting around for d-day!

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

If you are passing through the area around Temple it is absolutely worth it to make the short side trip to Zabcikville and stop in Green's Sausage House for some klobasniky! I have lived in Houston and used to make the trip to Austin all the time for school. Weikels does have some good ones, but Green's are the best I have encountered so far (although even a bad one is good!).....

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Proud Texan and TAMU former student here (whoop!! BTHOtu!). LOVE Shipley's, but...if you can...travel up North on I-35, North of Waco, toward Dallas and make a pitstop at The Czech Stop in Hillsboro. Truly wonderful kolaches. Just sayin'. ;)

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

In San Antonio you literally have to ask at each individual restaurant to know if what you want is called migas or chillaquilles. I prefer Austin migas to anything, but I have to concede after moving to San Antonio that the Austin places probably got the idea for migas from San Antonio.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Sorry El_Zilcho, what misplacedtexan was describing is most definitely Texan migas. I don't doubt that the "original" version of migas is a different dish, but so it goes with many other dishes that have been regionally adapted, e.g. Japanese "curry", BBQ differences regionally (where I grew up BBQ was anything cooked on a grill and in central Texas that would be blasphemy since it doesn't involve indirect heat), etc.

I don't know why, its just a pet peeve of mine when people correct other people just to seem to say "you don't know what you're talking about, but I do".

http://bitten.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/02/19/missing-migas/

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

Made this last night using 3 large chicken breasts and 3 sweet potatoes - chicken was almost perfect in 50. After that we put the potatoes in a large pan and crisped them up along with some butter and already roasted garlic, turned the oven up to 400 and added a bottle of beer and 2 minced jalapenos to the pan for the chicken and put it in for another 8 minutes.

Shredded the chicken for tacos with some homemade avocado salsa and the potatoes were a perfect side dish. We skipped the rice since the potatoes were enough starch for us. Delicious!

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

Made this tonight with skinless, boneless chicken and brown rice. The sweet potatoes took 50 min. and the chicken 40 min. We drizzled extra honey on the sweet potatoes too. This was a great, simple, quick meal.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

The chicken and sweet potatoes recipe inspired my husband. My husband didn't include onions (for me) but subbed celery and sprinkled S&B (Japanese) curry powder. We ate it with plain white rice. I loved it.

This was a delicious, filling, and cheap meal -- it cost us less than $1.00 for 2 whole legs and ~$1.00 for 2 sweet potatoes. We roasted zucchini and yellow squash which were $0.50 each.

From Recipes

Memaw's Buttermilk Biscuits

HOLY CRAP, Robyn Lee (THESE BISCUITS WERE SO GODDAMN GOOD. Every bite exploded with crispy-soft-buttery-salty awesomeness) and sshoys (Partway through cooking, I heard an odd sizzling sound coming from the oven. I opened to find the biscuits frying in their own butter and I knew I was in for a treat.) and the rest of y'all! I am going right into my kitchen and baking up a batch of these biscuits RIGHT NOW. Thanks!!!

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

haha this is great to see as a texan! and one from houston, too.
shipley's sausage/jalapeno kolaches are ALWAYS good. they're simple but incredibly satisfying. also- shipleys has the best donuts i've ever tasted in my life, hands down. their donuts are to die for. there are tons of great kolache places all over texas, just jump on I-10 or 290 and you're bound to run into a family owned kolache shop on the side of the highway.
and i think i know where to go for dinner on my birthday now- bryan caswell's restaurant.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

"Migas are another great Texas food trend that started in the Austin area. They're basically scrambled eggs with corn tortilla strips, jalapenos, cheese, and cilantro in the mix. I'm hungry just thinking about them!

This article makes living away from Texas even more difficult! I miss it!"

Actually, you just described chilequiles, not migas.
Migas is just eggs, and corn tortillas, ala mexicana if you add chile, onion, and tomato.

From Talk

Brussels Sprouts

This is an age old debate. Most of us weren't introduced to brussels sprouts as kids, and only discovered them in our adult lives. Last year, there was a host of recipes posted, and I made one that was pan-roasted with garlic and balsamic vinegar that barely made it around the table once, they were so popular. I will probably do the same thing this year - though I'll double the recipe! Hmm, bacon, now that's a thought....

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

Just created this recipe, but with chicken breast instead - also, did not made the rice (used some couscous I had on hand). However, I plan to make the rice next time, but using freekeh - since I often use freekeh in place of rice or pasta. Thank you!

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Shipley's is fantastic! I am a student at Texas A&M, and my analytical chemistry professor regularly brings in Shipley's donuts for our class. Of 50 people. I guess he likes us. Well, we like him too, thanks in large part to the donuts.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Ohhhhhhh, Weikel's. I live in Austin and I'll drive to Weikel's just for kolaches. But if I don't feel like it, there's a Shipley's right by my house in Austin that has pretty good kolaches and even better donuts.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Weikel's -- the best Kolaches. Period. It's the reason we take I-10 to 71 to go to Austin instead of 290. Also have to buy a loaf of bread and a puffed rice/marshmallow and TOASTED PECAN treat. Heaven.

My question: Does anyone know where there is a good taco pizza? The above photo lured me in but was deceiving.

Dessert Gallery and Three Brothers Bakery. *daydreaming*

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

Sounds delicious, really delicious and two carbs, yummmmm. One question though: where do you buy your whole chicken legs? That is expensive! We have a hispanic market here in my town and can buy either drumsticks, thighs, or whole legs for 88 cents a pound usually. The REGULAR price is $1.29 per pound.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

There is a Kolache Factory in the Indy area (Fishers) if that is closer than Texas for any of you. I used to live right down the street from it and picked up a few almost every weekend. All of this Houston talk makes me think of barbecue....so much better than anything available up here.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Anyone traveling from Houston to Austin on 71 must stop at Weikel's bakery. Not only are their kolaches wonderful, they have the hands down best cinnamon rolls in the state. Save some money for one of their wonderful meringue pies too! You can get everything 'to go' or grab coffee and sit out at a picnic table. Weikel's is just across from the McDonald's on 71. It is a Shell station too (no kidding). I have no financial interest. The family is the nicest on the planet having taken me, my mother and dogs in during the epic Rita evacuation a few years ago when I arrived in LaGrange too tired to drive on and they didn't want us sleeping in our car.

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

I'm going to have to go try out these places now! I'm pretty sure Stella Sola is Italian, not Spanish for Lone Star.

@Lyra: The dessert thing is so true. I've been meaning to try out the cupcake places as well. I heard Crave Cupcakes in Uptown Park is delicious! I've also been meaning to try out Dessert Gallery as well. And there's always House of Pies =)

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

please, stella sola has been open for all of four days. let's give it a least a week until we decide it is a food trend. i ate there friday night, and it was just okay. the warm market salad was pretty lackluster, and the bucatini carbonara with pancetta and crab meat was extremely salty, which is saying a lot for me, since i am a salt freak.

From Recipes

Eat for Eight Bucks: Chili Roasted Chicken and Sweet Potatoes

This looks great but . . sweet potatoes AND rice? 2 starches and no greens? Really?

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

Migas are another great Texas food trend that started in the Austin area. They're basically scrambled eggs with corn tortilla strips, jalapenos, cheese, and cilantro in the mix. I'm hungry just thinking about them!

This article makes living away from Texas even more difficult! I miss it!

From Serious Eats

Unique Food Trends: Houston, Texas

@amanda0730: Thanks! The post has been updated.

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About Robin Bellinger

Website: http://robinheather.typepad.com/go

Location: San Francisco

About: I spend most of my time daydreaming about what I'm going to make for dinner and wondering whether it's about time to bake some cookies.

Favorite foods: steak, apples, bread and butter, gruyere, potatoes, Tex-Mex in Houston, hamburgers, milkshakes, sauteed leafy greens, salty caramels, grilled cheese, diner food in general, homemade strawberry shortcake, pound cake, vanilla ice cream

Last bite on earth: still-warm bread with really good butter...or maybe a caramel, because I'd get to chew it a while before I went!