Lentils are a great starting point if you’re trying to make a vegetarian dish to win over a meat lover in your life, because they are so satisfying and delicious, and really do a good job imparting that heartiness into traditionally meat based dishes
You can essentially turn any leftover meat into a frittata. All you do is dice up the meat, chop up some veggies (frozen veggies are perfect), sauté them in an oven-safe skillet,...
You know what? I realized the other day that since I started my blog one month ago, I didn’t post any single recipe featuring meat. But don’t get me wrong, I am no vegetarian. I don’t feel the need to eat some every day, but I do love meat. To prove that to you, I wanted to share this ...
I was just about to post this recipe and one other came up as nearly the same, although that one is broiled and missing the olive oil. It is a very good dish and the sauce works well with rice. I should try it broiled too, but I don't know if the pan sauce would be as good without the catch from the chicken. The original WW recipe is this one, plus 2 tbs olive oil. This is WW POINTS: 4 Exchanges: 3 Very Lean Meat.
This traditional Korean one-pot meal has it all: crisp and cool veggies, spicy sauce, a luxurious fried egg and just enough meat to fill you up without overdoing it. Kids and adults will have fun making their own personal bowls with all their favorite
A recipe for Mexican Meat Loaf made in the crock pot containing egg, taco sauce, corn chips, Mexican cheese, taco seasoning mix, salt, ground beef, taco
I was so excited to see your best broiled steak recipe contest. Steak is one of my favorite foods and while barbecuing outside is ideal for some, it is one of the few barbecued meats that actually benefits from the broiler. Why? Because you can control the heat and it won't burst into flames when you put the lid down, run inside and came back out to find fat has dripped down into the flames and set your beautiful piece of meat aflame.This is a recipe my dad used to make when I was a kid. He is recently deceased (cancer) but his spirit lives on in the meat each time I eat it and think of him. He used to rub the entire steak in a liberal dosing of pure yellow mustard, then add salt and pepper. I have updated it a bit, by substituting dry mustard and changing the spicing a bit. But its still every inch his recipe. The key is to buy a New York roast and cut it yourself into nice 2 1/2 inch slabs (or have your butcher do it.)