Author: Debbie

Amanda Farris: White Chicken Chili

White Bean Chicken Chili amanda farris

Mmmmmmm. Yum. Soup month is my favorite! Soups are so easy to prepare, taste delicious, and are my new best friend as a mom to four little ones because clean-up is EASY and dirty dishes are minimal.

I have a rule for myself in my home. Anytime I make soup I must make double or triple the recipe. Soups are easy to freeze and save for a later date. They make excellent lunches as leftovers and are typically very healthy.

My thought is, if you are making a soup it doesn’t take that much extra work to double the ingredients  to throw in the pot and it  saves you time for a future meal.

My mom got me a HUMONGOUS soup pot for Christmas a couple of years ago, and it is still one of my most used and favorite gifts because when I make soup, I am really making about three soups. If you don’t have a big one, I suggest you make the investment and get one now. It is hands down one of my most helpful kitchen items.

The recipe I’m going to share with you is for a HUGE soup pot, so don’t double or triple the recipe to save it. Actually use the ingredients and amounts that I listed.

To freeze this soup, put it in freezer bags and lay them flat in the freezer. To thaw them out, you can put them in the refrigerator the day before. Or, if you are like me, you will forget. So, I just put my soup frozen and all on the stove top on the lowest heat available to thaw it out and warm it up. It works every time.

Having a plethora of frozen soups in my freezer has saved me in hosting on more than one occasion. You will always have something to serve unexpected company for a quick bite to eat.

Enjoy! Print this recipe or pin it to make later. But make it soon! Soups and cold weather are comfort to the soul!

 

Amanda Farris is a former teacher/coach who hung up the whistle when she got promoted to mom. She still keeps those competitive juices by running in local races and playing competitive board games with her kids. She is the reigning Jenga champion in her home. 

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Ricci Alexis: One Pot Cajun Pasta

I have loved Cajun food for as long as I can remember. I grew up in Southwest Arkansas and lived a couple miles from the Louisiana line so a lot of our food was Cajun inspired. My Dad put Tony Chachere’s Cajun seasoning on everything we ate and I still do to this day. I eat it on chicken, veggies, in soups, on garlic bread, and even on my eggs in the morning! Trust me, its good stuff.

 

As much as I love Cajun food I may love pasta even more so any recipe that combines the two is a win in my book! I have been making my not-so-famous One Pot Cajun Pasta for a few years now and it is always a huge hit with my friends. I love that you can put whatever meat you want in it and it still tastes good. I usually use chicken and sausage because that it what I usually always have on hand. I have also made it with chicken and shrimp and shrimp and crawfish before and it is good no matter what meat combo you use!

Now this is a one pot dish but despite the name you don’t just throw everything in to the pot and hope for the best, there is actually a method to the madness. So let’s get to it!

First you cook both the chicken and sausage through with some Cajun seasoning and then you add the veggies. I use red, green and yellow bell peppers, an onion, 3 cloves of fresh garlic and some sliced mushrooms. You can totally add more veggies or substitute any of these for something else, this is just what I like!

When the veggies get soft you add in the dry pasta and chicken broth and stir, stir, stir! I tried that pot sized pasta the last time when I made this recipe and I have to say that I really loved it!  no more breaking pasta and having it all different sizes! You bring all of that to a boil and then let it simmer for 10 minutes while making sure to stir it a lot so the pasta doesn’t stick!

After 10 minutes, or when most of the liquid is gone, you add in the heavy whipping cream (my fave) and Parmesan cheese and keep stirring. I turn the stove off at this point and let it sit for a few minutes to let it thicken up a little.

After that you just dish it up and eat! You can eat it plain or top it with green onions, more Parm, and it you’re feeling frisky a little more Tony Chachere’s. I always add a little more Tony’s…HA!!

So there you have it, my secrets to a super yummy, super easy, One Pot Cajun Pasta! I hope you enjoy it as much as I do!!

Enjoy!

ricci alexis profile

 

Ricci is an Respiratory Therapist by day and a lobgger by night. She loves big hair, anything monogrammed, traveling and living in the natural state. She has one fur child, a dog named Sophie, and thoroughly enjoys being the “cool Aunt” to her many nieces and nephews. You can catch up with her on her lifestyle blog, Ricci Alexis, or find on any social media platform as @riccialexis 

 

KD Reep: Dancing to a Different Drummer with Pinto Bean Cake {Foodie Friday}

Beans, Beans, the Musical Fruit 

I love weird stuff – to a degree. In particular, I love midcentury modern weirdness, and I found this cake on Mid Century Menu, a blog about recipes and cocktails from the 1930s-1970s (sometimes beyond, but who’s counting?).

As a kid, my mama would make chocolate cake with leftover mashed potatoes. Did I care? Not a whit. And, I would not have known if she hadn’t told me. When I ran across this recipe, I knew I had to make it for a number of reasons, including:

  • My love of cake, first and foremost;
  • My love of pinto beans;
  • My love of weird things, particularly cheap, fast and easy weird things; and
  • I needed a dish for a church potluck.

Something that spoke to me about this recipe, besides being unusual, is its use of cheap, readily-available items almost everyone has in their cabinets. Pinto beans (and mashed potatoes, for that matter) sustained by family for generations, and we ate what was prepared until they were gone – no tossing anything out because we were tired of eating it. Essentially, the pinto beans in this cake serve as a filler so you don’t have to use as much flour for volume, and they are tasteless after the cake has baked, the same way the mashed potatoes are in my mother’s chocolate cake.

I like to think this recipe was born by someone who made too many beans, wanted to create some way of feeding them to her family one last time but had too few ingredients (or money with which to buy them), and made something actually delicious with what she had on hand. You can find the original recipe at MidCenturyMenubut I simplified this even more to be as cheap, fast and easy as possible. My version is below, and the steps I took to make it are somewhat unorthodox, too.

The main thing to keep in mind with this cake is to use what you have on hand. Have some apples or pears about to go bad? Dice those up and toss 2 cups into the cake instead of the can of apple pie filling. Have leftover nuts from Christmas? Chop those and use in place of the walnuts. If you don’t have raisins, replace with canned pineapple or leave them out altogether.

 

If you use the cinnamon and sugar combination to prepare the bundt pan, you may notice your cake comes out dark. Rest assured, it’s not burned. You can use flour if you’d prefer, but I like to use the sugar and cinnamon to give the cake a little extra crunch and flavor.

And the original recipe called for cooked pinto beans that were fresh, dried or frozen. I used canned because it’s what I had available, they are already cooked, and I can’t taste any difference between canned and the other preparations.

 

 

As for how much time to bake the cake, I say start with 50 minutes and add or subtract time according to your oven. Everyone’s oven bakes differently so keep an eye on the cake after 50 minutes and check for doneness in 5-minute increments.

To ice or not to ice? I say a cake without icing is a great big muffin. You can make homemade frosting, dust the cooled cake with powdered sugar, ice with whipped cream or grab a cheap can of store-bought frosting, melt it to pourable consistency in the microwave and drizzle to your heart’s content. Whatever you do, this cake will stand up to it.

I hope you try this and are pleasantly surprised. If you’ll excuse me, I have cake to eat.

 

KD Reep headshot

 

KD Reep is a writer, public relations practitioner and aspiring romance author in Little Rock. She owns Flywrite Communications Inc., a marketing communications agency in Mabelvale. She is a six-time recipient of the Public Relations Society of America’s Prism award and has been published statewide as well as in the Arkansas Times, Savvy Magazine, Bourbon & Boots, Arkansas Money & Politics, Delta Farm Press and Rice Farmer magazine, among others.

 

 

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Twitter: @kdreep

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Brittney Lee: Cowboy Beans {Foodie Friday}

Years ago we went to a BBQ at a friend’s house. My husband sampled the beans she had made and kept offering them to me.

Well, full disclosure: I don’t really love beans.

I kept declining to try them, and finally did (just to shut him up. Y’all know the feeling!). Well, I’ll be! I actually liked these beans!

She called them Settler’s Beans and gave me the recipe. I’m not sure where it originally came from, but over the years, I’ve tweaked it and we now call them Cowboy Beans since I added BBQ sauce and chili powder to the recipe.

These are hearty enough to be a meal, but will also be a great compliment to lots of main dishes. They are also great to bring to a potluck. I’ve taken them to my church picnic for the last several years and the bowl is all but licked clean.

You can make them in a pan or in a slow cooker if you want them to stay warm for a while.

Feel free to halve the recipe if you aren’t making beans for a crowd. But at our house, the more Cowboy Beans, the better.

 

Brittney Lee is a native Arkansan with a love for bright lights and big city. She often escapes her 20-acre home south of Fort Smith to shop, eat, and catch a concert in the big city. She blogs about her life, her faith, her adventures, her dogs, and her country home at RazorbackBritt.com.

Lyndi Fultz: Hearty Black Bean Salad

 

I’ve been dreaming about this salad for weeks. Seriously. As I filled out my content calendar for the January, I typed in this post title. You see, several months ago I came up with the title and giggled at writing the word “hearty.” It was going to be January and super frigid and figured we would all want something hearty right about now.

The winter descriptive meant that I had to come up with something wintery. Which means one thing to me when it comes to salads… root vegetables. These are the things I dream about. How about you?

The intention was to add a can of black beans to this salad to add a pop of interest. But them I happened upon our very own community member’s salsa with black beans and corn… well, let’s just say that mixing that delicious salsa with ranch dressing takes this salad to the next level. The next atmosphere. The next galaxy.

Thanks for the idea, Helen.

May you all have a big bowl of hearty winter black bean salad and be filled with joy.

I

Happy salading.

Lyndi Fultz, nwafoodie

Lyndi FultzArkansas Women Blogger member Lyndi Fultz writes about living and eating well from her life in beautiful Northwest Arkansas at nwafoodie. Much of her blogging inspiration comes from this gem of a place, which she refers to as the proverbial land of milk-and-honey. Read more related to cooking, entertaining, gadget suggestions, ingredient explorations, local finds, local restaurant treasures, kitchen tour spotlights, and always with a healthy and simplistic approach.