The Meal Planner


The grocery list is back! This time it's easier to use and printable as well. It is color coordinated by meal so you can easily pick and choose which meals you would like to make. Either print and use the grocery list as is and make all the meals I have planned, or cross off the meals you would rather not make. Hopefully this is useful and helpful to you!

Click here to get a printable version of this week's meal plan and recipes


Day 1: Italian Sausage Soup
As the temperatures begin to drop, this is a great and quick recipe for warming up and using up fall produce.


Day 2: Bombay Sloppy Joes with Spicy Sweet Potato Wedges
I so love Aarti Sequeira from the blog Aarti Paarti and was thrilled to see her win Next Food Network Star. I of course had to try her recipe that got over 500 comments and 5 stars on the foodnetwork site. This is a great recipe for using up ground turkey.



Day 3: BBQ Ranch Chicken Tostadas with Avocado Corn Salsa

I made these for the second time recently and my husband declared them one of his favorites. We could both eat an entire bowl of the avocado corn salsa on it's own


Day 4: Coconut-Crusted Chicken Fingers with Curried Quinoa Salad with Black Beans and Peaches
This is my adaptation of coconut shrimp which I ate in a restaurant a long time ago and loved. No time to fuss with deep frying, these babies are baked. I'm serving it with this quinoa salad and using Kitchen Kathy's idea for swapping out the mango for peaches and the honey for maple syrup.

Day 5: Pork Loin with Yogurt and Chickpeas and Pan-Roasted Veg

Oh lovely fall roasted root vegetables. The warm smokey cumin combined with the butternut squash and carrots makes this lovely autumn combo and the minty yogurt sauce perks it right up. Great for serving on the weekend and eating with friends.




For more great meal plans, check out my complete list of meal plans or the Menu Plan Monday links at Orgjunkie.

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The Meal Planner



I remember watching Jamie Oliver as a teenager as "The Naked Chef" and loving his cool personality and simple approach to cooking. His good looks and charming ways had me glued to the t.v. watching "Oliver's Twist" and his myriad of shows that would later follow. Since he began his t.v. chef career as an early twenty-something, it has been interesting to watch him grow and mature as a person which has translated to his food. Instead of these hip dinner parties he used to throw for friends with trendy food, his recipes have taken on a different mindset.

It is obvious in Jamie's Dinners: The Essential Family Cookbook that his growing family has made him passionate about sharing good food with loved ones and making lasting memories around the dinner table. His goal is to get everyone cooking, no matter their ability, to throw great dinner parties, family occasions and everyday meals that are remembered and cherished.

When browsing through this cookbook to mark recipes I wanted to try, my list kept growing and growing and growing. This book is filled with full-pages of beautiful photography accompanying almost all the recipes, as well as photos of Jamie eating dinners with friends and family. He still maintains his "cool vibe" with hand-drawn pictures and messy handwriting marking the chapters. There were so many mouthwatering recipes to try, I found it hard to limit myself.

With recipes like The Ultimate Burger and Chips this cookbook gives you familiar favorites, with new additions and twists that will have your family begging for more. Full of warm spices this juicy burger patty is restaurant worthy yet served in your own backyard. His technique for making oven fries has completely changed my own kitchen habits, as I now parboil my potato wedges and preheat my pan in the oven as Jamie teaches in this recipe, producing oven fries that are so crispy on the outside and pillowy soft on the inside.


Many of Jamie's recipes had me exclaiming "that's the best potato salad I've ever made!", "that's the best tomato sauce I've ever made!" and "that's the best dang roasted chicken I've ever made!" Jamie has such an amazing grasp of flavor pairings and combination's throughout this cookbook, ones I wasn't even sure about until I had tried them, like Lamb with Chickpeas, Yogurt and Pan-Roasted Veg. In that recipe he convinced me I like turnips and butternut squash!



But just to be clear, it wasn't all daisies and roses for me. This Spanish Chickpea and Chorizo Soup had me smacking my lips as I read through the ingredients; chorizo sausage, garlic, tomatoes, prosciutto, chickpeas and spinach...oh my. I could hardly wait to try it. Sadly it was a total flop. The flavors didn't meld as harmoniously as I would have liked and the addition of the one pound of fresh spinach right at the beginning of the cooking time wasn't jiving for me. Simmering spinach for 40 minutes until it completely disintegrates and turns an awful shade of sludgy brown is not my idea of delicious. What further wrecked it for me was pureeing the mixture, so instead of eating nice chunky sausage and chickpea soup, it was a mushy brown mess...with hardboiled eggs crumbled over the top. My culinary friend Tara assures me that when she makes this soup her family loves it, so I'm really not sure where this recipe went wrong for me. Oh wait I do...it was boiling the heck out of the spinach! It baffles me that Jamie doesn't fold in the delicate spinach right at the end of the cooking time with the heat off to gently wilt the spinach and preserve it's color.


There were also some clear flaws in the writing of this book. While Jamie's introduction clearly states he wants everyone to get in the kitchen to cook for their families, his instructions are not clearly written making this a difficult book for a beginner to cook from. From his very vague instructions like "...fry the eggs until set giving you a nice little omelette" to the completely confusing missing ingredients fiasco. Jamie writes like a chef to homecooks who know their way around the kitchen with ambiguous measurements like "a handful of this" as well as utilizing unspecific cooking times and temperatures. This wouldn't go far in instilling confidence in an inexperienced cook. I consider myself pretty seasoned in my kitchen and only found his vagueness slightly annoying when cooking the dinner recipes, but was completely lost when I ventured into the unfamiliar territory of baking. His Toffee Apple Tart wasn't explicit for a newb like me and I found it difficult to achieve success.


These flaws are only a minimal deterrent for me, as I found the layout of this book and the flavor combination's wonderful. With a chapter titled "The Top Ten" I bookmarked almost every single one of these recipes, and with "Five Minute Wonders" Jamie's really paying attention to the busy working parent or person who still wants to eat great food but stay out of the fast food lane. One chapter I especially loved was "Family Tree" as Jamie shows you how to prepare one great parent recipe and then gives you ideas and recipes for lots of other applications of it. I first made his Simple Tomato Sauce and served it over tagliatelle and it was simple and wonderful. I also tried this same sauce as a base for baking Italian Sausages and then tossing with fresh basil at the end, which our whole family couldn't get enough of. I found myself dreaming of this sauce and drooling over the pictures of Jamie's other possibilities, so I later made chicken breasts baked in the tomato sauce and smothered in mozzarella, olives and torn fresh basil (fabulous by the way). I loved how explicit he was in devising other plans for the parent recipes instead of using the canned phrase "there's so much you can do with this, the possibilities are endless!" Because he gives 5-10 other recipe ideas, it really gets the wheels turning so you CAN come up with your own possibilities.


Jamie's mission to help create family favorite recipes and lasting memories around the dinner table was completely fulfilled in my house. I was able to make Smoked Salmon and Horseradish Potato Salad and Rosemary Marmalade Ham for a birthday dinner with rave reviews from my extended family members, and Tender and Crisp Chicken Legs with Sweet Tomatoes for my very grateful Mother-in-Law on Mother's Day. I served my dad Spanish Roast Chicken when he visited this summer and he promptly asked me for the recipe and went home and made it for my brother. Our little family has enjoyed Chorizo and Tomato Frittata on busy weeknights, and we've also shared delicious recipes like Roasted Chicken & Potatoes with Rosemary and Lemon with friends who unexpectedly drop in for dinner.
Jamie's Dinners: The Essential Family Cookbook definitely delivers if you are looking for phenomenal flavors to share with and impress the ones you love.

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Jamie Oliver calls this "a cracker of a dish to serve at home...it will really get your taste buds going." Ummm...check, check and check. I have probably cooked this dish 4 times in the last few months, I just can't get enough.

This is an easy roasted chicken dinner with a WOW factor.


Recipe from Jamie's Dinners: The Essential Family Cookbook
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Serves 4

2 lbs potatoes, peeled and cut into 1 inch cubes
3 lb whole chicken
sea salt and fresh ground pepper
11 oz hot or mild Spanish chorizo, sliced on angle
olive oil

Gremolata:
2 lemons, zested
1/4 cup fresh parsley, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic


Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

Peel and cut potatoes and place them in a medium sized pot and cover them with cold water. Turn heat to high and boil for 5 minutes, then drain.

Zest the lemons and place all zest into a small bowl (to be used later). Cut one of the zested lemons in half and stuff it inside the whole chicken. Remove the parsley leaves from the stalks and put the stalks inside the chicken as well. In a 9 x 13 roasting pan, dump in the boiled and drained potatoes and place the chicken on top. Drizzle the chicken and potatoes with a bit of olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Place in the oven for about an hour (or until the chicken reaches an internal temperature of 170 degrees). With 20 minutes left in cooking time, sprinkled the sliced chorizo sausage over the potatoes and chicken to finish cooking.

While the chicken is roasting, you can quickly make the gremolata. Take the small bowl of lemon zest and add the chopped parsley to it. Use a rasp or finely chop the garlic and stir together with the lemon and parsley. Season with salt and pepper.

When chicken is done roasting, remove from the oven and let it rest covered in foil for 10-15 minutes to let the juices redistribute. When it has rested, carve the chicken. To serve, pile some of the chorizo and potatoes onto a plate, add the chicken and scoop out any juices that have accumulated in the pan (they are amazing!) Top the chicken and potatoes with a bit of gremolata for an incredible hit of fresh flavor.


Click here for printable version of Spanish Roast Chicken

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THE RESULTS?
Wow. Wow Wow WOWWWW! The smokey paprika in the chorizo really impregnates the chicken and potatoes with flavor. My favorite part has got to be the gremolata that hits the hot chicken and fills up your nose with fantastic smells and gives you a fresh punch as you eat. Hands down my favorite way to roast a chicken.

As much as I LOVE the flavors of this dish, it is an AWFULLY written recipe. The recipe as in the cookbook has listed a beaten egg in the ingredients and then no directions for when to use it. Umm?? Also if you check his website this recipe is also posted, and it's obvious that he tried to fix the terrible instructions. The egg is no longer listed, but there's a big discrepancy with "greaseproof paper". The recipe in the cookbook says to wet some greaseproof paper and cover the whole chicken, yet the website says that it goes underneath. I'm assuming it's purpose is to make clean up easy. Since I have made this recipe quite a few times, I have used both greaseproof paper (or parchment paper) underneath my chicken and potatoes and I've also not used it. I find that my potatoes don't get as nice of a crispy coating on the outside using the paper, so I chose to forgo it here. I've also simplified the recipe slightly and made the directions much more clear.

My other issue with Jamie's recipe is that he wants you to add the sliced chorizo right at the very beginning of roasting time....as in, it's in the oven for over an hour. That beautiful chorizo turns to bits of charred jerky. Hence, I add my chorizo in the last 20 minutes. So Jamie scores huge points for flavor..... minus 10 points for recipe instructions.


Meal Ideas:

  • Spanish Roast Chicken and Potatoes + Simple Salad
  • Spanish Roast Chicken and Poatoes + Roasted Broccoli or Asparagus

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The Meal Planner


I go through these times where in my head I feel like this blog is just a silly hobby, and not something I should actually be spending my time on. Not when I'm a wife, mother and teacher and there's bums to wipe, and stories to read, and school plans to make, and dates to go on, and life to happen. So I neglect this blog and don't write for weeks or months telling myself this blog is too selfish for me to continue.

Then a dear friend comes along or a sweet reader emails me and tells me how much they love this little tiny spec of the interwebs that is mine, and they were somehow inspired to start cooking, or eating better, or making more interesting meals for their families, or meal planning to get their supper times in order. My heart melts and I am reminded why I started this blog in the first place: to help people to learn to meal plan. I do love this blog and sharing with you and that perhaps it isn't so selfish after all...that maybe it is even possibly a gift in helping others.

So thank you dear sweet friends and family and readers who stick by me and encourage me and come back and read here even when I leaving you hanging for weeks on end. Because without you I wouldn't be doing this.

And with that, I'll pick up where I left off with my Something from Nothing series. I'm always reminded how incredibly wasteful we can be with food when I prepare steamed broccoli as a side dish for supper. I lop off of the big long broccoli stalk and toss it aside and throw all my pretty little florets into a steamer. There the stalks sit until I eventually throw them in the garbage when I'm cleaning up after supper. It pangs me with guilt every time as I think "there must be something I can do with these things." Recently I was cooking a big meal for the boys for my husband's birthday. My husband requested I make Broccoli Salad (which is a recipe from my Dad made similar to this one). I had three big heads of broccoli chopped into florets for the salad and 6 stalks leftover that left me a bit more guilt ridden than usual because of the larger quantity.

I decided it was time to stop throwing those broccoli stalks away! Full of broccoli flavor, if you sweat them down in some chicken broth and puree them with cream they make a wonderful Cream of Broccoli Soup.


Recipe by Elizabeth Zyla via allrecipes.com
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Serves 2

2 tbsp butter
1 small onion, diced
1 small potato, diced
2 cups fresh chopped broccoli (can be made with all leftover stalks or stalks and florets)
1 1/2 cups chicken broth
1/4 tsp salt
ground black pepper to taste
1/2 cup cream (whipping, half and half or even whole milk)


In a medium pot, melt the butter over medium heat. Add the onion, potato and broccoli and toss to coat. Add a lid to the pan and let the vegetables sweat until they have softened, but not browned, about 5 minutes. Add the chicken broth, bring to a boil and then turn down and let simmer until the veggies are fork tender.

Pour into a blender and puree until smooth. Pour back into your pot and add the cream, and salt and pepper to taste. Stir and serve.


Click here for printable version of Cream of Broccoli Soup
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THE RESULTS?

I love Cream of Broccoli and appreciate that something I normally would have thrown into the garbage is the basis for this soup. It's quick and could easily be worked into a meal plan when you have broccoli penciled in for earlier in the week.

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The Meal Planner

My grocery bill has been SKYROCKETING lately. What is the deal? I meal plan every week, shop the sales, go in with a plan and yet my receipts added up to astronomical amounts last month. In an effort to wrangle the budget back in control, I thought I'd share with you some of my favorite ways to make Something from Nothing.

One of my favorite children's books is by Phoebe Gilman titled Something From Nothing. It's all about being creative with what you've got. Each time the little boy's blanket, jacket, tie, etc gets worn and wrecked he exclaims "Grandpa can fix it!" and sure enough, Grandpa always finds a way to construct something new out of it. The last thing Grandpa makes is a button and it gets lost. The mother of the boy tries to console him and says "even Grandpa can't make something from nothing...." but crafty Grandpa creates a story for the boy to remember. So we CAN make something from nothing!

My first "Something" to share with you is a freezer chicken stock made out of the bones we normally throw in the garbage. Not just boiling a carcass after you've eaten a roasted chicken, but bones and pieces you've collected over time. Here in Canada boneless skinless chicken breasts cost a whopping $7-8 per pound! Even when there's a really good sale on the price only drops to about $4 a pound. We can can the big frozen boxes of chicken breasts for about $2.50 a pound but it's really not my favorite, as the breasts are usually flacid and pumped full of water. My trick is to buy bone-in, skin-on chicken breasts and debone them myself.

It's one of the simplest things to do. The skin comes right off with a swift pull, and you need only slide a small sharp pairing knife down the breast bone and it's detached from the breast. Quick and easy. Maybe 30 extra seconds per breast is added to your prep time. And the price is much better....I'm looking at maybe $2 a pound for nice fresh, not frozen, not pumped full of water, chicken breasts. For an even better price, I'll buy bone-in, skin-on chicken thighs. Deboning these take a bit longer and is a bit trickier, but still worth it for the price and flavor for me.

Okay, so now you've got a pile of chicken skins which can go in the garbage, a pile of meat to use however you'd like, and a pile of chicken bones. Take them bones and put them in a large Ziplock bag. Write on the bag "Bones for Chicken Stock" and the date you started the bag. Throw it in the freezer. Each time you have some more chicken bones, pop them into the freezer bag. I'll even throw in bones from cooked chicken thighs or legs that we've stripped the meat off of. When it's full, you'll be able to make a big pot of homemade chicken stock which will equal about 8 cups.

And my biggest tip for making a super rich and flavorful homemade chicken stock? Roast the chicken bones first. It gives it a full-bodied taste with a nice dark color. I've never had homemade chicken stock be so tasty until I started roasting my bones.


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Makes 8 cups

1 large ziplock bag full of chicken bones, defrosted
Oil
Water

Optional:
10 peppercorns
1-2 carrots, chopped
1 onion, chopped
1-2 stalks celery, chopped


Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Pull the chicken bones out of the freezer and into the fridge the day before you want to make the stock so they aren't frozen. Put them in a roasting pan and drizzle with a little bit of canola or olive oil. Roast in the oven for 30-40 minutes until the bones and any bits of meat left clinging to them are lightly browned.

Remove the pan from the oven and dump all the bones as well as any juices into a large pot. Fill the pot with water, covering the bones completely (about 8-10 cups). Bring the water up to a boil, and then turn down to low and let simmer for 1-2 hours. You could also add the peppercorns, onion, and celery to this and let simmer with the bones.

Strain the bones and let cool. If you want to get rid of any fat, put the pot of broth in the fridge. When completely cooled you'll be able to take off the top layer of fat. Broth can be frozen or stored in the fridge for up to a week.

Or alternatively, strain the bones and return the broth to the heat. Chop up and add your choice of vegetables, spices, and/or noodles for a great homemade chicken soup.

Click here for printable version of Freezer Chicken Stock.

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THE RESULTS?
You can find a bag of chicken bones in my freezer year round. I love how I'm already saving money by buying chicken on the bone and then saving more money by turning those bones into broth. And the method of roasting the bones? It's totally revolutionized my homemade broths! I would simmer and simmer and simmer my bones for hours, waiting to get a really concentrated rich chicken broth, only to be disappointed with watery bone water. Roasting the bones first gives my broth that rich flavor I'm looking for.

Obviously, this same method could be used for other meats, like beef bones. Just make sure to label your bags and keep chicken and beef bones separately. Sadly, this doesn't work so well for vegetables. I tried. I was always saving my onion skins and ends of carrots and celery or other veggies and throwing them in a bag in the freezer. I found the broth was too bitter, so now I just stick with chicken or beef broth.

You'll want to use up your bones and make broth at least every 3-4 months. Any longer than that and you'll risk a freezer burnt flavor to your broth.

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"Here's a cup
and here's a cup
and here's a pot of tea.
Pour a cup
and pour a cup
and drink a cup with me.

Mmmm....delicious!"


I'm back full swing into teaching preschool and this is one of my favorite ways to settle them down into circle time so I can read a story. We pretend to pour our cups of tea and drink it all up which is fun and yet relaxing for them at the same time. A few kids from last year remember when I was teaching them about Japan and we had a Japanese tea party where I poured them cups of real iced tea. This year, pouring a pretend cup of tea isn't quite as satisfying for them!

This iced passion tea lemonade is an absolutely fantastic homemade tea. Great for warm summer evenings, or in my case hot September and October days. What the what? I think we had better, warmer, sunnier weather in the last two weeks here than we did all summer. It left me craving this tea and wanting share it with you. It was prepared for me by my dear friend Shanna and is an exact knock-off of Starbuck's Passion Tea Lemonade.

I may just have to prepare it for some preschoolers I know.

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1 large teabag Tazo Passion Iced Herbal Tea (not single size)
Prepared lemonade
Raspberry Syrup

Ice

First brew tea according to package instructions. Before discarding the tea bag use a big spoon and make sure to have squish out all the passion goodness from them. The mixture is going to be very concentrated, so add a bit of water (around a cup) to make it stretch farther. Let cool.

Add equal parts lemonade to the tea concentrate & chill. Fill glasses with 1/3 ice, pour in tea mixture, and finish with 2-3 tbsp of raspberry syrup... you can just eyeball it really. (You can also use simple syrup in place of raspberry, but it won't be as good.)

Stir and enjoy.

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THE RESULTS?
This is one of my favorite drinks to order at Starbuck's and to make it at home thrills me! It's fruity and yet kind of tart from the lemonade. The startlingly pink color of this drink would be wonderful to serve at a baby shower or kid's birthday without resorting to pop or kool-aid or something equally unhealthy.

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