Showing posts with label sausage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sausage. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Quick Pasta and Sausage



 I know I tend to cook a lot of the same type of meals, but what can I say, sometimes I open the pantry and wonder what I can combine to make dinner.  On the up side, my kitchen smells divine.  On the upper side, it was done in 4 minutes, so there is really no complaining from me.

Quick Pasta and Sausage.

1/2 box bowtie pasta
1/2 jar salsa verde
1/2 box (2 c) chicken broth
1 package jalapeño and cheese sausages (4)
1 package frozen peas, steamed for 4 minutes in microwave
1/2 c sour cream.

Cook the pasta and salsa and broth on high for 4 minutes.
Quick release.
Stir
slice sausages, and add with peas and sour cream to pasta.  
voila!  it's ready to serve.  


Friday, February 20, 2015

Variations on a Theme



So my dear friend sent me a package the other day.  It had two boxes of that lovely Knorr seasoning cubes that my market here doesn't seem to carry (If they do, I sure can't find it!).  And my sweet daughter-in-law called and talked about making beans at her house.  So I knew I needed a pot of beans.  But who wants to wait to soak overnight and all day to cook?  Not me!  So I chose a time when my adult daughter was gone.  She still does not eat beans.  I know, it's a sure sign I failed in the way I raised her.  Or she just doesn't like beans.  Either way, today I am making beans!

I pretty much followed Char's recipe below, only I had Great Northern Beans instead of pintos.  And we are carnivores, so I had to add sausage to the pot.

30 minutes on high with natural release, and then I thickened the juice with a little bit of dehydrated potatoes.   Char was right, they are the best beans ever!


Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Frogmore Stew


My intentions were good. I took a before picture...then we ate dinner and I forgot to get a picture of the finished product before it was consumed. 

This is also known as 'Lo-Country Boil'.  Whatever the name, we call it delicious.

6 red potatoes cut in half 
2 chicken thighs
3 Cajun sausages
3 ears corn on the cob
10 oz frozen medium size shrimp, cleaned, uncooked
1/4 c Old Bay seasoning
3 c chicken broth 

Brown chicken in a little butter.  
Layer in pressure cooker as follows:
Potatoes
Chicken
Sausage (poke the casing to keep from splitting during pressure)
Shucked corn broke in half
Old Bay
Chicken broth

Pressure on high 4 minutes.  Natural release for 8 minutes, quick release after that.  While waiting for the natural release, sauté the shrimp in a little butter in a separate pan until shrimp is just barely pink.  Open pc cut sausage and chicken into bitesize peices and add the shrimp sausage and chicken to the pot.  Serve in bowls with some rolls on the side.  (Broth is for flavor and cooking, it's too salty to actually eat as a soup).  Enjoy!

Monday, February 9, 2015

Easy Sausage Rice


We eat this meal quite a bit...it's quick and filling.  My issue is I keep forgetting to take a picture of it. But tonight I removed the fork out of my mouth in order to take this photo.

It's very adaptable to families of all sizes. My mother used to feed the masses with 5 cups of rice, but we have downsized significantly so I only used 1 1/2 c rice, which fed the 3 of us and had enough leftover for a lunch later in the week.

Sausage Rice

1/2 lb hot sausage (we like hot, but any flavor will do.  This was Owens brand)
1c chopped celery (3 stalks)
1 envelope Lipton chicken noodle soup mix
1 1/2 c long grain rice
3 c water

Using brown setting, brown the sausage in the pressure cooker.  Add celery, soup mix, rice and water. Mix once.  Lock on lid, push rice button.  If your pc does not offer a rice setting, high pressure 6 minutes.  Natural release for 5 minutes and quick release the rest.  Serve with a green salad and if you are my husband, applesauce, because everyone knows if your meal has rice in it, it must be paired with applesauce.  I don't understand it, but I have learned over the past 29 years when to put the applesauce on the table.