Red Wine Roast

Yesterday I posted “What’s for supper” at our house on my Facebook page, and managed to get everyone all excited, so I figured I’d share the recipe.

I cooked a Home-raised, Sirloin Roast in Red Wine. I should warn you- your house will smell amazing for hours and you will be good and hungry by the time it’s done.

As with any roast, low and slow is the way to go! Now, I cooked mine over the stove, but that’s not to say you couldn’t cook it in the slower cooker, or the oven, after, of course, you’ve seared the meat.

Here’s what you’ll need.

3-5 TBS olive oil
1 large yellow onion, quartered (purple would work too, but I think white might get too mushy)
3 cloves of garlic, peeled.
Salt
Pepper
2 cups of beef broth (or 2 beef bullion cubes disolved in 2 cups water)
2 cups of red wine (or more if you feel naughty!)
1/2 cup water
fresh or canned portabella mushrooms
red potatoes, quartered (optional)

Season the roast with salt and pepper or whatever else suits your fancy. Season all sides. (note- fresh rosemary would be lovely in this dish, but my rosemary bush has, sadly bit the dust in this winter weather).

In a large stock pot, skillet, or dutch oven, heat olive oil over med-high heat. When the pan is good and hot, add onions and garlic. Stir for about a minute. Then place the meat, fat side down into the pan. Cover and cook until seared, repeating on each side, about 2-3 minutes per side. Then add 2 cups of red wine, 2 cups of beef broth, 1/2 cup water, and potatoes if desired. Bring to a boil for about 2 minutes, then turn heat to low, cover, and let cook for 3- 3 1/2 hours (or until roast is tender). You’ll need to turn it a few times to best distribute the flavors. With 30 minutes left, add mushrooms.

And voila- gorgeous, tender and oh so tasty meat!

Now, we’re on a slow carb diet at our house, which is why there are no potatoes in the photograph. But if I were eating potatoes, it would have been even better. It was melt in your mouth tender!

If you wanted to do this in a slow cooker, You could sear the meat in a large pan first, then transfer it, the onions, and garlic to the slow cooker, add the broth, wine and water, place on high for about 1/2 an hour, and then turn it to low and go on about your day.

If you were going to cook it in the oven, I think 300 degrees would get you. It will take about 22-25 minutes per lb. of roast for a medium rare roast. So if you have a roast that’s 4 lbs, about an hour and half will get you. Please keep in mind that a sirloin roast is one of the more tender cuts of roast. If you were using say a boneless-top round roast, it’s about 35-38 minutes per lb to get the desired tenderness/doneness.

No go. Cook. And be merry.

Happy Tails!

Fried Pickles

Homemade fried pickles!

Yesterday I posted on Facebook that I was making fried pickles. It didn’t take long to fill the page with comments and requests for the recipe. And since I aim to please, I figured, what the fey! It won’t take any time at all to type it out, because, it’s THAT easy!

What you’ll need:

About 2 cups of dill pickle slices. Vlasic is my pickle of choice for this project. I think they hold up the best.

1 cup of buttermilk
1 cup flour
1 cup corn meal
1/2 Tbs Season salt
Vegetable oil for frying (but don’t ask me how much- Okay?)

Now, there’s a couple ways you can tackle this project. You can drain your pickles by hand before adding them to the buttermilk, or you can put all the pickles in a colander and drain them that way. Either way works. I typically just pull them out of the jar with a fork- let some juice drip off and set them in the buttermilk mixture for about 10 minutes. Now, not all 2 cups of pickles will fit into 1 cup of buttermilk quite right, so I typically work in smaller batches for that reason, and because I don’t have a pan big enough to fry 2 cups of pickles at once.

While your pickles are soaking, mix the flour and corn meal together with the season salt. I like to use a whisk for that job because I think it does it best. Also, it’s a good idea to heat your oil. I’d say somewhere around 350 degrees will get ‘er done. Also, I don’t deep fry my pickles- they’re pan fried in my trusty cast-iron skillet. You want enough oil in the pan to cover the bottom and go about 1/2 way up the side. Remember as your oil gets hot it will get thinner, so take that into account.

Once your pickles are good and soaked, use a fork to remove them, one at a time, from the buttermilk recipe into the flour/cornmeal mixture. I like to put my breading into a pie pan, because it makes it easiest to batter the pickles.

Bread each pickle, place into the oil and cook for about 2 minutes total- or until they are golden brown. You’ll probably want to turn them at least once. Remove from the oil and set onto a plate covered in paper towels so the remaining oil can be drained.

Let them cool and then enjoy them plain or with some ranch dressing. Either way works for me!

Happy Trails and Happy Cooking!

Beer Battered Onion Rings

Oh My. The goodness that you can get from this:

Combined with this:

These are so good. Here’s what you’ll need:

2 1/2 cups of flour
1 and 2/3 bottles of dark beer (I use Shiner Bock and believe it makes the BEST batter)
3 tablespoons of Tony Chachere’s Creole Seasoning, plus more for salting onions once cooked
1/2 tablespoon of Cayenne pepper
2-3 large yellow onions, sliced and separated in rings (Vidalia works best)
2 quarts of vegetable oil for frying

I like to slice my onions thick, and typically I pop out the smallish ends and save them for another dish.

Here’s what you’ll do:

Whisk together dry ingredients
Add one beer, and then as much of the second beer as you need to reach the consistency of pancake batter.
Dip onions in batter and cook until golden. Shake off excess oil.
If desired, salt again with more Creole Seasoning. They’re excellent both ways!

Here’s what they’ll look like finished:

Good stuff, right? This will make a plate big enough to serve 6-8 people.

Like any good Southerner, I serve them with ranch dressing, but it doesn’t stop these crazy South Dakotans from eating them with no sauce, or *gasp* (at the horror), KETCHUP!

I’m just kidding, y’all. They’re great no matter how you serve them!

Happy Onion Ringing and Happy Trails!

Chicken, Black Bean and Corn Quesadillas

It’s no secret I’m a fan of Mexican food. I could eat it everyday, and twice on Sundays. I’m just sayin’.

This is one of our household faves, and I thought I’d share it with you. It’s quick and easy if you want it to be, or complex if you want to do it all from scratch. Myself, I never have time to do it from scratch, but you certainly could.

Since I’m 8 times out of ten in a mad rush to hurry supper along, I used all canned goods for this dish.

I used a 12 oz can of chicken (drained), a can of black beans (drained), a can of sweet corn (drained) and a can of rotel with all the juicy goodness added. I threw in some minced onion, and diced garlic as well as Cumin, Chile Powder and salt, to taste.

Here’s how simple this is:

Throw everything into a pan and stir until it’s warmed through.

Yeah, that’s it. Crazy, right?

Once all the ingredients are warmed through and smelling lovely, throw a tablespoon of butter in a skillet and toss on a flour tortilla. Fill half the tortilla with two tablespoons of shredded cheese, top with the filling, add more cheese on top of that, and fold the tortilla over.

Cook until golden on one side, and flip.

Once finished, slice it in half:

And serve with sour cream, guacamole, salsa, rice, or whatever other condiments your little heart desires.

Happy Cooking!

Shredded Beef Enchiladas

This is going to be food week here on the blog- well, at least there’ll be four days of recipes this week! I hope to get some ranching stories told too, as well as share some stories about last week’s calving. That said, I don’t know if time will allow for all of that because you know, I do have cowgirl’n to do as well!

First up, are some shredded beef enchiladas. It’s a great thing to do with leftover shredded beef- or shoot- you could even make a roast and shred it simply because you were craving these!

What you will need to make this loveliness is:

About 2 cups of shredded beef (slow cook it in the oven overnight- or in a crock pot on low overnight). I’m going to assume that all my readers know how to shred a beef roast!
8 flour or corn tortillas (I will say that corn is more “authentic” but it’s also more time consuming. So flour will work if you’re in hurry and feel like making less of a mess).
7oz can of diced roasted green chiles (or you can make your own)!
1 1/2 cups of salsa verde (or you can make your own). Something tomatillo based would be best.
Garlic Salt and Cumin (to taste)
1/2 cup diced onion
2 tblsp olive oil
1 cup of shredded cheese (Monterey Jack, Cheddar, Pepper Jack or any combination of those)

For the sour cream sauce:

1/2 stick of butter
3/4 tablespoons of flour
1 1/2 cups sour cream
1 1/2 cups half/half (or milk if you want to be healthier)
2-3 beef bullion cubes
1 cup water
cumin, salt and pepper to taste

To make the filling:

Add the chopped onion to a pan with the olive oil. Saute until transparent.

Then add the beef, your green chiles and warm through, adding garlic salt and cumin to taste. I added about a 1/2 tablespoon of cumin and 1 teaspoon of garlic salt, but whatever suits your taste will be lovely. If you had some fresh cilantro to throw into the warmed beef mixture that’d be super awesome too!

Once warmed through, spread the mixture evenly over your 8 tortillas and top with shredded cheese. Tuck them together in a casserole dish and start the sauce. While you do that, it’s best to pre-heat the oven to 350. Doesn’t the temperature 350 get a lot of love in the world of baking? I mean, let’s think about this for a minute- most recipes call for some form of 350 degrees!

Now it’s on to making the yummy sour cream sauce. Usually sour cream sauce is for chicken enchiladas, but it’s so good, I figured that beef should get some love too, you know?

Add your butter and flour to the same pan in which you warmed the beef mixture. Let’s face it. There’s always good flavor left over from something like that, and I figure why waste it. I use a cast iron skillet for these sort of endeavors, so you get added flavor from the pan. You’ll want to make a basic roux and wisk that together that for a few minutes until it turns a golden brown. Then add in your sour cream, milk or half and half, and your bullion cubes- dissolved in the water, and bring to a boil, cooking until smooth. Add your salt (as needed) pepper and cumin.

When the sauce is seasoned to your taste, pour it over the enchiladas and top each with two tablespoons of green salsa and shredded cheese.

Bake it in the oven for about 15 minutes (or until the cheese is melted and the sauce is bubbly).

Yummy, right?

Here’s the little goodie served up. I topped it with another couple tablespoons of salsa verde. If you had fresh cilantro, I’d totally throw some of that on top too!

Now, mix up a margarita and enjoy!

Happy Tuesday and Happy Trails!

Sausage Stir Fry

I love stir fry though I don’t have a wok, or a hibachi in my kitchen. Typically, I improvise. Maybe it’s the Americanized version, or maybe it’s just my own personal style coming through, but this dish is one of my one-dish wonders (kind of), it’s pretty fast, and super easy. It’s really a no-fail dish.

Here’s what you’ll need:

16 oz of sausage. I use Jimmy Dean’s Spicy Pork Sausage because it is my all time favorite.
1 red or green (or both) bell pepper, seeded and sliced.
1 medium onion, sliced.
8 oz of broccoli, fresh or frozen, though in this case frozen works better
1 small can of water chestnuts, drained

Brown the sausage in a heavy skillet, or wok if you have one! Once it’s browned, remove it from the pan and add your peppers and onions. Saute them for about 3 minutes, add the broccoli and water chestnuts, turn your heat down, and cover for about 5 minutes. Throw in a dash or two of some garlic salt, and a tablespoon (or two) of soy sauce. Once your broccoli is cooked through, add the sausage back to the pan, stirring occasionally, until it’s all warmed through.




Serve over white rice, or brown rice or a mixture of both- or don’t serve it with rice at all. I don’t usually eat it with rice, because I can do without the calories of rice, and I love rice, so I tend to eat more than I should. It’s one of my favorite quick meals to throw together! What’s your favorite? And what do you think of mine?

Margarita, Anyone?

I don’t know if this recipe has been published before- it was shared with me by a friend of mine many years ago, and I love it. I make it all the time. But be warned. It is potent- because you can’t have just one AND it packs a punch!

What you’ll need:

1 can of frozen Limeade concentrate (save the can!)
1 can of tequila of your choice
1 12 oz corona beer – or other Mexican light beer of your choosing (Bud light does not do well, but works in a pinch!)
1 12oz can of diet sprite, sprite, or tonic water (I prefer sprite zero- so it doesn’t get too sweet).
Salt and wedges of limes for garnish.

Combine all ingredients listed above in a 2 quart pitcher, stir well and serve on the rocks, with salt and lime!

Easy, refreshing and potent. It doesn’t get better than that!

I have never made these frozen, because where I grew up, it was so hot that if you had a frozen rita it was slush before you finished it! I can assume that these would be good if you desired to blend them. But you damage the spirit of the alcohol when you do that. And that, in my opinion is just wrong!

Feathers, Family and Supper. Please.

This was a fun-filled weekend full of feathers, family and friends!

Let me explain.

I made feather earrings- which are for sale in my shop:

And my friend, Kim, from Sargent Ranch Lodge, brought me pheasant feathers and a rooster- a rooster that I had to clean so that I could cook it- which I did (there’s a first time for everything!). More on that later. But the pheasant feathers, oh the feathers. They’re just beautiful. And they’re going to become earrings, Christmas garland embellishments as well as Christmas decorations. Who is excited about that besides me? Will the excited parties please stand up? And if you’re excited about it, know that when the decorations are available, they’ll be for sale in my jewelry shop!

On to the pheasant rooster- We did manage to save more feathers from it for my projects; and my helpers were sure enough awesome. That was the first time I’ve ever cleaned a bird, and the cowboy’s son, Ty, found us a 9 minute video on Youtube about skinning and cleaning a pheasant. Smart boy, that one. So the three of us- Ty, our niece Juju, and myself watched a “how to” video and then proceeded to clean the pheasant.

The kids really got in to helping; they even gutted it! And then asked to wash it in the kitchen sink. And I should add, they did a superb job.

Then it was time to cook it. I’ve never cooked pheasant before, so I asked my friend how she liked it. She said she likes it in a casserole type dish with wild rice. So that’s what I did. I have some fabulous wild rice, that I get from an Indian Tribe over in Minnesota and along with some portabella mushrooms made a dish that’s to die for.

And because I love you, I’ll share.

One pheasant rooster- this one was about 2 lbs.
4 c Water (roughly)
4 c Chicken Broth (roughly)
4TBS Olive Oil
Baby Carrots (optional)
Celery (optional)
2TBS Fresh thyme
6 oz Canned or fresh portabella mushrooms
3/4 c Wild Rice
1 can of cream of mushroom soup
Cheddar Cheese (optional)
Bread Crumbs (optional)

To begin, boil the whole bird in a mixture of water and chicken broth- about a 50/50 mixture. Enough to just cover the bird. I added fresh thyme to the water and if I’d have had my thinking cap on, I’d have thrown some olive oil in there too- along with some baby carrots and celery if I’d have had some. I didn’t, but if you do, I recommend it! I let that cook, once it began to boil, for about 45-60 minutes on a low heat- until the meat started to fall off the bones.

Then remove it from the pan- but don’t get too eager to throw out the liquid left in that pan. You’re about to use it because there’s all kinds of flavor in there!

Pull all the meat off the bones and throw it in a 9 x13 casserole pan. Then you want to add all but about 2 cups of the reduced broth mixture to that pan. If you had carrots and celery in that pan, add that too. Then throw in 3/4 to a cup of wild rice, a can of portabella mushrooms- or fresh if you have them, and a can of cream of mushroom soup. And more fresh thyme.

I cooked it for about 45 minutes at 350 degrees- and then another 15 at 400 degrees.

Sprinkle with cheese or breadcrumbs or nothing, and enjoy it. It was really quite tasty!

I hope your weekend was as fun as ours, and that your Monday is better than average!

XO

Mustard Rubbed Pork Tenderloin in Coconut Rum Sauce

All I have to say about this is YUM!

And all you’ll have to say is “I can’t wait to make this!”

And then you’ll ask me “why are there no photos?”

To which I’ll answer, “well, I wasn’t sure I would like it, and thought that the dogs might eat good this night, so I figured what’s the point?”

I. Was. Wrong.

And like most of the other recipes on this site, it was thrown together by the seat of my pants.

This recipe was born out of one that I have loved for years and it was created because I had no Marsala wine and there is no substitute for Marsala wine. The closest you can get is sherry, and well, I didn’t have that in my kitchen either. I am a lousy chef. Or something.

But it doesn’t matter, because the happy mistake that had me buying pork tenderloin and not the Marsala wine, is something too good not to share! And the best part- it’s easy.

What you’ll need to serve 4-5:

2 1lb pork tenderloins
8 oz of mushrooms, sliced (Button or Bellas are best)
1 stick butter
1 medium large onion, thinly sliced
1 cup of coconut rum
1 1/2 cup cream
8 Tbs Spicy Brown Mustard
8 oz diced pineapple, juice reserved. I used canned, because rarely do I get fresh.

What you’ll do to make the yummy goodness:

Rub your pork loin with about half the mustard. Then you want to sear it in a hot pan. Again, I don’t know how a woman (not to name any names, Mom!) functions in her kitchen with no cast iron skillet! You just want to gently brown it on all sides. When that is done, put it in a casserole dish. I have lovely deep dish ceramic number (9×13) and it was perfect for this dish. Surround your pork loins with the pineapples and diced mushrooms and half a stick of butter (because let’s face it, butter is yummy!). Cook it for about 15 minutes in a 350 degree oven.

Meanwhile, add your remaining butter and onions to the hot pan, with letting them just get opaque and brown. And die because it smells so good at this point. Now, after a couple minutes, add your rum to the pan. You’ll probably do a bit of de-glazing because there will be some yummy goodness that fell off the tenderloin when you cooked it. But that’s good. Give the pan a quick stir and let the rum boil for a couple to three minutes so the alcohol cooks off and it gets a bit sticky. Now add your remaining 4 Tbs of spicy brown mustard, stirring well. Add in your pineapple juice and let it get happy in there for a couple moments. Then add your cream. And let the whole thing boil for about 2 minutes. If the sauce is too sweet for you, simply add more mustard, and Voila!

At this point if you didn’t dawdle, your timer for the first 15 minutes should be going off and when it does, remove the pork loins, turn them, and cover with your sauce. Cook for another 15 minutes or until it has reached your preferred doneness level.

I served ours over a bed of mashed potatoes (pineapples and all) with steamed asparagus. I realize that I serve asparagus with a lot of things. It’s so good. I can’t help it.

Personally I was worried about The Cowboy not liking it because he typically doesn’t like sweet with his meat, but he said it was really good, and of course, I knew I was going to like it. And I’m certain you will too. Add to it what you want, omit from it what you want and make it your own. This was simply my creation that I thought I’d share.

Happy Eating!

Bratwurst, Pasta and Vodka Sauce

I’m sure you’re all thinking, what a strange combination! But I assure you it is a delightful one! I am always looking for new ways to cook old favorites, and Bratwurst is no exception to that! I love them grilled, or boiled in beer with sauteed onions and peppers, and frankly, this recipe is sort of a combination. But since I was low on stuff in my kitchen, which is often the case here since I’m 60 miles from any sort of decent grocery store, this is a new twist on pasta.

Here’s the things I used:

4 bratwurst. Mine were made from antelope and were seasoned with Italian Herbs and Garlic. Trust me, they’re just as good grilled as they are this way! You could just as easily substitute an American classic such as Johnsonville Brats and this will taste just as lovely!

1 med-large onion (diced)

1 red (or green, or yellow) bell pepper (sliced)

Frozen or fresh broccoli or asparagus. I used frozen broccoli because I rarely have fresh veggies, other than asparagus on hand. It’s a drawback to living on a ranch in the middle of nowhere, but we manage, somehow!

1/2 stick of butter

1 dark beer

Penne (or your favorite kind of pasta) cooked as per the box instructions (I always add salt and a couple tablespoons of olive oil to the water).

Canned or homemade vodka sauce. And I know I’ve said I’d post my vodka sauce recipe at some point-this sadly, for those of you waiting, isn’t it. I was rushing around this time, and had to use canned. My favorite canned vodka sauce is Bertoli, in case any of you were wondering. If only I learned how to can maybe I could can my own vodka sauce!?! I digress.

Here’s what you’re going to do:

1. Add the butter to a hot 12 in skillet (in this case it’s my trusty cast iron skillet), then the bratwurst. You want to brown the outsides, but not cook the inside so much. So essentially you’re searing the meat. Once you’ve turned the meat a couple times and you start to see some yummy brown bits stuck to the bottom of the pan, add about 1/4 of the beer. You’re going to do a bit of de-glazing here. Continue turning the meat until all sides are browned, and you’ve used 1/2 your beer.

2. Once seared, you will remove them and cut them into slices, adding them back into the pan. Continue de-glazing until your meat is almost cooked through. you don’t want to cook it all the way, because you’ll overcook it if you do.

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Just lookin’ at this makes me hungry!

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3. When the meat is cooked until almost all the pink is gone, remove the meat and add the diced onion. They will pick up all the yummy goodness the bratwurst and beer left behind! Don’t be scared to let them get a bit brown. They’re yummier that way! Cook them on medium high heat for just a couple minutes.

Look how yummy the fond in the bottom of this pan is!

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Onions:

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Yummy!

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4. Once the onion has started to turn transparent, add your diced red pepper and fresh or frozen broccoli.

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Reduce heat to low, cover for a couple minutes and then stir.

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Mmmm… even the broccoli is picking up that brown goodness left at the bottom of the pan!

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5. Once your broccoli and peppers are properly steamed, add your diced bratwurst back to the pan.

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At this point, as yummy as that looks right now, you could easily stop here and serve it over white or brown rice, or even just as is- it would be super good! You’d want to salt and pepper to taste if you were going to do that!

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6. I’m sure this is unconventional, but it’s how I decided, in my rush, to do it tonight. I dumped the can of vodka sauce on top of the meat and veggies, covered it and turned off my pan. There was enough heat in there to warm the sauce well without over-cooking the veggies or meat.

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7. In a big bowl add your cooked pasta.

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I got this one at Kohls, on sale for $25! I love that store!

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8. Now you may add your skillet full of veggies and meat and sauce. Toss well until every last piece of pasta is coated with sauce. It’s the only way to do things.

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This would have been especially good served with fresh Asiago cheese, but alas, there isn’t a store within a couple hundred miles of me that believes we should have any kind of fancy cheese other than Parmesan in a container from Kraft Foods. Depressing, I know.

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I am so hungry now!

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