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  1. What Makes A Good Family Meal Good For Kids Recipes - Yahoo Recipe Search

    Easy Homemade Chili
    Pillsbury.com
    <p>Whether you’re cooking for family, roommates or yourself, everyone needs a quick, easy chili recipe on hand! This one is super simple and kid-friendly (not too spicy), and it comes together in just 30 minutes with ingredients you probably already have in your fridge and pantry.</p> <p>This classic dish originated in the Americas and has been influenced by multiple cultures and cuisines over the years, so there are a variety of recipes out there. But what about everyone can agree on is that the base of a good chili is a thick sauce made with chili peppers of some kind, onions, canned tomatoes, and plenty of cumin. If you ask us, our easy chili recipe is one of the best because it brings those tasty ingredients (along with savory beef and beans) together quickly to create a delicious dish ready for all sorts of toppings, from cheddar cheese to green onions.</p> <p>Another great thing about chili is that it’s a one-pot family favorite that’s perfect for so many different occasions. Have a busy day with the family? Chili is a weeknight wonder, and it makes amazing leftovers—so that’s tomorrow’s lunch covered, too. The flavors just get better overnight! You’ll also catch us making this quick and easy chili for game days, movie night gatherings and any other get-togethers that call for a hearty, comforting meal that’s sure to satisfy.</p>
    Hidden Veggie Beef Chili
    Yummly
    Sure, this hearty veggie beef chili recipe has all the protein you’d expect, but as the recipe name indicates, Hidden Veggie Beef Chili also packs extra vegetables (more than a quarter of what you need in a day). The rich tomato sauce base is blended with super veggies like sweet potato, cauliflower, and spinach. That means every bite of this kid-friendly beef chili provides fiber, potassium and vitamins A and C. This vegetable beef chili recipe is made with mild spice but can be easily adjusted to suit you and your family’s preferred heat level. This vegetable beef chili dish is ready in about an hour, and is a terrific recipe for meal prepping, since it makes enough for several family dinners and freezes well. It’s always a good idea to have some of this Hidden Veggie Beef Chili on hand to enjoy by the bowlful, with nachos, or spooned over a baked potato.
    Spinach and Sausage Calzone
    Food52
    As a kid, growing up outside of Boston in a household of Sicilians, seemed, at the time, normal. Especially as the first born son, normal was being doted on by my mother and grandmother (no doting from my dad, I knew who not to cross!). Meals at the table were the rule, seven days a week. 5pm sharp on a weeknight, high noon on Sunday. Saturday rules were loose. Family was preached and food was the binder. Slow cooked Sunday &quot;gravy&quot;, the ubiquitous tomato sauce loaded with beef and pork and sausage and anything else my grandmother could squeeze into her giant pot, was Sunday standard. What would a Friday night be without fish (Catholic in the 60&#39;s and 70&#39;s). Christmas Eve seafood feasts, Christmas day ravioli AND manicotti followed by a roast beast. But the lesser made meals that I keep going to are the one&#39;s that make me truly feel blessed to have grown up in a family that was loving (in a loud and tempestuous Sicilian way) all tied together by some of the best food ever. This calzone recipe is one of those meals. It&#39;s not a calzone in the traditional sense. It&#39;s just what my grandmother called it. It probably should be called something else, but the name has stuck through the years. It was typically served during a party or holiday. I would grab 2 or 3 slices and hide it, letting it get to room temperature. It just seemed extra good having sat a bit. Some warm marinara sauce was the perfect accompaniment. It&#39;s the recipes such as this one that I make for my grandkids now, using food to teach them the meaning of &quot;La Famiglia&quot;. It&#39;s also the one that neighbors fawn over at a party, loving that &quot;Eye&quot;-talian food. I&#39;ve tweaked this recipe from my grandmother&#39;s over the years. She always used frozen spinach. Nah, it&#39;s just not right (and I bet she didn&#39;t have those blocks of frozen spinach when she grew up in Sicily). The amount and type of cheese changes almost every time. But these are my favorites (and not necessarily Italian). I&#39;ve found adding the Boursin (some mascarpone would work great too) into the spinach helps to bind everything better while also adding a background flavor you&#39;d only know it&#39;s there when it&#39;s not. You can use sweet or hot Italian sausage. You can use some other sausage. Nothing sacred here. Toss in some artichoke hearts. Make it your own and pass it down.