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  1. What Makes A Good Family Meal? - 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>
    Mayonnaise Chicken
    Allrecipes
    A recipe that my mom used to make when we were little and picky about what we ate. Now I feed it to my family and friends and everybody loves it! Good for a day when you don't want to stand at a stove forever but still want a really nice meal. For more flavor, you can add already mixed Italian dressing to the mayo and dry Italian blend.
    Guajolote Enchilado con Pasta de Frijol
    Food52
    {This is a first person biography of a Mexican restaurateur in Los Angeles that I published through AltaMed. It is one entry into a book that served as a fundraiser for uninsured individuals. The recipe is prepared by Rogelio Martínez and served at Casa Oaxaca in Culver City, CA and Santa Ana, CA.} Casa Oaxaca Rogelio Martinez Juarez 3317 West First Street Santa Ana, CA 92703 Tel: 714.554.0905 I was born twenty minutes from the city of Oaxaca in a small town called Tlacochahuaya. My mother, Carmen, and my father, Ricardo, were native Zapotecos. I have six siblings and we all speak our native dialect as well as Spanish. My name is Rogelio Martinez Juarez. I dropped out of school in the eighth grade. I decided at that time that I wanted to be a baker. I came to this decision because nobody else in town wanted to be a baker. It was considered the lowest of the low in the economic class structure of the town. To learn how to bake, I went to one of the largest hotels in Oaxaca, Hotel Victoria, and asked for a job. They saw my enthusiasm and decided that I would be a good employee. They taught me how to bake and also how to Cuchariar (perform spoon service) at the tables of their most important clients. Spoon service is the art of dishing the plates artistically while at the table in front of the client instead of preparing the dish in the kitchen. I enjoyed this very much and decided that in addition to being a baker, I would also be a professional server. By the time I was 22, I had become a true professional in the food service industry. I had worked in all the fine restaurants in the city of Oaxaca and some in Mexico City. My eagerness as an entrepreneur was beginning to show in my character and I made the greatest venture in my life: I immigrated to the United States and established myself in Los Angeles. During this period, I never faltered in my desire to be a professional in food service. Among the finest of chefs in Los Angeles, who knew me as “Elvis” because of my hairstyle, I became known as the hardest of workers. I worked for Mark Peel and Nancy Silverton at Campanile and for Wolfgang Puck at Spago. I worked for many, many important chefs and restaurateurs in Los Angeles but the most significant for me was my relationship with Frederic Meschin at The Little Door on Third Street. In retrospect, I now realize that after so many years in L.A., my overwhelming drive and my crushing loneliness in Los Angeles led to me becoming an alcoholic. In 1986, when President Ronald Reagan issued amnesty for immigrants, I applied to become a resident of the United States through La Hermandad Mexicana. By this time, I had married a woman from Santo Domingo Albarradas in Oaxaca, named Angelica and we had two children, Diana and Aldo. I petitioned and promised La Virgen de Juquila that if she allowed me to bring my family over from Oaxaca, I would stop drinking. I applied for myself and for my family and we were granted amnesty and residency in 2000. I stopped drinking to fulfill my promise to Juquila and we began to live together in the mid-Wilshire area of Los Angeles. Frederic at The Little Door helped me to purchase a triplex in the area. We were so happy. I was 36 years old. In 2004, with the money we saved from my tips, we decided to start two businesses: ServiOax, an import/export shipping service and Siete Regiones, a bakery. The bakery was moving along slowly and closed after three months but ServiOax grew tremendously. On the days that I had off from my work as a busboy at The Little Door, I would fly back and forth from LAX to OAX with packages from all the Oaxaqueños in the area. I would carry up to seven boxes and suitcases myself. I did everything I could to make the business a success. One day, during a routine revision of all our shipments, we found contraband hidden in one of the packages. It was at that point that I became frightened with the business and decided to return to my original plan: Opening a restaurant. Since my friend Fernando Lopez at Guelaguetza was operating and serving Oaxacan food in Los Angeles, I traveled south a bit and found a Mexican city in Orange County called Santa Ana. In 2007, I chose the first location that I was offered and leased 3317 West First Street and I called it Casa Oaxaca. After 17 years of working as a busboy in Los Angeles, I had realized my dream of owning my own restaurant. Angelica and her brother Gilberto became my financial partners and we braved the business of a small family restaurant. The building at 3317 was formerly a house of prostitution and we discovered that someone had been killed in the restroom. The floors were uneven and nothing worked right but we were never detoured. We fixed it, cleaned it, painted it and designed it to be just like we were dining in our towns in Oaxaca. The menu, handwritten on a notepad, was a combination of seven dishes that we loved the most including our favorite moles and tlayudas typical of our towns. It was very hard. I thought that since I knew the service side of the business, I could make it a successful endeavor but quickly I realized that I lacked business experience. I lacked fluency in English. I lacked capital. I lacked the close-knit community of Oaxaqueños that lived in Los Angeles. Even though I only went 45 minutes away, I was immediately forced to understand that I could not rely on that network to make this business work. It was just my wife and I and our faith in La Virgen de Juquila. Together, we built a clientele, as they say, slowly but surely. In 2011, we finished the year with close to $500,000 in sales. We have ten employees and a Facebook business page and people on Yelp! seem to really enjoy our food. After years of financial mismanagement, we established a banking relationship with City National Bank and we bought our first iPad and were trained to manage our ADP payroll through an App! There are days when we think that we just can’t bear another day and there are days when we can’t believe our good fortune. I still bake our Pan de Yema daily and I perform spoon service for special corporate parties, weddings and quinceañeras. There was one day this year that really made me reflect on my life and my chosen vocation. My mother, Carmen, died at the age of 86 in September. On Día de los Muertos in November, I went home to spend time with my father and to pay tribute to her contribution to my life. I was in the living room of my house in Tlacochahuaya with my father and we were eating a dish of Guajolote Enchilado con Pasta de Frijol in front of the altar we created for her. I remembered the taste of her food in that meal I realized at that moment that every day since I left my home in México at the age of 22, I have been attempting to feed that taste to all the people whom I have come across in my life at Casa Oaxaca. Recipe Blurb: This recipe is as authentically Oaxacan as they get. Mexico’s diverse indigenous ethnicities offer a striking variety of food. The turkey in dried chiles is a great example. The chiles in this recipe are very mild and simply give the turkey a nice smoky flavor. Using these types of chiles often constitutes a sauce that is called an adobo. What makes this dish stand apart is the avocado leaf. Used mainly in Oaxaca and a few other regions in Mexico, the avocado leaf adds a hint of anise and bay leaf flavor to the beans and the turkey. There have been concerns about toxicity levels in avocado leaves, but Mexican food maven Diana Kennedy puts it to rest in her 2003 book “From My Mexican Kitchen.” She said that toxicity reports stem from a 1984 study at the University of California at Davis, which showed that dairy goats suffered some toxic effects from ingesting very large amounts of avocado leaves (the toxic agent remains unknown). The crucial point, according to Dr. Arthur L. Craigmill, toxicology specialist at Davis and one of the authors of the study, is that the toxic effects were traced to the Guatemalan avocado (Persea American) and not Mexican avocado leaves (Persea dryminfolia), a different variety. So be sure to buy the Mexican variety from a specialty Mexican food market. This dish is a unique one that should be reserved for a special occasion or to impress your friends.
    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.
    Pasta al Fumo
    Food52
    The name of this recipe means “smoky pasta” in Italian, and it hails from the Cortona region of Italy. A friend told me about this recipe years ago since his family is originally from Cortona, and one day I decided to try to make it, only to discover that there was not a lot of information about it online. Naturally, I decided to figure out my own version since the idea of a pasta sauce made from bacon, tomato, rosemary, and cream sounded too good to be true. After a lot of fiddling, this recipe is what I came up with: a thick, rich sauce that clings to the noodles and capitalizes on the flavor in its name: smoke. The aromatic baseline for this hearty meal supports the more delicate flavors of rosemary and garlic which mingle in the background. Over the past year, and especially in lockdown, this has become my all time favorite pasta sauces.
    Easy Microwave Omelet
    Food.com
    This is a 3-4 minute omelet which is made in the microwave. Delicious and versatile, it can be made with what you have on hand and what your family prefers. If you like things spiced up you can use hot peppers and hot salsa for a garnish. Good way to get vegetables into the breakfast meal.
    Better-Than-Boxed Chocolate Cake
    Food Network
    This cake is completely delicious, and not the least formal, which I've learned, from the staunchy loyal, old-fashioned cake lovers in my family, is a very good thing. It is filled with the love of my mother whose chocolate cake was never, ever remiss at a birthday or milestone even if it meant staying up past midnight while the rest of us slept. Her chocolate cake has flown miles and ridden over mountains in the backseat of a car to make it to our most special meals or occasions just in time, and it even made it on the menu at our wedding. And it's kept my dad never far from her side for over forty years. For the ones you love, you won't mind putting in the extra effort to make them a cake from scratch, especially when it's almost as easy as cake from a box. This one is based on ingredients from your pantry and comes together all in one bowl. And when you taste its luscious textures, you may just swear off your old mix for good. The rich, silky, buttery chocolate icing is what really takes this over the top and makes it just the thing to make your chocolate cake legendary.
    Old-fashion Potato Pancakes
    Food.com
    Good ole potato pancakes..what could be better, quicker and more economical? This delicious simple recipe makes a meal, or an appetizer. Try this out on your family...
    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.