Saturday, April 10, 2010

It is time...high time...

Ok, everyone.  EVERYONE.  It is time for you to talk back.  

I am looking for some  

decently balanced
decently healthy 
meal ideas.  

(And quick and easy are pluses too)  

When you are thinking about supper, what is your favorite meal to make?
What is your favorite meal to eat?
What is the meal that just makes you feel healthy?

Now, don't go running to your recipe book (unless you really want to).
Often the best meals are the ones that are second nature, that you know off the top of your head.

Think for a second...

And now hit the comment button and let me know what you thought of!

It's time to get some fresh recipes into this kitchen of mine!

And here's a hint...you can come back in a couple days and check out the comments for a couple new meal ideas for yourself! 

5 comments:

Karis Brandes said...

Jared and I eat a fair bit of chicken ceasar salad. It's a lettuce base so I figure that's very healthy. Though that's probably counteracted by the amount of dressing that goes on it. And sometimes I fry the chicken which makes it even less healthy (but soooo yummy)

Sparlingo said...

Jeremy and I make this really lovely turkey dish. It will sound really weird, but the main ingredients are: lean ground turkey, peanut butter, soy sauce, ginger, brocolli slaw (brocolli, cauliflower, cabbage). As long as you don't use too much PB it's pretty healthy (although admittedly high in sodium).

Kelsie-Lynn said...

These days our favorite is mini-meatloafs (which I got from Sabrina's meal blog), rice or a noodle dish of some kind, stemmed veggies, and a salad. Nothing fancy but we love it. I will send you the link for the meatloafs. I don't usually like maatloaf but I love this one.

Jo Funk said...

Macaroni, Mushroom Soup, and Hamburger... abbreviated to "mac mush ham" in my family.

Ingredients: Onion, Garlic, Ground beef, Macaroni, Cream of mushroom soup, and Peas

Pretty simple really... Saute diced onion and garlic, add group beef and brown. Boil up macaroni(or any other kind of noodle). When beef is fully cooked, add a can or two of cream of mushroom soup(tomato soup also works very well) and mix. DO NOT add any water or milk. Drain noodles and mix into beef sauce. Peas go well. Add to meat sauce while noodles are cooking and allow to heat through.

Another awesome side dish is ranch potato bake.

Ingredients: Potatoes, ranch dressing, seasoning, Ritz crackers.

Cube potatoes. Cover with ranch dressing and spices(wahtever you have on hand, I like using a bit of italian seasoning and victorian epicure cheese chives and bacon dip mix). Put in a glass baking dish and cover with foil. Bake at 350 until potatoes are almost done(check periodically, not sure how long it takes). when almost done, crunch up some ritz crackers and put on top. Bake uncovered until potatoes are done.

Alicia Buhler said...

Stir-fries are the staple meal around here - there's no other yummy way to get that many vegetables into me. Sometimes I come home from grocery shopping and chop a whole lot of vegetables so they're handy for stir-frying. We also chop all of our meat into stir-fry sized chunks before freezing. We use tamari instead of traditional soy sauce, which is what my naturopath recommended and I actually like it better than soy. Given that you live in California - health-freak central - you should have no problem finding it.

Another idea is beef dip - yum! We brought that to potluck this evening.

Carrie recommends our sausage and cabbage dish - cook some farmer sausage, add shredded cabbage, carrots (I shred the carrots with a vegetable peeler for this dish) and onions and saute. Season with butter, salt and pepper. Really good served over mashed potatoes.

On the cabbage theme, I'd also recommend that you look up a "Runza" recipe online - kind of like mom's meat buns but with cabbage inside too.