Sunday, February 27, 2011

Week 47 Challenge - Mexican Food

We eat several different meals that we consider to be mexican, although in reality they are probably a very loose interpretation of what Mexican food really is. The challenge for this week was to cook a mexican dish we had never made before.
While wandering around on the internet looking for ideas, I thought of Mexican Pork and Beans - something I have never had, but must have heard of somewhere. As it happens, there are literally thousands of recipes for Mexican Pork and Beans. I was wanting to make as authentic a dish as I could, which is made more difficult when you have never seen or tasted the dish before.

I came across this recipe for

Mexican Pork and Beans. The ingredients and spices looked to be a good balance from what I had read in numerous other recipes.
It also helped that there were no strange ingredients to source.

I made this on Friday night, for Craig and Sandra (and kids), and Paul and T. I cooked it in the afternoon, and we finally got to eat after Summer Soccer.
We had it with Rice, Tortillas and Salad.

This gets a 4.5/5 from me. Really tasty, with just the right amount of chilli in it to make it warm but not hot. Having beans in the dish meant that the 1kg of meat stretched to feed 6 adults and 6 children.
I used a pork shoulder roast, deboned and diced. There could have been a bit more meat in the dish, but realistically we probably didn't need more - it was just tasty enough that we would have eaten it if it was there.

Yet another recipe to add to the repertoire.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Week 46 Challenge- a budget meal

With our regular meals, I try to keep to an average of $10 meat per meal to feel our family of 2 adults and 3 kids. With the challenge for this week being "a budget meal" I decided to try and make the whole main course for as close to $10 as I could, including meat.

I found a Destitute Gourmet recipe for
Peanut Pork and Rice. This recipe also happened to be a one pot meal, where everything is cooked together, which is always a bonus when it comes to cleaning up afterwards.

I think the total of ingredients added up to $11.47, which fed us all plenty, and there was enough left over for Kyla to take in her lunch the next day. Having garlic, courgette and beans from our garden certainly helped to keep the total cost down.

We would give this a 4/5 and I will certainly make it again.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Week 45 Challenge - Grains

This week, the challenge was to use a grain that you had never used before.

I bought a bag of pearl barley last week, having read about making a pearl barley risotto. The challenge gave me a push to actually make it this week.

I was a little dubious about how this would
work, and after a quick look on the ever useful internet, found a recipe that looked good.
I didn't have any mushrooms, so they just got left out of the dish, and I added some slow roasted tomatoes that I had done. The texture is quite different to a regular risotto, with a bit more bite to the barley grains. The risotto tasted really good, and the kids all happily ate it. Incidentally, Pearl Barley has a very low GI rating (25) which means that it does not impact your blood sugar level very much. This will make it a very good recipe for me to cook for Jill sometime.

I would score this at 4.5/5 and will
definitely be making it again - probably trying it with different flavours as well, just as I would with a regular risotto. And at $1.90 for 500g, it is significantly cheaper than risotto rice. I used just under a whole 500g pack, which provided a large serving each for 5 of us, and a large lunch for Daryl the next day. Pretty cheap really.

A high school student


Kyla has officially started High School now, and is only a few months off becoming a teenager! She is also now eligible to go to Youth Group, which starts this weekend.
Clearly we are all getting very old.

I thought you might all like to see Kyla in her school uniform, ready for her first day.
It has been/is a big adjustment for her, but she is doing very well. She caught the bus to school yesterday for the first time, and this afternoon will catch it home. This is a big thing, as up till now she had never had to do this. Fortunately she has a friend from Waimauku School who catches the same bus, so they have been organizing to do this together.

She is in the GAT (Gifted and Talented) Class, and so there are very high expectations from the school about how hard they will work this year. Kyla has a very good work ethic, so I do not think this will cause her any problems.

No doubt she will grump at me for this blog entry, but I figured you may like an update anyway.