About Me

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Mother of two young boys, stay home mom and founder/owner/slave to SaucyPlate.com a website dedicated to meal planning. Not just recipes, complete meals planned out and ready to be added to your personalized shopping list. I grew up in a family with a mother who always had a home cooked hot meal on the table. We always had dinner together and I thought my friends who didn't were weird. Once I had a family of my own I decided to follow my dreams and go to culinary school. I knew I would find a way to combine my love of being home with my kids, love of cooking, and a entrepreneurial drive. SaucyPlate.com is the combination of all my loves. Together with my husband we have developed a website designed to bring good food back to the family table. It is quickly becoming a lost tradition!

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Cooking Class: The Basics

So many great recipes call for roasted garlic; however it is not a skill that we are just placed on the earth with the knowledge of how to do it. In our first cooking class on the basics here is a short tutorial on how to make that wonderful aromatic and versatile garlic.

1. Preheat the oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit

2. Cut the top off of the bulb of garlic


3. Place the garlic, cut side up on a piece of foil large enough to wrap the garlic. Drizzle with olive oil; wrap the foil around to form a packet.



3. Place on the metal rack of your preheated oven and roast for 45 minutes -1 hour, until the garlic is aromatic and soft.

4. Remove the garlic from the oven, and squeeze the flesh of the garlic out of its papery wrapper.


6. To make a mashed garlic paste, place garlic flesh in a bowl, add a pinch of salt and a little olive oil and gently mash with a fork.

Here are some great recipes that call for roasted garlic:

Steamed Artichokes with Roasted Garlic Butter

http://saucyplate.com/Recipes/169.aspx

Roasted Garlic Polenta

http://saucyplate.com/Recipes/104.aspx

Try this polenta with the Summer Ratatouille and Polenta Meal

Friday, January 11, 2008

Weeknight pasta in a flash

Pasta is the mid week life saver. It is fast, easy to prepare and filling. I keep a lot of different shapes of pasta on hand, along with a few key ingredients to throw together a fast pasta dish on those nights when I'm tired, the kids are hungry and cranky and I just need to get dinner on the table. Some items I recommend keeping stocked at all times are; canned diced tomatoes, balsamic vinegar, white wine vinegar, olive oil, fresh Parmesan, boxed white wine, onions and garlic. With these few items you can easily throw together a pasta dish, supplemented with whatever fresh meats, or veggies are in your refrigerator. Even without additional items you can make a great pasta sauce with the above items alone!

This recipe calls for for fresh tomatoes and zucchini, but you could substitute any fresh vegetable you have on hand; spinach, bell peppers, mushrooms, broccoli, asparagus, you name it.

Goat Cheese and Ricotta Pasta with Balsamic Vegetables
http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/415.aspx

Also try our full meal with this recipe with great side dishes already picked out for you: http://www.saucyplate.com/Meals/236.aspx

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

A meal that I love, and my 4 year old will eat it too!



When I first made this meal I was experimenting with an Asian style stir fry that I was hoping would appeal to my son without having to be frozen chicken nuggets. I am always trying to develop new recipes that he will eat. He loves this chicken. It is sweet and savory, yet a new twist on the ever popular chicken. While he is yet to jump into the stir fried veggies, I just leave some cut up carrots on the side for him, add some ranch dressing to dip into and he's ready to go!

Sweet Soy Chicken with Stir Fried Veggies Meal
http://www.saucyplate.com/Meals/74.aspx

Holiday recipes: we can do better than canned cranberry sauce!



My family has a long tradition (well maybe my mom started it!) of trying out new recipes every Christmas. Some families like to make the same dishes every year, but my mom and I see the holidays as a time to get together in the kitchen and try something new, and the men are put on rug rat duty to give us some space to get cooking. But its okay with them, they always get the reward of a tasty meal!

If your holiday meals left you desiring something new, here are some great recipes that you can make all year. Then when the holidays come back around you will be ready to dazzle your in-laws!

Roasted Fall Vegetables with Brown Butter

http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/387.aspx

Pear and Berry Salad

http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/340.aspx

Tequila, Apple, Pear and Cranberry Relish

http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/396.aspx

Honey Butter Roast Chicken Breasts (also can be used for a Turkey)http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/389.aspx

Winter Squash: sounds cold, but actually quite steamy....


Cinnamon, cloves, butternut squash, its like the smell of winter in a soup! The keys to a well done pureed vegetable soup are as follows: 1) always cut your vegetable into equal sized pieces to ensure even cooking (to avoid lumpiness) 2) start cooking your vegetables in cold liquid and then bring to a boil 3) separate the liquids and solids before pureeing. Start with a little liquid in the blender with your solids (veg) and then slowly add more liquid until you reach your desired consistency. 4) Don't overfill your blender with hot liquid or it will overflow and make a hot giant mess!
Autumn Spice Butternut Squash Soup
http://saucyplate.com/Recipes/375.aspx

Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 40 minutes
Serves 12

Ingredients
16 cup butternut squash cut into 1 inch cubes (about 1 extra large squash)
3/4 cup shallots chopped
1 cup sweet onion chopped
1/2 tsp corriander
1/2 vanilla bean (split, seeds scraped and reserved)
1/2 tsp cloves crushed
1/4 tsp cayenne pepper
2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 tbsp maple syrup
1 cup celery chopped
1 cup carrots diced small
4 parsley stems
3 fresh thyme stems
2 whole black peppercorns
1 bay leaf
1 cheese cloth (5 inch square + twine to tie)
2 qt water (or enough to just cover vegetables)
1/4 cup marsala wine
1/4 cup cream
salt and pepper to taste

Directions

Combine coriander, vanilla bean seeds, cloves, cayenne, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
In a large soup pot, heat 2 tbsp canola oil over medium low heat. Add shallots and onion, and cook and stir until translucent. Add carrots, celery and spice mix. Cook for 5 more minutes. Add squash and enough cold water to cover.
Lay thyme and parsley stems, bay leaf and peppercorns on the square of cheese cloth, wrap and tie to create a packet. Add herb packet to soup. Bring soup to a boil, reduce heat to low and simmer for 30-40 minutes until vegetables are soft enough to easily puree. *Remove herb packet*
Working in small batches, puree soup in a blender until it has a smooth consistency. Add more water if needed to reach your desired thickness. When all of soup is pureed, return soup to the pot, bring it back up to a low simmer over medium heat.
Combine brown sugar, marsala, and syrup in a small sauce pan. Heat marsala mixture over medium heat until it just reaches a boil and sugar is dissolved. Slowly stir marsala mixture into the soup, tasting as you go until you reach your desired sweetness for the soup. Stir in cream and season with salt and pepper to taste. Serve hot.

Chef's Notes
If you are unable to find Marsala Wine, sweet sherry would be a good substitute.

Everything is Better with Bacon

Okay so its bad for you. Nitrates, sodium, fat...but it is still so delicious. So unless you are watching your fat intake (or cholesterol) there are lots of reasons to add bacon to your meal, primarily flavor and moisture. And in my book, prosciutto is just a fancy Italian word for bacon! So here are a few of my recipes that incorporate bacon, beyond a side dish for your pancakes!

Caramelized Onion, Spinach, Bacon and Fontina Strata
http://saucyplate.com/Recipes/186.aspx

Bacon Wrapped Sweet Orange Shrimp
http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/222.aspx

Prosciutto Wrapped Balsamic Chicken
http://www.saucyplate.com/Recipes/66.aspx