Recipes and Tips to Use Different Ingredients


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Benefits Of Eating Local Food

Filed under: Main — Susanne @ 11:47 am

Happy Earth Day!

I’m taking a break from our usual format today to talk to you about why eating local food is important. But don’t worry, after this little rant, we’ll move right back to the “What Can I Make With ….” Format.

Most of us realize that the way we eat affects our health. If we eat badly then we can expect that we may have poor health too. By the same token, the way that we eat has a tremendous impact on the health of the planet.

We have become so accustomed to eating foods grown in far away places that we do not give it a second thought. Most produce in the United States travels an average of 1,500 miles before it gets sold. Just think about it, the bananas you eat probably come from South America. The distance your food travels has serious effects on your health and the climate.

When foods are brought in from a distance it is impossible to identify the pesticides used and the route taken to grow and transport the food to local supermarkets. Foreign countries might not have the same controls and safety regulations that we do. Control over what you are putting into your body is limited.

Local farmers tend to use fewer chemicals than large factory farms. Fruits and vegetables have a longer time to ripen. The food will be fresher, often having been picked within 24 hours. This means the food will be more delicious and contain more nutritional value.

Eating locally grown foods is just plain safer. The threat of bioterrorism is greatly reduced. Food that has to travel a long distance to get from farm to plate has a far greater risk of food contamination.

The transportation of food around the globe is not without impact. In fact it has an adverse affect on our climate and our air quality. It directly affects global warming and pollution. Buying locally grown produce and food items reduces the pollution going into our atmosphere and it reduces fuel consumption.

Eating foods grown locally give you a greater variety. A farmer who is not concerned with shipping foods, shelf life of the produce, or supermarket demands for ‘name brands’ is free to try small crops of different varieties. Local produce translates to eating foods when they are in season. This means you will be enjoying foods when they are the most abundant, at their nutritional peak, and the least expensive.

Purchasing food that has been locally grown keeps your dollars circulating within the community. Farmers on average get less than half the value on a dollar after transportation, processing, packaging, refrigeration, and marketing costs. Farmers who sell food to local customers receive the full retail value, a dollar for each food dollar spent. Additionally, eating locally encourages the use of local farmland for farming, thus giving farmers an economic reason to keep development in check while preserving open space.

By eating locally grown food you will help to reduce fuel consumption and global warming, strengthen the local economy, and protect the environment. You will also be eating fresher, tastier fruits and vegetables while safeguarding the health of your family.

How about you? Do you try to buy local produce? Where do you find it? What’s your motivation to go out and try to find local food in this era of Mega Marts that ship in stuff from all over the world?


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What Can I Make With Cantaloupe

Filed under: Fruits, Main — Susanne @ 11:16 am

My local grocery store had a sale on Cantaloupe this week and I just couldn’t resist. The sweet smell of these delicious melons …. Anyway, I ended up buying three of them. I cut up the first one right away and we enjoyed it with some fresh pineapple chunks and some grapes as a fruit salad. The question is… what do I do with the other two?

We like to eat them just peeled, seeded and cut into chunks with some toast for breakfast, but I’m sure there are plenty of other things you can do with these melons. What are your favorite cantaloupe recipes?


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What Can I Make With Rhubarb

Filed under: Fresh Vegetables, Main, Vegetables — Susanne @ 10:15 am

One of the first vegetables that’s ready to harvest is rhubarb each year. I love this tart first vegetable of the season and with all the rain we had recently, my rhubarb plants are growing like crazy right now. The first stalks should be ready for harvest in just a few days.

Usually I have just enough to make a couple of rhubarb pies, but this year looks like quite a bit more. So I guess my question is what do you make with Rhubarb?

Here’s my favorite rhubarb pie recipe:

* 4 cups chopped rhubarb
* 1 1/3 cups white sugar
* 6 tablespoons all-purpose flour
* 1 tablespoon butter
* 1 recipe pastry for a 9 inch double crust pie

Preheat oven to 450F

Combine sugar and flour. Sprinkle 1/4 of it over pastry in pie plate. Heap rhubarb over this mixture. Sprinkle with remaining sugar and flour. Dot with small pieces of butter. Cover with top crust.

Place pie on lowest rack in oven. Bake for 15 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 350F, and continue baking for 40 to 45 minutes.


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What Can I Make With Boiled Eggs?

Filed under: Main, Other Stuff — Susanne @ 11:48 am

I hope you had a great Easter. We had a good time coloring and decorating almost 2 dozen eggs. Of course now I’m left with plenty of hard boiled eggs. I’ve been storing them in the fridge, so they are still save to eat for a few more days. So far we’ve been snacking on them by peeling them and then sprinkling them with a little salt. But we are all getting a little tired of that and there are still plenty of boiled eggs left.

What are your favorite recipes and ideas for hard boiled eggs?


Make all your favorite restaurant dishes at home with the Copy Cat Cookbook.

What’s Your Favorite Fish Recipe?

Filed under: Main, Seafood — Susanne @ 1:18 pm

Since today is Good Friday and I was raised catholic, I’m going to prepare some fish for dinner. Depending on the weather, I usually bake it or cook it on the grill. Since it’s supposed to be rainy today, we’re having some baked white fish fillets for dinner.

By far my favorite is to wrap a salmon fillet in some aluminum foil with some lemon and dill and then either bake it or cook it on the grill (in the foil) until it is done.

How about you? What’s your favorite fish fillet? Submit your recipe as a comment below.


Make all your favorite restaurant dishes at home with the Copy Cat Cookbook.

What Can I Make With Grapes?

Filed under: Fruits, Main — Susanne @ 4:56 pm

I recently bought a bunch of grapes on sale. We love to eat them just as they are. I usually keep a bowl of fresh, washed and ready to eat fruit on my kitchen table, including grapes of course. It’s a great way to get everyone in the family to snack on fresh fruit.

Staring at that big bunch of grapes on the table got me thinking though…I’m sure there are a bunch of fantastic recipes that call for grapes. Care to share some as a comment below?

I’ll start by sharing one of ours…

Fruit Kabobs

Get some of your favorite fresh or canned fruit. Wash and shop into bite size chunks as needed. Thread the fruit pieces on bamboo skewers and serve these fruit kabobs with vanilla yogurt to dip them in. Grapes work perfect for these since they are already bite size.


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What Can I Make With Leftover Spaghetti?

Filed under: Main, Pasta & Rice — Susanne @ 9:54 am

For some reason I always cook quite a bit more spaghetti than we end up eating in one meal. If I have sauce leftover too, I usually just store the two together and reheat them the next day for lunch.

But there are quite a few times when I have pasta leftover, but no sauce - usually that’s on a day when I don’t have a jar of tomato sauce in the pantry either.

Any ideas on what else to do with leftover cooked spaghetti? I’m sure there are quite a few delicious things I could be doing with this…


Make all your favorite restaurant dishes at home with the Copy Cat Cookbook.

What Can I Make With Carrots

Filed under: Fresh Vegetables, Main, Vegetables — Susanne @ 8:46 am

I almost always have a bag of baby carrots in the fridge. We love to much on them as a snack or appetizer and I serve them as a side dish of sorts with lunch. Everyone in the family enjoys them dipped in a little ranch dressing, but we don’t really like cooked carrots all that much. I toss a few handfuls of them in when I make pot roast, but that’s about it.

Needless to say, I need some new ideas on what to do with carrots. Do you prefer ready to eat baby carrots or do you use the whole regular ones? What are your favorite ways to prepare them? Share your recipes as a comment below.


Make all your favorite restaurant dishes at home with the Copy Cat Cookbook.

What Can I Make With Oysters

Filed under: Main, Meats, Seafood — Susanne @ 4:41 pm

Steamed OystersWe’ve been spending a lot of time at the beach lately and since this is Oyster season, we’ve splurged and got a whole bushel of local oysters. They are absolutely fabulous raw and steamed, but even so there’s only so often I can eat them and we have barely made a dent in this huge bag of oysters.

My favorite way to eat them is to just steam them, dip them in a little melted butter and eat them, but I’m sure there’s a lot more you can do with them. Do you have a good recipe for oyster stew? How do you fry them and what else do you make with fresh oysters? I’d love to hear your ideas and recipes, so please leave them as a comment below.


Make all your favorite restaurant dishes at home with the Copy Cat Cookbook.

What Can I Make With Lemonade?

Filed under: Drinks, Main — Susanne @ 10:51 am

We love Lemonade at our house and I almost always have a pitcher of it sitting in the fridge. We drink plenty of lemonade and ice tea all summer long. I’m much more comfortable with everyone drinking it than soda all day long.

Since it’s still pretty cool around here, and we were all nursing a cold, I thought about something my mother used to make for us as kids, which was basically a hot lemonade, sweetened with honey. So I grabbed a mug of lemonade and heated it in the microwave and it turned out great. Not only does it taste yummy, it feels wonderful on my throat and the steam helps loosen up congestion.

That got me thinking…are there any other uses and recipes for lemonade. I’m sure you can use it to flavor all kinds of different stuff.


Make all your favorite restaurant dishes at home with the Copy Cat Cookbook.
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