Posts Tagged ‘corn’

Shepherd’s Pie

October 7, 2011

Ground Beef AND/OR Lamb (1.5-2 lbs)
Onion (1 medium, minced)
Carrots (2 medium, minced in food processor)
Garlic (4 large cloves, minced or pressed)
Ketchup (2 tbsps)
Flour (1/4 cup)
Worcestershire Sauce (2 tsps)
Frozen Peas (1/2 cup or more)
Canned Corn (1 can) OR Frozen Corn
Russet Potatoes (4 medium, cubed)
Heavy Cream (1/2 cup)
Cheddar Cheese (shredded)
Butter (2 tbsps)
Green Onions
Chives
Paprika
Parsley
Thyme
Rosemary
Salt
Pepper

Brown the ground beef in a skillet, breaking up the meat, until the meat is cooked. Set the meat aside. Keep some of the fat in the pan.

Meanwhile, get the water boiling for the potatoes. Add salt to the water. Bring to a boil then simmer until the potatoes are tender.

Saute the onions, carrots, and salt in the rendered fat until soft. Add in the garlic, ketchup, and flour. Stir in the Worcestershire sauce, your choice of herbs, and green onions and cook until the mixture has thickened and the flour has absorbed, about 2 minutes. Turn of the heat and add the frozen peas and season with salt and pepper. Pat the meat in a layer of a casserole or baking dish. If you like a thick layer of meat, use a casserole; if you like a thinner layer, use a baking dish or roasting pan.

Now you need to mash the potatoes. Drain them and mash them, with or without skins–your preference. I used a potato ricer, because that produces the best result. Stir in butter, cream, salt, pepper, and chives until the potatoes are the desired consistency.

Over the layer of meat in the dish, add a layer of corn one kernel thick. Then carefully dollop mashed potatoes onto the dish and spread with a spatula. Sprinkle top with cheddar and paprika.

Bake at 450 until the edges are bubbling and browning for about 30 minutes.

Yummy Yummy Couscous

September 5, 2009

Pinenuts
Israeli Couscous (large grain)
Onions or Shallots, diced
Chicken Broth
Salt
Pepper
Cinnamon
Nutmeg
Lemon Juice
Parsley
Raisins
Cranberries, dried
Optional:
Corn, frozen
Chicken, slivered

Toast the pinenuts in some oil. Take out the pinenuts and keep the oil in the pan. Add couscous and onions and toast until some of the couscous turns golden brown. Add broth, salt, pepper, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Cook until the couscous is done. Add corn and chicken bits near the end of cooking if you want those (or anything else you might come up with–black beans, chickpeas, maybe?). When its completely done, add pinenuts, lemon juice, parsley, raisins and cranberries (if you add the raisins any sooner they get kind of soggy and gross… unless your raisins are particularly dried out).

Inspired by: TJ Israeli Couscous Recipe

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