Sunday, September 29, 2024

Creamy Chicken Taco Soup

This Creamy Chicken Taco Soup boasts chunks of tender chicken, sweetcorn, and black beans in a rich, spicy cheesy tomato broth. Taco flavors in a bowl to warm you up! 

Food Lust People Love: This Creamy Chicken Taco Soup boasts chunks of tender chicken, sweetcorn, and black beans in a rich, spicy cheesy tomato broth. Taco flavors in a bowl to warm you up!

When we are in Texas, tacos are on our menu frequently because I can buy our favorite tortillas freshly made at a neighborhood store. They are made with half wheat flour and half corn so are called mitad y mitad - half and half. They are softer than corn tortillas with more texture than plain flour ones. Truly, the perfect mix. 

Here in the Channel Islands, corn tortillas are hard to come by and I cannot abide flour ones so we spend our summers mostly taco-less. I did pack a bag of masa harina in the suitcase this year, along with a tortilla press so I could make my own. A girl’s gotta do what a girl’s gotta do. 

Had the weather been cooperating, I’d have marinated my chicken breasts and we’d have grilled them for actual tacos. Since it’s pouring down rain and the wind is howling, I decided taco soup was more fitting. 

Creamy Chicken Taco Soup

For this recipe, I use bone-in, skin on chicken breasts because they add more flavor to the soup as they simmer. The trick is to simmer the chicken slowly so you can remove the pieces whole to debone and shred.

Ingredients
1 tablespoon canola or other light oil
1 medium onion
4 cloves garlic
1 1/2 oz or 42g roasted red peppers
3 tablespoons taco seasoning
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon cayenne
Several generous grinds black pepper
6 cups or 1440ml chicken stock
1 can (14 oz or 400g) crushed tomatoes
2 chicken breasts (weight about 1 lb 5 oz or 600g with bones)
8 oz or 225g cream cheese (cut into cubes)
2 cups or 280g frozen corn
1 can (14 oz or 400g) black beans, drained and rinsed

To finish:
Fine sea salt, to taste (Keep in mind that some taco seasonings and chicken stock have a lot of salt so definitely taste before adding more.)

Optional toppings: cilantro, cheddar cheese, tortilla chips, lime wedges for squeezing

Method
Peel and finely chop your onion and garlic. (Use a small food processor if you have one!)


Chop the roasted red pepper with a sharp knife. 


In a large pot, sauté the onion and garlic with the oil until they are soft, about 5 minutes.


Stir in the chopped red pepper, taco seasoning, smoked paprika, cumin, cayenne and black pepper. 


Add the chicken stock, canned tomatoes and chicken breasts.


Bring the pot to a low boil then reduce the heat and simmer, covered, for about 30 minutes or until the breasts are cooked through. I insert a thermometer in mine to check. When it reads 180°F or 82°C, the chicken is done.

Remove the chicken from the pot and set it aside till it's cool enough to handle.  


Add the cream cheese to the pot and stir. Leave it to melt while you deal with the chicken. 


Remove the skin, bones and any cartilage from the breasts. Pull the meat apart into bite size pieces. 


Add the chicken, corn and black beans to the pot and stir. Gently heat the soup until it’s hot through.


Serve the soup with the toppings of your choice but I highly recommend squeezing a little lime juice on it. 

Food Lust People Love: This Creamy Chicken Taco Soup boasts chunks of tender chicken, sweetcorn, and black beans in a rich, spicy cheesy tomato broth. Taco flavors in a bowl to warm you up!

Enjoy!

It’s Sunday FunDay and today we are sharing taco recipes in celebration of National Taco Day! Many thanks to our host Camilla from Culinary Cam. Check out the links below. 

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.



Pin this Creamy Chicken Taco Soup! 

Food Lust People Love: This Creamy Chicken Taco Soup boasts chunks of tender chicken, sweetcorn, and black beans in a rich, spicy cheesy tomato broth. Taco flavors in a bowl to warm you up!

.

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Stuffed Turkey Cutlets

Stuffed Turkey Cutlets are a fun, attractive way to serve turkey and stuffing. Each person gets an individual stuffed “turkey” wrapped in bacon. This recipe is great main dish for a low stress party. No more wondering if the turkey is perfectly done. It is! 

Food Lust People Love: Stuffed Turkey Cutlets are a fun, attractive way to serve turkey and stuffing. Each person gets an individual stuffed “turkey” wrapped in bacon. This recipe is great main dish for a low stress party. No more wondering if the turkey is perfectly done. It is!

Personally, we like stuffing all year long, not just for Thanksgiving and Christmas, so I often find myself frying sausage meat and mixing it up to roast under chicken thighs, as a filling for squash or occasionally, just baking it in a pan as a side dish. 

You will find the ingredient list and method below for the stuffing I make over and over again but please feel free to use your favorite recipe here as well. I know that for some families their own treasured stuffing recipe cannot be changed! 

Stuffed Turkey Cutlets

Cutlets or escalopes of turkey can be found at most grocery stores these days. While they are more expensive per pound than a whole turkey, not a bit will go to waste. And look at how pretty they are! 

Ingredients
For the sausage stuffing:
7 1/2 oz or 215g good quality fresh sausage (3-4 links)
6-7 slices stale bread, toasted and cubed
1/3 cup or 75g butter
1 medium-sized onion, finely chopped
2-3 stalks celery, finely chopped
1 tablespoon poultry seasoning
1 1/2 cups or 180ml turkey or chicken stock
Freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 large egg

To assemble:
10 turkey cutlets (approx. weight 2 1/2 lbs or 1135g) 
10 slices smoked bacon
toothpicks

For decoration – optional
20 fresh sage leaves
10 fresh cranberries
toothpicks

Method
Cube the bread and add it to a large bowl that all the stuffing ingredients will fit in, with room to stir.


Remove the sausage from the casings and fry until golden in a skillet, breaking it into crumbles as you go. Remove the sausage from the pan with a slotted spoon and remove all but a tablespoon of any rendered fat. 


Add the butter to the frying pan and turn the heat on low. Sauté the onion and celery in the butter until it’s soft and translucent. 


Add the poultry seasoning, a few generous grinds of black pepper, and the 1/2 teaspoon of cayenne and mix well. 


Add the onion mixture to the bowl with the bread. 


Add the crumbled fried sausage back in and stir. Now add the broth and stir again.
 

Set the stuffing aside to cool. 

Meanwhile, put the turkey cutlets, one at a time, between two large pieces of cling film on a cutting board and use the side of your rolling pin or a similar implement to flatten them out. 


Use new pieces of cling film for each turkey cutlet and set them in a stack, still between the cling film till you’ve pounded them all flat. 

Add the egg to the cooled stuffing and mix well. 

Lay one turkey cutlet on your working surface. Remove the top piece of cling film and discard. Put about 1/10th of the stuffing into the middle of the turkey cutlet and fold the sides over to cover it securely. 


Roll each of the stuffed turkey cutlets up in the bottom piece of cling film and line them up to chill on a plate in the refrigerator as you get them each made.
 
Once they are all made, preheat your oven to 375°F or 190°C. 

Remove the cling film from each cutlet and wrap them with one slice of bacon. Secure with toothpicks and place in a large baking pan. 


Roast in your preheated oven for about 35-40 minutes or until the bacon is crispy and center of the stuffing reaches a safe minimum internal temperature of 165°F or 74°C.

If desired, decorate each stuffed cutlet by securing two sage leaves and a fresh cranberry with a toothpick. Remove the other toothpicks to serve.

Food Lust People Love: Stuffed Turkey Cutlets are a fun, attractive way to serve turkey and stuffing. Each person gets an individual stuffed “turkey” wrapped in bacon. This recipe is great main dish for a low stress party. No more wondering if the turkey is perfectly done. It is!

Of course, the pan drippings can used to make gravy and I recommend you do! Follow this easy instructional video from TheKitchn.

Serve the stuffed turkey cutlets with cranberry sauce and your favorite gravy. 

Food Lust People Love: Stuffed Turkey Cutlets are a fun, attractive way to serve turkey and stuffing. Each person gets an individual stuffed “turkey” wrapped in bacon. This recipe is great main dish for a low stress party. No more wondering if the turkey is perfectly done. It is!

Enjoy! 

Welcome to the 20th edition of the 2024 Alphabet Challenge, brought to you by the letter T. Many thanks to Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm for organizing and creating the challenge. Check out all the T recipes below:
Food Lust People Love: Stuffed Turkey Cutlets are a fun, attractive way to serve turkey and stuffing. Each person gets an individual stuffed “turkey” wrapped in bacon. This recipe is great main dish for a low stress party. No more wondering if the turkey is perfectly done. It is!

.


Sunday, September 22, 2024

Jersey Slow Cooker Beans

The perfect dish for a leftover ham bone or pork knuckle, Jersey slow cooker beans are a traditional meal in the Channel Islands, baked in a bean crock. 

Food Lust People Love: The perfect dish for a leftover ham bone or pork knuckle, Jersey slow cooker beans are a traditional meal in the Channel Islands, baked in a bean crock. Nowadays we can use a slow cooker.

Given the many, many vintage bean crocks I see on the shelves of charity shops here on the island of Jersey, not many families are using those to cook the Jersey bean mix still found in grocery stores. I can only assume that they are using slow cookers or perhaps even pressure cookers. 

Back in the olden days, the Jersey bean crock was filled at home and baked overnight in a nearby baker’s oven as it cooled down, since homes didn’t have modern ovens as we do now. 

Most recipes online agree that a mix of beans is essential, as is some type of pork and/or beef. These days, the meat tends to be pork belly, pork knuckle or ham but years ago, it was pig’s trotters, that is to say, feet and beef shin. For my money, something on a bone adds the most flavor, hence my use of pork knuckle or ham.

Cheap cuts of meat add a lot of flavor and, of course, beans are fairly inexpensive as well, making Jersey slow cooker beans a filling meal for farmers and townies alike. 

Fun fact: People native to the island of Jersey are known as “Jersey beans” because of this ubiquitous traditional dish! Once upon a time it was pejorative but now they’ve embraced the nickname and use it proudly. 

Jersey Slow Cooker Beans

The traditional mix includes at least six different kinds of beans, including the most enormous butter beans I’ve ever seen. Check out my photo of the beans below but you can use whatever mix of beans you have on hand. One old article I read said that Jersey bean crock was a great way to use up the leftover odds and ends of your bean supply.

Ingredients
1 pork knuckle or ham bone, with some good meat still on
1.1 lb or 500g mixed dried beans
1 medium carrot
1 medium onion
2 stock cubes (preferably ham, if you can find it, but chicken or vegetable will work)
Freshly ground black pepper


Method
If you have time or have planned ahead, you can soak the beans overnight in cool water. If, like me, you are slow off the mark when meal planning, boil a full kettle of water and pour it over the beans in a heatproof bowl. 


Cover the bowl with a plate and set a timer for one hour. 

When the hour is up, if using the quick soak method, or the next day, if soaking overnight, pour off the water and rinse the beans in cool water. 


Peel and chop your carrot and onion. 


Add the beans to the slow cooker, along with your pork knuckle or ham bone. 


Tip in the chopped carrot and onion. Pour in water to cover everything. Rather than add salt, I like to use stock cubes which add salt AND flavor. Add those in now. 


Cook on high for 6-7 hours.

When the beans are tender, transfer the pork to a plate with a slotted spoon. Discard bones, cartilage and gristle and return the meat to the bean pot. Season the mixture to taste with fine sea salt and black pepper. 

Food Lust People Love: The perfect dish for a leftover ham bone or pork knuckle, Jersey slow cooker beans are a traditional meal in the Channel Islands, baked in a bean crock. Nowadays we can use a slow cooker.

Serve, as is traditional, with crusty bread. 

Food Lust People Love: The perfect dish for a leftover ham bone or pork knuckle, Jersey slow cooker beans are a traditional meal in the Channel Islands, baked in a bean crock. Nowadays we can use a slow cooker.

Enjoy! 

It’s Sunday FunDay and today we are sharing slow cooker recipes. For some of us, it’s still too warm in our kitchens to turn on the stove and for others, the cooler weather of autumn is upon us and we need warming dishes. Slow cookers are great for both needs. Check out the links below.

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.


Pin these Jersey Slow Cooker Beans!

Food Lust People Love: The perfect dish for a leftover ham bone or pork knuckle, Jersey slow cooker beans are a traditional meal in the Channel Islands, baked in a bean crock. Nowadays we can use a slow cooker.

.

Sunday, September 15, 2024

Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road

This no-bake Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road is made of dried fruit, crunchy cookies and pecans covered in rich dark chocolate with butter and miso. It works wonderfully with any dried fruit, nut or cookie. Feel free to make substitutions! 

Food Lust People Love: This no-bake Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road is made of dried fruit, crunchy cookies and pecans covered in rich dark chocolate with butter and miso. It works wonderfully with any dried fruit, nut or cookie. Feel free to make substitutions!

A couple of months ago, I was visiting a dear friend and she gave me a brand-new cookbook, Dominique’s Kitchen. The author had won the honor of being published after competing on Jamie Oliver’s 2022 show, The Great Cookbook Challenge. As the show’s blurb says, “Jamie Oliver and Penguin Books team up to find the next big cookbook author, as cooks compete to impress the judges for a one-of-a-kind publishing deal.”

Imagine being offered the potential opportunity to have your cookbook published by such a large and prestigious publishing company! So much more pressure than The Great British Bake-off where all they get for sure is a cake stand. (Many do end up publishing cookbooks but it’s not guaranteed.)

I had watched a few episodes but somehow missed the final. The cook who won, Dominique Woolf, trained at Leith's School of Food and Wine. According to Amazon, she’s a food writer, entrepreneur and home cook to her young family.

All I can say it that we have thoroughly enjoyed cooking several recipes from Dominique’s Kitchen and this recipe is adapted from one of hers. 

Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road

This recipe is a great use of any stale cookies you might have in the cupboard. In fact, that’s why I made this the first time. While cleaning out the snack bin, I came across some milk chocolate Hobnobs that were past their best. They were perfect for rocky road though! I’ll never throw stale cookies away again and you shouldn’t either.


Ingredients
7 oz or 200g 70% cocoa dark chocolate
1/3 cup or 75g unsalted butter
3 tablespoons golden syrup (or honey)
1 tablespoon miso paste
10 Hobnobs (or your favorite crunchy cookie)
3 1/2 oz or 100g dried fruit, chopped if large (I used a mix of strawberries and cherries I had dehydrated myself)
3 1/2 oz or 100g pecans

Method
Line a 9x9 in or 23x23cm baking pan with baking parchment.

In a large skillet, toast the pecans over a medium heat, shaking the pan frequently so that they don’t burn. 


Roughly chop the pecans with a sharp knife. 


In a large bowl break up the Hobnobs or your chosen cookie, and stir in the chopped pecans and dried fruit. 


Put the chocolate, butter, golden syrup and miso paste in a microwavable bowl. 


Heat in the microwave on medium for one minute. Stir well and heat again for 30 seconds and stir again. Repeat until everything is melted and well combined.


Pour the melted chocolate mixture into the dry ingredients and stir to combine.


Tip the whole lot into your prepared baking pan and spread it out to the edges.  


Cover with cling film and press the mixture down. Put the pan in the refrigerator to set. 


Once set, slide the baking parchment on to a cutting board and cut the rocky road into squares. Store chilled if you live someplace warm.

Food Lust People Love: This no-bake Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road is made of dried fruit, crunchy cookies and pecans covered in rich dark chocolate with butter and miso. It works wonderfully with any dried fruit, nut or cookie. Feel free to make substitutions!

Enjoy!   

Food Lust People Love: This no-bake Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road is made of dried fruit, crunchy cookies and pecans covered in rich dark chocolate with butter and miso. It works wonderfully with any dried fruit, nut or cookie. Feel free to make substitutions!

It's Sunday FunDay so today my blogger friends and I are sharing candy recipes. Many thanks to our host, Karen of Karen's Kitchen Stories. Check out the links below. 

 
We are a group of food bloggers who believe that Sunday should be a family fun day, so every Sunday we share recipes that will help you to enjoy your day. If you're a blogger interested in joining us, just visit our Facebook group and request to join.


Pin this Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road! 

Food Lust People Love: This no-bake Dark Chocolate Miso Rocky Road is made of dried fruit, crunchy cookies and pecans covered in rich dark chocolate with butter and miso. It works wonderfully with any dried fruit, nut or cookie. Feel free to make substitutions!

 .