Our mistakes, missteps, and successes as we learn to live on less

Monday, June 20, 2011

Food Storage Recipe: Tamale Casserole.

I LOVE tamales.  Love them.  I discovered them when we moved to Ogden, and I can't get enough.  Problem is, they are a. expensive and b. not that easy to make.  I ran across a substitute on a food blog a few weeks ago that I thought might be acceptable.  It wasn't. The leftovers languished and were tossed out. So I tweaked a few things, and  it's better now.  It's still not smothered tamales from Javier's in Ogden, but it's good enough to make every couple of weeks, and it's food storage friendly, which makes me happy.  One of the kids ate it, and the other just at the cornbread off the top, but that's not too bad for a new meal.

The dish is a seasoned meat mixture topped with cornbread.  The sauce from the meat mixes with the bottom  of the cornbread, making that really good seasoned corn flavor that I love from real tamales.  Overall, I like it, and I'm happy to have a new food storage recipe to add to my rotation.


Bottom layer:
1 pound ground or shredded meat.  I used ground turkey, but chicken, beef, elk, or whatever is in the freezer or in a can on the shelf would work just fine.   That strange TVP stuff might even work, but I haven't been brave enough to try it yet in anything.  Or even buy it.  Or even look at it too closely.
Onions.  I used dehydrated, which I put in the pan with the meat when it was mostly cooked. 
1 small can tomato sauce
2 small cans green chiles
Cumin
Red chili powder

Put meat in pan and brown it.  Add the onions and brown them, then the other ingredients.  Stir until cooked and seasoned.

Topping:
1 1/4 cups flour
3/4 cup corn meal
1 tbsp sugar
2 tsp baking powder
dash salt
1 cup skim milk (or powdered substitute)
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 egg or two egg whites (or powdered eggs)

Mix dry ingredients.  In a separate bowl, beat egg with a fork.  Add milk and oil.  Combine wet and dry ingredients and stir until just moistened.

Put meat mixture in a square casserole dish.  Spoon cornbread over the top.  Bake at 350 for 30-35 minutes.

Jam

There is a store here in Utah County, our new home, called Sunflower Market.  Actually, it's called Sunflower Farmer's Market, but it has no resemblance to an actual farmer's market, I refuse to call it that (close rant).

This store is basically a Whole Foods clone, complete with overpriced bakery, overpriced snacks, bulk bins, and occasional good sales.  Every week they do have a produce loss leader, which I take full advantage of.  Last week, it was peaches for 47 cents a pound.

I made four trips for peaches, so as not to clean them out.  A helpful employee told me which days they get produce deliveries, so I showed up on those days, ready to pick up another ten or fifteen pounds of peaches.

We have peach cobbler.  We have bottled peaches (though not very many.  I didn't remember just how much time and work those take.  A whole day, and I got eight quarts).  We have a lot of peach jam.  This sale coincided with a sale of strawberries at another store, so we have a LOT of jam.  Like, thirty pints of jam.  I added it up, and I think I spent sixty dollars on all the jam, which should last us a good long time.

I love to see all the jam stored on the shelves in my new pantry.  I love that I spent a lot less on it than I would have had I bought it in a store.  Mostly, I just love homemade jam.