Venus, guess whats cookin' tonite?

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I'll admit, I guess it's part of my generation (a sidenote: stay-at-home moms like mine are another drying trend) that I don't like pot roast, company chicken, etc...

However I LOVE corned beef and cabbage, seafood, some Mexican, Italian, & Spanish dishes, as well as fine Asian food (Sushi, Sashimi, etc)...makes my mouth water just thinking about it!
 
Pressure Cooker seafood for Austin

OK Austin, see what you think of this

SOUTH AMERICAN SEAFOOD STEW
5 minutes high pressure
3-4 minutes additional cooling

1 1/2 tbs olive oil plus 1/2 tsp paprika
1 cup coarsely chopped onions
2 tsp whole cumin seeds
3 cups fish broth or 24 oz bottled clam juice
1/4 tsp crushed red pepper flakes2 large bay leaves
1 1/4 lbs. yellow plaintains or Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut into 1/2 inch pieces
1 1/2 lbs calabaza pumpkin or butternut squash, peeled and cut into 1 1/2 inch chunks
1 15 oz can diced tomatoes or whole plum tomatoes, chopped, with liquid
1 tsp salt, or to taste
1-2 cloves garlic, pushed through a press
1 tsp dried oregano leaves
1 lb.firm-fleshed white fish fillets, such as triped bass, flounder, or scrod, cut into 1 inch chunks
1/2 pound small or medium shrimp, shelled & deveined
1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro
2 tbs freshly squeezed lime juic, or more to taste.

Heat the oil in the cooker over medium high heat. Cook the onions and cumin, stirring frequently, for 2 minutes. Add the fish broth, red pepepr flakes, bay leaves, and plaintains/potatoes. Set the calabeza pumpkin/butternut squash on top. Pour the tomatoes over the squash and sprinkle with salt. DO NOT STIR.

Lock the lid in place. OVer high heat, bring to high pressure. Reduce the heat just enough to maintain high pressure and cook for 3 minutes. Quick-release the pressure. Remove lid, tiltilng it away from you to shield from the steam

Stir well as you add the garlic and oregano; remove the bay leaves.(most of the calbeze is likely to melt into a puree and thicken the sauce.) Over medium heat, bring to a gentle boil Add the fish and cook, uncovered, for 2 minutes, stirring gently once or twice. Add the shrimp and cook until the fish becomes opaque and eaily flakes and the shrimp turns pink, 1-2 minutes more.

Adjust for salt and stir in the cilantro and enough lime juice to sharpen the flavors and give the stew a slight acid edge. Serve inlarge soup bowls.

From "The Pressured Cook", Lorna Sass
 
That sounds DELICIOUS! My mouth is watering!

Mom & I will definitely have to make this next week!

Thanks for the recipe!
 
Pressure Cooker Fish Stew

Jaune:

This dish sounds great. Had to laugh though, Austin says he'd love it, and daughter Hayley says no way. Guess you can't please all of the people all of the time! LOL

BTW, Hubby freaked out over the rice pudding. He had never eaten it before (he's a rice and gravy kind of guy) and the thought of "sweet rice" just grossed out his taste buds. What a priceless expression on his face though when he took a bite! My rice pudding almost came out of my nose, I started laughing so hard!!:-D

Thanks again for the recipes; will do the guinea pig test on the family ;-)

Venus
 
Rice pudding for hubby

So it wasn't really clear if he liked it or not. So he'd never even tried ready-made rice pudding ever before? If so, that's really suprising. Of the ready-made stuff, I find Kozy brand to be the best.
 
Another recipe to share

Here is a recipe of my own invention. It's very simple, and everybody seems to enjoy it.

FRENCH ONION CHICKEN

2-3 chicken breasts, skinned and boned
A little olive oil & butter
1-2 cloves garlic, minced
1 pkg dry onion soup mix
1 (11 oz.) can mushrooms, undrained

Cut chicken into good-sized chunks. Heat pressure cooker and brown chicken in oil & butter. Add garlic, soup mix, and mushrooms WITH LIQUID. Cook 15 minutes at 15 lbs. pressure. Let pressure drop of its own accord (as the 1971 Presto booklet says). Remove chicken to serving dish and reduce sauce by furious boiling OR thicken with cornstarch. Pour over chicken and serve.

Serves maybe 3 members of my family...I guess that's 5 or 6 normal people.
 
Sounds yummy!

Spiralactivator:

This sounds delicious. May have to scrape the mushrooms off for hubby (picky, picky).

Jaune:

Hubby NEVER had rice pudding. I was surprised too. I also love Kozy rice pudding. Have you ever tried their flan or tapioca. I love those too. Daughter doesn't like "bits" in her pudding so rice pudding and tapioca are out, but she may try the flan. This is a kid who will eat blue food (blech). Go figure. ;
 
Pudding

I've had Kozy's tapioca pudding(I LOVE tapioca pudding), but not their Flan, at least, not yet. Unfortuantely, none of that stuff is really conducive to my Atkin's Diet regimen. So I can only do it once in a while.
 
Better Homes & Gardens Cookbooks

Was going through my collection of cookbooks for the pressure cook (didn't realize I actually have SIX of them) and one of them was from BH&G, so thought I'd see what they had to offer.

Editor, Lisa Mannes
1995
ISBN: 0-696-20410-X
Library of Congress Catalog Car Number: 95-75621

Here's one that maybe Austin & Halyley can agree on.

SHREDDED BEEF TACOS

Use any leftover meat in a taco salad. Arrange the meat, cheese, and guacamole on a bed of leaf lettuce. Add some salso for a quick slad dressing and servie with corn chips.

Preparation time: 10 minutes
Cooking time: 45 minutes

2 lbs. boneless beef chuck roast, 2 inches thick
2 tbs cooking oil
3/4 cup chopped green or red bell pepper

1/2 chopped onion

2-3 cloves garlic, minced

2 dried chipotle or jalapeno peppers, seeded and chopped

1 tbs chili powder
3/4 beef broth or beef stock
8 8 inch flour tortillas

Optional
Guacamole
Dairy sour cream
shredded cheddar cheese
shredded lettuce

Trim any visible fat from the neat, set aside
In a 4 or 6 quart pressure cooker heat 1 tablespoon of oil over medium heat. Cook meat until brown on all sides. Add more oil if needed. Remove the meat and set aside. Drain off fat.
Place the rack in the pressure cooker. Return the meat to the cooker and add the bell pepper, onion, garlic, peppers, chili powder, and beef broth or stock.
Lock lid in place. Bring to 15 pounds pressure. Cook for 35 minutes
Allow pressure to come down naturally. Carefully remove lid. Meanwhile, heat tortillas according to package directions.
Transfer neat to a cutting board. Using the tines of 2 forks, pull the meat across the grain to form shreds. With a slotted spoon remove the vegetables to a serving platter. Combine with meat.
On each tortilla spoon about 1/2 cup of the meat mixture. If desired, top with guacamole, sour cream, cheese, and lettuce. Roll up tortillas.
 
changing tastes

"Well, I'm thinking Austin is probably just expressing himself right now food-wise, in a few years he will probably feel entirely differently about company chicken and things like that. :)"

I've had complete reversals in taste from childhood to adulthood. HATED seafood as a child, now I love it, especially since I found out that frying it in cornmeal the way my family did it wasn't the only way it could be cooked. I liked tomatoes and pickles as a child, now I'm just now starting to like (raw) tomatoes again and I still hate pickles as an adult. And with the tomato thing, it's only RAW tomatoes I didn't like. Tomato soup, stewed tomatoes, salsa, tomato juice were all devoured.
 
Picky , picky, picky...

Jaune:

Yes, I know what you mean about a "maturing palate". I used to detest green beans. Now I cook them with diced bacon, onion, chicken broth, and lots of pepper. Wow, they taste great that way. However, the one thing I still can't stand is BEETS. Yuk! To me they have always tasted like metal >:[

Hopefully when the kids get older everything will balance out.
 
Thanks for that hint Venus, I love green beans but have never thought of using chicken broth to cook them in. I will give that a try. Terry
 
Lovin/hatin food

Green beans are great if you don't overcook to khaki green, so is broccoli. I used to hate spinach as a kid, so my father used to mix them into mashed potatos (hence, green mashed potatos) & I loved em. I grew to like spinach, & I'll even eat Boston Market's version of creamed spinach.
Beets are good pickled, or with butter
Pickles I've never been fond of (Dill), until I tried half-sours, which have garlic in them & are much greener
(I can eat 1/2 a jar in one shot, though no kissing!)
One thing I detested as a child was cottage cheese, but dorm food cured me of that.
Jerry
 
I used to make my own chicken broth.I love using Campbell's chicken broth or Swanson's broth in making many recipes.White rice cooked in chicken broth is delicious.

For a canned broth, Campbell's makes a pretty good one.IMO it is far better tasting than College Inn.
 
1946 pressure cooker

As a teenager digging through the cupboards (this was mid-70's), I found Mom's old pressure cooker. Don't recall her ever using it, but somehow I managed to get it into my 'pile' when divvying up the household years later... it's a "During Scale-O-Matic," with a copyright date of 1946 on the owner's manual/cookbook. The lid has a cantilevered arm with a weight which slides up and down this arm for 5-10-15 lb. Still going strong... used it about a month ago to cook beans. Solid die cast aluminum.
 
1946 pressure cooker

As a teenager digging through the cupboards (this was mid-70's), I found Mom's old pressure cooker. Don't recall her ever using it, but somehow I managed to get it into my 'pile' when divvying up the household years later... it's a "During Scale-O-Matic," with a copyright date of 1946 on the owner's manual/cookbook. The lid has a cantilevered arm with a weight which slides up and down this arm for 5-10-15 lb. Still going strong... used it about a month ago to cook beans. Solid die cast aluminum.
 
1946 Pressure Cooker

Wow, I love to hear about someone who appreciates vintage small appliances. Those pressure cookers will probably outlast all of us. About the only things that could go wrong on them are the rubber gaskets or losing the regulator (if it isn't permantly affixed).

Enjoy your pressure cooker like we do (but watch out for exploding beef stew ;-); one of my previous experiences).
 

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