Sunday, July 31, 2011
Cooking with Ages 4-12
Ages 4 to 7 years:
•Allow them to measure some of the ingredients, such as flour, water, sugar
•Allow them to sift dry ingredients
•Let them spread butter or peanut butter on bread for sandwiches
•Let them stir the batter for muffins, cake, pancakes
•Children this age can learn to set the table correctly
•Ask for their decisions such as chocolate or white cake, oatmeal or vanilla cookies
Ages 6 to 8
•Let chop nuts for cookies using the Food Chopper
•Children can make peanut butter and jelly sandwiches with the Cut ’N Seal
•Allow them to open cans and drain, using the Pampered Chef can opener
•Let grate carrots and mix carrot and raisins and other salads
•Let frost cookies or cupcakes
•Show them how to peel potatoes, carrots and apples with the Vegetable Peeler
•Children can use a My Safe Cutter to cut up cooked potatoes or other soft foods
Ages 8 to 12 years:
•Let mix and bake cookies or a cake from a mix, supervising the removal from the oven, setting the oven temperature and timer, and use of the mixer, if used.
•Let mix together potato or macaroni salad, including chopping onion, pickle and other ingredients.
•Let them turn pancakes or French toast on the griddle.
•Allow to make biscuits, Jell-O, pizza or macaroni and cheese or other pre-packaged convenience foods with minimal supervision.
More tips and ideas next week!
Saturday, July 30, 2011
RoW - Strawberry Ice
The Pampered Chef ® Strawberry Ice Recipe
2 tbsp (30 mL) sugar
2 tbsp (30 mL) cold water, divided
2 cups (500 mL) frozen unsweetened strawberries
Cinnamon Crunch Chips (optional)
Place sugar and 1 tbsp (15 mL) of the water in (1-cup/250-mL) Prep Bowl; stir. Microwave on HIGH 20–30 seconds or until sugar is dissolved, stirring once. Add remaining water; stir. Place frozen strawberries in Small Batter Bowl. Microwave on HIGH 30–50 seconds or until strawberries are slightly thawed.
Add one-third of the strawberries to Manual Food Processor; cover and pump handle until coarsely chopped, scraping down sides as necessary. Add and coarsely chop remaining strawberries, one-third at a time, until all berries are coarsely chopped.
Add sugar mixture to strawberries. Cover and process to desired consistency. Serve ice immediately with Cinnamon Crunch Chips, if desired, or place in freezer until ready to serve.
Yield: 6 servings
Nutrients per serving: (1/4 cup/50 mL): Calories 35, Total Fat 0 g, Saturated Fat 0 g, Cholesterol 0 mg, Carbohydrate 9 g, Protein 0 g, Sodium 0 mg, Fiber 1 g
Cinnamon Crunch Chips
2 7-in. (18-cm) flour tortillas
1 tbsp (15 mL) Sweet Cinnamon Sprinkle
Preheat oven to 400°F (200°C). Lightly spray tortillas with water using Kitchen Spritzer. Sprinkle tortillas with sprinkle. Using Pizza Cutter, cut each tortilla into six wedges; arrange in a single layer on Large Round Stone with Handles.
Bake 8–10 minutes or until edges are lightly browned and crisp. Remove chips from baking stone to Stackable Cooling Rack; cool completely.
Yield: 12 chips (6 servings)
U.S. Nutrients per serving (2 chips): Calories 35, Total Fat 1 g, Saturated Fat 0 g, Cholesterol 0 mg, Carbohydrate 6 g, Protein 1 g, Sodium 90 mg, Fiber 0 g
© 2009 The Pampered Chef used under license.
Thursday, July 28, 2011
TSoW - Dorm Room Survival/Shower
Kids will soon be back in school, and that includes the ones going off to college! Did you know that college kids eat, too? Gasp! But, do they know how to fend for themselves in the wild areas of the college quads? Why not set them up with everything they will need to make, eat and store food? Host a Dorm Room Survival Show and stock your college-bound eating monster, and your friends', with the essentials. We'll make a microwave only recipe that they can make in their mini micro-fridge and show them an alternative to McDonalds and dry ramen. And, I have an electronic dorm room cookbook that everyone will receive via email after the show!
What are you waiting for?
Dorm Room Survival Tools From The Pampered Chef
Small Micro-cooker- heating up soups ….cooking macaroni and cheese, ramen noodles…or to make a “pot of tea” in the microwave!
Small Bar Pan- use in oven,microwave, or toaster oven. Cook up bacon, hot pockets, reheat pizza, Easiest Fudge Brownies (recipe included), or bake 4 ready-made cookies or an individual sized frozen pizza.
Cut N Seal- make your own hot pockets and crustless p&j sandwiches!
Small Bar Board- small cutting jobs, easy to store
Small and Large Batter Bowls- tuna and noodles in the microwave… mixing bowl, storage bowl for leftovers. You’ll use them for everything!
Quik Stir Pitcher- mix up OJ, or iced tea…will fit in fridge
Apple, Veggie, Mango, Pineapple Wedgers – promotes healthy snacking (apples, pears)
Small bowl, Small Squares- perfect size dishes for one, easy to store and stack, guaranteed, break and chip resistant, can microwave in them
Food Chopper- Save yourself time so you have more time to study! Great for apartment living too, when you have to do all your own cooking!
Manual Food Processor- whip up a quick batch of salsa to share!
Hot Pad/Trivet- use as an oven pad, a trivet, and to open jars
8" Saute Pan- Lifetime Guarantee, nothing sticks, perfect size (get the whole set at half price and give your student the smaller pieces!)
Twixits! – mandatory for closing bags of chips, pretzels, frozen waffles, or the bag of dirty laundry…also good for identifying your tube of toothpaste.
Tool Turn-About – Fill it with the remaining items on this page! Use some compartments for desk/craft supplies, too (scissors, pens, ruler, glue stick, highlighters,etc.)!
Can Opener- won’t rust, easier to use, won’t have to replace it in a year because it won’t turn, no sharp edges, lids can be put back on top of the can
Mini Serving Spatula- dish up those brownies easily, perfect small size
Paring Knife with case- safe to store (case) great for smaller cutting jobs, lifetime guarantee
Small Spreader – for spreading margerine, peanut butter, jam, icing, mayo, etc.
Cheese Knife- No small wire to break! You won’t have to replace this, works much better than a knife.
Skinny Scraper- small cans, peanut butter jars, stirring, can’t melt it.
Small or Mini Mix N Scraper- more like a spoon and spatula in one! Can use in cookware and won’t melt!
Citrus Peeler- won’t break a nail opening oranges or grapefruit!
Grapefruit Knife- Perfect for avoiding the “Freshman 15” (weight gain)
Mini Whipper- Whip up chocolate milk, and anything else that you need a whisk for
Bamboo Tongs- retrieve toast and bagels from the toaster without electrocuting or burning
Bamboo Spoons- won’t stain or crack
Small Bamboo Spoons- smaller jobs, serving up dips or salsa
Easy Opener- open up jars, sodas, bottles much easier, sticks on your dorm fridge
Monday, July 25, 2011
Product of the Week
The Manual Food Processor is a go-to product for my kitchen and when traveling. It has a small footprint - about 6" in diameter - and has a 3 cup volume. I have waited for a while to purchase a food processor because I wanted to have a spot for the processor to live. And, the $450 price didn't encourage me to invest, either. So when the Manual Food Processor came out this Spring, I was so excited! I wouldn't have a huge monster on my counter or taking up cupboard space. And who really wants to wrestle that out just to shred some green onions?
I have used this to make salsas (tomato based and tropical), egg salad, blizzards, tapenades and just general food processing! I even have a facebook page dedicated to the Manual Food Processor that you can join. I only allow recipes, tips and ideas - no sales!
If you do want to try the Manual Food Processor for yourself, let me know! We'll get together and make some Mango Confetti Salsa or Strawberry Ice or whatever! If you don't live near me we can still figure it out. Want to have it for your own? Check out my website, click on Order Products, Choice 2, Ok to Continue, New Products. Or you can contact me directly via email, facebook, twitter, phone, etc.
#2581 Manual Food Processor — $49.00
Just drop in ingredients and pump the handle! Our unique curved blades chop, slice and blend ingredients in seconds. The more you pump, the finer the cuts. Includes a handle lock for convenient storage, measure marks for easy measuring and nonskid base for stability. 3 cups. Vessel and blade post are dishwasher-safe.
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Cooking with Kids
Tips, hints and recipes for kids in the kitchen series
You know the pleasure you get from preparing and serving something that your family loves? Children can experience the same satisfaction when they help prepare food for themselves, their friends, or the whole family. It builds their confidence and self esteem and you can get dinner done while spending quality time with them. Just make it fun. Kids will eat what THEY make!
In fact, some professionals believe that cooking is as educational as it is exciting for children. Helping to cook involves several valuable skills important to child development:
•Planning a series of steps in a process
•Using mathematical skills to measure ingredients and time the cooking of foods
•Reading and interpreting written instructions used in recipes
•Expanding creative boundaries
•Mastering teamwork when cooking with adults and other children
Pampered Chef has the products to enable kids to do a good job in the kitchen, eliminating the frustration and impatience because they can “do it themselves!”
Supervision is the key to cooking with kids…they develop cooking skills at different rates so it’s important to have an adult introduce children to skills that match their ability levels. Preparing meals can be more fun and a lot of help when the whole family is involved. Try the following:
All Ages:
•Require washing hands before helping or independent cooking experiences.
•Encourage cooperation in kitchen clean-up.
•Stress safety with cutting tools, ovens, stove tops and appliances.
•Provide simple recipes and instructions.
•Have ingredients on hand for spur-of-the-moment cooking opportunities.
•Be available for help
Ages 3 to 5 years:
•Encourage to “help” - pour or dump ingredients when making cookies, Jell-O etc.
•Let them have their own set of measuring cups & spoons for the sandbox and wading pool or bath.
•Let them tear lettuce for salad, wash fruits and vegetables together.
•Enjoy the clean-up…let them lick the bowl or spoon, “because they were such good helpers”
More age appropriate tips next week!
Saturday, July 23, 2011
RoW - Recipe of the Week - Three Cheese Garden Pizza
Three-Cheese Garden Pizza
Garden-fresh vegetables and a trio of cheeses make this pizza a winner. You can serve it as an appetizer or a lighter main dish at around $2 per serving!*
1 pkg (13.8 oz) refrigerated pizza crust
1 tbsp plus 1 tsp vegetable oil, divided
2 garlic cloves, pressed
4 oz cheddar cheese, grated
4 oz mozzarella cheese, grated
1 oz Parmesan cheese, grated
1 tsp Italian seasoning
1 small onion
2 plum tomatoes
1 medium zucchini
1 cup mushrooms
1. Preheat oven to 400°F. Lightly brush 1 tsp of the oil over Large Bar Pan using Chef’s Silicone Basting Brush. Unroll dough onto bottom of pan, gently stretching and pressing dough to cover bottom. Place remaining oil in (1-cup) Prep Bowl. Press garlic into oil using Garlic Press; brush evenly over dough. Bake crust 7 minutes.
2. Meanwhile, grate cheddar and mozzarella cheeses using Ultimate Mandoline fitted with grating blade; place in Classic Batter Bowl. Grate Parmesan cheese over batter bowl using Microplane® Adjustable Grater. Add Italian seasoning using Adjustable Measuring Spoon; toss lightly using Small Mix ‘N Scraper® and set aside. Using Ultimate Mandoline, slice onion and tomatoes using v-shaped blade; slice zucchini using crinkle cut blade. Thinly slice mushrooms using Utility Knife.
3. Remove pan from oven to Stackable Cooling Rack. Sprinkle half of the cheese mixture evenly over crust; layer evenly with onion, zucchini, tomatoes and mushrooms. Sprinkle with remaining cheese mixture. Bake 15–18 minutes or until crust is golden brown; remove from oven to cooling rack. Cut into squares using Pizza Cutter. Serve using Mini-Serving Spatula.
Yield: 6 main dish servings or 12 appetizer servings
U.S. Nutrients per serving (1 main dish serving): Calories 350, Total Fat 15 g, Saturated Fat 8 g, Cholesterol 35 mg, Carbohydrate 36 g, Protein 17 g, Sodium 810 mg, Fiber 2 g
Cook’s Tips:
• Brushing the bar pan with about 1 tsp vegetable oil will produce a crisp, evenly browned crust.
• For best results, layer vegetables over the pizza in the order as directed in Step
• Prebaking the pizza crust will help keep it from getting soggy when topped with vegetables that have a high water content.
• Sprinkling some of the cheese on the crust before topping the pizza provides a barrier between the crust and the moist toppings.
• Italian Seasoning Mix can be substituted for the Italian seasoning, if desired.
*Prices based on main dish serving size. Prices are estimated and vary regionally.
Around $2 per serving!*
Friday, July 22, 2011
Now Hiring!
I don’t know which one of you- drops a child off at daycare, is a single mom or dad, has college tuition to pay for.
I don’t know which one of you has an adjustable mortgage, a car payment and student loans to pay off
As I look at you I don’t know which one of you dropped a child off at day care leaving them screaming, not having a vacation an adjustable mortgage rate that has gone up.
What I do know that this business has provided so many an opportunity to live their dreams.
What are YOUR dreams? Let's get together and see how Pampered Chef can help you achieve them!
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Theme Show of the Week
COLD STONE SHOW
Talk about yummy!! Oh wow! If your guests love the ice cream concoctions they get at Coldstone Creamery they’ll love this! I'll teach you how to make “Cold Stone” treats at home with a few simple ingredients and tools. GREAT for a hot summer treat without breaking the bank.
Tools we get to play with:
*Manual Food Processor
*Cool and Serve Square Tray
*Stoneware
*Forged Knives
*Easy Accent Decorator
*Simple Additions
...and more!
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Does it PAY to become a Direct Seller?
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Changes
Please take a moment to check it out, let me know what you do and don't like and suggest me to your friends! I'm working on this becoming the "hub" of my passion and my business - getting people back in the kitchen without the fear!
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
Fun, Fast and Fresh - It's Dinner
If you know what you are doing tomorrow night, your friends do, too! I'm looking for a few good hosts to invite everyone they know who has a US address, a mouth and eats! A friend is providing the place, I'll provide the food and paper goods...all you do is bring some friends, gather some orders and get lots of FREE and highly discounted Pampered Chef items!
On top of the amazing food we'll be making, I'm going to try to give away a Cool and Serve Square Tray for FREE (valued at $42) when guest sales reach $500! Bring friends and/or orders for a better chance of winning!
If you want to party with us, but don't want to host, email me and I'll send you an invitation! You can also place a $60 order on my website by June 30th and you'll get a FREE Savory Sauce of your choiceAND a VIP invitation to my 50% off sale to get rid of all my extra Pampered Chef products!
Monday, June 27, 2011
Power Cooking
Check out my facebook page on Power Cooking where I will be posting recipes and tips. I also offer Power Cooking Clubs and Workshops in the Treasure Valley, ID area as well as on my route from Boise, ID to Ft. Collins, CO: near Ogden, UT and Cheyenne, WY, etc. Just ask and I'll see what I can pull together!
Later this week I'll be posting tips on Power Cooking as well as recipes you can try out. I just love being able to take advantage of a sale on proteins and save time as well!
Thursday, December 18, 2008
Top 10 Resons Not to Sell PC
1) I find it easy to ask my boss for a raise I deserve.
2) Being laid off is a great way to catch up on sleep and to organize those photo albums.
3) I really do love wearing pantyhose and high heels to work every day.
4) I enjoy getting the kids up and dressed early and giving half my
paycheck to a day care provider.
5) After a ten hour day, it's relaxing to prepare dinner, catch up on
laundry, and drive the kids to their activities.
6) Living on one income is very easy to do these days - I don't know what I would do with any extra money.
7) Why would I want to earn free trips or any other incentive gifts?
8) I love working sixty hour weeks - it makes me enjoy my weekends that much more.
9) I really don't want or need any more tax breaks.
10) I think working for someone else is a great way to become richer.
Why Party?
I am sad today because I received a call from a potential host. She is 7 months pregnant, was a referral from her Aunt and was going to have a PC Baby Shower. It is called Stork the Freezer. Basically, her guests help to put together freezer meals (usually 10-15) for when the baby comes. Simple meals that are thaw and reheat as well as ones that take a few more ingredients to finish - items that don't freeze well. Basically, it is Power Cooking plus. She was so excited to not only have a PC Baby Shower and to have help making the meals, but that she would get free products (January hosts can get an extra $50-100 in free products) to fill her kitchen. She was making a list of people she wanted to invite and even had a few ideas to add to the party. I am sad for her, not for the lost party.
I was supposed to go to her house this morning and go over the host kit, pick out the recipes and set a date. She called me one hour before the meeting and cancelled the whole show. She kept saying "sorry for the inconvenience", but there was none. We hadn't set a date and I hadn't wasted gas or time by going there. I probed a bit just to find out why she didn't want to have it after all. She said it wasn't something she wanted to do right now (um, not true), that it was too much work (she wanted to hand deliver the invites, normally I send them and make the reminder calls the night before, I would have even offered to pick up the groceries and have her reimburse me since she would be close to giving birth and has a 1 yr old), and finally settled in on the fact that her mother in law wanted to give her a baby shower. So, you can only have one baby shower? You can't let the MIL know that this is an option and to work with me IF she wanted to go that way? I provide the entertainment, so no stupid "how big do you think the mother's belly is in yarn" games? And, her guests would be providing a service to her. The probably would feel like they needed to bring meals (money out of their pockets and a hassle to get the dishes washed and back to their owners) after the baby was born. I don't get it.
Basically, she lied to me. Someone made fun of the idea and she cowered out of it. That not only sucks that she bended to their ideas, but that they would take this opportunity away from her. Why do people do it?
So, here is a list of 10 reasons to have an in-home cooking show:
10. You’re on a first-name basis with the Domino’s delivery guy.
9. Your family is tired of eating Hamburger Helper.
8. It takes two hours to make dinner, two minutes to consume it and two days
of soaking the pot to clean it.
7. Your knives have a hard time cutting through butter.
6. You received a PC gift and you have no idea what to do with it.
5. Your kitchen tools are older than your car.
4. Your family thinks that cookies are supposed to be burned on the bottom.
3. Veggies taste better when cut into cool shapes--just ask a kid!
2. Samples of quick, easy and delicious recipes (made before your eyes!)
1. You deserve a fun time out and I provide the entertainment!
With the economy not doing so well, and people totally freaking out about it, I provide a reason to get together (learn new recipes that cost around $2 a serving and take less than 30 minutes to prepare), you don't have to spend a lot of money because people are coming for a taste test and not a meal, and it is fun!
I am angry at the person who caused this potential host to miss out on a fun and useful party. Everyone eats, its not a fad and its not going to go away. Cooking shows provide a way for people to learn how to economically and quickly feed themselves and their family.
Saturday, December 13, 2008
2008 Recipes of the Month
January - Truffle Brownie Cups
February - Smashed Potato Soup and Fluted Microwave Cake
March - Power Cooking - Ground Beef
April - Greek Cheese Torta
May - Strawberries and Cream Trifle
June - Red, White and Blueberry Trifle
July - Deluxe Cheeseburger Salad
August - Express Shows - Salad Chopper Salsa
September - Creamy One Pot Pasta
October - Power Cooking - Chicken
November - Incredible 30 Minute Chicken and Pumpkin Trifle
December - Bread Bowl Artichoke Dip
There is a lot of thought that goes into these recipe choices. I do try to choose recipes that highlight the next month's host special (so the host can get bookings and get the host special again) as well as showing off the current month's guest special to be able to encourage more sales per person. I do also work with my hosts if they really want something else. Below are all the recipes:
January - Truffle Brownie Cups
The Pampered Chef ® Truffle Brownie Cups Recipe | ||||||||
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Yield: 24 servings | ||||||||
Nutrients per serving: (1 brownie cup): Calories 120, Total Fat 7 g, Saturated Fat 4 g, Cholesterol 20 mg, Carbohydrate 15 g, Protein 1 g, Sodium 10 mg, Fiber 0 g | ||||||||
Cook's Tip: It's best to use a nonstick cooking spray containing flour when baking these brownie cups. In a pinch, brush wells with melted butter, then sprinkle with unsweetened cocoa using the Flour/Sugar Shaker. Tap out excess cocoa. | ||||||||
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
February - Smashed Potato Soup and Fluted Microwave Cake
(Fluted Microwave Cake is just a normal cake mix "baked" in the Fluted Stone in the Microwave for about 12 minutes)
Smashed Potato Soup
(It's Good For You!...pg 59)
1 cup coarsely chopped carrot
1 cup coarsely chopped celery
½ cup finely chopped onion
1 (1 lb, 4 oz) pkg refrigerated mashed potatoes
1 (14 1/2 oz) can 99% fat-free chicken broth
1/2 cup fat-free milk
1 garlic clove, pressed
1/4 tsp salt
1/8 tsp ground black pepper
1/2 cup reduced-fat sour cream
2 Tbls snipped fresh parsley
Optional toppings: sliced green onions, reduced-fat shredded cheddar cheese and crisply cooked, crumbled turkey bacon
1. Coarsely chop carrot, onion, and celery using Food Chopper. Place mashed potatoes in Medium (3 qt) Saucepan. Gradually add broth and milk, whisking until mixture is smooth using Nylon Spiral Whisk. Stir in carrot, celery, garlic pressed with Garlic Press, salt and black pepper. Bring to a boil; reduce heat. Simmer, uncovered, 10 minutes.
2. Remove from heat; stir in sour cream and parsley. Ladle soup into bowls; top with desired toppings.
Makes 8 servings.
March - Power Cooking - Ground Beef
This will be discussed and recipes posted in another post.
April - Greek Cheese Torta
The Pampered Chef ® Greek Cheese Torta Recipe | ||||||||
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Yield: 32 servings | ||||||||
Nutrients per serving: (about 1 tbsp spread and 1 baguette slice): Calories 140, Total Fat 9 g, Saturated Fat 4.5 g, Cholesterol 20 mg, Carbohydrate 12 g, Protein 4 g, Sodium 260 mg, Fiber 1 g | ||||||||
Cook's Tip: If desired, 1 jar (7 oz) roasted red peppers, drained and patted dry, can be substituted for the sun-dried tomatoes. Toasted almonds can be substituted for the pistachios. Proceed as recipe directs. If desired, 1 tsp lemon zest, 1/2 tsp dried oregano leaves and 1/4 tsp coarsely ground black pepper can be substituted for the Greek Rub. |
The Pampered Chef ® Strawberry Cream Trifle Recipe | |||||||||
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Yield: 12 servings | |||||||||
Nutrients per serving: Calories 290, Total Fat 10 g, Saturated Fat 6 g, Cholesterol 40 mg, Carbohydrate 44 g, Protein 5 g, Sodium 240 mg, Fiber 2 g | |||||||||
Cook's Tip: To toast almonds, place almonds into Small Micro-Cooker®; microwave on HIGH 1-2 minutes or until golden brown, stirring after each 30-second interval. Cool completely. Vanilla or white chocolate pudding and pie filling can be substituted for the cheesecake pudding, if desired. If using vanilla pudding, add 6-8 drops of red food coloring for a pinker color, if desired. To make a strawberry fan, open the Egg Slicer Plus® and place the strawberry stem end down; slice most of the way through it with wires. Remove the strawberry from the wires and gently fan out the slices. | |||||||||
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
June - Red, White and Blueberry Trifle
Red, White & Blueberry Trifle
Juicy berries and delicate angel food cake mingle in this impressive and patriotic summer dessert.
1 prepared angel food cake (13 oz)
1 qt. fresh strawberries
3 cups blueberries
1 container (16 oz) frozen sliced strawberries in syrup, thawed
1 lemon
3 containers (8 oz each) blended strawberry yogurt
1 pkg (3.4 oz) white chocolate instant pudding and pie filling
2 cups thawed frozen whipped topping, divided
Cut cake into 1-in. cubes using Color Coated Bread Knife; set aside. Hull fresh strawberries and cut into quarters. Set aside ½ cup of the strawberries and ½ cup of the blueberries for garnish. In Classic Batter Bowl, combine remaining fresh and frozen strawberries; mix well. Juice lemon using Juicer to measure 2 tbsp juice. In Stainless (4-qt.) Mixing Bowl, whisk yogurt, pudding mix and lemon juice until smooth using Stainless Whisk; immediately fold in 1 cup of the
whipped topping.
To assemble trifle, place one-third of the cake cubes into Trifle Bowl. Top with one-third of the strawberry mixture and one-third of the blueberries, pressing down lightly. Top with one-third of the yogurt mixture, spreading evenly. Repeat layers two times, spreading last layer evenly using the Small Spreader to create a flat surface.
To garnish, fill Easy Accent® Decorator fitted with open-star tip with remaining whipped topping. Pipe whipped topping over top of trifle; garnish with reserved strawberries and blueberries. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Yield: 16 servings
Nutrients per serving: Calories 210, Total Fat 2.5 g, Saturated Fat 2 g, Cholesterol 5 mg, Carbohydrate 44 g, Protein 3 g, Sodium 280 mg, Fiber 2 g
Cook’s Tip: Cheesecake pudding and pie filling or vanilla pudding and pie filling can be substituted for the white chocolate pudding, if desired. If using vanilla pudding, add 6-8 drops of red food coloring for a pinker color, if desired.
©The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2008
July - Deluxe Cheeseburger Salad
The Pampered Chef ® Deluxe Cheeseburger Salad Recipe | |||||||||
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Yield: 6 servings | |||||||||
Nutrients per serving: Calories 250, Total Fat 10 g, Saturated Fat 5 g, Cholesterol 55 mg, Carbohydrate 20 g, Protein 20 g, Sodium 750 mg, Fiber 3 g | |||||||||
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
August - Express Shows - Salad Chopper Salsa and Triple Citrus Mojitos
For quick and easy salsa...
Place 1 small peeled red onion, 1 pressed garlic clove, 1 whole jalapeno pepper, stems removed, and 1/4 c cilantro leaves, and 4-6 Roma Tomatoes (cut in hald and jelly squeezed out) in Stainless Steel bowl. Coarsely chop using Salad Chopper. Add salt and pepper to taste; chop until vegetables are uniform in size. Zest lime into mixture using Microplane Grater, squeeze lime over salsa using Citrus Press; stir.
At a show I put all the ingredients in the bowl and pass around with the Salad Choppers. While the guests are chopping away, we make the Triple Citrus Mojitos. Whomever wants rum in theirs gets rum in their glass first. I make the mojitos virgin.
The Pampered Chef ® Triple-Citrus Mojitos Recipe | ||||||||
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Yield: 8 servings | ||||||||
Nutrients per serving: Nutrients per serving (about 1 cup, excluding optional ingredient): Calories 130, Total Fat 0 g, Saturated Fat 0 g, Cholesterol 0 mg, Carbohydrate 33 g, Protein 0 g, Sodium 20 mg, Fiber less than 1 g | ||||||||
Cook's Tip: To garnish rims of glasses, zest an additional orange using Microplane® Adjustable Grater. Combine zest and 1/2 cup sugar in Prep Bowl. Place a small amount of sugar mixture onto Simple Additions® Appetizer Plate. Rub rim of glass with orange wedge to moisten. Dip rim of glass into sugar mixture. | ||||||||
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
September - Creamy One Pot Pasta
The Pampered Chef ® Creamy One-Pot Pasta Recipe | ||||||||||
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Yield: 6 servings | ||||||||||
Nutrients per serving: Light: Calories 410, Total Fat 11 g, Saturated Fat 3.5 g, Cholesterol 15 mg, Carbohydrate 65 g, Protein 15 g, Sodium 1000 mg, Fiber 5 g | ||||||||||
Cook's Tip: For an interesting flavor twist, omit salt, black pepper, Parmesan cheese and basil. Add 1 tbsp Moroccan Rub or Greek Rub. For a heartier version of this recipe, add grilled turkey Italian sausage or sliced grilled chicken breasts to pasta. If desired, 2 cups halved cherry tomatoes can be substituted for the sun-dried tomatoes. | ||||||||||
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
October - Power Cooking - Chicken
This will be discussed and recipes posted in another post.
November - Incredible 30 Minute Chicken and Pumpkin Trifle
Incredible 30 Minute Chicken
3-4 lb. Whole Chicken, thawed
Pampered Chef Oil
Pampered Chef Seasoning (almost any will work)
Salt and Pepper to taste
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Yield: 4-6 servings |
Nutrients per serving: Calories 490, Total Fat 29 g, Saturated Fat 8 g, Cholesterol 165 mg, Carbohydrate 2 g, Protein 52 g, Sodium 450 mg, Fiber 0 g |
Variation: All-in-One Chicken Dinner: Prepare chicken as directed above and place into baker. Combine 1 cup each celery and carrots, cut into 1-inch pieces, and 3 cups red or russet potatoes, cut into 2-inch pieces, in Classic Batter Bowl. Toss with additional seasoning and oil, if desired. Arrange vegetables around chicken. Microwave, uncovered, on HIGH 35-40 minutes or until Pocket Thermometer registers 165°F in thickest part of breast and juices run clear. Remove from microwave. Cover with lid and let stand 10 minutes (temperature will rise to 170°F). Yield: 4 servings. Nutrients per serving: Calories 580, Total Fat 29 g, Saturated Fat 8 g, Cholesterol 165 mg, Carbohydrate 23 g, Protein 54 g, Sodium 500 mg, Fiber 3 g |
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
Pumpkin Trifle
PC Harvest Pumpkin Bread and ingredients to make the bread
1 - 16oz container of Cool Whip
1 Cup skim milk
1 small package of cheesecake pudding
2 cups chopped pecans
2 1/2 TBSP PC's Pantry Sweet Cinnamon Sprinkle
In medium stainless steel mixing bowl, use small mix n' scraper to mix together bread mix and ingredients. Spread batter into parchment lined medium stoneware bar pan. Bake at 350 for 25-30 minutes cool completely.
Using whisk, mix together milk and pudding until it begins to thicken. Use small mix n' scraper to fold in cool whip into pudding mixture and add sprinkle.
Lift bread out of stone and place on cutting board. Cut pumpkin into bars and into small chunks using pizza cutter. Place chunks in trifle bowl to cover bottom. Top with 1/3 of pudding mixture then 1/3 of the nuts. repeat layers twice.
December - Bread Bowl Artichoke Dip
The Pampered Chef ® Bread Bowl Artichoke Dip Recipe | ||||||||||
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Yield: 12 servings (about 2 cups dip) | ||||||||||
Nutrients per serving: (about 2 tbsp dip and 4 bread cubes): Calories 220, Total Fat 8 g, Saturated Fat 4.5 g, Cholesterol 25 mg, Carbohydrate 29 g, Protein 7 g, Sodium 610 mg, Fiber 2 g | ||||||||||
Cook's Tip: To soften cream cheese, microwave on HIGH 15-30 seconds or until very soft. Whisk until smooth. | ||||||||||
© The Pampered Chef, Ltd., 2001 |
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Top 10 items to have in your pantry
9. Flour, sugar, salt, baking powder, baking soda - the basics of baking.
8. Beans - dry (if you know what to do with them) and canned.
7. Evaporated Milk. This may seem weird, but in a pinch, you can water it down and use it as milk in hot chocolate or even cereal. I like this better than powdered milk because it can still be used in baking.
6. A cookbook you trust. Whether it is something fast, something easy, or something you are used to, having a cookbook you trust will make it easy to whip up something or even ask someone to make something you know you will like.
5. Oils. I like different oils for different jobs, but you have to make sure you will use them within 3-6 months and that they can be stored in a dark and cool place. Peanut oil has a great high smoke point, olive oil for flavor and health, vegetable oil for baking.
4. Onions and potatoes. You can make so much with just onions and potatoes: hash browns, soup, mashed potatoes, french fries and onion rings (okay, a bit more skill is needed for these), etc.
3. Broth - chicken, vegetable, beef. I have all three for different reasons. I use beef broth the least because we tend to eat more chicken. I like having it in the boxes because I can sometimes taste the can.
2. Rice. Cheezy rice, need I say more? Okay, I will. Rice + cheese = yummy. I do also suggest you have a rice cooker. It may seem lazy, but I can't tell you how many times I have burnt rice. Ugh, the smell!
1. Canned meat/fish - sounds weird, but it isn't. We are all familiar with tuna. I prefer tuna from a can. I also like to have chicken on hand. Husband likes sardines and such, so I usually have something like that for him. You can get other seafood as well as turkey in cans. And, corned beef in a can is great for hash!
These may not be staples for you and your family, but it is important to have them. What happens if you have an extra bill and can't go grocery shopping this week? Having these on hand will make it so you can make simple food for a little while without spending too much money.
Hello!
I live in Boise, ID and have for almost 10 years. The weather is awesome (just enough snow so it stays pretty and you don't get sick of it) and I love having four distinct seasons.
I grew up in Houston, TX and lived in the same house from age 3-18. My parents moved when I was 27, so it was a pretty stable household.
I love animals and have one cat right now. His name is Cat. We did have two cats until we had to put Kitten down on October 3, 2008. I am still raw from it because he was only 7 and he was my first cat. Cat is 10 and really belongs to Husband. He only likes me because I am warm and feed him. Okay, he does like me a bit more than that, but he likes Husband more.
We have been married for 10 years. We met online back in 1996 in a chat room on Valentine's Day. A bit cliche, no? We got engaged that summer and married in 1998. Not my idea...another idea for a post later.
We don't have kids, and I know that is something I want to blog about soon.
I am a consultant for a company that sells high quality kitchen tools. They really like to Pamper people who want to be Chefs. Unfortunately we are not supposed to name the company. They like to control the brand, which does make sense to me. But, it does make it hard to blog about. If you haven't figured out the company or you want to check out my website, email me.
How to Burn Water
I do have to say, I'm not the best writer. I kind of write the way I talk, but I do try to go back and edit and make sure that what I say will make sense to people other than me. Sometimes I'm not so good at that, so please feel free to ask questions.