It's been a busy few weeks so I haven't been able to write about the food I've cooked. Cooking has also been a little strange because I've cooked in little pockets of time throughout the week which don't fall on Sundays. For the most part, I still cooking on Sunday, but sometimes, I end up cooking on Saturday for a few hours too if it's more convenient.
Week #11
Pre-Seasoned Beef Tips $14.99
Chicken Karage (2 lbs) $25.99
Beef and Broccoli Stir-Fry $18.99
Green Bean Stir-Fry $14.99
Take-Out Total: $74.96
Tax: $6.18
Grand Total: $81.14
Chicken Karage
I've made this karage before, but the last time, we fried it using our deep fryer. This time, I fried it in the wok. I have to say, frying in the wok was much easier than I expected. Yes, it makes a mess of the kitchen but this is why our backsplash is covered in paper. When the day comes that we or our children or extended family sell this house, the stove and backsplash are going to look pristine and it's not from lack of use. It's from diligent cleaning and covering to protect from things like oil splatters. A gross kitchen is a gross kitchen....and I've seen my fair share at open houses and when we were house hunting. We're always going to have our house secrets from disasters which only we know about, but if it looks clean as far as you can tell, it's clean enough.
This entire batch from last week went into the freezer, but I have a feeling it'll be pulled out (maybe today!) as a supplement to this week's food.
Green Bean Stir-Fry
I've done stir-frys with green beans before but never in this way. I've gotten into the habit of blanching my green beans before stir frying so they wouldn't be hard and fibrous at the end of cooking. One day when scrolling, I came across this recipe and took a screenshot of it.
In her video that accompanied this recipe, she said cutting the green beans on the bias would take extra time but it would be worth it. She wasn't wrong. It took a lot more extra effort to cut, but they were very tasty! I would do this again. Thanks Mama Tea!
Pre-Seasoned Beef Tips
I hardly ever buy pre-seasoned meat from the grocery store because it's more expensive and usually not worth it. However, H-E-B really got me last week for groceries because they sent me so many coupons. I saved 31% in coupons on that shopping trip and it included almost 13 pounds of meat. Win for them for getting my business and win for me for saving money. Did I mention they did it all with free curbside pickup and I didn't have to push a cart or walk around a store? And here I am giving them free advertising...😆
Beef and Broccoli
This is the first time beef and broccoli has made it onto my cooking rotation (and blogged.) I have a feeling I may have cooked it one week and not written the blog. But here it is! This is a favorite for me to make because the meat texture and the flavor of the sauce is good. My kids will also eat it and don't complain about the greens.
I don't follow a recipe for this so it is a rustic version of what they serve at the restaurant. I parboil my broccoli in salted water first so it becomes soft. Then I marinate my beef in corn starch and cooking wine. The actual sauce I use for my beef and broccoli is a combiantion of LKK black pepper sauce and LKK sweet bean sauce. I used to make it with just the black pepper sauce and I found it was missing the sweetness I craved. I could probably use sugar instead of mixing sweet bean sauce into it, but I haven't experimented. And since I found these two sauces work well together, I've not departed from this mix. Maybe next time, if I remember.
Then I saute the beef in my wok about 80% of the way cooked, add in the broccoli, and then add in my sauce. I do add some water to the sauce to make it more pourable to begin and then thicken the sauce during the last few minutes of cooking.
Week #12
Egg and Tomato $15.99
Mushroom, Snow Pea, Tofu Stir-Fry $17.99
Snow Pea Leaves $16.99
Pork Cutlet (not pictured) $10.99
Ketchup Shrimp $16.99
Soup (5 qts): $20.99
Take-Out Total: $99.94
Tax: $8.25
Grand Total: $108.19
I forgot to take a picture of every single dish this week until Tuesday so that's why everything looks partially eaten. Pretty sure half the shrimp and half the soup was already gone by the time I remembered.
Egg and Tomato (top left)
I hadn't made egg and tomato in a while so I decided to buy tomatoes and make this dish this week. I am growing my own tomato plants this year, but they're not close to being ready, so I had to buy them from the grocery store. With the rise in egg prices, eggs have been more valuable and don't get used as quickly anymore either. But it was a nice change to add this dish back to the menu since for a lot of us it's the common "go to" dish to make since it's so easy.
Mushroom, Snow Pea, Tofu Stir-Fry (top center)
This was an impromptu dish I decided to make. The snow peas were on sale, mushrooms were on sale, and I picked up a pack of pressed tofu. I've always loved the flavor with the thick sauce you get from a corn starch slurry. I season with some soy sauce and chicken bouillon and then add cornstarch and water. It turned out well.
Snow Pea Leaves (bottom left)
Snow pea leaves randomly went on sale again so I bought a bag. I always remove 80% of the stems now. They're just so much more pleasant to eat without the stems. I used to think it was so wasteful to just pluck the leaves off, but since I compost all of my fruits and vegetables, I can justify removing any non-pleasant edible parts. It just helps me save money on my soil amendments!
Sidenote. I did this experiment weeks ago with snow pea leaves and I'm just now getting around to share it. At the grocery store, sometimes I'll see wilty leaves on the vegetables. This used to be a turn off for me, but then I realized, as long as the stems are intact and the leaves aren't bruised, there's a way to bring the leaves back to life - just soak them in water. I weighed the snow pea leaves I bought before and they weighed in at 518 grams. Then, I soaked them in water to let them revitalize. After, I weighed them again: 565 grams. That's almost a 10% increase post soaking. So don't be afraid of the wilty leaves at the grocery store!
Pork Cutlet (not pictured)
I had bought a 9 pound bone in pork shoulder last week which I cut and saved into multiple packs in our freezer. There were some pieces leftover that weren't large enough to make into a portion by itself so they ended up in a bag I labeled "cutlets." I think my original intention was actually to pound them into pork chops but I forgot to pound them when I actually cooked. So they ended up like pork...pieces.
I browned them in a pan and they turned out nicely. There was no official crust on it, but they were still flavorful because I marinated with corn starch, cooking wine, soy sauce, and sesame oil.
Ketchup Shrimp (bottom center)
My daughter loves ketchup shrimp, as do I. It came up in the rotation again because I was looking for a protein to make as a stand-alone dish. This was my first time making it without measuring each ingredient (I've gotten pretty good at eyeballing...) and also my first time making it in the wok. It turned out well. Our wok has really proven itself in the last five weeks ago since we debuted it. Really happy with this recipe and I should try and make it more often.
A note on the shrimp: I always use head-on shrimp for this recipe because I love the extra juices I get. I do make sure to use scissors to cut open the side of the shell which helps the sauce seep into the shrimp as well as make peeling the shrimp much easier. And yes, I remove the intestinal tract.
Soup - 5 qts (right)
This was a random throw-together soup. I had extra broth leftover from cooking my pork shoulder bone so I figured I'd make a soup with it. I had leftover napa cabbage to throw in, some chopped up carrots, tofu puffs I keep on hand frozen in my freezer, and some frozen meatballs. I season the soup with soy sauce and chicken bouillon. That's really it. We eat it with rice because we're lazy, but you could definitely cook some noodles to go with it.
I hate to say this because it's a little embarassing, but putting together this blog of two weeks back to back was more tiring than when I cook a week's worth of food. On the flip side, it means I use less brainpower to cook than I do to write now...which means I must be pretty good at cooking. 😅