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Solutions:
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- Make
Meals in 30 Minutes or Less
- By Jill Cooper
I was having
dinner at my son's house the other night and my daughter-in-law
had fixed "old fashioned" baked potatoes. You know,
the kind you make in the oven and not the microwave. Boy, they
were good. It seems that so many things taste better slow cooked
in the oven.
We started
talking about how much longer it took to cook them in the oven
compared to the microwave. That started me thinking. Yes, it
does take longer in actual cooking time but in some ways it is
easier. When I bake potatoes in the oven, I get them ready and
in the oven an hour before dinner and then just forget about
them until dinner is ready. Then, all I have to do is set them
on the table and dinner is served.
When I microwave
them, I tend to start cleaning them and preparing them at the
same time that I'm trying to make a salad and heat up the veggies.
While I'm doing all of that, I have to remember to keep turning
the potatoes and if I am cooking several, I have to put a few
in the microwave and when they are done, pull them out and add
more, all of this at the same time that I am trying to prepare
the rest of the meal.
Why is it that,
even though we have faster methods of cooking our meals, they
seem to have become more frenzied and hurried than years ago?
Then it dawned on me -- With the introduction of the microwave
and the idea that meals can be prepares in 30 minutes, most people
do nothing to prepare or plan their meals until 30 minutes before
they
are going to eat. So 30 minutes before dinner you find yourself
trying to thaw something, cook it, and slap it on the table and
at the same time talk and deal with tired, hungry, cranky kids.
Let's not forget how exhausted you are at this time of day, too.
We need to
warm up our ovens and start using them again the way our grandmothers
use to do. Here are some tips and ideas that prove that cooking
meals in a conventional oven instead of a microwave can be just
as quick and easy, not to mention how much more delicious they
taste and smell.
I think we
underestimate the power of coming home and smelling something
yummy cooking. We automatically seem to relax, feeling that "all
is well with the world". I really think it can change the
whole atmosphere of your home for the evening.
I am not living
in a dream world. You can fix meals the way our grandmothers
did. I hear some readers saying, "Our grandmothers weren't
ever as busy as we are and so they had time to fix large meals."
I can hear our grandmothers chuckling at that statement. My husband's
grandmother had to help on the farm from early in the morning
until evening. She took care of a large home garden, canned,
cleaned house every day, did laundry without a washer or dryer
and still provided meals not only for her family, but up to 20
farm hands as well. She had to do it all without a refrigerator,
microwave, or a grocery store and the nearest water was a mile
away from her house.
My mother-in-law
would go to work as early as 7 am and work until 9 pm 6 days
a week, but she still managed to make three large meals each
day. If you're thinking, "That's great if you want to spend
all your spare time in the kitchen," consider that they
spent less time in the kitchen than we do with less of the conveniences
and still managed to have well balanced delicious meals each
day.
What was their
secret? -- They had never heard of 30 minute meals. Even if they
had they would probably have laughed and wondered who would spend
so much time on a meal? They knew that the key to a quick meal
wasn't how fast you could cook, but how organized you were. You
can easily have a meal on the table in 15 minutes if you are
organized and plan ahead.
No, this doesn't
mean you have to microwave or fry everything to have a quick
meal. Slow cooking something in the oven not only makes things
taste better but sometimes is quicker.
Our grandmothers'
secret to quick meals:
Keep your meals
simple.
Be organized.
Decide what
you are preparing the night or the morning before. Thaw anything
you need the night or the morning before.
Prepare as
much of the meal as you can during the slow time of your day
and when you are most refreshed. (This is very important.) Slow
cook meats in the oven or in a crock pot.
Keep your kitchen
clean so you have an uncluttered work area. Here are some ideas
on what to prepare. These aren't elaborate gourmet meals. If
you are too busy to cook dinner, then you are to busy to make
gourmet dinners. Stick with the basics and keep it simple like
our grandmothers did.
Roast: Place
a roast in a crock pot or pan. Peel five potatoes and carrots
and drop them in with it and turn on the oven. This takes five
minutes. Clean and cut broccoli, celery and cucumbers for a salad
-- five minutes. At dinner time, chop lettuce and tomato for
the salad, adding the already prepared veggies. Then put the
meat and the fixings on a platter -- five more minutes. Voila!
Dinner in 15 minutes.
Stew: It takes
me seven minutes to cube meat*, peel five potatoes, carrots and
onions, toss it into a pot and to season it. At dinner time,
I put bread or dinner rolls on the table -- one to two minutes
and I have dinner in nine minutes.
*Ask your butcher
to cube or slice all your meat for you. They usually charge nothing
or just a few cents per pound. It saves not only time in cutting
but in clean up too.
Chicken: Toss
a chicken in a pan or crock pot -- two minutes. Clean potatoes
to put in with chicken or to bake in the oven -- three minutes.
At dinner time, warm a veggie -- two minutes. Slice some fruit
-- three minutes. Dinner in 10 minutes.
Lasagna: Put
noodles in a pot to boil -- one minute. Fry hamburger, get out
cheese, tomato sauce and the rest of the fixings; mix sauce while
noodles boil, 7-8 minutes. Layer everything -- two minutes. Cover
and put in the fridge for dinner the next day or that evening.
Put the lasagna in the oven to heat while getting out of your
work clothes, checking the mail, etc. Set the table and cut a
salad -- five minutes. Dinner is served; 15 minutes.
Beef stroganoff:
Make your beef stroganoff in your crock pot. (If you don't want
to use a crock pot, this recipe usually takes very little time
just stirring it up in a pan.) Dump everything but sour cream
and noodles, into the crock pot -- three minutes and simmer all
day on low. Clean carrots, celery sticks and broccoli for a relish
dish (five minutes) and put it in the fridge. At dinner time,
boil egg noodles (5-7 minutes). While they are boiling, add sour
cream to sauce and set the table. Total time: 15 minutes.
Chili: Mix
everything in a pot the night before. Depending what you put
in, it should take 5-10 minutes. Simmer throughout the next day.
Soup: Do the
same as with the chili.
These are just
general example of ways to fix meals easily and quickly. It isn't
really a matter of time as much as it is a matter of being organized
and getting things done before you are too exhausted to think.
If you have
meats thawed and the ingredients on hand, most things can be
tossed together in about the same time as it takes to order and
wait to get your food at a fast food place.
Also, remember
when you have your oven going to try to cook more than one thing
in it. For example, if you are going to be baking a casserole,
bake a pan of brownies, muffins or baked apples at the same time.
_______________________________________
Author:
Jill Cooper raised two teenagers
alone on $500 a month income after becoming disabled with Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome. She is the co-author of Dining On A Dime Cookbook.
To read more of Jill's articles and for free tips and recipes
visit http://www.LivingOnADime.com |