Tortilla Pie

saturdaystirrings.jpgFiddleDeeDee at It Coulda’ Been Worse has started Saturday Stirrings where we can share favorite recipes and find new favorites. I hope you will join in!

I was going to put up a cozy winter recipe as a last hurrah before spring starts…but I just couldn’t do it. Nothing ovenish appeals to me right now. So I am sharing this:

Tortilla Pie

1-1 1/2 c. of browned and drained ground beef or ground turkey
1 T. or so minced onion
Garlic powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. chili powder, more or less to tast
3 flour tortillas
1 1/2 c. refried beans, divided
1 c. shredded Monterey Jack cheese
1/2 c. salsa
Sour cream, if desired

Brown meat with onion; drain and add garlic powder, chili powder, and salt; mix well. Place tortilla in greased microwave-safe pie plate. Spread with 3/4 cup refried beans, 1/2 cup cheese, 1/4 cup salsa, and 1/2-3/4 cup meat. Top with tortilla; layer the same amount of beans, cheese, salsa, and meat. Top with tortilla. Cover; microwave on high for 5 minutes. Broil 30 seconds. Serve with salsa and sour cream, if desired. Makes 6 servings.

Note: This can also be made with cooked chicken. I like to make one each with chicken and ground turkey for the same meal. The leftovers reheat well, too. Tip: frozen boneless skinless chicken tenderloin can be sprinkled with spices (for this recipe, salt, pepper, minced onion, garlic powder, and chili powder) and cooked in microwave in 9 minutes, rearranging pieces once during cooking. Dice into bite-sized pieces.

Easy finger sandwiches

saturdaystirrings.jpgFiddleDeeDee at It Coulda’ Been Worse has started Saturday Stirrings where we can share favorite recipes and find new favorites. I hope you will join in!

I don’t have a nailed-down and exact recipe for this, but I had them at a wedding reception once, and my friend, who also loved them, knew the person who made them and asked her how she did it. So, going by word of mouth, I went from there and worked out what works best for me.

These are little finger sandwiches that are good for brunches, receptions, ladies’ meetings, etc. — any event where you need a “finger food.” Of course, you could adapt them to regular sandwiches if you like.

1. First, get the type of small rolls that are all stuck together when you buy them:

Finger sandwiches

This is actually after I put them all back together, so they’re not stuck together any more, but this is how they come: all stuck together in a disposable pan.

2. Cut the whole section of rolls in half horizontally.

3. Spread both layers with a mixture of mustard, Worcestershire sauce, and poppy seeds. I’m sorry, I’ve never measured this exactly, but if I were estimating I’d say maybe 1/2 cup mustard, 1 1/2 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce, and 1 tablespoon poppy seeds.

4. Layer ham and Swiss or provolone cheese over the bottom half of the rolls.

Finger sandwiches

As you can see, this time the top halves of the rolls came apart, but sometimes I have done it with the whole top half staying all together, and that makes it even easier.

5. Place the top half back over the bottom half as in the first picture above.

You can do up to this point ahead of time and put them in the refrigerator until a little while before serving time.

6. Place in 350 oven for a few minutes (5-10 or so) until warmed through and cheese is slightly melted. You could also microwave them, but you’d need to take them out of the foil pan — probably best done at the splitting in half stage.

7. Slice into separate small sandwiches and place on serving dish.

Of course, you could experiment with different types of rolls, condiments, meats, and cheeses. But I really like the flavor of this combination.

Country-Style Eggs

saturdaystirrings.jpgFiddleDeeDee at It Coulda’ Been Worse has started Saturday Stirrings where we can share favorite recipes and find new favorites. I hope you will join in!

This was in a cookbook that came with my microwave, oh, some 20-25 years ago. We’ve had two or three microwave ovens since then, and this recipe has worked fine in each. of course, microwave ovens vary, so the times might be different for you. We’ve used it as a “breakfast for dinner” recipe, but it would also work fine for breakfast.

Country-Style Eggs 

4 slices bacon
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
6 ounces frozen hash browns
1/4 cup chopped onion
1/4 cup chopped green pepper (optional)
6 eggs
1/4 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
1 cup (4 ounces) shredded mild cheddar cheese

Cook bacon according to microwave oven instructions; crumble and set aside.

Put margarine, potatoes, onions, and green pepper into an 8-inch round glass cake or pie dish. Cook uncovered in microwave oven 6 minutes on high or until vegetables are tender; stir once.

Mix eggs, milk, salt, and pepper. Flatten potato mixture and pour egg mixture over the top. Cover with plastic wrap. Cook in microwave oven 6-7 minutes at medium-high, or until egg mixture is almost set; stir once.

Sprinkle bacon and cheese over egg mixture, Heat uncovered 1 minute at medium-high, or until cheese just starts to melt.

Remove from oven and let stand 5 minutes, Cut into wedges to serve.

4-6 servings. 

I usually leave out the green peppers. I also usually use the “heat and eat” already cooked bacon since we don’t use bacon very much — I’d hate to have to wait on a dish like this to cook the bacon first. If I didn’t use that what I would probably do is get regular bacon and fry it all up at once, and then freeze it to use just a few pieces at a time.

I’ve also made a single serving of this, though I couldn’t give you exact measurements. I usually eat my breakfast after taking Jesse to school, and sometimes cereal just doesn’t appeal to me. This is a nice change even though I normally don’t like eggs scrambled in the microwave. I basically follow the same recipe, only I put just a few hash browns in a smaller dish with margarine and a sprinkle of minced onion, microwave for a minute or so, stir, and cook again until the potatoes are mostly done, then mix two eggs with a little milk, salt, and pepper and pour them over the potato mixture and microwave at medium-high for 45 seconds to a minute, stir, and then microwave again until mostly set. I often tear up a piece of ham lunch meat instead of the bacon when I do it this way and add that and a sprinkled of shredded cheddar cheese, microwave for about 20 seconds, then let it sit for a few minutes. Delicious! And nice when I need a heartier breakfast than usual.

Kielbasa Sausage Stew

My Photo Hunt post is just below this one.

saturdaystirrings.jpgFiddleDeeDee at It Coulda’ Been Worse has started Saturday Stirrings where we can share favorite recipes.

This is one I clipped from One magazine put out by Penzey’s spices. A dear friend has given me a gift subscription to it for a couple of years, but I don’t use Penzey spices and have only found a few recipes in their magazine that I wanted to try, and this is a definite winner. The whole family loved it. It smells wonderful while it is simmering.

Kielbasa Sausage Stew

4 slices thick-cut bacon, diced
1 large onion chopped
1/4 cup fresh parsley, cleaned and chopped
1/2 teaspoon dried rubbed sage
1 lb. kielbasa sausage cut into 4-inch lengths
4 large potatoes, peeled and cut into 2-inch chunks
4 large carrots, peeled and cut into 2-inch chunks
2 cups chicken stock or 1 1/2 teaspoon chicken soups base dissolved in 2 cups warm water
Salt ans pepper to taste

In a large pot or Dutch oven, fry the bacon over medium heat until just crisp, about 10 minutes. Drain all but 2 tablespoons of the bacon drippings from the pan. Add the onion, parsley, and sage to the pan with the bacon and saute over medium heat until the onion is translucent, about 15 minutes. Add the kielbasa, potatoes, carrots, and stock. Cover, reduce heat to low, and simmer until the potatoes and carrots are tender, about 20-30 minutes. Remove cover and simmer another 10 minutes to thicken the sauce slightly. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serves 4-6.

I used minced onion and dried parsley rather than fresh, and I cut up the sausage and vegetables in smaller chunks. We use turkey link sausage: my favorite is Hillshire farms.

I’ve wondered if this would work well in a crock pot: I think it would.

Can you discover why this made me laugh?

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Snackalicious Super Dishes

supersnackssmall_2.jpgRobin at Pensieve is hosting a Snackalicious Super Dishes round-up. She says:

Any time between now and Friday, January 25, post a recipe for your favorite crowd-pleasin’ dish–it can be a main course, appetizer or dessert, but I’m thinking anything that would make for a tailgating good time–Super Bowl Sunday or at your next pot luck. On January 25th, link your recipe post to the Mr. Linky that will be displayed at Pensieve.

And she’s giving away cookbooks!

The details are here (or click the button above). The other entries for today are here.

I don’t know that I would take this tailgating, but I often take this to potlucks or fellowships, even an occasional shower.

Veggie Pizza Squares

2 8-oz. packages refrigerated crescent rolls
2 8-oz. packages cream cheese, softened
2/3 c. mayonnaise or Miracle Whip
1 tsp. dill weed
1/4 tsp. garlic powder
1 tsp. minced onion
1 1/2 c. each fresh chopped cauliflower, broccoli, and carrots
1 1/2 c. grated mild cheddar cheese

Roll out crescents rolls onto a 15 x 10 inch baking sheet; seal seams. Bake 15 minutes at 375 or until browned. Cool. Mix cream cheese, mayo or Miracle Whip, dill, garlic powder, onion. Spread over crust; sprinkle with vegetables and cheese and press down slightly. Refrigerate for two hours before serving. Cut into small squares.

The vegetables listed are my favorites to use, but others could be substituted or added, such as sprouts, celery, radishes, peas, etc.

Works-For-Me Wednesday: Meals from leftovers

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Some years ago someone gave me this list for “Planover Recipe Ideas” — meal ideas that can be made from leftovers. I don’t know who made up the original list. But this contains several ideas of possible dishes you could make with leftover meats or potatoes from another meal. In some cases there might be just enough leftover to use some of these for lunch ideas for a couple of people, but in some cases you might have enough for a whole meal. You could also plan to make extra meat or potatoes and use the “planned leftovers” for some of the following. The list is just as I received it — I don’t have measurements or proportions. I think for many of these you could just “wing it” — for others you could search for a more specific recipe.
Roast Beef:

Hot Beef Sandwiches (meat slices with gravy over French bread)
Beef Salad Sandwiches (diced beef, celery, low-fat mayonnaise)
Beef slices in Pita Bread ( tomatoes, alfalfa sprouts, or romaine)
Beef and Peas on Baked Potatoes (beef, gravy, peas, tomato sauce)
Chili Con Carne on Rice (Beef, chili hot beans, tomato, onions)
Enchiladas (diced beef, shredded cheese in corn tortillas topped with tomato sauce and enchilada sauce mixture)
Beef Stir Fry (slivers of beef, gravy, soy sauce, sliced vegetables)
Beef Chunks and Gravy Over Noodles or Rice
Beef Barbeque with Potatoes (barbeque sauce and onions)
Beef Stew (beef, potatoes, carrots, green beans, tomatoes)
Beef Stroganoff (beef chunks, sour cream, onions, mushrooms, cream of mushroom soup)
Beef Hash (diced beef, potatoes, carrots, peas, ketchup)

Chicken:

Chicken Salad (diced chicken, salad dressing, pineapple, almonds)
Hot Chicken Salad (diced chicken, celery, nuts, salad dressing)
Chicken Almond Curry on Rice (slivered chicken, almonds, pimento, white sauce, dash of curry spice)
Creamy Chicken (chicken, sour cream, onions, white sauce)
Pepper Chicken on Rice (chicken, green peppers, onions, gravy)
Chicken Stir Fry (chicken, gravy, soy sauce, sliced vegetables)
Mexican Chicken (layer chicken, cheese, corn tortillas with sauce of onions, tomato sauce, cream of chicken soup, and chili)
Chicken Paprika (chicken, onion, broth, paprika, sour cream)
Chicken Bog (chicken, broth, rice, pepper, polska kielbasa)
Chicken and Dumplins (chicken, gravy, dumplins)
Enchiladas (shredded chicken, shredded cheese in corn tortillas topped with tomato sauce and enchilada sauce mixture)
Broiled Oriental Chicken (chicken, soy sauce, garlic salt, pepper)
Teriyaki Chicken (chicken, soy sauce, sugar, onions, broth)
Chicken Pie (diced chicken, gravy, peas, carrots, pie crust)
Chicken Barbeque (chicken, barbeque sauce)

Ham:

Ham Omelet (eggs, diced ham, onions, cheese, vegetables)
Ham Salad (diced ham, celery or relish, salad dressing)
Split Pea Soup (split peas, ham chunks, water, grated carrots)
Pinto Beans (pinto beans, ham chunks, water, garlic salt)
Quiche (pie shell, evaporated milk, diced ham, eggs, Swiss cheese, cooked chopped broccoli)
Pasta Salad (diced ham, pasta, green pepper, Italian dressing)
Swedish Rolls (rolls with ham slices and Swiss cheese topped with mixture of melted butter, mustard, onion flakes and Worcestershire sauce)
Chicken Cordon Bleu (roll ham slice with Swiss cheese slice in raw chicken breast, then dip in egg mixture and coat with bread crumb mix. Drizzle with melted butter; bake)
Ham Croquettes (chopped ham, thick white sauce, onion, chilled, formed into cones while rolling in bread crumbs)
Ham Patties (chopped ham, bread crumbs, onion, milk, egg)

Hamburger:

Spaghetti (hamburger, spaghetti sauce, spaghetti noodles)
Lasagna (hamburger, spaghetti sauce, pureed tomatoes, lasagna noodles, mozzarella cheese, ricotta cheese, Parmesan, egg — cover with plastic wrap and bake in microwave for 22 minutes)
Chili (hamburger, chili hot beans, onion, chili, catsup)
Sloppy Joes (hamburger, catsup, Worcestershire, mustard)
Stuffed Peppers (hamburger rice, tomato sauce, cheese)
Tamale Pie (hamburger, sliced canned tamales, torn corn tortillas, whole corn kernels, cheese)
Hamburger Stew (hamburger, water, potatoes, tomatoes, celery, car- rots, rosemary, thyme, onions, corn, green beans)
Hamburger Macaroni and Cheese (hamburger, mac & cheese)
Hungarian Goulash (hamburger, macaroni, tomato sauce, cheese)
Baked Bean Savory (hamburger, baked beans, sage, ketchup)
Haystacks (hamburger and baked beans placed on rice and corn chips, topped with cheese, lettuce, green pepper, and onion)
Hamburger Maindish (hamburger, cream cheese, ketchup, cream of mushroom soup, topped with biscuits)

Baked Potatoes:

Country Fried Potatoes (slice and fry on sprayed skillet)
Potato Salad (potatoes, eggs, celery, salad dressing)
Broiled Potato Wedges (wedged potatoes, oil spray, herbs)
Twice Baked Potatoes (potatoes, cheese or sour cream, herbs)
Spanish Omelet (eggs with diced potato, onion, cooked bacon)
German Potato Salad (potatoes, green pepper, onion, cooked bacon, vinegar dressing)

See more workable ideas at Rocks In My Dryer.

Soup-tacular

It's A Soup-Tacular!It must be recipe week in the blogosphere, between Shannon’s call for quick and easy recipes on Wednesday and BooMama’s Soup-tacular today. Fine with me — I like finding new, good recipes! And I love soup when the weather’s cold.

I posted this first one a while back, but I’ll repost it here so as to have all these together:

I love potato soups, and some day I am going to make a completely-from-scratch one. But in the meantime this quicker version does nicely. I found it in a Quick Cooking magazine (now called Simple and Delicious) (one of Taste of Home’s spinoffs). It’s quick, it’s easy, and it’s good.

Corny Potato Chowder

4 bacon strips, diced
1/2 c. chopped onion
1 can (15 oz.) whole potatoes, drained and diced
2 cups milk
1 can (14 – 3/4 oz.) cream-style corn
1/2 tsp. garlic
1/8 tsp. pepper

In a large saucepan, cook the bacon and onion until bacon is almost crisp; drain. Add potatoes; saute for 2-3 minutes. Stir in the milk, corn, garlic salt, and pepper. Simmer, uncovered, until heated through. Yield: 4-6 servings.

I use the already-cooked-just-microwave bacon (we don’t use bacon very often, so that works well for us), then just mix all the other ingredients together and heat through. I don’t use that much onion either — more like a tablespoon of minced onion. And I use garlic powder rather than garlic salt and just add a few sprinkles of salt. I also buy the already diced canned potatoes. And I just use 1 cup milk — I like more stuff and less broth or liquid in soups.

Quick Vegetable-Beef Soup

1 lb. ground beef or ground turkey
Minced onion
Garlic powder
1 cup Minute Rice
1 can tomato sauce
1 can mixed vegetables
1 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce

Brown the meat and onion and cook the rice according to package directions. Drain the meat and add rice, tomato sauce, vegetables, and Worcestershire sauce. Simmer til heated through. We like to serve it with crackers or corn muffins. You can use frozen (or even fresh!) vegetables if you choose — you would just need to cook them longer. This soup is also good for adding leftover vegetables.

Chicken Ramen Noodle Soup

2 packages chicken-flavored ramen noodles
1-2 cups cooked chicken cut into bite-sized pieces
Minced onion
1 can mixed vegetables

Prepare the ramen noodles according to package directions. Add cooked chicken, vegetables, and minced onion to taste; heat through. As with the above recipe, you can use frozen or fresh vegetables if you prefer.

Chicken and Rice Soup

2 cups cooked, diced chicken
Minced onion
1 tsp. garlic powder
2 cans chicken broth or 2 c. water and 2 tsp chicken bullion
1 cup Minute Rice
1 can mixed vegetables
Salt and pepper to taste

Do you see a lot of similarity between the last three recipes? 🙂 Just mix these ingredients and heat through.

I make Turkey Bone Soup the same way, except I take the bigger bones from the turkey, boil in a big pot of water for about and hour, remove the bones, run the broth through a strainer to get out any little bits of bone or gristle, then proceed as above, only using leftover turkey instead of chicken. It’s one of my favorite leftover turkey dishes.

All of these are fairly adjustable: you can add more or less of any of the ingredients according to what you like and what you have on hand. In most of them I like to sprinkle a little frozen corn in with the mixed vegetables.

Works-For-Me Wednesday: What Do I Fix?

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Shannon’s “Works For Me Wednesday” today is a themed one, asking for quick, easy meal ideas for “those nights” — like when you’re not feeling well, or errands took longer than expected and you have something to attend at church or for school that night, or you get back from baseball practice late and everyone starving, etc. I am really looking forward to getting a lot of ideas today!

I try to keep a couple of quickie meals in the freezer for those times. One is Banquet chicken nuggets and chicken tenders and Ore-Ida frozen french fries (I like the Pixie Crinkles best, but we try different kinds for variety). Pop them in the oven for about 10 minutes while you rustle up a vegetable side dish, and you’re set. I also love Contessa brand chicken fried rice — add a little oil and microwave (or stir-fry) long enough to heat through. Wonderful!

But frozen stuff can be expensive and take up a lot of room in your freezer plus increase your sodium intake exponentially. So we can’t do that too often. Though I’d have chicken fried rice once a week if I could.

Other quickie staples are:

  • Grilled cheese sandwiches and tomato soup
  • Tuna sandwiches and some other kind of soup
  • Wraps: tortillas with a squirt of honey mustard, topped with a slice of ham, turkey, and provolone and a little lettuce or baby spinach leaves, then rolled up.
  • English muffins sliced in half, spread with Miracle Whip (or your favorite condiment), topped with tuna which has been drained and mixed with a little Miracle Whip (plus anything else you might want to add) and cheese (we like to do a few each with different kinds of cheeses. We always have American and cheddar and sometimes Swiss, provolone, or Monterrey Jack). Bake in about a 350 oven until cheese melts, serve with tomato soup or macaroni and cheese or carrot sticks or whatever
  • English muffins sliced in half, spread with pizza sauce or spaghetti sauce, topped with pepperoni and provolone or mozzarella cheese, baked until cheese is melted and edges of muffin are slightly brown. (I don’t usually have pizza sauce or spaghetti sauce in hand, but I open a can of tomato sauce and add [right in the can] minced onion, garlic powder, oregano, basil, and Parmesan cheese and stir, and it works just fine. I prefer it, in fact, to the jars of sauce).
  • Canned crescent roll dough unrolled and separated into wedges with pepperoni and provolone or mozzarella placed on the wide end; roll up, bake until browned, serve with pizza/spaghetti sauce or ranch dressing for dipping.
  • Breakfast for dinner: scrambled eggs are pretty quick. I add ham lunch meat to mine and sprinkle with shredded cheddar cheese when it’s done.
  • My kids like hot dogs cut up into tomato sauce and warmed through, served with macaroni and cheese and a vegetable.
  • Fully cooked link sausage links (like kielbasa or other varieties) cut up into barbecue sauce, heated through, served with macaroni and cheese and green beans. Though I like the bottled barbecue sauce on other things, it seems a little strong or harsh for this, so I make up my own with 1 cup ketchup, 1/2 cup vinegar, minced onion, 2 Tbs Worcestershire sauce, 1 Tbs mustard, and garlic powder: mix together, add sausage, and the sauce will thicken as it cooks.

I have a friend who sometimes will brown 5 lbs. of ground beef all at one time with onion and then separate it into five portions and freeze it. Having the meat browned is half the battle: just thaw for a few minutes in the microwave (if you’re making something like a soup or casserole. you probably could just thaw it enough to break it up and let the rest of it warm through in the dish you’re cooking).

My very first works-for-me-Wednesday entry (and one of my most often searched-for posts) was about chicken tenderloins. Love those things because you can take them straight from the freezer to the oven or microwave. Several ideas for using them are here and here.

Tuna is one of those things that no one gets real excited about, but the family does enjoy it when they do eat it and it does stop hunger. 🙂 Here are my quickest tuna meals:

Quick Tuna Casserole

2 1/2 cups Minute Rice
1 can tuna, drained
1 can cream of chicken soup
Shredded cheddar cheese

Prepare rice with 2 1/2 cups water according to package directions. Mix in tuna and soup, top with cheddar cheese, and microwave for 3-4 minutes.

Tuna Tetrazzini

1 pkg. (7-8 oz.) angel-hair pasta, cooked
1/4 c. (1/2 a stick) butter or margarine
1/4 c. all-purpose flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. pepper
1 c. chicken broth or 1 c. boiling water + 1 tsp. chicken bouillon
1 c. milk
1 T. snipped parsley (optional)
1- 1 1/2 tsp. minced onion
1 small can tuna, drained
Grated Parmesan cheese

Melt margarine in a glass casserole dish in microwave (about 1 minute). Add flour, salt, and pepper; blend well. Add broth and milk gradually, stirring constantly. Cook uncovered in microwave 4-5 minutes on high, or until thickened; stir after 2 minutes, then every minute (a wire whisk works great to make sauce smooth). Add onion, parsley, and tuna to sauce; mix well. Mix in cooked pasta. Heat uncovered in microwave 3 minutes on high. Stir mixture well and sprinkle with Parmesan cheese. Microwave uncovered on high 3-5 minutes. Makes 6-8 servings.

I’m one of those weird people who actually likes spam (the food, not the junk). I sometime like to cut it in slices and fry it, then make a sandwich with it. This casserole is a comfort food from my childhood:

Spam Casserole

1 can Spam or Treet
1/2 box rotini (or other) noodles
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 can cheddar cheese soup
Margarine

Cut spam into cubes and brown in melted margarine while noodles are cooking. Drain noodles, add soups and spam and stir well: Heat through.

And here’s another fairly quick favorite:

Country-Style Eggs

4 slices bacon
2 Tbs margarine
6 ounces frozen hash browns
1/4 cup chopped onion (or about a tablespoon minced onion)
6 eggs
1/4 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon salt
Dash pepper
1 cup (4 ounces) shredded cheddar cheese

Fry or microwave bacon: crumble and set aside. Put margarine, potatoes and onion into an 8-ounce round glass cake dish or pie plate. Cook uncovered in microwave on high 6 minutes or until vegetables are tender, stirring once. Mix eggs, milk, salt and pepper. Flatten potato mixture and pour egg mixture over the top. Cover with waxed paper and microwave 6-7 minutes at medium-high or until egg mixture is almost set, stirring once. Sprinkle bacon and cheese over egg mixture: microwave uncovered 1 minute at medium-high or until cheese just starts to melt. Remove from micrwave oven and ket stand 5 minutes. Cut into wedges. Makes 4-6 servings.

Optional: you can add 1/4 cup or so of chopped green pepper to cook with the potatoes and onion mixture, though why anyone would want to do that, I don’t know… 🙂

I’m hungry already. I’m going to be drooling by the time I read the other posts…

Works-For-Me Wednesday: Two quick and easy cookie recipes

wfmwheader_4.jpgSometimes a child forgets to tell us he needs to bring cookies for something at school or church until the last minute, or sometimes our schedule just gets out of control and we’re short on time to bring cookies for a church fellowship or get-together with friends, or sometimes we just want a little homemade sweetness but we don’t have (or want to spend) a lot of time preparing it. These are a couple of my favorite quick, easy, simple cookie recipes.

Double Delicious Cookie Bars

(Note: These contain peanut butter chips, but they can be omitted and additional chocolate chips used instead if you’re taking this somewhere where someone might have peanut allergies)

1/2 c. margarine or butter
1 1/2 c. graham cracker crumbs
1 14-oz. can sweetened condensed milk
1 12-oz. pkg. semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 c. peanut butter chips
1 c. semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 1/2 tsp. shortening

Preheat oven to 350 (325 for glass dish). In a 9 x 13-inch pan, melt margarine in oven. Sprinkle crumbs evenly over margarine. Pour sweetened condensed milk evenly over crumbs. Top with 12-ounce packages chocolate chips and peanut butter chips; press down firmly. Bake 25-30 minutes or until lightly browned. Melt 1 cup chocolate chips and shortening; drizzle over bars. Cut into bars when cool. Store loosely covered at room temperature.

Peanut Butter Kiss Cookies

These are a pared-down version of the originals but taste every bit as good. My son’s girlfriend got this recipe in one of her classes.

1 c. peanut butter
1 c. sugar
1 egg
Hershey’s Kisses

Thoroughly mix together peanut butter, sugar, and egg. Drop by teaspoonful or roll into 1 inch balls onto ungreased baking sheet. Bake at 350 for about 10-11 minutes, until slightly browned. Immediately place an unwrapped Hershey’s Kiss in the center of each cookie and press down. Let sit on pan for a minute or two, then remove from pan. Let cool before storing. Makes 24-26.

Peanut butter kiss cookies

For more wonderful, workable tips, go to Rocks In My Dryer.