T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3113.1 | We call this "Goulash" | CSC32::D_SCHOENFELD | Front Line Error Support | Tue Jul 02 1991 16:23 | 15 |
|
Let's see if I can remember this off the top of my head......
Brown 1 to 1 1/2 lbs hamburger, drain off excess fat
Add 2 cups dried Elbow Macaroni
2 8oz cans tomato sauce
2 cups water
2 Tbls sugar
Chopped onion and green pepper to taste.
Cook covered on medium heat for about 20 minutes or until Macaroni
is tender, stirring occasionally.
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3113.2 | A bulghur pilaf | CIMNET::TOBIN_D | | Tue Jul 02 1991 16:35 | 16 |
| Something a little different ...
Brown 1 cup chopped onion and one chopped green pepper. Add hamburger
and brown it, cutting it up into small pieces as it cooks.
When the hamburger has lost all its color, drain off all the liquid.
Add two cups liquid. I usually use one can of beef broth and add
enough red wine to make 2 cups. Bring to a boil.
Add 1 cup of medium grain bulgur wheat or cracked wheat. Then add one
cup of frozen baby peas. Stir through to make certain that all the
wheat gets wet and that the mixture is level throughout the pan.
Turn the heat to low, cover the pan, and let it sit for 15 minutes.
Taste and adjust seasoning. Stir through to loosen the mixture, and
serve in bowls.
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3113.3 | HAMBURGER MEAL - 2 PANS | LEDS::MELANSON | | Tue Jul 02 1991 17:35 | 11 |
| I usually brown up some onions, clove of garlic, 1 green pepper with
some hamburg meat, drain.
Then mix hamburg mixture with 2 cans of tommato soup and cooked/drained
maccaroni. (just add tommato soup as is, DO NOT ADD ANY WATER)
Heat thoroughly and serve w/garlic bread and salad.
sandy
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3113.4 | Great appetizer | TRACTR::OSBORNE | | Wed Jul 03 1991 09:19 | 4 |
| Brown 1 lb of hamburg and drain. Add 1 jar of mild, medium, r hot
salsa sauce and heat through. Serve with tortilla chips.
Stu,
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3113.5 | Sloppy Joes | ICS::ANDERSON_M | | Wed Jul 03 1991 16:06 | 8 |
| Brown 1 1/2 pounds hamburg, drain. Return to stove and add two cloves of
sliced garlic, one large onion chopped, one jar chili sauce and saute
for about 2 minutes.
Serve on Bulkie rolls with Eagle Brand Chips and a beer!
alas...sloppy joes
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3113.6 | BEST EVER -Sloppoy Joe's | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | i'd rather be shopping | Tue Jul 09 1991 11:56 | 19 |
|
This is the best Sloppy Joe recipe, it sounds strange, but try it!
Brown 1-1/2 lbs hamburger
Drain off fat
ADD:
1 can Chicken Gumbo Soup, stir well
1/2 Cup Ketchup
1/2 tsp Celery Salt
Cook for about 20 minutes---it's done!
Let me know how you like, it's REALLY good!
Jackie
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3113.7 | Variation on .1 | AKOCOA::THORP | | Thu Jul 11 1991 11:22 | 5 |
| I use the recipe in .1, but I add 1 tsp each salt (optional), basile,
and oregano.
Chris
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3113.15 | | AUNTB::MONTGOMERY | D-D-D-Dittos! | Sun Aug 11 1991 13:10 | 10 |
|
Every fall we have a big chicken stew/bonfire party. We do our chicken
stew like oyster stew, that is adding milk and butter to the stewed
chicken and a little of the chicken broth. I like to make it pretty
thick, like a chowder and serve with cracker/homemade bread.
Mmmmm, fall's on the way!
Helen
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3113.16 | | TALLIS::TORNELL | | Mon Aug 12 1991 17:42 | 35 |
| Hiya, Carla! I devised a neat dish I call "company chicken". Brown up
some boneless chicken breasts in a large frypan. You can add some
garlic to the oil if you like. Cook the chicken all the way through
then remove and keep warm. Deglaze the pan with 'White Wine
Worcestershire' sauce and you can add a little water or chicken broth at
this point if you want more sauce. Correct seasonings, (for me, lots of
black pepper). Add lots of sauteed mushrooms to the sauce. I like to
saute fresh but canned is or course, easier. Arrange the chicken on a
serving platter and pour the mushroom mixture over the top. I top it
sometimes with fresh parsley but more often with a good grated parmesan
or a nutty swiss or jarlsberg.
You can also top with chopped, roast peppers, (pimento in a jar is the
easiest), chopped black olives, chopped onions, capers, whatever. Serve
it with a good crusty french bread and a wine that can stand up to it - a
Sauvignon Blanc would be better than a Chardonnay, a Cabernet Rose even
better. You could also chunk the chicken and pour it all into
individual pastry shells you find in the "gourmet" section of
supermarkets. It's impressive but those shells are *expensive*!
Then there's an even easier one. Brown the chicken breasts over high
heat but don't cook them all the way through. Remove them from the pan
and deglaze the pan with a *small* amount of liquid, preferably water
or a not-too-salty chicken broth. In the pan, make a package of rice
according to the package directions. You can use any kind of rice at
all; Near East's Rice Pilaf, their Spanish Rice, Wheat Pilaf, a Lentil
Pilaf, Uncle Ben's White n' Wild or Brown n' Wild rice, whatever. After
adding rice and water, arrange the browned chicken breasts over the rice
and cover. When the rice is done, enjoy! You could add some cut up
carrots, (cut them small or precook them slightly), onions, peas, almonds,
almost anything at all to the pan at the beginning of cooking. Otherwise,
you might want to serve it with a salad or something. This also works
well with pork chops and pork tenderloin, too.
Sandy
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3113.8 | One Dish Dinner | CNTROL::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Aug 15 1991 13:33 | 15 |
| Line the bottom of a dutch oven with bacon strips. Roll up ground meat
into balls the size of a golf ball. Place a layer of meat balls on the
bacon. Put a layer of sliced carrots followed by a layer of slice
potatoes and then a layer of slice onions. Sprinkle a little salt and
pepper on each layer if desired (I don't salt since the bacon usually
has enough for my taste). Repeat layers until pot is full ending with
a layer of bacon. Add a little water, cover the pot, and put it on top
of the stove on low heat for about an hour (potatoes and carrots should
be tender).
This is also a great meal to take camping. Individual servings can be
made by putting a ground meat patty in a piece of aluminum foil and
then put in a strip of bacon and add sliced carrots, potatoes, and
onions. Wrap it all up tightly in the foil and throw the packets
directly on the coals. Turn it over a couple of times during cooking.
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3113.9 | campfire food | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Mon Aug 19 1991 00:07 | 7 |
| The Boy Scouts of America refer to the previous dish as "hermits",
for no appearant reason.
Just a note for archeological posterity.
- MM
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3113.17 | chicken and dumplings | MR4DEC::WILDER | | Wed Aug 21 1991 13:35 | 45 |
| How about chicken stew with dumplings.
Lightly flour 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts cut into three
pieces each. Saute in 1/2 c. peanut oil in a Dutch oven until brown
on all sides, but don't over cook or they become tough. Remove from pan.
Deglaze pan with several tbls. of chicken stock. Add flour to soak up
oil (about 4-6 tbls. - you be the judge) Remember you want gravy, so
you might need to add oil/flour. saute lightly, then gradually add
3 cups of chicken stock or more - gravy should be thin. Add to gravy:
1-1/2 c. finely diced carrots, ~ 12 very small (pearl) onions peeled
(you can use the frozen kind if you must). Cover and cook on medium
heat for 20 min. Stir up and add 1 pkg. (10 oz.) frozen peas. Add
chicken and any juice that has collected with it. Stir well and bring
to a simmering boil. Drop spoonfuls of dumpling mix (see below) on top.
Cover and cook on low heat 20 min. WITHOUT LIFTING THE COVER -
NO PEEKING. NOTE: the gravy must continue to simmer gently while the
dumplings cook, but if you turn the heat too high, the bottom will
burn.
Dumplings:
2 c. flour
cut in 6 Tbls. butter until the consistency of coarse corn meal
(don't use diet spreads - they have too much water content)
add 1/2 c. chopped parsley
1 t. salt
2 t. baking powder
mix well. Add 3/4-1 c. milk (until dough is sticky, but not too wet.)
I also do this in a food processor - saves time and effort cutting in
the butter which is really very important to a light, airly dumpling.
You can also just make any baking powder biscuit dough and bake on
top in a 400 oven for 15-25 minutes to have chicken stew with biscuit
crust.
This makes an unfailingly delicious stew with dumplings which are wet
on the outside and dry and light on the inside. I serve it in large
soup plates.
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3113.18 | CHICKEN/RICE/CORN | CGVAX2::GALPIN | | Thu Aug 22 1991 13:25 | 10 |
| Here is another recipe that I tried the other day that is
excellent:
Brown 2 - 4 chicken legs. Add 1 cup BBQ sauce, and 1/2 cup water
to the chicken. Cover, and cook on medium low heat for 20 - 25
minutes. Add 1 1/4 cup minute rice and one can of corn. Cover and
cook for another 5 minutes.
Yummy!
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3113.19 | Crock Pot Chicken w/Beer | POBOX::SCHWARTZINGE | Summertime--the Livin' is Easy | Fri Aug 23 1991 12:32 | 19 |
| This is great, because it cooks while you are at work:
Cut up 1 chicken.
Place in Crock Pot
Add 1/2 C Onion, sliced large
1/2 C green peppers, sliced large
1 C Mushrooms
Add 1 Can Beer
1 Can Tomato Paste
Cover with water
Cook on Slow, Serve with Rice.
Jackie
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3113.10 | Quick hamburger Gulosh | KAOFS::J_MACDONALD | | Fri Oct 25 1991 11:53 | 13 |
| A recepie my mother in law uses when an unexpected
amount of kids and grandkids show up is...
Browned hamburger (lb. your choice)
drain fat.
ADD:
1 can of Cambells chicken noodle soup
SERVE OVER:
Mash potatos or rice.
Quick, easy, and good.
spices are optional (I use pepper and garlic)
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3113.11 | ANOTHERsloppy joe recipie?? | EMDS::PETERSON | | Fri Oct 25 1991 16:30 | 15 |
|
Friday Night Sloppy Joes
1-1/2 lbs burger
1 can Campbells Onion soup
2-3 tablespoons of Flour
Catsup
Brown burger and drain off fat. Sprinkle flour over meat and mix
in. Dump in can of soup and 3-4 tablespoons of catsup. Spoon onto
hamburger buns, and then cut into quarters. Eat with a fork.
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3113.12 | One pan Hamburger | DNEAST::BLUM_ED | | Fri Nov 01 1991 13:00 | 18 |
|
How about another Hamburger/soup recipe:
1 to 1.5 Lb Hamburger
1 Can Campbells alphabet vegetable soup
Brown the burger and drain.
Add the soup with no water, cook a bit while stirring.
Serve over toasted bread of your choice...
Kids love it.
Yum yum..
e
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3113.13 | Hamburger, Green Beans and Potatoes | GENRAL::KILGORE | Ah, those Utah canyons..... | Fri Nov 01 1991 16:46 | 9 |
| My mom used to fix this for us and my husband likes it.
Brown 1 lb grounds beef
Cut up 4-6 potatoes, place in with ground beef
Add 16 oz can of cut green beans
Spice to your liking....we use onion powder, salt and pepper.
Cook until the potatoes are done. Serve. Round out the meal with
a green salad.
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3113.14 | | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Thu Jul 09 1992 14:45 | 10 |
| Brown hamburger in pan, drain.
Add 1 box of Rice Pilaf (I use Near East) and the appropriate water.
Cook until Rice is juuuust about done.
Add 1 can Cream of Mushroom soup.
Toss in a handful or so of shredded cheese (optional).
Stir until well blended, cover and simmer over low for 5-10 mins.
You could add some veggies, too.
~beth
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3113.20 | | AIMHI::OBRIEN_J | Yabba Dabba DOO | Mon Jun 21 1993 16:22 | 17 |
| Quick Skillet "57"
1/2 cup chopped onion 1/4 cup Heinz 57 Sauce*
1 pound ground beef 2 tsp salt
1 tbsp margarine 1 tsp sugar
2 cups hot water dash of pepper
1 (1 lb.) can tomatoes cut up 4 oz. uncooked elbow macaroni
1 can mushrooms - optional
Brown onion in margarine add beef and and brown, drain off excess fat.
Stir in remaining ingredients, mix well. Bring mixture to a boil;
reduce heat to low, simmer uncovered 15 to 20 minutes (until macaroni
is tender.
*Can substitute Ketchup
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3113.21 | Mt. Washington Hash | WREATH::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Sat Nov 27 1993 21:45 | 14 |
| Cut up an onion and a green pepper and cooke them in a skillet with
some butter. Set aside.
Cook up a bunch of hamburger, say a pound to a pound and a half,
crumbled up. Drain off the grease.
Add the cooked onion and green pepper back in, plus a can of whole
kernel corn, drained.
Stir everything 'till heated up and serve.
We called this Mt. Washington hash because our scout troop invented one
year on our annual Thanksgiving weekend trip up Mt. Washington in New
Hampshire.
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3113.22 | American Chop Suey | ABACUS::RUSSELL | | Mon Dec 06 1993 13:45 | 38 |
| Another quickie:
~1 lb hamburg (lean is better, less fat to drain off)
Spaghetti sauce (homemade or store bought)
Uncooked pasta - spaghetti, shells, elbows, bowties, ziti
etc (whatever your preference)
Volume based on # of people to feed &/or personal tastes.
Cook pasta per the directions on the package, drain and rinse with
hot water.
Brown hamburg in a large skillet until almost done, then drain off
fat (if any & set aside), then return skillet to heat. Add spices/
seasonings & finish cooking hamburg until done.
Seasonings:
Chopped onion or onion powder(for those who don't
like real onions, like kids)
Chopped galic
Salt & pepper
Italian seasonings
Red &/or green peppers - chopped optional
...and any others you'd like. Be creative.
Then stir in spaghetti sauce and simmer allowing seasonings to
meld. When hot & bubbling stir in the pasta.
Serve with warm fresh Italian bread.
mmmmm!
Alan
p.s. What to do with the fat you drained off from the hamburg?
If you have a dog, add it to their dinner. "Wow what a treat!
My family really does love me!" ....besides it also good for
their coat, keeps it shiny and healthy.
If you don't have a dog, just disgard it.
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3113.23 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Dec 06 1993 16:43 | 6 |
| I know, I know, this sounds icky to the gourmets amongst us, but my
Mother used to make this when I was a kid and I loved it.
Cook up some hamburger. Drain off the grease. Mix in a can of
Franco-American spaghetti. Heat and serve.
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3113.24 | Mine too, Yuk!!! | ABACUS::RUSSELL | | Mon Dec 06 1993 18:04 | 8 |
| I told my wife when we first got married if she EVER put THAT
concoction in front of me, she'd be in divorce court so fast she'd never
know what hit her.
Mother's answer to a fast (and I do mean fast) & filling supper. This
was the Friday night's meal whereas beans & hotdogs was Saturday
night's.
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3113.25 | We called this campers stew | AKOCOA::CSKILTON | | Tue Dec 07 1993 12:23 | 7 |
| This one my kids love.
So do I since it's so easy!
Brown 1 lb. hambuger with about 1/2 diced onion.
Drain grease.
Add 2 cans of baked beans and 2 cans sliced potatoes.
Cook til hot!
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3113.26 | Veggie Beef Cassarole | CSTEAM::BAKER | Spirit that won't let me go | Tue Dec 07 1993 15:05 | 15 |
| 1.5 lbs hamburg - browned and drained
1 can cream of Mush soup **
1 can cream of Aspargus soup **
3 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
3/4 C water
1 can Veg-all - drained and rinsed
1 pkg refridgerated biscuits (the kind you whack on the counter and
they pop out of the cylinder)
Mix everything together in a cassarole dish (except biscuits).
Bake 15 mins, then top with biscuits, bake 12-15 mins more.
Easy and tasty!
~beth
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3113.27 | add to previous note! | CSTEAM::BAKER | Spirit that won't let me go | Tue Dec 07 1993 15:06 | 5 |
| Oh yeh, the ** were for the fact that you can substitute basically ANY
creamed soup here. I believe it called for tomato, but I couldn't find
it, so I used the two listed.
~beth
|