"Cooking is like love, it should be entered into with abandon or not at all." -Harriet Van Horne

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Perfect Pot Roast, thanks to the Pioneer Woman.


My new next door neighbor is really great. Our kids love to play, and I marvel at how much alike we are. Both of our husbands are JAGs, both of our first cars we bought for ourselves are VW Jettas that both of our husbands now drive to and from work. We both love Americana themed things, and we even have the same picture hung in the same place in our separate homes. We have the same interests, and I see that we do many, many things the same way. One thing we share is a love for cooking and baking. She has turned me on to a cooking blog called The Pioneer Woman.

Apparently, I am the last person on earth that has a love for cooking and baking that had not heard of her blog until recently. I mean, this lady is amazing. Her husband runs a cattle ranch in the middle of nowhere Oklahoma. She helps on the ranch, homeschools four kids, makes all kinds of delicious food, takes pictures of the process, blogs about it, as well as blogging about several other things besides cooking, writes cookbooks, has blog readers out to the ranch to cook with her....I mean, how do women do this? It doesn't seem like there is anything neglected in her life, except for maybe sleep. She didn't mean to become rich or famous, but is now both, at least in the cooking blog community. How come stuff like that doesn't happen to me???

My neighbor, Amanda, has The Pioneer Woman's cookbook, and she let me borrow it last week. I sat down, read it like a novel, then went straight to Amazon to order my own copy. I mean, this lady knows what's-what when it comes to cooking. I love that her recipes are real, and that she uses real, everyday, not-hard-to-find ingredients. It's hearty, wholesome food (she does feed cowboys, after all, and they ain't gonna eat no junk!). And she uses real butter and lots of it. You get automatic bonus points with me if you use real butter. And lots of it.

One thing I have always struggled with in my world of cooking is pot roast. I love a good pot roast. It is the ultimate comfort food, and I love to serve it on Sundays. Makes the whole house smell good and the oven or crockpot does all the hard work, which is nice on Sundays when we're supposed to be enjoying a day of rest anyway.

My mom makes a fabulous pot roast. She uses this dutch oven thing that has be at least fifty years old. I never remember having a pot roast she made that didn't come out of that pot. This past summer at Lamberts Cafe when we were at the beach in Alabama, I had some pot roast that was not better, but as good as my mom's. But after many, many attempts, I have never been able to make what I feel is a really good pot roast. Edible and fill your belly, sure. But nothing great.

Until last Friday. I decided I wanted comfort food on a Friday. I had a pot roast in the refrigerator and while reading the Pioneer Woman's cookbook, I found a recipe that looked divine. I have always cooked pot roasts in my crockpot. And I just could never get it right. They were always edible, but I could never get one where I pushed back from the table and went, "That was just an awesome pot roast!" Until last Friday night, that is.

I give all the credit to the Pioneer Woman and her recipe, and none to myself. My only regreat with this recipe is that I didn't buy a bigger roast. Lesson learned. If we would have had leftovers, they would have been great on sandwiches the next day. So I will send you here to her recipe, and give credit where it is due. Thank you, Pioneer Woman, for teaching me how to make a good pot roast. I promise I will never do a pot roast in my crockpot ever again!

Click here for The Pioneer Woman's Pot Roast Recipe

I also made her mashed potato recipe out of her cookbook. I used red-skinned potatoes instead of russets and left the skin on because we like extra fiber like that. And just for kicks, I sprinkled some cheese over the top. Holy schmoly. Just typing this and uploading these pictures makes me want to run right to my kitchen and cook another meal like this one.

Click here for the Pioneer Woman's mashed potato recipe.

I get way more excited about food than anyone probably should. I know this.


Hard Rock Cafe Potato Soup


Soooo...I sort of took the summer off from sharing recipes. This has been pointed out to me by various people...I had no idea anyone at all read this blog, but now that I know I have an audience, I will have to do better! My initial goal was to post a recipe a week. Maybe that is a little unrealistic for my life, but I'm thinking maybe once every other week would be doable. But, I have a little catching up to do now, so you're going to get a two-fer tonight!

This is hands down my most favorite potato soup recipe, ever. My mom dug it up years ago off of one of those copy cat recipe websites. She would make it with bacon cheese bread and bring it to me and my roommates at college. Heaven. It's definitely worth sharing, and I know you will like it if you try it!

Hard Rock Cafe Potato Soup

8 slices bacon, fried crisp
1 c diced yellow onion
2/3 c flour
6 c chicken broth
4 c diced peeled baked potato (HUGE TIME SAVING TIP..I used three cans of diced great value brand potatoes. So much faster than baking, peeling, and dicing potatoes, and you can't tell a difference in taste at all.)
2 c heavy cream (you can use half and half to lighten it up a bit)
1/4 c chopped fresh parsley (I use about 1 T of dried parsley)
1 1/2 T garlic powder
1 1/2 T dried basil
1 1/2 T tabasco
1 1/2 T pepper (If you put the full amount of pepper and tabasco, it will be very spicy. Adjust amounts of pepper and tabasco if you are not a spicy fan or are cooking for kids who aren't spicy fans.)
1 c grated cheddar cheese
1/4 c diced green onion

Cook and chop bacon. Set aside. Cook onion in drippings over medium high heat until transparent. Add flour, stirring to prevent lumps. Cook for 3-5 minutes until mixture just begins to turn golden. Add broth gradually, stirring constantly with whisk until thickened. Reduce heat to simmer and add potatoes, cream, bacon, parsley, garlic, basil, tabasco, and black pepper. Simmer 10 minutes. DO NOT BOIL. Add cheese and green onions. Stir until cheese melts. YUMMY!