Posts Tagged ‘vermont recipe’

Another way to enjoy a Turkey comfort meal

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Thanksgiving is one of my favorite times of the year. I love preparing a great feast and entertaining friends and family. The flavors of Thanksgiving create the ultimate comfort foods for me. To rekindle this sentiment at other times of the year I have created an easy anytime meal that embodies the taste of this special holiday. Paired with some pan roasted red potatoes and a salad, last night we treated ourselves to this tasty, blissful meal. I hope you enjoy this recipe as much as I have — if you decide to make it, I’d love to hear how it turned out; let me know!

Can’t wait for Thanksgiving, Turkey Meatloaf

Ingredients:

2 c coarsely crushed Olivia’s Traditional Stuffing

2 c chicken broth (reserve 1 cup for gravy)

1 ½ c chopped onion, ½ large, (reserve ½ cup for gravy)

1 c chopped celery, 2 stalks

1 lb lean ground turkey

1 lb lean pork breakfast sausage* (reserve ¼ lb for gravy)

1 t poultry seasoning

2 eggs

2 T flour for gravy

Salt and Black Pepper to taste

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

In a large bowl mix stuffing and 1 c chicken broth. While stuffing is soaking, prepare onion, celery and add to stuffing mix along with ground turkey and ¾ lb lean pork sausage, eggs, poultry seasoning, salt and pepper. Combine ingredients, but do not over-mix. Place meatloaf mixture into a large loaf pan or hand form into a loaf shape on a cookie sheet. Bake for a total of 60 minutes, or until center of meatloaf reaches a temperature of 155 degrees.

Prepare gravy in a 12” fry pan over medium heat. Sauté remaining ¼ lb of sausage and ½ cup of onion until tender. If your sausage is very lean you will need to add 1 T butter. Add 2 T flour and stir until combined. Add 1 cup of chicken broth and simmer stirring frequently until gravy has thickened. Adjust thickness by adding sifted flour or chicken broth if necessary. Salt and pepper to taste. When meatloaf has baked for about 40 minutes, add gravy to the top and finish baking, approximately 20 minutes.

This is a yummy, moist meatloaf that reminds me of the flavors of Thanksgiving, a combination of turkey and stuffing wrapped into one. Enjoy!

*If you can’t find lean pork sausage (the commercially prepared varieties can sometimes have too much fat) you can make your own by mixing 1 lb lean ground pork, 2 t brown sugar and 2 t poultry seasoning, salt and pepper.

My Split Pea Soup: just add a cold fall day, and serve!

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

After a summer of lots of crispy fresh salads, the days turn cold, the garden is covered in frost and something inside me clicks. It’s time for soup…

One of my favorites is Split Pea soup with Olivia’s Butter & Garlic croutons. I can’t have one without the other. Pea Soup is so easy to make. Its best with a ham bone, but a quick substitute can be bacon. I start with a ham bone that at one time or another I have stuck in my freezer. Add about a quart of water, a large onion, a couple bay leaves, a few pepper corns and a little salt. I let this simmer for an hour or two until the ham is falling of the bone and the broth has some taste. I remove the bone, pick the meat from the bone, return it to the soup, add about 1-1 ½ cups of green split peas and let simmer another 2-3 hours on really low heat. Sometimes I add carrots toward the end of the cook time, too soon and the color of the soup gets a little questionable… Because I work at home, it’s easy for me to check my soup periodically.

If you don’t have a ham bone, sauté about a pound of bacon, cut into small pieces, remove most of the fat and proceed as above, you might want to add some vegetable broth to prop up the flavor.

If you work outside your home, try a crock pot. It’s really hard to beat this filling, delicious soup, generously sprinkled with the croutons. The butter and garlic are a perfect combination with the peas and ham.

Enjoy! Francie