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Archive for food – Page 2

Crock Pot Lasagna

The other day I made Crock Pot Lasagna for dinner.  As I was cooking I began thinking about posting my dinner menu on Facebook.  When I post something special I am cooking, oftentimes it gets a big reaction and a lot of comments. What would happen if I posted cereal with milk or PB&J?  Would I get the same reaction?

God’s Word is sometimes like this with us as human beings.  The Bible is a collection of stories or accounts of the Jewish people and others involved with them.  There are many amazing things that happened to and for the people in The Bible.  Consider when Joshua and his army marched around Jericho and the Wall fell down or when Gideon defeated the Midianites with only 300 men?  How about when Peter was on the rooftop and he experienced the heavenly vision from the Lord?  Or when the disciples were in a locked room and Jesus appeared to them after His resurrection?  Consider when John was on the isle of Patmos and the Lord delivered the book of Revelation to him!  These were all amazing, out of the ordinary days in the lives of a just a few honored and Godly men in the Bible.

Now, think about all their other days.  If they lived to be almost a hundred years old, which John the apostle did, how many days did they have like this?  Was God absent from their life during this time?  Did He go away only to return for the spectacular event? No, He did not.  In Hebrews 13:5 He promises never to leave us or forsake us.  He is always with us.  Even on those less than spectacular days when you moms are covered in baby boogers, still in your pajamas, with your teeth not brushed, He is still there, helping us more than we know.

So what do we do on those not-so-spectacular days when nothing quite as amazing as the parting of the Red Sea is taking place?  We do His Word.  Still.   We read it, think about it, and act on it.  We practice it.  We practice 1 Corinthians 13 that says, “Love is patient.  Love is kind.”  When your child is climbing on the cabinets for the 956th time, we are patient and kind.

We “offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips, giving thanksgiving to His name. (Hebrews 13:15)” When your husband is late from work and will miss dinner, thank God anyway because you have a husband on his way home.  If you are currently going through a deployment, you can thank God for the opportunity as a military family to serve the nation.

God is faithful to us even when we cannot see Him amazingly in action and nothing quite spectacular is going on.  He is watching over His Word to perform it. (Isaiah 55:11)  If you act on God’s Word you will most assuredly grow in your faith today.  (See James 1 and Isaiah 55 for further study.)

Crock Pot Lasagna

1 1/2 pound ground beef

1 onion chopped

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 can tomato sauce

1 can fire roasted tomatoes

1 cup water

1 tsp. salt

1 tsp dried oregano

1 pkg.  (8 oz.) no-cook lasagna noodles

4 cups mozzarella

2 cups combination of your choice of cheeses, cottage cheese, shredded parmesan, and/or ricotta

In a skillet cook ground beef, onion, and garlic until meat is browned.  Drain grease.  Add the tomato sauce, tomatoes, salt and oregano to the cooked ground beef; mix well.  Spread a fourth of meat mixture in the bottom of your crock pot.  Arrange 3 lasagna noodles over sauce.  You might have to break them to fit properly.  No worries, they will cook with the meat and cheese and you won’t notice.  Combine the cheeses; spoon a third of the mixture over the noodles.  Repeat layers twice.  Top with any remaining meat sauce mixture.  Cook in the crock pot on low for about 5 hours.   Enjoy!!!!!

Popularity: 2% [?]

Gluten Free (or not!) Chicken Bulgogi

There are few things in life that elicit memories as much as taste.

When my husband and I met, he was stationed in South Korea, living the single life, his first duty station after Tech School.  Life was good. As soon as he washed up from being on the flight-line all day, he’d head into town where he’d feast on Chicken on a Stick, Chicken Bulgogi, Beef Bulgogi, Kimchee and countless other things that he can no longer pronounce.  The flavors were incomparable to anything he’d ever had stateside.

Fast forward a few 6 years and he’s in Afghanistan, sharing a base with the Koreans.  The phone calls I’d get from him were short.  I’d always ask, “What are you doing tonight?”  The same answer.  Every week.  ”One of the troops and I are going to go hit up the Koreans for some bulgogi.”  I’d laugh and make sure he’d take the bag of cookies I sent for this weekly exchange of tastes.

I know by the time he finally left Afghanistan, there were some very happy Koreans, filled up on “American Cookies!”, but my husband sorely missed his weekly bulgogi.

I finally nailed down a recipe that he says is “even better than authentic,” but I’m not sure I’ll ever be able to challenge his opinion.  He always takes a moment to relax and reminisce on the days of old when I make it though.

I’m including notes on how to make this (not) gluten-free as well.  Try it out on your husbands who have had the privilege of serving in Korea and let me know what they think!  It seems fussy, but I promise it’s a breeze to throw together; it just takes a tad of pre-planning.

Chicken Bulgogi
An Original Recipe

Notes: To make this glutenful, simply swap the Liquid Aminos for a dark soy sauce (Tamari).  If you can’t find Tamari, feel free to use regular old soy sauce.  I actually want to encourage you to try Liquid Aminos anyway.  The flavor cannot be beat.  The punch of flavor you get from soy sauce is all there with the bonus of 16 additional amino acids and the absence of preservatives and added salt.

4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts, flattened to 1/2″
2 Tablespoons fresh lemon juice
2 Tablespoons sesame seeds, divided
4 cloves garlic, minced
5 scallions, minced
1/2 cup Liquid Aminos
2 Tablespoons sugar
1- 1/2 teaspoons sesame oil
1 inch fresh ginger, peeled and minced
Pepper
Crushed Red Pepper flakes
Hot cooked rice, to serve

Flatten the chicken breasts by placing them, one at at time, into a plastic bag and beating it with a heavy object.  I use a meat tenderizer, but a heavy skillet, rolling pin, etc. will work too.  Flatten the chicken to 1/2″ thickness.  Remove to a glass pie plate, casserole pan… whatever you have that is non-reactive (not metal), rub the chicken with the lemon juice.

Meanwhile, lightly toast the sesame seeds in a small skillet set over low-medium heat until golden brown and fragrant.

In a small bowl, combine the liquid aminos, sesame oil, garlic, ginger, sugar, pepper, red pepper flakes and one tablespoon of the toasted sesame seeds.  The amount of red pepper flakes you use is up to you, we like things a little spicy so I add a healthy sized pinch.  Pour this mixture over the chicken, making sure to turn the pieces so they get a good dose of the marinade.  Cover and refrigerate for 3 hours, up to 24 hours.

After marinating, warm about a tablespoon of light oil in a stovetop grill or a large skillet over medium-high heat.  Once hot, cook chicken about 4 minutes per side, until cooked through.  Keep a close eye on the chicken while it’s cooking, between the soy sauce and the sesame oil, you’ve got a combination that loves to go from perfectly cooked to charred beyond recognition in no time.

Serve with hot white (or brown!) rice, garnish with remaining toasted sesame seeds.

Popularity: 2% [?]

Celiac Awareness Day – Top 5, What I’ve Learned

Photo taken 4 years ago, before I was “sick”

Today is the 5th annual Celiac Awareness Day.

I might be new to this Celiac thing, but dang it… I’ve learned a lot about myself in the last month and half and I want to share it with you so you can understand more about this gluten-intolerance.   Read More→

Popularity: 3% [?]

Gluten Free Blackberry Cobbler

About a month ago I was diagnosed with Celiac Disease.  At first, the diagnosis was terrifying, and as the minutes ticked by at a painful pace I started become increasingly depressed.  How was I going to get through this?  Being a celiac isn’t a temporary thing, it’s a life change.  Complete and total discipline. Read More→

Popularity: 17% [?]

Coups for Troops

Thank you, thank you to everyone who has been participating in Coups for Troops! We have been a bit overwhelmed with all of the coupons that have been sent to Wives of Faith over these past few months. (We’re talking THOUSANDS!) Military wives, military wife groups, church groups and even high school student clubs have been clipping coupons, just one little way to show their support for military families serving overseas.

We are about to send out the next shipment but currently we only have 4 ladies on our list receiving them! We’d love to spread the coupon love around so if you are a military family living overseas who could benefit from using expired coupons at your commissary, please email me (sara@wivesoffaith.org) with your name and mailing address. There is no cost for recipients; for those who are sending coupons to us to be sent, we do ask you provide a small cash donation with your coupons to help cover our shipping costs (and please cut the coupons – that helps A LOT!)

I’ll let you know what the final tally is of the number of coupons we send out once they’re all counted.

Popularity: 1% [?]