The Tromp Queen COOKS!

The Tromp Queen Cooks! Family Favorites: old and new — all delicious!


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The Tromp Queen’s Chili

Image by Marissa Garza of ornamental peppers; via Flickr CC license.

Image by Marissa Garza of ornamental peppers; via Flickr CC license.

I have posted several chili recipes here:  White Chicken Chili, My Mom’s Chili (which I called Super Easy Super Bowl Chili), and Chili Spaghetti.

I have a couple more favorite chili recipes, believe it or not.  Here is one that I created by combining several of my favorite recipes and adding some of my own flair, too.

Ingredients:

1.5 ground beef (85% lean)
1 onion, diced
3 cloves of garlic (run through garlic press or use the kind in a jar)
3 T. Penzeys Chili 3000
1 T. Penzeys Medium Hot Chili Powder
1/2 t. cumin
1 t. salt
1/2 t. sugar
25 grinds black pepper
1 large can (28 oz) whole tomatoes, drain and chop
1 small can (6 oz) tomato paste
2 cans (14 oz) dark red kidney beans, drain and rinse
2 c. water
4 c. tomato juice

Brown the ground beef; drain.  You can add the garlic and onion while you brown the beef or add it after you brown it; if after, cook a few minutes more.  Add the rest of the ingredients bring to a boil, then lower to a simmer.  Cook, covered, at a simmer for an hour if you can.  Less will be okay, but it will taste better if you cook it longer.

This makes a pretty large batch and is soupier than some of the other chili recipes I make.

I hope you like it!


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Make Ahead Meatballs

Image by Annie Mole, cooked meatballs via Flickr CC license.

Image by Annie Mole, cooked meatballs via Flickr CC license.

This Make Ahead Meatballs recipe is originally from the 1999 Quick Cooking cookbook, but you can find it online now.

The magazine had a feature on getting more than one meal from an original item.  For example there was an easy recipe for making Roasted Chickens (2) and then you could make chicken enchiladas with the extra chicken for another meal.

This meatball recipe made it into my “Family Favorites” notebook, though.  My semi-picky eater daughter has always eaten these meatballs.

I cook pasta or tortellini and then heat up some sauce in a separate pot.  People can combine it to please themselves. Meatballs on the side?  Or on top of the sauce? Or with no sauce at all?

Here is the recipe with my tweaks.  The original recipe is for 4 pounds of ground beef, but I very rarely make that many.
My recipe is for 1 pound of meat.

Combine in a large mixing bowl and stir together the following:
1 egg
1/2 c. fine breadcrumbs (chopped up dry toast is fine, but I often use packaged bread crumbs)
1/8 c. finely chopped onion  (I use Penzey onion powder, about 1/2 t.)
3/4 t. salt 
1 t. Worcestershire sauce (the original calls for 1/2 t., but I like more)
1/4 t. white pepper (black pepper is fine)
1 lb. 85% lean ground beef (or leaner if you prefer)

Using a scoop to make meatballs: Adventures of Pam and Frank, via Flickr CC license

Using a scoop to make meatballs: Adventures of Pam and Frank, via Flickr CC license

Mix.  Shape into small meatballs or use a scoop.  Brown in a skillet with olive oil, turning until nicely browned and cooked through.  Alternatively (and much easier if making more than a pound at a time), bake the meatballs on a tray in the oven at 400 degrees for 12-15 minutes, turning at least once.

A good way to make a lot of meatballs quickly is to flatten the meatball mixture out about 1 inch think into a square or rectangle on a clean surface.  Using a knife, cut the meat into squares about 1 inch wide — cut 1″ strips in one direction and then cut 1″ perpendicular strips.  Roll the squares quickly between your hands as you put them onto the baking tray so they look a little more meatball-ish.  Bake as directed in the recipe. Done!

1JLS meatballs via Flickr CC license

1JLS meatballs via Flickr CC license

Tweaks:
I often add some garlic, either to the meatball mixture or at least to the olive oil in the skillet.  I sometimes add 1 t. or so of Italian Seasoning (Penzey, of course!).  Chopped fresh parsley would be fabulous if you don’t happen to have a picky eater at your house who immediately turns up their nose at anything green.  I do happen to use the white pepper for this recipe most of the time just because I have some, but it really isn’t a necessity.  I think they taste best topped with some shredded Parmigiano cheese.

Oh —  here are the partner recipes that were published with this meatball recipe:

Sweet and Sour Meatballs

Meatball Pizza Subs


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Chili Spaghetti

“Willie’s Chili” by Lon Farenwald
Some Rights Reserved

This recipe reminds me of Azar’s Big Boy Restaurant’s Chili Spaghetti that I loved to eat as a young girl growing up in northern Indiana. I don’t know how far the Azar’s chain reached, but there were several within an hour of my hometown. We often ate at the one in Glenbrook Mall (later it became Glenbrook Square) in Fort Wayne. Their signature sandwich was the Big Boy, a double-decker cheeseburger with cheese and a special sauce (similar to a Big Mac but with a unique Azar’s taste). I also remember their delicious strawberry pie! I will share my mom’s recipe for making that pie in a future blog post (when strawberry time arrives!).

Ingredients:

1 lb. 85% lean ground chuck

Brown the beef in a dutch oven or other large pan with a lid.

Measure all these spices into a small dish:

4 t. chili powder
1 t. cardamom
1 t. ground (or grated) nutmeg
1/4 t. allspice
1/4 t. cayenne pepper
1/4 t. ground coriander
1/4 t. garlic powder
1 1/4 t. salt
1/4 t. ground black pepper

When the beef is browned and drained, use a potato masher (old fashioned utensil) to smash and break up the meat into very small pieces.

Add:
2 T. cornstarch to 1/2 c. cold water.
Stir. Add this to the beef in the pan. It should thicken up pretty quickly.

Throw in the small dish of spices and stir. Heat this mixture for a minute or so until you start to smell the spices.

Add:
1 box of beef broth (32 oz.)
1 small can of tomato paste (6 oz.)
1 can of dark red kidney beans, drained
1 T. white vinegar

Do not forget the vinegar! It really brings the flavors together.

Stir to mix thoroughly. Bring to a boil, then lower heat, cover and simmer for 45 minutes or longer as needed.

Meanwhile, toward the end of the sauce cooking time — heat a large pot of boiling salted water and cook 1 lb. of pasta. To recreate my childhood memories, I use spaghetti but you could use any shape of pasta.

I sometimes add two cans of kidney beans, but that is up to you.

To serve, spoon the sauce onto the hot pasta. Top with powdered parmesan cheese (the kind with the green lid). Real Parmesan is good, of course, but again — my childhood memories dictate powdered Parmesan. Azar’s was not a posh place.  🙂

SO GOOD! I hope you enjoy this recipe. Please leave a comment if you try it. I’d love to hear from you.

This is a unique twist on chili and on spaghetti. I have heard that this is sometimes called Cincinnati chili and people eat it with onions and cheese (and other toppings).

As always, I use Penzey’s spices. Quality makes a difference! (I do not work for them, I just love their spices.)


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One pound of hamburger: What’s for dinner?

Recently I was at a loss for ideas of what to cook for dinner one evening.

I decided to use my Facebook status to ask friends for ideas.

This is what I said:
Let’s play “What’s for dinner at the Hasker Haus?”
A pound of hamburger and a fairly well stocked pantry and fridge. Ideas? Go!!

I got lots of good ideas, so I decided to turn the list of replies into this post.

Sunchild57 Photography via Flickr CC

Sunchild57 Photography via Flickr CC

My “usual suspects” for a pound of hamburger would be tacos, spaghetti and meat sauce, spaghetti and meatballs, chili, or chili spaghetti (aka Cincinnati Chili).  I requested that my friends not suggest any of those “usual” ideas.

From Lynette:   brown the hamburger – boil and mash 3-4 med to large potatoes – put hamburger in bottom of casserole dish, place 1 can of vegetable beef soup over the hamburger – then place mashed potatoes over that to top off the casserole – then garnish with shredded cheddar cheese – bake at 350 for 30 minutes – yummy

From Lynn:  Hamburger stroganoff. Flour, garlic salt, pepper, cream mushroom, sour cream. Over noodles.

From Jeff: Hamburger helper!!

From Pat:  Goulash the easy way. Med onion diced, a can of Kidney beans, Macaroni, hamburger, dice or whole canned tomatoes, salt, pepper and basil.

From Karen: Order Dominoes!

From Sara:  Sour cream noodle bake from Pioneer Woman. Or ummmm, hamburgers?

Sour Cream Noodle Bank: Pioneer Woman recipe

From Rachel:  My go-to hamburger easy recipes are pretty basic, but when I don’t feel like doing much they’re perfect. We do hamburger, peas and rice with soy sauce. It’s yummy. Steam the rice, Brown the hamburger, add rice to the drained meat, add in soy sauce, throw in a bag if frozen peas. Easy. Or I do hamburger ramen noodle casserole, a big favorite. Brown hamburger, drain. Add in jar of spaghetti sauce and halve up 4 ramen noodle packs, cover the noodles with the sauce. Use two seasoning packs, add a little less than a cup of water and whatever bag of frozen veggies you have. Corn, peas, mixed veggies, whatever. Simmer for about ten minutes. Add shredded cheese to top and cover so cheese melts. The kids LOVE this one. Or I do hamburger soup – whatever stock or broth I have, browned meat, carrots, potatoes diced, celery, onion, corn, garlic. Season with salt and pepper, soy sauce, basil, a bit of cumin, paprika.

Sara again:  Maid-Rite style burgers.

image by Jacob A Walker via Flickr CC.  Maid-rite loose meat sandwich.

image by Jacob A Walker via Flickr CC. Maid-rite loose meat sandwich.

From Marianne and Stacy:   This is the recipe I wanted when I started all of this! 1# gr. beef, 1 egg, 3/4t salt, pepper to taste, 1/2c milk, 1c crushed cornflakes, 2T minced onion, 1T Worcestershire, 1-2 cloves garlic. Form into 4 patties, 1″thick. Broil 3-5″ from heat 10-12m, turning halfway through.  Addendum from Laura H:  To me it has to have cornflakes or it won’t taste like Mom’s… Knowing you like info, I add this. Mom got this from a magazine in the 50’s. It was called Budget Porterhouse Steak . When I wrote out the recipe for the kids, I called it Good Broiled Hamburger.

From Laura K:  Turkish Kebob?   Me:  Köfte!
Recipes for this dish: Turkish Meatballs from food.com; Turkish Köfte Recipe from chow.com; Köfte Kabobs from All Recipes.com; How to make the perfect lamb kofte; Lamb Kofte with Yogurt Sauce form Epicurious; Kofta Kabobs with Tzatziki from Food network.

From Bert:   I do a potato bake – brown the burger with a diced onion, add a can of tomato soup, add a lot of raw sliced potatoes. Stir together and bake 375′ for an hour or so…

I really appreciate all the choices and recommendations.  Now I have many new ideas for the next few weeks of family dinners, and you do, too!


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Super Easy Super Bowl Chili

Mom's Super Easy Super Bowl Chili

Mom’s Super Easy Super Bowl Chili

This is my mom’s chili recipe. The original recipe was called “Chili Concoction” and it came from a children’s cookbook.

I threw this together in less than 15 minutes tonight.  Then it just needs to simmer for a bit.

Ingredients:

1.5 pounds ground beef (85 percent lean)
1 medium onion, diced
1 t. chopped garlic (or 2 cloves finely chopped)
1 can ( 1 lb. 12 oz. petite diced tomatoes)
1 can (6 oz.) tomato paste
1 can (15 oz.) dark red kidney beans
1 t. sugar
1 T. chili powder (I use Penzey’s)
1 t. salt and black pepper to taste

In a dutch oven or 5 quart or larger pan, brown the ground beef until no longer pink.  Drain.  Put the beef back in the pan with the chopped onion, garlic, salt and pepper.  Open the can of tomatoes and the tomato paste. Drain and rinse kidney beans. Add all of this to the beef pan along with the sugar and chili powder.  Simmer for 15 to 30 minutes or longer if you have time.  If it gets too thick you can add water.

You can add more spice by adding some cayenne or crushed red pepper flakes.  You could add more chili powder if you wish.  You could add cumin and/or oregano.  You could add another can of kidney beans.  This chili is fairly thick and very tomatoe-y.

Enjoy!  Please let me know if you try this recipe.  I’d love to hear your feedback.