Showing posts with label sidedish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sidedish. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Tennessee Style Potato Salad For Two


 

There are many ways to make potato salad, but if your looking for a mayonnaise egg base salad, you've come to the right place. This is an easy yummy salad. I think you will like this. 


Tennessee Style Potato Salad For Two 

Recipe by Christine Lamb @ Christine's Pantry 

Ingredients:

2 cooked russet potatoes, chopped
2 hard boiled eggs, peeled and chopped
2 tablespoons red bell pepper, finely chopped 
2 tablespoons white onion, finely chopped 
1 teaspoon dell relish
1 tablespoon mayonnaise 
1 tablespoon sour cream
Salt and pepper to taste
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
1/4 teaspoon yellow mustard 

Direction:
Add cooked potatoes to a medium size bowl and the rest of the ingredients. Gently mix all ingredients together. Cover and chill, untill ready to serve. 

Until next time,
Christine 



 

Monday, February 19, 2018

Asian Flavor Green Beans

These green beans reflects the Asian flavor. They'll make everyone want to eat their vegetables, even the picky eater. 

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Skillet Fried Potatoes

Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.


When the European diet expanded to include potatoes, not only were farmers able to produce much more food, they also gained protection against the catastrophe of a grain crop failure and periodic population checks caused by famine. Highly nutritious potatoes also helped mitigate the effects of such diseases as scurvy, tuberculosis, measles and dysentery. The higher birth rates and lower mortality rates potatoes encouraged led to a tremendous population explosion wherever the potato traveled, particularly in Europe, the US and the British Empire.

Historians debate whether the potato was primarily a cause or an effect of the huge population boom in industrial-era England and Wales. Prior to 1800, the English diet had consisted primarily of meat, supplemented by bread, butter and cheese. Few vegetables were consumed, most vegetables being regarded as nutritionally worthless and potentially harmful. This view began to change gradually in the late 1700s. At the same time as the populations of London, 

Liverpool and Manchester were rapidly increasing, the potato was enjoying unprecedented popularity among farmers and urban workers. The Industrial Revolution was drawing an ever increasing percentage of the populace into crowded cities, where only the richest could afford homes with ovens or coal storage rooms, and people were working 12-16 hour days which left them with little time or energy to prepare food. High yielding, easily prepared potato crops were the obvious solution to England's food problems. Not insignificantly, the English were also rapidly acquiring a taste for potatoes, as is evidenced by the tuber's increasing popularity in recipe books from the time. Hot potato vendors and merchants selling fish and chips wrapped in paper horns became ubiquitous features of city life. Between 1801 and 1851, England and Wales experienced an unprecedented population explosion, their combined population doubling to almost 18 million.

Before the widespread adoption of the potato, France managed to produce just enough grain to feed itself each year, provided nothing went wrong, but something usually did. The precariousness of the food supply discouraged French farmers from experimenting with new crops or new farming techniques, as they couldn't afford any failures. On top of hundreds of local famines, there were at least 40 outbreaks of serious, nationwide famine between 1500 and 1800. The benefits of the potato, which yielded more food per acre than wheat and allowed farmers to cultivate a greater variety of crops for greater insurance against crop failure, were obvious wherever it was adopted. The potato insinuated itself into the French diet in the form of soups, boiled potatoes and pommes-frites. The fairly sudden shift towards potato cultivation in the early years of the French Revolution allowed a nation that had traditionally hovered on the brink of starvation in times of stability and peace to expand its population during a decades-long period of constant political upheaval and warfare. The uncertainly of food supply during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, combined with the tendency of above-ground crops to be destroyed by soldiers, encouraged France's allies and enemies to embrace the tuber as well; by the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, the potato had become a staple food in the diets of most Europeans.

The most dramatic example of the potato's potential to alter population patterns occurred in Ireland, where the potato had become a staple by 1800. The Irish population doubled to eight million between 1780 and 1841 — this, without any significant expansion of industry or reform of agricultural techniques beyond the widespread cultivation of the potato. Though Irish landholding practices were primitive in comparison with those of England, the potato's high yields allowed even the poorest farmers to produce more healthy food than they needed with scarcely any investment or hard labor. Even children could easily plant, harvest and cook potatoes, which of course required no threshing, curing or grinding. The abundance provided by potatoes greatly decreased infant mortality and encouraged early marriage. Accounts of Irish society recorded by contemporary visitors paint the picture of a people as remarkable for their health as for their lack of sophistication at the dinner table, where potatoes typically supplied appetizer, dinner and dessert.
By http://www.history-magazine.com/potato.html

Skillet Fried Potatoes
Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.

Ingredients:
2 large potatoes, peeled and cubed
salt & pepper, to taste
vegetable oil, enough to cover bottom of pan

Directions:
Heat oil in skillet over medium heat. Peel and cube potatoes. Add potatoes to skillet, sprinkle salt and pepper. Cover. Cook about 10 minutes. Remove lid. Turn the potatoes. Cook until tender. Enjoy!









Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Sauteed Green Bell Peppers

Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.


All bell peppers start out green. Bell peppers come in a variety of colors and can vary in flavor. The ripeness determine the flavor and color of each pepper. A red bell pepper is a mature green bell pepper. As a bell pepper ages, its flavor becomes sweeter and milder.

Bell peppers are available all year, but they are less expensive during the summer months. Fresh peppers come in variety of colors, shapes, and sizes, but when selecting them, their skin should be firm without any wrinkles, and the stems should be green. Avoid peppers with black spots.

Store unwashed bell peppers in a plastic bag in the refrigerator. They will stay fresh for about a week. Green bell peppers will stay fresh a little longer than the yellow and red peppers.

To freeze bell peppers, cut the top off and remove seeds and veins. Wash and dry. Then place the peppers in a freezer bag, making sure to remove air from freezer bag. and place in your freezer. Peppers will retain there quality for 6 months.

When peppers go on sale, I buy a lot, and freeze them. Having chopped, prepared veggies in the freezer is nice when you are short on time. 

Note, I say this a lot but I also feel I could never say it enough... Thank You! Y’all make me smile and brighten my day. I have great people who take time out of their busy lives to read my blog. I love how many of y’all also take the time to comment, good conversation and helping to make us closer. I love to read your comments and cherish them all, as well as the folks who write them! Please feel free to chat with each other in comments as well. I know that I read a comment that really makes my day, I'm thinking that this may happen to you as well. If you have a question, feel free to leave me a comment or send me an email. Y’all make yourself comfortable here! Have fun!

Sauteed Green Bell Pepper
Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.

Ingredients:
2 large green bell peppers, seeds and veins removed
1 tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon garlic powder
salt and pepper, to taste
pinch crushed red pepper
grated Parmesan cheese, optional

Directions:
Remove veins and seeds from peppers, cut lengthwise into strips. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium high heat. Add crushed red pepper. Then add bell peppers, sprinkle garlic powder, salt and pepper. Stirring occasionally. Cook until peppers are just tender. About 8 to 10 minutes. Garnish with grated Parmesan cheese. Enjoy!

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Mashed Potato Cakes

Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.


Nothing goes to waste in my home. I'm always thinking of ways to use my leftovers. I had some leftover mashed potatoes from dinner the other night. I think for most people potato is a favorite. I love potatoes. They are affordable. Low calories, full of nutrition and can be prepared in variety of ways.

Have you ever wonder why your potatoes turn green? They turn green because exposure to light... not good eats. Potatoes should be kept in a dark cool well ventilated place.

Potatoes and onions are great friends in any dish, but they should never be stored together. They both will spoil faster. 

Mashed Potato Cakes
Copyright 2011 Christine's Pantry. All rights reserved.

Ingredients:
1 cup mashed potatoes
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
2 tablespoons butter
1/4 cup flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper

Directions:
Heat oil and butter in skillet over medium high heat. Form large patties. In a dish add flour, salt and pepper, mix. Coat potato patties in flour. Add the potato patties to skillet and reduce heat to medium low heat. Cook until patties are brown. About 10 to 15 minutes, turn and cook on the other side until brown. Sprinkle with salt and serve. Enjoy!

Note: Don't turn the potato cakes to soon, you won't get the buttery crust.