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When I first moved into my apartment, I cooked meals from scratch every week. Then somewhere along the line I started buying TV dinners, and now my diet is 60% Lean Cuisine. I want to change that, so I'm challenging myself to try at least 40 new recipes this year. That's a little over three meals a month, which I think is easily doable even if I'm working most of the time.
But this thread's not just for me. Feel free to join in this challenge too, and set your own personal goals to aim for. I'll bet a lot of you are secretly amazing chefs, and I'd love to see what you can do.
Alright, first dish of the year: Oven Baked Blackened Tilapia
Prep time: 5-10 min
Cooking time: 12-14 min
Servings: 3
Ingredients:
3 tilapia fillets (around a quarter pound per fillet)
cooking oil spray
2½ tablespoons paprika
1 teaspoon onion powder
1 teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon dried parsley flakes
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon black pepper
¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional)
fresh cilantro to taste (optional)
Directions:
Pat dry the tilapia fillets using a paper towel, then set them aside.
Combine the paprika, onion powder, garlic powder, dried parsley flakes, salt, black pepper, and cayenne pepper in a bowl, and mix well.
Spray cooking oil on both sides of each fillet, and then rub the paprika mixture on both sides. You should have enough of the mixture to liberally coat each one.
Preheat the oven to 400°F.
Lay aluminum foil over a baking tray. Spray cooking oil over the foil and lay the fillets on top of it. Spray a bit of cooking oil over the top of each fillet.
Bake for 12 to 14 minutes or until the fish is done and flaky.
Sprinkle the fillets with fresh cilantro to taste, if you so desire.
Man, what a great way to start this challenge off. I think this was the best fish I've ever made. Tilapia's cheap, so this is a very affordable meal, especially if you already have most of the seasonings. If you like food spicy, this is a great dish to try. If you don't like it too spicy, you could probably get away with reducing the paprika by a tablespoon or so. The recipe didn't call for it, but I went ahead and sprinkled some cilantro over the fillets, and it tasted great. I'll probably be trying this again sometime.
Val's recipes (1/40):
Spoiler.
1. Oven Baked Blackened Tilapia (Jan 25)
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 1:29 pm
by smol Kat
I already try to cook from scratch as often as I can (this week is an exception...) but I definitely look forward to seeing what people try out and might post some recipes of my own!
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 2:56 pm
by pepsibetsy
That looks so yummy!!! I'd love to have a go at this challenge... I work 40 hrs a wk, teach/volunteer at my church 4 days a week, so finding time to do this is going to be hard but I'll do my best!
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 4:48 pm
by smol Kat
There are definitely solutions! Slow-cooker meals, 30-minute meals, no-prep meals (looked some of those up this week as I'm incapacitated)...
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 4:55 pm
by pepsibetsy
Thanks for the tips, Kat!
I will definitely look into them & keep you all posted
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 7:01 pm
by smol Kat
Ooh! And make-ahead meals. Do those when you have a lot of time, generate a lot of leftovers, ???, profit!
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 8:18 pm
by Apiary Tazy
Gonna forward these to Jenocide for no reason.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2018 8:52 pm
by I REALLY HATE POKEMON!
This will be a fun topic to watch but I mostly only eat cereal, sandwiches, and eggs.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Fri Jan 26, 2018 12:34 am
by Heroine of the Dragon
That looks amazing, Val!! Well done *gives you marshmallows for dessert options*
I cook 80%+ of all my meals from scratch due to necessity. Last week, I roasted turkey drumsticks (in butter with rosemary, parsley and pepper). I also made chicken paprika from scratch (chicken, paprika, chicken stock, pepper, cream and flour), and cooked a silverside the "old-fashioned" way (nutmeg, cloves, raw sugar, pepper and apple cider vinegar). They were each accompanied with either, various vegetables (Mashed potatoes, steamed broccoli, corn and carrots), or a salad (tomato, cos lettuce, raw carrot, cucumber, beetroot and corn kernels). I ate a lot of leftovers for lunches and even a few evening meals.
My New Year's Resolution was to eat 4 rainbow meals a week, and I have managed to do this for the month of January so far!!
Tonight, I'm planning pumpkin soup (we grew the pumpkin so I'm hoping for a taste sensation ) with bacon bits, nutmeg, parsley, vegetable stock, pepper, cream and a white roux.
And you should know me well enough that I bake. A lot. Constantly. Cakes, biscuits, cookies, and slices.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Fri Jan 26, 2018 2:00 pm
by Booyakasha
I was feeling ambitious, so I made a nice pork chop/homemade mash/sauerkraut dinner. Ate it in traditional Wisconsinite fashion (aka slice the chop up into cubes, then misch it all together into a pile and top with gravy--------------they call it a haystack). It was good.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Sun Feb 04, 2018 11:12 am
by Valigarmander
I did another one! Chocolate Covered Peanut Butter Pretzels
1½ cups powdered sugar*
½ cup brown sugar*
3 tablespoons flour*
3 cups chocolate chips**
1 lb bag of mini pretzels
* This is the amount the recipe calls for, but I still had quite a bit leftover after using an entire one pound bag of pretzels. If you're not afraid of coming up short, I'd recommend cutting the amount for these ingredients by a third or even half.
** If you plan on fully dipping the pretzels, you'll need about 3 cups of chocolate chips. If you're only half-dipping them, 2 cups should be enough.
Directions:
Combine the softened butter and peanut butter in a bowl and mix on high. (If you don't have an electric mixer, grab a strong wooden mixing spoon and get ready for a nice workout). Add in the sugar and flour, mixing well until you're able to roll little balls of peanut butter in your hand without it sticking too much.
Take a single pretzel, place a small dab of the peanut butter mixture onto it, and press a second pretzel down to make a little sandwich. Repeat until you've used up all of the pretzels.
Refrigerate the pretzels for at least two hours, or overnight.
Melt the chocolate for dipping.
Dip each pretzel sandwich in the chocolate, either completely or only halfway depending on preference. (Chopsticks are handy for dipping, if you have them.) Place the dipped pretzels on a sheet of parchment paper.
Refrigerate the dipped pretzels for about two hours, or until the chocolate hardens.
Peanut butter is great. Chocolate is great. Pretzels are great. Bless the genius who realized you could combine all three. This one takes a while to make, but has a high yield, so you'll have plenty to eat all by yourself share with your friends and family. They taste frickin' great, too.
Oh my gosh I LOVE THIS IDEA. I'm so bad at cooking for myself but I need to be better about it. You've inspired me; expect an addition from me soon.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Sun Feb 04, 2018 2:14 pm
by I am nobody
I've spent the last year and a half making the same "throw meat in a pan and wait" recipe, so I'm on board with this as well:
Chicken Katsu with a side of terrible lighting:
I fully expected this to be terrible given that it was my first attempt at a real recipe of any kind, but it came out amazing. I don't know if it was using plain yogurt instead of a beaten egg or accidentally cooking it in way too much vegetable oil, but the breading was much crispier than what I've had before. And that was with barely any tonkatsu sauce - I somehow didn't think to order more before making this.
I also learned that boiling vegetable oil is hot and you shouldn't splash yourself with it. Whold've thought?
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Sun Feb 04, 2018 2:59 pm
by smol Kat
^Interesting, I've never thought to use yogurt as a binder instead of egg.
Couple days ago I made a casserole based on this recipe with a few changes:
-I didn't have enough rice, so I just cooked what I had and let that be enough.
-I also had a pound and a half of meat, because that was the smallest package I could find.
-Wegmans has pre-cut broccoli, so I used that because cutting up a whole head is for chumps.
No picture because we kind of devoured it immediately. It came out pretty good, but I think next time I'll be using dried beans instead of canned; I have a sneaking suspicion that Wegmans doesn't let them soak for long enough before prepping and canning....
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Sun Feb 04, 2018 9:00 pm
by Apollo the Just
Cooked a Swai fillet in butter and garlic salt for dinner tonight. This thread inspired me on my grocery run and Safeway had a pack of 2 fillets for 5 bucks so here we are 8)
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Mon Feb 05, 2018 4:41 am
by I REALLY HATE POKEMON!
Anyone know of more vegetables that go well in chicken salad? Onion, celery, and parsley are all I can think of.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Mon Feb 05, 2018 4:00 pm
by smol Kat
I'm partial to spinach but i know it's not everyone's thing.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Mon Feb 05, 2018 5:22 pm
by pepsibetsy
Yesterday I made a yummy breakfast sanwich P:
I prepared an egg over medium and added onion, garlic, salt, pepper, parsley... put it on toasted bread with turkey, veggie cheese, and guacamole. It didn't come out too bad, pretty yummy and filling!
I'm partial to spinach but i know it's not everyone's thing.
Good idea, I always forget to really consider spinach because the soggy canned stuff comes to mind.
Re: 2018 Cooking Challenge
Posted: Wed Feb 07, 2018 9:38 pm
by I am nobody
My katsu ran out for dinner tonight, so I had to make something else for tomorrow. The easiest good recipe I could find was...
Szechuan Chicken, supposedly:
So this objectively should have been a catastrophe, and it is only by sheer luck that I produced something edible. To start, the recipe called for onions and garlic, which I couldn't find at Target and simply ignored. It also wanted white wine vinegar, but I didn't want that and substituted lime juice per internet advice.
Then it asked for four chicken breasts, but clearly was not expecting them to be as large as what they sell here. So I had to use triple the corn starch they called for in order to distribute it anywhere near evenly, and then couldn't stir at all because the chicken completely filled the skillet I had. I doubled the amount of oil since the requested one tablespoon was just a sad puddle next to the mountain of chicken, then sort of flailed at imitating stirring. Then I added the right amount of sugar, soy sauce, water, and lime juice despite using so much extra of the earlier ingredients for some reason, and only at that point realized I had no way of cooking it covered for that step. So I flailed at stirring some more, realized I couldn't measure out 1/8th of a teaspoon of cayenne pepper and just threw some on there, and stirred some more.
The result probably cannot be considered Szcheuan chicken, but it's pretty good and, against all odds, somehow evenly cooked on the inside.
Recipe, although you'd probably get something totally different from the above.