Thursday, February 17, 2011

MOVED!

We've moved to waspfoodie.com!

Monday, January 24, 2011

Black bean brownies

Hold on to your hats!  This recipe is a little strange.

I heard about this at my weight watcher's meeting in Randleman, NC.  A bunch of old southern ladies in a Methodist church basement trying to lose weight in the land of fried foods.  The leader said these were good so I made them and was pleasantly surprised.

You'll need:

package of regular brownie mix
Can of black beans
food processor
9 by 13 pan
cooking spray
adventurous attitude

First step: drain the beans and rinse them really well.

Put beans back in can and fill with water.  (Not a whole can of just water, but water + beans to fill the can.

Pour the beans and water into food processor or blender and give it a good whirl.

Add brownie mix.

Pour into greased 9 by 13 pan (or a smaller one if you want thicker brownies).

Bake according to package.  Mine baked at 350 for 25 minutes.

The end result: dense, chocolatey, a little flat, but worth the 5 points for a 12th of the pan (which is a pretty big square!)

Like my pretty plates from Mom & Dad Spence?

And I promise, they don't taste like beans!

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Easy Chicken n Biscuits

FINALLY a new post!

Between trying to recover from awful jobs and an awful cold, I haven't posted any thing new in weeks!

I decided to start up again and made it my goal yesterday to cook dinner.  This was so easy, even my sorry been-glued-to-the-couch-butt could do it.

Weight Watchers Points: 6 points when the recipe is made into 8 servings

Here's the ingredient list:

chicken (about 2 pounds)
can of cream of mushroom soup
bag of frozen vegetables
tablespoon of milk
2 tablespoons of ranch dressing
dash of Parmesan cheese
tube of reduced fat refrigerated biscuits
salt, pepper, oregano, basil

1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees and get a cookie sheet and casserole dish ready.

2. Cook the chicken in a skillet with salt, pepper, oregano, basil and a little bit of oil until browned.

3. Cut chicken into bite size pieces.

4.  Mix together in a big bowl: chicken, can of soup, bag of vegetables, milk, ranch, and cheese.

5. Pour into greased dishes.  I did one small casserole and two cute individual ones.

6. Cover with foil and cook for 15 minutes.

7. Reduce heat to temperature on biscuit package.  (Mine were supposed to cook at 350).  Cook biscuits.  Leave the casseroles in there too!

8. When biscuits are cooked, remove everything from oven.

9. Place biscuits on top of casserole and sprinkle with some cheese if you please.


Don't know why the picture came out so yellow!
Single serve comfort food!
Wash it down with some yummy tree water.

ENJOY!

PS: CHECK OUT WASPY KNITTIN' SECTION!

Friday, November 26, 2010

Sweet Potato Soup

I must be on a soup roll.... two soup blog posts in a row!

This stuff is really good.  It reminds me of Ethiopian food or even mild Indian food.  It tastes like FALL.

I nabbed the recipe from: http://allrecipes.com/Recipe/Sweet-Potato-Carrot-Apple-and-Red-Lentil-Soup/Detail.aspx.  I followed the original pretty closely, but used less butter and regular lentils instead of red lentils.

Here's what you will need for the first step:

2 tablespoons of butter
2 sweet potatoes (pretty big ones, peeled and chopped)
1 onion  (chopped)
3 carrots (peeled and chopped)
1 large or 2 small apples (peeled and chopped)


Cook all those lovely harvest flavors together for 10 minutes on medium heat.

Sauteing the sweet potatoes, onion, apples and carrots.
 
Next you will need:

4 cups vegetables stock
1/2 cup of lentils
1/2 teaspoon paprika
1/2 teaspoon cumin
1/2 teaspoon chili powder
1/2 teaspoon fresh grated ginger
salt
pepper

Add these ingredients to the vegetables and bring to a boil for about half an hour or until veggies are tender.

Smelled soooooooooooooo good.

Transfer to food processor in small batches and liquify!

Pour back into original pot.  Add more broth, water or olive oil until you like the texture.  I added a little more broth and a few tablespoons of olive oil to mine.


DONE!

Check out the finished product:


Sunday, November 21, 2010

Pesto (sorta) Tomato Soup

My favorite herb by far is basil.  If I could make it into a perfume, I would.  So when I saw that the letter "P" won the poll (yes, I am getting desperate when it comes to motivation/ideas/polls), I was excited to make PESTO!

For some reason pesto made me think of tomatoes and tomatoes made me think of tomato soup.  It is such an awesome tummy warming food for fall.  I decided to make my own recipe of pesto tomato soup.

What I did not account for was being able to make pesto in Asheboro.  The closest grocery store is a Food Lion and they only have dried basil.  So my plan was to go to an Asian market and get fresh basil, since these places usually have it for Vietnamese or Thai food.

Royall and I drove up to the biggest Asian market around and after getting over the usual "fish-smell-hitting-you-right-in-the-face" Asian store disorientation, I realized they did not have fresh basil. 

However, we did leave with octopus flavored chips (that was Royall's pick), assorted ramen noodles and dumplings, a box of crackers, and a big bag of rice.

We then decided to go to a regular grocery store.  We got lost and took a nice drive around town until we happened upon an organic store.  They did not have fresh basil and I refused to pay 6.99 for 5 oz. of pre-made pesto sauce.  I settled for a dry pesto mix and some other ingredients and 60 bucks later, we were heading back home.

There's no pine nuts or REAL pesto sauce in this, hence the "sorta" in the title.

I was pretty amazed at how well this turned out though, especially since I made it up all on my own!

Okay, you will need the following:

2 (28 oz) cans of tomatoes
1 small onion, chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
1-2 tablespoons olive oil
white bread
chicken broth (about a cup)
salt, pepper
pesto sauce mix (1/2 packet)
splash of milk
2 tablespoons of sugar


1. Chop your onion and garlic and heat on medium in a skillet with olive oil for a few minutes.
2. Add cans of tomatoes and all the liquid and bring to a boil.
3.  Add a few chunks of white bread (leave out the crust).  I got this idea from when RH made gazpacho.
4. Add pesto seasoning and let boil for 5 minutes.
5. Use a food processor to get it nice and blended.  I had to do two batches in order to fit it all.
6. Return to stove and add chicken broth until the soup is as thin as you would like.
7.  Stir in salt, pepper, sugar and a touch of milk.
8.  Do a taste test to see if you need more salt, etc.
9. Serve with crusty bread or dare I say....GRILLED CHEESE! mmmmhmmm.

Enjoy!

Here's the photo play-by-play:
Ingredients

Adding the bread!

My old school can opener.  Gets the job done!

That's not mold!- it's the pesto powder.

Letting it all stew together

Before

After

Final product



I wish I had made grilled cheese to go with this! Oh well, keeping it low-cal.

PS: This would be awesome with a dollop of sour cream.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Healthy Chicken Packets

These chicken packets pack a lot of flavor, but not a lot of fat! My favorite part: no dishes to clean when you are done! Simply throw out the foil.

You'll need:

boneless, skinless chicken breasts
olives (I used chopped, sliced or whole would be fine too)
diced tomatoes
fresh basil (mine was stolen from the local pho restaurant)
salt, pepper, and garlic if you please
I also think this would be awesome with fresh mozzarella cheese, but that would up the calories and fat

Put the chicken on a piece of foil.  Layer with basil, olives, and tomatoes.

Gorgeous healthy colors!

Fold foil into packet and place on baking sheet.

Cook at 350 degrees for 20-30 minutes.


STEAMY!!!

The final product.
Eat up!

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Popcorn cake

This is SO good and only takes about 10 minutes to make.

It is a similar recipe to rice krispie treats- carb, butter, marshmallow= YUMMY

Here's exactly what you will need:

1/2 cup popcorn (as measured before popping)
1 bag miniature marshmallows
6 tablespoons butter
teaspoon salt
handful of chocolate chips or other sweet bits (Reese's pieces, M&M's, etc.)

You will also need a bundt pan or 9x13 pan, sprayed with cooking spray.

First, pop your popcorn.  I used an air popper, but you could also use some canola oil and popcorn heated in a large pot.

Then, melt the butter and marshmallows together.

Let the mixture cool for a little bit before adding popcorn in order to avoid deflating it.

Stir it all together and add some candy bits!

Pour and press into bundt pan with greased hands.

Let cool before removing from pan.

Close-up



ENJOY!