All posts by cajunmamacookin

Welcome! My name is Aimee aka Cajun Mama. I am from Alexandria and my family's roots are deep in Avoyelles Parish. I love where I am but I love where I'm from and I love to tell you all about it . I am a wife, mom, sister and teacher! I love to cook meals my family loves and I enjoy sharing family recipes with you all. I live in Shreveport now and I am blooming where I'm planted. I love sharing stories about my family and the foods we love with our Shreveport friends and my coworkers. Nothing makes me happier! I also love spending time with my family, taking trips with my 3 sisters, and snuggling with our two dogs, Roy and Millie! I'm so glad you're here and I hope you enjoy my stories and recipes!

chicken piccata stuffed mushrooms

I am a traditional girl at heart.  But then I’m not.  I love my roots but I love my wings.  I just don’t use my wings to stray very far from my roots…so to speak.  I may live in Shreveport and I have grown to love it here, my last name is Bowlin, but I will always be Aimee Marie Mayeux deep down. I like to mix who I am now with who I will always be and make this life my own.  Staying stuck in the past is never fun because then we cannot grow, change and adapt…that makes life too hard.  It is all about balance my friends.  This all carries into my cooking.  Everything Thanksgiving, no matter how many wonderful dressing recipes I come across or try, I will make without fail my Momee’s cornbread dressing.  I absolutely love it.  But also, when I make it, my kitchen kind of smells like her’s used to when we walked in on Thankgiving morning.  It is like my cousin and one of my best friends, Robin, is right there with me with a spoon and we are sneaking bites behind Momee’s back.  But I will try new things too.  I may make another dressing recipe, but it will be served alongside Momee’s recipe because any other way just feels wrong.  When I have a Christmas get together or any party, I like to mix my favorites with new things.  This recipe I bring to you today is one of those new things.  I found it in a Paula Deen Christmas magazine and made it for my ornament exchange.  They are a wonderful, flavor filled addition to any festive party spread.  I love chicken Piccata and I love mushrooms, so it stands to reason these would be high up on my list.  The capers are optional but ya’ll, I call them necessary.   I will be honest and say I don’t know what capers are…and I am ok with not knowing.  They are delicious.  The only thing I would alter about this recipe the next time I make them is to give the chicken a few pulses in the food processor.  I think it would make for a better texture for the filling and certainly make it easier to put the filling in the mushroom caps.  Also, sprinkling the tops with some panko crumbs and then brushing the tops with a little melted butter to give them a little color.  I tried these on a whim and I am so happy I did.

Chicken Picatta Stuffed mushrooms 

(a recipe from Paula Deen magazine Christmas edition)

Ingredients 

2 pounds button mushrooms (white mushrooms)
6 tablespoons butter
1/4 cup minced green onions
1 tablespoon minced capers *(it says optional on the recipe but without the capers these will not taste very picatta-ish (is that a word? Lol)
1 teaspoon dried thyme
1/2 teaspoon  kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
1 cup cooked chicken, finely diced, or chopped into small pieces
1/2 cup dry white wine (cooking wine is fine)
4 oz. cream cheese (that’s half a block)
1/2 cup Panko breadcrumbs
1/4 cup (half a stick) of butter, melted

Directions 

So preheat your oven to 350 degrees.
Remove stem from mushroom caps and set caps aside. Dice enough stems to equal one cup and discard the rest.
Melt the 6 tablespoons of butter over medium heat in a skillet.  Saute the diced stems, green onions, capers, salt and pepper and thyme.  Saute this for about 5 minutes, stirring constantly.

Stir in chicken and wine. Cook another 5 minutes or until most of the liquid has evaporated.

Add in cream cheese and Panko and stir until combined.
Fill each mushroom cap with a tablespoon of the mixture.  Bake in oven for about 20 minutes.
Serve hot.  Get ready to watch those babies disappear.  It is truly a festival for your mouth!!  You will be the star of any get together when you set these out.

Image

I am telling you…these are delish!!

 

photo (25)

 

I am a little older now, but this girl still lives in my heart…try new things, but always keep your favorites close.  I think I wore that dress out.  I loved it!

Cajun Mama Special Potatoes

Pregnancy can do some crazy things to a woman.  4 pregnancies in 5 years can really do some stuff.  Those 5 years were full of many things.  Joy, tears, worry, excitement, anticipation, love, laughter, tears, snuggles, cravings, chaos and oh yeah…potatoes.  Not just any potatoes my friends…my SPECIAL potatoes.  These special potatoes were an evolution of sorts.  This recipe came about long before Cajun Mama Cooks and back when I didn’t cook as much as I do now.

I have always loved twice baked potatoes and in college I used to buy the…gasp…frozen kind.  I know.  Yikes!!  But I liked them.  And then we got married and I started cooking more.  Money was tight and I figured I would give it a try making them on my own.  So I would bake potatoes and scoop them out and make the filling and then put it back in.  They were pretty good but then I got pregnant and then pregnant again.  And again.  My morning sickness was constant and severe and potatoes seemed to make me feel better.  I wanted to swim in a big ole bowl of stuffed potatoes.  Big Daddy really got into grilling and we loved those potatoes with whatever he grilled, but all that scooping and filling was not my bag.  Plus with a bunch of little precious darlings/minions running around, who had time for that?  Not me.  So one day, I was going to make mashed potatoes so I peeled and cut up a bunch of potatoes and boiled them.  But being an impulsive, hungry, pregnant (again) woman…I decided to make what is now affectionately known as my special potatoes.  Oh ya’ll…they are so good.  The beauty of these potatoes is that they are the perfect side dish.  They are laid back enough for barbecue but pretty enough to go on the side of prime rib roast.  They go so well with either.  Or maybe I say this because I have found a way to cook them all year round, regardless of the season.  Oh well…they are really good and 3/4 of my kiddos love them, making them miraculous potatoes in my book.  And I have picked up a few short cuts and tweaked this recipe a bit to where they are almost perfect.

My old neighbor and dear friend , Stacie,  LOVES these potatoes and when I made them I would  bring her some leftovers to take for her lunch at work the next day whenever I could.  She is still my loyal and wonderful friend  after all these years, even though she has seen me through 2 pregnancies and been there with all 4 kids crying at the same time…so maybe these are magical potatoes.  She still comes around even though we have moved.  They really are that good.  So give them a try and at the very least your kids or husband/wife or both might just go into a carb coma after they eat a bowl of these.  You will get some quiet time.  Magical potatoes indeed.  No really, make them.  You will be so happy you did.

photo (21)I

I want to grab a big ole serving spoon and gobble them up!!!

Cajun Mama’s Special Potatoes

Makes about 8-10 servings, depending on size of serving.

Ingredients

1 package of Ore-Ida steam and mash potatoes (found by frozen french fries) cooked according to package directions

OR

6 medium sized potatoes, peeled, diced and boiled until tender then drained. (I use the steam and mash whenever possible.  If you have not bought these before you should try them…takes all prep work out of mashed potatoes but they are real potatoes…not boxed)

8 oz. sour cream

1/2 stick butter

2 green onions, chopped (green parts only)

5 slices of bacon, fried and then crumbled ( I have used real bacon crumbles before when pressed for time…just keeping it real folks. 🙂

kosher salt and black pepper

Tony’s seasoning

2  cups cheddar cheese, evenly divided

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.  Grease a 9 x 13 baking dish.

Cook your potatoes, whichever kind you decide to use.  While they are still hot, dump them into the bowl of your stand mixer or a large mixing bowl.  Add sour cream.  You can add more or less depending on your taste.  Add salt and pepper and tony’s, about 1/2 tsp. of each.  You can more later to taste if you wish.  Mix on low speed until well combined.  Add more salt and pepper, tony’s  or sour cream if you want at this point. Add green onions, crumbled bacon  and 1 cup of the cheddar cheese and mix until this is all combined.

Taste for seasoning and add to it if you wish.  Add in some Tony’s at this point too.  Again, according to your tastes.

Transfer the potatoes to your greased dish.  Sprinkle with remaining 1 cup of cheese.  Bake for about 25 minutes or until cheese is melted and all bubbly.  Serve on the side of whatever meat dish will ultimately pale in comparison to these special delicious wonderful fantastic potatoes.  I really love these potatoes if I have not made that clear.

Hope ya’ll love them as much as I do.

Chocolate Bourbon Pecan Pie

Yes…you read that title correctly.  Chocolate bourbon pecan pie.  And it is every bit as delicious as you would imagine.  It is Thanksgiving and Christmas and all good things rolled into one.  It is traditional pecan pie but so much more.  I came across this recipe one lucky day…before pinterest. Shocking I know!!  I gave it a try that Christmas and we were blown away.  Friends who came to Christmas dinner wanted to take an entire pie home.  It is that good.  The best thing about this pie is that it is easy to prepare and yet it tastes so fabulous it seems as if you have spent hours preparing it.  This pie will have people beating down your door to be friends with you, get you into the best holiday parties, heck it is so good they might throw  a party in your honor!!  Ok…I may be embellishing a little but I assure you making this pie for your friends and family can’t hurt anything.  Oh it is so good.  So give it a try.  I promise you have totally got this!  So get to baking…Cajun Mama says so.  Sorry…I know that was bossy…but I like to pretend ya’ll listen to me…the people who live in my house with me certainly don’t.  I am pretty sure they hear a series of dolphin squeaks when I speak.  Ha ha!  But really…sigh.

Chocolate Bourbon Pecan Pie

(From Southern Living Nov. 1998)

Yields  one 9 inch pie

Ingredients 

1/2 package refrigerated pie crusts

4 large eggs, room temperature

1 cup light corn syrup

6 tablespoons butter, melted

1/4 cup firmly packed light brown sugar

3 tablespoons bourbon

1 tablespoon all purpose flour

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

1 cup coarsely chopped pecans

1 cup semisweet chocolate chips

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Lay pie crust in a 9 inch pie plate, taking care to fold edges under and crimp

Whisk together eggs, light corn syrup, and the following 6 ingredients until mixture is smooth.  Stir in chopped pecans and chocolate chips.  Pour into pie crust.

Bake on the lowest oven rack for 1 hour or until set.  Mine took exactly an hour and then I let it cool for about 45 minutes and it was perfectly set.

ImageYeah…it is even better than it looks.  Promise.

PW’s meatloaf and BB’s honey carrots

I love meatloaf.  I love meatloaf sandwiches.  I am speaking out today on behalf of meatloaf lovers everywhere.  This post is for you. My mama always made cheese stuffed meatloaf and I always loved it but when I moved out, I could never quite make it as well so I found other recipes and tried them out.  They just didn’t hit the spot.  Then I had kids and meatloaf making kind of went by the way side for a few years.  Then they got a little older and my oldest and my pickiest eater loved meatballs, burgers, and hamburger steak so I had a hunch he might like meatloaf.  I found a Paula Deen recipe and he loved it.  Definite winner.  Sadly, when we moved last year, I lost the magazine that the recipe was in and I have tried to find it again but I can’t.  I have googled it, searched pinterest for it.  Nothing.  To be honest, he loved that recipe, but I could go either way on it so I figured it wouldn’t hurt to branch out and find some new meatloaf recipes.  Boy did I find a good one.  Oddly enough, I have Pioneer Woman’s cookbooks and I know I have seen this recipe but I never made it until Big Daddy told me he had a hankering for meatloaf the other day.  So I set out and sure enough…this recipe came up when I googled best meatloaf recipes.  Yep, apparently google knows good meatloaf.  Big Daddy almost made himself sick on this meatloaf.  I am not lying.  It went so well with some mac and cheese and BB’s honey carrots (as my kids call them and BB is what they call her).  Now, my oldest did not try it.  He decided to pass, which is not unusual for him with a new dish.  The majority of the fam liked it so I considered it a win.  I think he found the bacon on top off putting.  None the less, whether or not you or your family care for meatloaf, if you are just wanting to experiment and are wanting an awesome meatloaf in your repertoire, this is a great place to start.  Oh and the leftovers make a delicious sandwich for lunch the next day.  Can’t beat that.

I made a few additions to this recipe and I have a few suggestions for what I will do next time, but this recipe can be found on The Pioneer Woman’s website/blog and in her cookbook.

Pioneer Woman’s favorite meatloaf 

2 lbs. ground chuck

1 cup whole milk

6 slices of white sandwich bread

1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese

1/4 tsp. seasoned salt

3/4 tsp. Kosher salt

Freshly ground black pepper

1/3 cup flat leaf parsley (I omitted this as my kids tend to find any “green stuff” in their meat off putting)

*I add some Mexi-cajun seasoning to mine.  My friend Shelley makes it and it is so good.  I put about 1/2 tsp. in my meat

4 whole eggs, beaten

10 slices thin (not thick cut or center cut) bacon

1 1/2 cup ketchup

1/3 brown sugar

1 tsp. dry mustard

a few shakes of Tabasco or LA hot sauce or to taste

Instructions

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.  In a medium size bowl, pour milk over the bread slices.  Allow the milk to soak in for a few minutes.  Prepare your 9 x 13 baking dish by covering the bottom and sides with aluminum foil. Trust me on this. If you have a rack that fits in your baking dish or pan, use it.  It will allow the fat to drip down.  Again…trust me.

In a separate bowl, add your ground chuck, Parm, seasonings and milk soaked bread.  Pour in the beaten eggs.  With clean hands, mix the ingredients until well combined.

Lay bacon slices over the top.  Tuck the ends of the slices under the meatloaf.

Make the sauce:  add ketchup, brown sugar, dry mustard,and hot sauce in a mixing bowl.  Whisk this together.  Pour 1/3 of this mixture over the top of the bacon.  Spread with a spoon.

Bake the meatloaf for 45 minutes and then pour another 1/3 of the sauce over the top.  Bake for another 15 minutes.  Slice and serve with the remaining sauce on the side.

BB’s Honey carrots (an all star side if there ever was one.  Tasty and sweet, but still carrots and your kids are eating carrots so that makes them healthy…ish…healthier than say french fries…so score one for you!!  And they have honey for the main ingredient and how can that be bad?)

Stuff you need~

1 pound bag of carrots, peeled and sliced

1/2-1/3 cup of honey

2-3 Tablespoons sugar

1 Tablespoon butter, optional (this just makes them a little richer but not necessary at all)

Add carrots to a medium sauce pan.  Cover with water plus a little more.  Add honey and sugar and butter if you are using it.  Bring to a boil uncovered.  Reduce to a simmer, cover and let them cook until fork tender and some of the water has evaporated out.  Perfect.  These goes great with baked chicken and rice and gravy as well.  Just saying.  Enjoy.

 

Image

Is your mouth watering?  Mine is and i just ate the rest last night.  You won’t be disappointed.

5 ingredient white chicken chili

Hey ya’ll!!  It has been a little bit of a chaotic week so I have not posted yet and I apologize BUT I am going to make it up to ya’ll by posting a crazy yummy recipe.  I put this one in my column in Red River Moms a few months back and I have gotten lots of good feedback.  I think ya’ll will like it and best thing is it only requires 5 main ingredients.  You can add the optional toppings but the basic recipe calls for 5 things!  I figured since many of you do not get an issue of Red River Moms, you might not have seen it.  You can always view the issues of Red River Moms online though at http://www.shreveporttimes.com/section/redrivermoms if you want to.  Just a little FYI for you in case you are interested.  But just in case, I am going to post this deliciously easy and real recipe for you here today.  It is a soup recipe.  Ya’ll know I love soup and this one is a WINNER!!! 

5 ingredient White Chicken Chili (I found this at http://www.gimmesomeoven.com)

servings 2-4 

Total cook time 15 minutes (this includes prep)

Ingredients:

6 cups chicken broth (I use reduced sodium)

4 cups shredded chicken (you can use rotisserie or you can bake 3 chicken breasts or about 1 lb. and shred that…either is great)

2 15 oz. cans of Great Northern beans, drained 

2 cups Salsa Verde (she gives you a link to make your own…but I bought mine at Brookshires.  It is near the other picante sauce and salsas…Ethnic foods aisle)

2 tsp. ground cumin 

optional toppings: diced avocados, chopped fresh cilantro, shredded Monterey jack or cheddar cheese, sour cream, crumbled tortilla chips (I made my own and I will tell you how below)

Instructions:

Add chicken broth, shredded chicken, beans, salsa, and cumin to a medium saucepan or small stockpot.  Stir to combine.  Heat over medium high heat until it comes to a boil.  Lower heat and let it come to a simmer, cover.  Let it simmer for at least 5 minutes.  Serve warm with which ever additional toppings you like. 

Image

 

So hearty and flavorful…perfect for a chilly fall night

Homemade tortilla strips

Now, this is very simple.  Preheat your oven to about 325 degrees. Get you some corn tortillas.  I take about 5 at a time and cut them longways into strips and then cut the strips in half.   Spray a baking sheet with some cooking spray.  Lay your strips on the baking sheet.  Bake until the strips are crispy.  About 10 minutes give or take.  Remove from oven and let them cool.  Voila!  You made your own tortilla strips!!  Yay you!!!

Cajun bean and ham soup and a side of fire

I really enjoy Mandy at South Your Mouth’s blog so much.  She is sassy, knows good food, and is best of all Southern as all get out.  This chick knows her stuff.  So a few weeks ago, she posted a recipe for cajun bean and ham soup.  I was intrigued.  The picture made my mouth water.  I have had friends who have made the 15 bean soup with the packaged 15 bean soup mix.  I have certainly noticed the package in the store when I was there picking up my Camellia red beans but I typically pass right on by.  Well I read her blog post about the cajun bean and ham soup and noticed she mentioned that this recipe calls for the CAJUN 15 bean soup mix and that many people have a hard time finding the Cajun variety.  I was in Brookshires a few weeks ago and I was getting my red beans and I noticed the 15 bean soup mix.  Then right next to it, I saw the Cajun 15 bean soup mix.  I thought “score!!!” and I picked up a package.  I figured why not and I would cook them and blog the recipe soon anyway.  I had mentioned we went to my inlaw’s last weekend.  Granny made a ham (is there any thing better than baked ham?) and naturally I asked her “hey, what are you going to do with your ham bone?”  What?  That is a perfectly normal question to ask someone.  Isn’t it?  LOL!!!  Give me the ham bone and no one gets hurt!!!  She told me I could take the ham bone home no problem.  So operation cajun bean and ham soup was ready to launch.  Elusive cajun 15 bean soup mix?  Check.  Ham bone?  Check.  Houston we have lift off!  Yesterday morning, I knew the day had come.  I cooked those bad boys nearly all day in my big ole red Lodge Corner dutch oven with that ham bone right along with it.  Ya’ll.  LSU won and this soup was a winner.  Yesterday was a GOOD day.  Best part is that there is plenty left over for us to eat this evening.  Big Daddy’s aunt is visiting today and we are taking the kids to Dixie Farms today for a little Fall fun in the corn maze and pumpkin patch.

Now let me give ya’ll this tip.  Best thing in the world is to bake a ham one day and have that for supper.  And then the next day make this soup or a batch of red beans and rice the next night.  You can do all sorts of things with a ham and eat on that thing for several days.  That’s a trick my mama taught me.  Anyway, let me stop my yapping and give ya’ll this recipe so I can go get ready.

Cajun bean and ham soup (adapted from South Your Mouth blog)

Ingredients

1 package Cajun 15 bean soup mix  (I found mine at Brookshires…I will check other stores and let ya’ll know) *

1 big ole ham bone

8 cups of water

2 cups chopped ham

Directions

Now I started out by bringing the beans to a  boil (don’t add the packet of seasoning just yet) and then reducing heat so they are simmer for about 30 minutes on their own.  I then added the hambone and continued to simmer them for about an hour.   Then I stirred in the seasoning packet, put on the lid and let them simmer for about 3 hours.  Stir from time to time to make sure they are not sticking.  After about 4 hours, remove the ham bone and trim away all the extra meat off the bone.  Add this meat back to the pot along with the additional 2 cups of chopped ham.  Give it a good stir to get the ham good and mixed in.  Put the lid back on and continue cooking on low for another 2 hours or until beans are tender.  Remember to stir from time to time to ensure the beans don’t stick.  Serve over some rice with some cornbread and you are set.  Perfect meal for football watching on a lovely fall evening.  Enjoy!!

*If you cannot find the cajun 15 bean soup mix, you can use the regular 15 bean soup mix which should be fairly easy to find.  I will be honest and say I debated on whether or not to put in the seasoning packet because they tasted so good without it.  Mandy mentions in her post that she could not find the cajun 15 bean soup mix where she lives and she came up with her own seasoning blend to add to make it very close.  She adds  1 tsp. granulated garlic and kosher salt, 1/2 tsp. each dried oregano, dried thyme, onion powder and black pepper and 1 bay leaf.

1378268_553581271389111_1984504895_n

 

Words cannot express how delicious these are…

A side of Cajun Mama…On the way home from dropping the kids off at school yesterday, I heard the song We Didn’t Start the Fire by Billy Joel.  Big Daddy always picks on me because I listen to the words of songs too closely and naturally I did the same thing this time.  I have heard that song dozens of times, but have not really paid attention as an adult.  Back in high school, I liked that song.  As an adult, I love it.  It has a whole new meaning.  We didn’t start the fire.  It was always burning since the world’s been turning…for some reason on a rainy Halloween day, those words gave me peace and comfort.   I am not a girl to speak of political things in mixed company.  My daddy taught me this from a very young age.  I remember asking him who he was voting for in a presidential election at dinner one night and he looked at me and said “my baby that is not something you ask people.”  Boy in the age of Facebook and everyone feeling free to air their political beliefs, I am really glad he took the time to raise my awareness of that.  This side of Cajun mama is NOT a political statement.  It is simply me saying that the words of that song or the We didn’t start the fire part gave me comfort.  Let’s face it, whatever side you are on, things are looking pretty scary these days.  It is hard to know which way to turn or who to believe.  Those words spoke to me yesterday.  We didn’t start the fire…it has always been burning.  Look at our grandparents and great grandparents (I had the pleasure of knowing some of mine and I am blessed for that)…they survived so many things in their time.  Still here to speak about it.  My Momou is 92 years old.  She has seen the fire.  She still has fire in her eyes.  She stayed her course.  Raised 5 kids, cooked meals, celebrated holidays and I think she has close to 20 great grands, as she calls them.  Steadfast and sturdy and continuing on.  The smart ones discuss the fire.  The wise ones continue with what they are doing and let that fire burn.  There is cooking to be done, dirty kiddos to be bathed, boo boos to be kissed, and laundry to be done…no time to concern myself with that fire.  I see it.  Oh yeah, just like Momou did, but it won’t stop me from doing what needs to be done or steal my joy as I do it.  The fire will continue to burn on and on after we are gone.  In this world where we preach about doing good for others, thinking of others not ourselves, it is still very easy in the dark of night or the first light of day when we are watching the news to think that surely this may soon be the end of us all.  It won’t be.  Just like cajun mamas before me were cooking red beans and rice long before any of us, we will endure and survive.  Life will go on and there is always hope.  The fire is burning and as adults we feel the heat more and more every day…that does not mean it begins and ends with us.  As Billy Joel says, it will still burn on and on and on.  While we are on this Earth, we may stoke the fire, add to it our fuel, but we didn’t start it and we are not going to put it out. ~AMB

71647_4648345923992_2092032169_n

My girls and our beloved Momou…what fire?  🙂

 

Cajun Mama’s Creamy Chicken Spaghetti

So first things first.  I have told ya’ll that I am not from Shreveport originally.  I know it seems like those 2 hours North of Alex. would not make that big a difference food wise.  It does.  Chicken spaghetti is  a dish that I personally had not eaten or heard of before I came to Shreveport.  In fact, when my good friend Leia was craving chicken spaghetti during her first pregnancy, I honestly thought she meant spaghetti sauce with chicken pieces in it.  My mom made that when i was growing up.  My daddy loved it.  Spaghetti and meatballs and chicken in it.  So I thought that was what she meant when she said she wanted chicken spaghetti.  I was so wrong.  They were kind about it and thought my naivety was endearing.  So then one day, a sweet dear lady named Mama Kate sent me a local church cookbook and low and behold, it had a recipe for chicken spaghetti in it.  So I made it.  It was good but took a lot of time and at the time I was in college and didn’t have time for that.  Around this time, my mom started making chicken spaghetti and she had her own way (which is usually fantastic and better) and it was so good.  So over the years, my recipe sort of evolved and Big Daddy absolutely loves it.  Good enough of an endorsement for me.  I am quite certain everyone reading this has made chicken spaghetti before, but just in case you haven’t, let me warn you…this is one of those dishes that you will make repeatedly until you are sick of it because it is so good and easy.  My kids love this dish, but not with the Rotel so I always pull some out before I add the mushrooms or Rotel.  I always serve this with garlic bread and a nice big green salad.  MMMMMMMM!!!

1395910_555629214517650_389458128_n

Creamy dreamy chicken spaghetti 

 

Cajun Mama’s Creamy Chicken Spaghetti

Ingredients 

1 package of angel hair spaghetti

2 cans cream of mushroom soup

2 cans cream of chicken soup

1 jar of sliced mushrooms, drained

1 can Rotel tomatoes (I use mild but use the heat you want)

1 16 oz. package of Velveeta (I use the  2 % milk kind)

1 package of boneless chicken thighs, cooked and shredded (you can definitely use a rotisserie chicken if you choose)

Directions

Cook your chicken and shred.  Set aside.  Boil your pasta according to package directions.  Drain.  Pour pasta into a dutch oven.  Pour soups, Rotel, and  mushrooms into the pot.  Cut the velveeta into chunks and add that to the pot.  Now, over low heat, stir this all together.  You will need a strong spoon for this as this concoction is hard to stir until it is well combined.  Be sure to stir frequently as the pasta starts to stick to the bottom.  Continue to stir until the cheese is melted throughout and the pasta is well combined with the soups and cheese.  I like to sprinkle a little kosher salt and cracked black pepper over the finished product before serving.

There is really nothing to it.  Hope you love this dish as much as we do.  It is such a crowd pleaser!

Image

Me…so excited to get the Pioneer Woman’s new cookbook on the day it was released!  I have no shame.  ha ha

Cajun MAMA side note~That picture is the REAL me.  No makeup.  Hair not straightened.  Dark marks on my skin left from my pregnancies showing.  Totally excited expression and really quite goofy and cheeseball.  Yep that’s me.  I have never been one for pretense and these days even less so.  It takes too much time and energy.  Sure, I love to get dressed up and put on my makeup when I feel like it.  When I do, the only person I am trying to impress is…me.  It makes me feel good and the mood has struck me.  Other than that, no thanks.  I am my own genuine article just like you are.  I embrace her frankly because I do not have the energy to force this into any other than its natural state.   I am a little rough around the edges at times.  I am ok with that.  I would rather be seen that way than anyone ever accuse me of being anything less than real.  In this journey we call life, I find it easiest to love me the way I am.  I cannot be like anyone else.  It is too much trouble.  So I give myself permission to like me just the way I am.  I give you  permission to.  Now…there is a bracelet that my friend tagged me in a picture of that said “hide your crazy”. lol!!  Now, I want that bracelet so I can remind myself to reign myself in when I get a little TOO authentic and real.  But no Kardashian life for me.  I am not polished.  I am not posh.  And seeing the train wreck that is the Kardashians these days, why would anyone want to be that?  Who wants to keep up with the Kardashians?  They can hardly keep up with themselves.  That is a hard lonely life they are leading.  No thanks.  I will keep being the authentic hot mess that I am, cheesing it up in the Barnes and Noble because I got a new cookbook.  There is no glamour in that, but there is peace and contentment.  So be real my friends.  Be you.  Embrace your emotions, your true self.  Love that.  It is perfect as is.

Naughty brownies

Now the original name of these brownies is “slutty” brownies and “lady of the night” brownies.  I am really not sure where that name comes from unless it is the fact that you feel downright bad about yourself for making them let alone eating one.  I didn’t not let such a notion stop me.  I mean…chocolate chip cookie dough, double Stuf oreos and brownies?  Umm…sounds like a dream come true to me. But truthfully, these things are sinful so I can kind of see why such a name.  But for the sake of any aunts, uncles, friends’ parents from elementary school who might follow my blog I am going to call them Naughty brownies.  Also, my 10 year old gets on my Cajun Mama facebook page from time to time and also reads my blog, and I really not ready to answer questions about that name.  And they are naughty, so this name is appropriate.  Anyway, Big Daddy was going to the store this morning to get some stuff for his boat and he asked if I needed anything.  I said yes, 2 packs of double stuf oreos.  He immediately got a worried look on his face and asked if i was ok. He knows that Oreos are my weakness and a bad day could send me into the position.  Hunched over a glass of milk dunking oreo after oreo.  I told him I was fine.  I am making brownies.  He didn’t ask any more questions.  He just went and then came home with a pack of double stuf Oreos and then…gasp a package of Mega stuf Oreos.  Seriously?  Who knew they made those.  Luckily my kids love oreos too, so between putting them in the brownies and my kids’ attacking them like a pack of starved gorillas…no worries about having them around the house.  Ok…I made these brownies once before when I first found them on Pinterest.  I don’t think I cooked them long enough and the batch was too small so I kind of felt meh about them.  That was before Cajun Mama.  I felt like it was my responsibility to try them again and report the results to you all.  So…it was tough but I muddled through.  I took one for the team.  ha ha ha! 🙂  Much better results this time with a few changes to the recipe.

Also, this is NOT my brainchild.  I wish I could claim ownership of such a devilish concoction, but I am not a genius.  i do not know where this originated from but I will give you my take on it and i made some changes so to whomever came up with this recipe…my hat is off to you!!

Naughty Brownies

Ingredients

One recipe of Nestle Toll House cookie dough (off the back of the nestle toll house semi sweet chocolate chips package)

one package of Double Stuf Oreos

One family size package of Betty Crocker chewy brownie mix

Directions

LIne one 13 x 9 baking pan with parchment paper.  Leave some sticking out on each side so you can use it for handles to lift the brownies out the pan later.  Trust me.  Preheat your oven to 350 degrees.

Make cookie dough according to Nestle Tollhouse directions.  Press cookie dough into pan.  Lay enough Oreos on top of cookie dough to amply cover the cookie dough.  Like this…

Image

Next, make your brownie batter according to package directions.  Pour brownie batter on top of Oreos.  Make sure you spread it evenly over the Oreos and cookie dough.  Pop your pan in the oven and bake for about 40 minutes.  Check them for doneness and continue to cook in 10 minute increments until done.  You will know they are done when the brownies start to separate from the parchment paper and you don’t see any gooey brownie dough when you look at them.  Mine took about 50 minutes to be done.  I made a bigger batch than what the original called for and they cut much better and more evenly.  Plus more to share.  Win!  This batch turned out perfectly.  I let them cool for about 30 minutes and then I took each end of parchment paper and put that on a cutting board.  I then used my beloved Pampered Chef spatula and cut them into squares while simultaneously shooing little hands away until I was done.  Seriously…little people and big men come out of the woodwork when these are done.  Proceed with caution.  So. devilishly good.  Also these would be precious with the seasonal oreos (thought they will not be double stuf) for a little added color.  Hope you enjoy them.

Image

Aren’t they lovely?  These taste even better than they look.  Promise 

Cajun MAMA side note…So I woke up too early this morning.  Big Daddy had woken up and then my little bull followed suit.  Little Bull wanted a pot pie from the freezer of all things for breakfast.  So BD heated it up for them.  He had no way of knowing that Cookie loves potpies and i had bought that one for her.  She of course woke up this morning and decided she HAD to have it for breakfast.  That is how I ended up at Walmart at 7 a.m. in the frozen food aisle buying another potpie.  So naturally, me being the talkative Cajun I am even without coffee, I share this with the sweet checkout lady.  She gives me a knowing look and tells me “honey.  stop spoiling them children.  They gonna always expect you to do this stuff for them.” I took her words to heart.  She went on to tell me she knows what she is talking about as a 53 year old experienced mom.  I have no doubt she does.  I also have no doubt I probably go too far to please my kids sometimes.  I find it hard to see the line sometimes.  I often wonder if I am the only one.  Am I too self indulgent?  Then I see someone else doing something for their kids and I realize no…I am a mom.  Moms do those things.  Do our kids take us for granted?  Sure.  They are too young to understand why we do it…they just know we do it.  Was going to WM at 7 a.m. on Saturday morning to replace that potpie too much effort for my child who is already struggling to find her place and identity?  I don’t think so.  I want her to know she is worthwhile.  I want her to feel valued.  It is the same reason we moms and dads do any of the stuff we do.  Because we are laying the foundation for their tomorrow.  Does it ensure their love for the long haul?  Maybe.  I don’t know.  All I know is that I cannot give her everything.  I won’t. I cannot give her a pony.  I cannot order everything she wants from the PB Teen catalog.  Even if we could afford it, I would not.  That is not realistic.  I am limiting what Santa brings this year because all that excess is unnecessary and eventually setting me up for having to give more and more.  But I CAN go replace a potpie that was her’s and that I bought because she loves them that got eaten.  I can do that.  I try hard to live my life doing what I can with what I have where I am.  That is all I can do.  Same reason on Saturday when I am too tired to really care, I make trashy brownies, cajun bean and ham soup, a cheese dip for the game.  If it is the small things that become the big things, then I think I am going to make it.   We all will.  Those things I can do.  ~AMB

1002581_10201550224374817_941470106_n

Tina’s corn chowder

So this morning I was reading a post on Christy Jordan’s Southern Plate facebook page and there was a picture of a chowder recipe that lured me in.  All focus was lost and I knew I had to have some.  After I dropped the kiddos off at school, I ran to the grocery store to pick up some supplies.  I came home and got the chicken and dressing going and got it in the crockpot (another post for tomorrow) and then started on this corn chowder.  I know, I know…I was already making the chicken and dressing, why bother with corn chowder?  I told ya’ll about my cooking ADD..or maybe I have only talked about on my Cajun Mama facebook page?  Either way, I am pretty sure I have ADD when it comes to cooking and cleaning.  So when I saw that picture, my ADD kicked in big time.  I had to cook the chicken and dressing because my Sugar Cookie (oldest daughter will now be known as such) is a Thanksgiving dinner food freak like her mama.  So, yeah, I bought a can of cranberry sauce in October.  When we do it, we do it well.  So I figured I would go on and get supper going for tomorrow night.  Nothing wrong with being prepared, which I rarely am, so I may as well enjoy it.  So I have not finished the chowder yet, but I have it mostly done and I tried it.  Christy Jordan was right…it is FANTASTIC!!!!  The list of ingredients seems a little long, but most of it is stuff you most likely in your pantry.  

Tina’s Corn Chowder (from Christy Jordan’s Southern Plate)

Ingredients

1 onion, diced

2 T. butter

2 large red potatoes, cubed 

1 jalapeno, seeded and chopped

1/2 tsp. paprika

3 cups frozen corn

3 cups milk, divided

1 medium green bell pepper, chopped

1 can of chicken broth 

2 tsp. dijon mustard (I used creole mustard and it turned out great)

1 tsp. kosher salt

1/4 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes

4 green onions, chopped

1/2 cup flour

Instructions

In a large stockpot, saute onion and bell pepper until tender. Add broth and chopped potatoes.  Bring to a boil and then reduce heat, stirring occasionally.  With lid on, simmer for about 15 minutes.  Stir in jalapeno, mustard, salt, paprika, and red pepper flakes.  Next, add corn, green onion, and 2 1/2 cups of the milk.  Bring to a boil gradually, stirring from time to time.  Reduce heat and allow simmer.

While that is simmering, combine the flour and milk in a medium sized bowl.  Whisk together.  Gradually add this mixture to the stock pot.  Bring this to a boil, stirring constantly for about 2 minutes or until mixture is bubbling and begins to thicken.  

Image

 

This is the chowder before i stir in flour/milk mixture.  

Look at those colors!!

Apple Pie Enchiladas

If you are looking for a really complicated dessert that requires a bunch of ingredients that leaves you disappointed after a ton of work…this is not the post for you.  If you are looking for a very easy dessert that requires very few ingredients and everyone will LOVE…keep reading.  I ran across these on Facebook a few months ago, before I started blogging I think.  I made them.  They were gone within an hour.  I knew ya’ll needed this recipe.  Now, I will add that Bluebell homemade vanilla ice cream is just a must.  It just pushes this dessert from very good to completely fabulous.  It is comfort food and dessert all rolled into one.  

Apple Pie Enchiladas

Ingredients

1 21 ounce can of apple pie filling 

6 flour tortillas (I use fajita size)

1 tsp. ground cinnamon (I will tell ya’ll that I used roasted saigon cinnamon.  A man told me about this in the spice aisle the Saturday before Easter in Kroger a few years ago…yes I have the memory of an elephant which is a blessing and a curse)

1/2 cup butter 

1/2 cup white sugar

1/2 cup brown sugar 

1/2 cup water 

Directions

Spoon 1/4 cup apple filling down the center of each tortilla.  I used a 1/4 measuring cup to do this but you can just eyeball it and use a spoon.  Lay each enchilada seam side down in prepared 9 x 13 baking dish.  Set aside.

Image

While you are doing this, you can have your butter melting over medium low heat in a small sauce pan.  After butter is melted, add sugars, cinnamon, and water.  Bring this mixture to a boil, stirring constantly.  Reduce heat and allow to simmer for 3 minutes.  Ladle the sauce evenly over enchiladas and let stand for 45 minutes.  Bake in a 350 degree oven for 20 minutes.  Allow to cool for 5 or 10 minutes but serve the while warm with a nice scoop of vanilla ice cream (Blue Bell is what we keep around but feel free to use your favorite kind.).  

Image

 

Make apple pie enchiladas tonight…you can thank me later

Cajun MAMA side note…people ask me all the time if my kids actually eat what I cook aka what I write about.  Yes and no.  Remember I have 4 kids.  4 kids with VERY  different taste buds, personalities, views, feelings…and the list goes on.  Sometimes one or 2 eat what I make.  Sometimes only 1 kid eats what I make.  When there is a blue moon, all 4 kids eat what I make and like it.  When the a full moon on Friday the 13th in a Leap year comes, they all LOVE it.  My point is…it is rare.  There are different schools of thought on this topic.  It can get kind of heated.  I suppose the reason why is that feeding and nurturing our children’s bodies is important to us as moms and dads.  We want to nurture them from the inside out.  When I was nursing them, I had to trust them to know what they needed and when they were full.  They were in charge.  i barely pumped so I just had to rely on their instincts and mine to know they were getting what they needed.  They always did.  Things changed when they got on baby food and solids.  My oldest was the pickiest of all picky eaters.  He has gotten somewhat better as he has gotten older or “more manly” as he calls it, but still his cautiousness as a person carries over to his willingness to try new things, including foods.  I don’t take this as a personal affront to me or my cooking.  I take this as a sign that he knows what he likes or what he is comfortable with.  I have been worried about him eating enough.  i have followed him around with food and begged him to eat, despite the fact that every magazine article and parenting book said not to do that.  Once I realized he was thriving and growing in spite of me…I kind of backed off.  My other kids have gotten increasingly better or more comfortable trying new foods and my youngest pretty much eats anything.  They tend to grow and thrive and life goes on.  Thank heavens.  Fighting and fussing over food is not worth it.  At the same time I am not going to not cook what I am interested in cooking or cater only to them.  We would candy with a side of hot dogs with a sno cone every night.  So we declared a truce.  I do my best to incorporate their favorite meals into my planning a few days a week.  But when I cook something new and they do not want to try it or do not like it, they eat something easy like cereal or waffles with fruit.  It works for us.  They are all growing up to be fine strong happy healthy human beings who most importantly have a voice about what they like or don’t like.  They are encouraged to try new things, but sometimes they are just not ready.  I am growing up as a mom with 10 years under my belt and I see that it usually all works out.  I am learning to trust myself.  Most importantly, I have learned to trust them.