Posts Tagged ‘Eggs’



Ranch Style Eggs

Monday, August 14th, 2017







 photo TheOkieHomeMaker_zpsd701b0ad.jpg



You Can Take The Egg Off’n


The Ranch, But…..



 photo 9 Breakfast_zpsedpeilfo.jpg







The beauty of living in Oklahoma is all of the different kinds of foods found across the state. Meals are impacted by the influences of the early pioneer and by the German influence and the Polish influence and the Swedish influence and the Italian influence and the Native American influence and, of course, the Mexican influence. No matter, where you go in the state, depending on the early settlers’ cultural background of the area , the foods are sensational and different.


When talking restaurant foods influenced by the Latino culture we have Mexican, Tex/Mex, New Mexico/Mex and American/Mex but “At Home Mex” is a favorite at our home! And since breakfast is our favorite meal, I think that I need to share my own version of Ranch Style Eggs, also known as Huevos Rancheros. They are gooey, cheesy, luscious eggs that will start your day off with a bang or can make you a hit at a potluck brunch with friends. Since our tomatoes are still producing, I use my fresh tomatoes. However, you can use canned tomatoes and they are just as good. The recipe makes three eggs but you can double or triple the recipe into a larger casserole dish and do just fine.


Ranch Style Eggs



Ingredients:

  • 1 Tbsp Olive Oil with 1 Tbsp Butter
  • 1/2 cup chopped sweet onions
  • 1/4 cup chopped bell peppers
  • 1/2 -1 seeded and chopped jalopeno pepper (depending how hot you like your food) Optional
  • 1 1/2 cups fresh or canned tomatoes, diced
  • 1/8 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp cumin powder
  • 1/2 tsp chili powder
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder
  • 3 corn tortillas with olive oil for brushing
  • 1 cup shredded, sliced or crumbled cheddar or cojack cheese
  • salt and pepper to taste


  • Printable Recipe

     photo 1 saute onions and peppers_zpsfiqjcf5l.jpg



    Saute onions in 1 tbsp olive oil with 1 tbsp melted butter until onions are just clear. Add green peppers and saute.





    Add either diced fresh tomatoes


     photo 3 Add canned tomatoes_zpsiqbhteos.jpg



    or add canned tomatoes. Stir and simmer.


     photo 4 add soda and cumin_zps0haqsuga.jpg



    Add soda and stir. A foam will form and just stir it down. The purpose of the soda is to cut the acid and any bitterness of the tomatoes. Add all of the spices and stir. Cook down until thick – about 20 minutes.


     photo 6 tortillas in the pan_zpshmelvgo9.jpg



    While the tomatoes are simmering, brush tortillas on both sides with olive oil and place into a casserole dish, overlapping to fit.


     photo 5 Make wells with tomato sauce_zpswqzrz95u.jpg



    Evenly distribute the tomato mixture around the tortillas, leaving a well in the center of each tortilla. Make sure that the tomatoes form a circular barrier for the eggs that you will be adding.


     photo 7 eggs in tomato sauce_zpswcxnc6pt.jpg



    Break eggs, one at a time and gently into the center of each tomato well.


     photo 8 Cheese on top_zpsftjcmiv6.jpg



    Cover the eggs and tomatoes with cheese. I am using crumbled cheese here, but you can use sliced or shredded cheese as well. Bake in a 400º oven for 10 to 20 minutes, depending on how firm you like your eggs.


     photo 9 Breakfast_zpsedpeilfo.jpg



    Serve hot with sausage, bacon or ham.


    Happy Cooking!



     photo DoughlightfullyYours_zps6d6bcd4d.jpg

    MB
    I really love to hear from my readers so please
    Click Here To Comment

    Or Scroll to Comment Box


    Please join us on FaceBook!!


    Image and video hosting by TinyPic



    Egg and Muffin Sandwiches

    Monday, January 3rd, 2011





    “Deserve” Leads to


    “De-Serve”



    (A Recipe To Serve!)



    OK, so that was kind of a crazy thing to write, but I was thinking about that place with the golden arches and their old slogan. Remember? It was that catchy song about what you deserve – you know – like a break today? However, as I grow older and older I am finding that what I think I deserve ain’t all it’s cracked up to be! I bet you can’t get that song out of your head now, can you?


     photo PICT0855_zps3ba02d25.jpg



    In my youth, I had the “prestigious” honor of being a “crew member” of the McDonald’s Restaurant team – aka, a “hamburger flipper”. I lived, breathed and literally ate McDonald’s. I don’t know how it is now, but back then, McDonald’s was run like the army and there was a real pride in the job and a sense of ownership in the company. Each year there was a competition for all crew members in order to become part of the “All American Team”. The more All American Team members at a store, the more prestigious the store in the eyes of the corporation. Competition was fierce and hard and not just a little scary. It was like participating in the Olympics, only instead of swimming you were waiting on and serving customers in under a minute, or in place of throwing the shot put, you were assembling, wrapping and tossing cheeseburgers onto a warming tray to a stop watch. The competition went on during the day while customers were actually being served and “The Suits” were there watching your every move. The one year that I decided to take the plunge, I competed at the cash register and outside the restaurant in grounds cleanliness. I won. I have proof. But I’m still waiting for the endorsement offers.


     photo cashregister_zps1cc15936.jpg



    Now, I need to remind you that cash registers at the time were not the electronic wonders they are today. Computers were something only ‘brainiacs’ even considered and, as far as we were concerned, still occupied an entire room with magnetic wheel thingys (my hubby tells me they were called column tape units and he would know) whirling synchronistically . If that isn’t a real word, it sounds good – can’t you just see it?? Yep, the cash box on which I registered counter sales was an upright mechanical monster with round, brown keys in rows all down the front of the unit. The first vertical row was for the cents, the second, tens of cents, the third, ones, the fourth, tens and so on. The number totals showed up in white on black placards, side-by-side, in a window above the buttons. In order to put in a monetary amount, one had to punch each row of places matching the numbers of the entry. I remember starting out punching one button at a time with one finger as the customer stood there looking at me like, “You moron, can’t you work any faster than this? My Big Mac is gonna mold before I get it.” However, I eventually mastered the beast and could use multiple fingers to put in a total all at once – three fingers for “$1.99” and the thumb and first finger to “enter”. I thought I was hot stuff. And, oh yes, I was there when the Big Mac was first introduced. I had a “Mac Attack” on a regular basis.


     photo Youdeserveabreaktoday_zps8d07c29f.jpg



    I learned to count back change. Those cash registers only told you what the total due was, not the total cash back. A $20 bill for that $1.99 order? A penny – two dollars, three dollar bills – three dollars, four dollars, five dollars, a five dollar bill – ten dollars, and a ten dollar bill – twenty dollars. Give a clerk today, if there is no computerized cash register, a ten dollar bill and a nickle for a $1.95 purchase and watch him slowly come unglued trying to figure out how much money you should be getting back!!!


    Crew members were required to be “versatile” and one’s pay scale and evaluation was based on just how many things one could do in the restaurant. That meant that I didn’t just work the front, but I cooked too and I loved it. It was a fascinating process and I am here to tell you that a McDonald’s hamburger or French fries are no more unhealthy for you than a hamburger or French fries that are fried at home. Food is food and frying is frying. Back then, however, there was one breakfast ingredient that seems to be missing these days and that was butter. But I’m getting sidetracked – back to versatility. Another job that was a requirement back then was being a morning host or hostess. That has gone by the wayside too, apparently, but it was a fun job that involved making sure tables were clean, visiting with the customers, refilling coffee and bringing extra food items requested. It is a job that taught me the value of a servant attitude. I found that the more gracious I was and the more willing I was to do for the customers, the kinder they were and the more appreciative they were. Even when I would get a real grouch, I found that if I didn’t take offense and just treated them kindly, their grouchiness didn’t bother me and they seemed to leave a little less grouchy. It’s a lesson to practice every day.


     photo mcdonalds-arches_zps4f482024.jpg



    I never would have picked McDonald’s as my career of choice at that time. I was fresh out of college with a degree in Fine Arts, but there weren’t any jobs out there in “Art” even if one did think that one’s art was “Fine”. McDonald’s was the only job I could land. I found out however, that even though I was not getting what I thought I “deserved”, I was learning an enormous amount of information and wonderful skills that would serve me the rest of my life. I’ve found that to be true in everything I’ve done that hasn’t jived with what I thought I had to have. I have figured out that I really don’t know what is always best for me and that I just have to chill and let God do the leading to whatever “best” is. It has led to a much more peaceful life, believe me!! We are at the beginning of a new year and stress is pretty heavy in the country and in the lives of many individuals. Seeking to serve rather than to be served is a heck of a way to deal with stress. When we seek to serve, rather than focusing on what we think we “deserve”, there is a change in attitude and actions for everyone involved.


    Anyway, because with any life’s lesson there really has to be food involved, it is time for a recipe. The following is my way of using the homemade English Muffins, from the last post, for egg and muffin breakfast sandwiches. Your kids will love you for them!


    Egg And English Muffin Breakfast

    Sandwiches



    Per Sandwich:
    1 egg or two egg whites
    1 English Muffin
    1 slice American Cheese
    1 slice Canadian Bacon or 2 slices thin-sliced Smoked Ham
    Melted butter or olive oil


     photo PICT0487_zps27497e1c.jpg



    In a skillet, melt a tsp of butter or olive oil until bubbly into oiled egg rings or tuna cans that have had the top and bottom removed. Make sure griddle is hot before adding eggs.



     photo PICT0489_zpseaf92eff.jpg



    Break eggs into single cups and pour each egg into the egg rings or tuna cans. If you are concerned about cholesterol, use two egg whites instead of the whole egg. Using a spatula, catch any wayward egg and put it back into the ring.



     photo PICT0490_zpsd30e7b4d.jpg



    With a spatula, break the yolks



     photo PICT0499_zpseecaac24.jpg



    When eggs are very firm, gently remove the egg rings by sliding spatula around the inside of the ring and flip the eggs to cook on the other side. Remove eggs and place on a plate in a warmed oven to keep warm.



     photo PICT0493_zpsf1fcebb0.jpg



    Brush the tops of your split English Muffins
    with either melted butter or olive oil. Place them face down in the hot skillet.


     photo PICT0496_zpsddbdb74c.jpg



     photo toastmuffins2_zps81f5a7df.jpg



    Use a kitchen press or heavy pan to weight the muffins, providing an even cooked surface that is warm and crunchy. These muffins have been turned over. See how pretty and browned they are?



     photo PICT0503_zps3c03b5b2.jpg



    Remove muffin halves to plates and immediately place a slice of American cheese on one half



     photo PICT0505_zps17a39015.jpg



    Place egg on top of cheese



     photo searham_zps9d1d14b5.jpg



    Return to your still-heated skillet and quickly heat Canadian bacon or thick slices of smoked ham for each sandwich . Fry meat on one side for just 15 seconds, turn and then cook the other side for 15 seconds.



     photo PICT0507_zps25305041.jpg



    Immediately put ham on top of egg



     photo PICT0508_zps3f2c71c8.jpg



    Add salt and pepper and cover with the other half of the English Muffin to make a sandwich.



     photo PICT0801_zps96296424.jpg



    I promise, it will melt in your mouth when you take that first bite!!




    Happy Cooking!


    MB

    Please join in the conversation by leaving a comment below. And join us on FaceBook