Discussion:
Meals for single dads?
(too old to reply)
CM
2006-11-04 13:36:20 UTC
Permalink
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?

Any suggestions welcome!
Xenos638
2006-11-04 14:09:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
1 eggplant, 1 zucchini, 1 pound of crushed tomato, 2 medium sized
onions, mushrooms, some chicken meat, oregano, see salt, olive oil,
shrimps, 2 cups of basmati rice
_____________________________________________________________________
Fry the basmati rice for 2-3 minutes in olive oil.
Add salt and water, stir.
Keep on adding water.
Do this for 5 minutes.
Put the cattle away.
Fry chicken meat for about 15 minutes.
Cut in to a big bowl the vegetables and mushrooms.
Open the cattle with rice. Add oregano and 1 pound crushed tomato.
Also add concentrated tomato, 2 ounces.
Start you backing oven ( temp. 250 Celsius )
Mix well.
Go to your vegetables bowl.
Add shrimps and mix well.
Add the rice and chicken meat in to the bowl.
Mix well.
Take a deep tray.
Treat the surface with olive oil.
Empty the content of your bowl.
Cover the tray with backing paper.
If needed use magnets to keep it in place.
Oven temperature should be 250 Celsius.
Put the clock to 48 minutes.
Wait until the clock is ringing
Take the tray out.
The surface of the food should be slightly brown.
Mix the food slightly.
Back in to the oven for 8 minutes but without the paper.
Take the food out.
Add some cheese and sweet chili to your plate.
Catsup if needed.
M***@tvo.org
2006-11-04 14:45:03 UTC
Permalink
Okay, Xenos638, you lost me. What do you mean by a "cattle". I'm 50 and
been cooking for 33 years since my mom died and this is a culinary term
I've never heard.

Mary
Xenos638
2006-11-04 21:33:15 UTC
Permalink
Post by M***@tvo.org
Okay, Xenos638, you lost me. What do you mean by a "cattle". I'm 50 and
been cooking for 33 years since my mom died and this is a culinary term
I've never heard.
Mary
Cooking pot
Joy
2006-11-04 23:18:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
Post by M***@tvo.org
Okay, Xenos638, you lost me. What do you mean by a "cattle". I'm 50 and
been cooking for 33 years since my mom died and this is a culinary term
I've never heard. Mary
Cooking pot
Ah. The word in English would be spelled "kettle".
Xenos638
2006-11-05 07:25:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Joy
Post by Xenos638
Post by M***@tvo.org
Okay, Xenos638, you lost me. What do you mean by a "cattle". I'm 50 and
been cooking for 33 years since my mom died and this is a culinary term
I've never heard. Mary
Cooking pot
Ah. The word in English would be spelled "kettle".
Thanks.
And " cattle " is a group of cows.
It would be impossible to fry rice in a group of cows
mL_
2006-11-05 07:46:47 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
Post by Joy
Post by Xenos638
Post by M***@tvo.org
Okay, Xenos638, you lost me. What do you mean by a "cattle". I'm 50 and
been cooking for 33 years since my mom died and this is a culinary term
I've never heard. Mary
Cooking pot
Ah. The word in English would be spelled "kettle".
Thanks.
And " cattle " is a group of cows.
It would be impossible to fry rice in a group of cows
maybe on a real hot day...
fry rice on the cows and cook eggs on the sidewalks..
K***@seanie.eu
2006-11-06 15:17:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
Post by Joy
Post by Xenos638
Post by M***@tvo.org
Okay, Xenos638, you lost me. What do you mean by a "cattle". I'm 50 and
been cooking for 33 years since my mom died and this is a culinary term
I've never heard. Mary
Cooking pot
Ah. The word in English would be spelled "kettle".
Thanks.
And " cattle " is a group of cows.
It would be impossible to fry rice in a group of cows
HOW SOON AFTER GETTING DIVORCED DO YOU STOP BEING A VIOLENT GREEK WIFE
BEATING BASTARD ?


Hey Mr Dimitrios Xenos aka Mitsos of Turku Finland

You should also thank the Finnish Socialist govt of the 1980s for
allowing Somali and Gambian muslims to immigrate to Turku and fuck
all
the greek immigrants Finnish wives !


Look how much better the black immigrants did than the lazy griks


The Black immigrants wear smart suits, have 3 low maintainance,
married, white mistresses, a fashion business, and a PhD !


http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3790215


The greek Immigrant lives alone in a tiny flat, gets no sex, has no
job, never sees his kids, waits 4 years for his tiny state pension,
suffers from paranoia and depression and looks like a terrorist who's

been on the run for 20 years


http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3789580

Have you seen the look on MooMoo's face ?

http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3784162

Models himself on Adolph Schicklegruberides The great Grik dick tater

Hear the moooooooing here


http://media.putfile.com/Xenos-Dimitrios-Sipiking-Pidjin-about-hes-fractals-innit

And here *LOL* for the Sci-Fi fanatics........

http://media.putfile.com/MooMoo-Mitsos-Dimitrios-Xenos-sipiking
Temily
2006-11-08 08:26:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
And " cattle " is a group of cows.
It would be impossible to fry rice in a group of cows
ROTFLMAO!!!!

Temily
Rog'
2006-11-04 16:05:41 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals
a single dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for
my and my two boys?
A few ideas, scalable...
Spaghetti + Tomato Sause (from a jar)
Chilli (w-Bush's chilli beans), cumin, cayenne pepper, chilli powder.
Steak + Baked Potatos.
Pork Chops, Macaroni+Cheese
Baked Fish Filets on a bed of diced tomato, garlic+onion, w-rice.
Baked, Breaded Chicken Breasts w- corn (canned or fresh).
Optional: Salad from a bag w/tomato wedges.
Joy
2006-11-04 16:47:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Rog'
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals
a single dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for
my and my two boys?
A few ideas, scalable...
Spaghetti + Tomato Sause (from a jar)
Chilli (w-Bush's chilli beans), cumin, cayenne pepper, chilli powder.
The chili will be even better without too much extra work if you also add:

canned beef broth (for the liquid)
canned kidney beans (I like to mix dark and light red beans)
chopped up onion (if you like it in chili) You won't want a whole onion
(IMO), just a slice or two chopped up
brown a pound or so of hamburger (or the meat of your choice) in a skillet
and dump it into the pot
a small can of tomato paste
I like to add a couple spoonsful of sugar and just a little bit of dark
chocolate, myself - but that is really a personal preference

Put it all in a pot and simmer on low heat for a while - the longer it
simmers, the better it will taste. Be sure to stir occasionally so it
doesn't stick to the bottom of the pot. (You'll want to cook it at least
until the chopped onion, if you added it, is soft)

The amount of cumin, chili powder, and cayenne is really cooks preference -
add some, taste it, and add more if you think it is bland.
Post by Rog'
Steak + Baked Potatos.
Pork Chops, Macaroni+Cheese
Baked Fish Filets on a bed of diced tomato, garlic+onion, w-rice.
Baked, Breaded Chicken Breasts w- corn (canned or fresh).
Optional: Salad from a bag w/tomato wedges.
Greeks Beg whilst their Finnish wifes suck on Mamba
2006-11-06 18:54:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
1 eggplant, 1 zucchini, 1 pound of crushed tomato, 2 medium sized
onions, mushrooms, some chicken meat, oregano, see salt, olive oil,
shrimps, 2 cups of basmati rice
_____________________________________________________________________
Fry the basmati rice for 2-3 minutes in olive oil.
Add salt and water, stir.
Keep on adding water.
Do this for 5 minutes.
Put the cattle away.
Mooooooooooooooooooooooooo


Put the CATTLE AWAY MooMoo !


Moooooooooooooooooo


Hey Mr Dimitrios Xenos aka Mitsos of Turku Finland

You should also thank the Finnish Socialist govt of the 1980s for
allowing Somali and Gambian muslims to immigrate to Turku and fuck
all
the greek immigrants Finnish wives !


Look how much better the black immigrants did than the lazy griks


The Black immigrants wear smart suits, have 3 low maintainance,
married, white mistresses, a fashion business, and a PhD !


http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3790215


The greek Immigrant lives alone in a tiny flat, gets no sex, has no
job, never sees his kids, waits 4 years for his tiny state pension,
suffers from paranoia and depression and looks like a terrorist who's

been on the run for 20 years


http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3789580

Have you seen the look on MooMoo's face ?

http://www.putfile.com/pic.php?img=3784162

Models himself on Adolph Schicklegruberides The great Grik dick tater

Hear the moooooooing here


http://media.putfile.com/Xenos-Dimitrios-Sipiking-Pidjin-about-hes-fractals-innit

And here *LOL* for the Sci-Fi fanatics........

http://media.putfile.com/MooMoo-Mitsos-Dimitrios-Xenos-sipiking
Panta Rhei
2006-11-06 19:10:08 UTC
Permalink
Greeks Beg whilst their Finnish wifes suck on Mamba, a full-blown
Post by Greeks Beg whilst their Finnish wifes suck on Mamba
Mooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Moooooooooooooooooo
Yeah!!! Something hurting you again, asshole Ruttledge? Was it your fat
Turkish wife that did you with "her massive strap-on" again! Poor whining
sod, you! LMAO!

F'up to your homegroup, of course: alt.asshole.sean-ruttledge
--
Living the life of a ridiculed, bitchslapped loony on usenet helps Sean
Ruttledge forget the failures in his life.
Temily
2006-11-08 08:25:52 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
1 eggplant, 1 zucchini, 1 pound of crushed tomato, 2 medium sized
onions, mushrooms, some chicken meat, oregano, see salt, olive oil,
shrimps, 2 cups of basmati rice
Thanks for the recipe Xenos! I like that one!!

And i think the term 'cattle' is cute :o)

At first i thought you meant beef..then i realised you meant
kettle...hehe

Temily
Xenos638
2006-11-08 09:37:26 UTC
Permalink
Post by Temily
Post by Xenos638
1 eggplant, 1 zucchini, 1 pound of crushed tomato, 2 medium sized
onions, mushrooms, some chicken meat, oregano, see salt, olive oil,
shrimps, 2 cups of basmati rice
Thanks for the recipe Xenos! I like that one!!
And i think the term 'cattle' is cute :o)
At first i thought you meant beef..then i realised you meant
kettle...hehe
Temily
I was always thinking that kettle is the container you boil only water
in it.
Like the one which makes a terrible sound when the water is boiling.
It has a narrow opening. Perhaps one inch or so and you place whistle on
that opening.
" a metal container with a handle and spout, for boiling water " = kettle
From my dictionary:
cauldron
digester
jam pot
pan
pot
vat
boiler
So, which of the above is appropriate?
I think it's pot
Temily
2006-11-09 03:03:21 UTC
Permalink
Post by Xenos638
So, which of the above is appropriate?
I think it's pot
Yep, Xenos, it's a 'pot' :o)

Temily
My Own Doppelganger
2006-11-04 15:40:52 UTC
Permalink
Check out Mens Health magazine and/or their website. Lots of quick
meal ideas (healthy too).
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
____________________
You do what you do and you pay for your sins
and there's no such thing as what might have been...
that's a waste of time...drive you out of your mind...
Rodney M.
2006-11-04 15:44:44 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
Hey I can relate to that... I have quite a few recipes:
- Wendy's
- McDonalds
- Kentucky Fried Chicken
- Subway
- Arby's
- Burger King
- A&W

Oh, you were referring to *healthy* food. Sorry, can't help you there
:-)
Gary Duguay
2006-11-04 15:54:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by Rodney M.
Oh, you were referring to *healthy* food. Sorry, can't help you there
:-)
Subway : )
Post by Rodney M.
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
- Wendy's
- McDonalds
- Kentucky Fried Chicken
- Subway
- Arby's
- Burger King
- A&W
Oh, you were referring to *healthy* food. Sorry, can't help you there
:-)
Barbara Didrichsen
2006-11-04 16:14:06 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
Foodfit.com has some pretty decent recipes.

Barb
Joy
2006-11-04 17:08:02 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
You might check out the frozen fish section of your grocery store - you can
get indidually frozen fish filets, for instance - keep them in the freezer,
then pull out however many you need and thaw them out in a bowl of warm
water (only takes a few minutes). These can be broiled (directions on the
bag they come in) and served with rice or bread, and salad-in-a-bag (or
carrot sticks for fussy children who don't like salad).

You might want to become familiar with the "marinade" selection of your
grocery store (which is probably located near the ketchup). There are all
sorts of things you can do with marinade. The fish I mentioned above, for
instance, can be really dressed up by brushing it with the marinade of your
choice. Here ares some examples:

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=sr_nr_seeall_10/103-6985362-2461464?ie=UTF8&keywords=30%20minute%20marinade&rh=i%3Aaps%2Ck%3A30%20minute%20marinade%2Ci%3Agourmet

I bet the lemon pepper or sesame ginger would be good brushed on fish. If
you had frozen chicken instead of fish, you might try terkyaki or herb and
garlic, or the sesame ginger - again, just thaw out the chicken, brush with
marinade, let it sit and soak in for 30 minutes or so, and broil (directions
are probably on the bag). Check out the frozen vegetable section and pick
out a vegetable you and the kids will eat, and follow the directions on the
bag. You can also get "ready to bake" bread in a lot of grocery stores,
now - you just preheat the oven, put the bread in for the number of minutes
it says on the bag, and pull it out and you have fresh "homebaked" bread.

There are lots of "meals in a box" available nowadays - they may or may not
meet your criteria for healthy, but it isn't a bad idea to have a couple on
the shelf for those really busy days when you just have to throw something
together quickly:

http://www.amazon.com/Boxed-Meals-Side-Dishes-Grocery/b/ref=sc_bm_l_2_16310241_1_7/103-6985362-2461464?ie=UTF8&node=16310241&no=16310241&me=ATVPDKIKX0DER&brand=Betty%20Crocker
Tracey
2006-11-04 17:53:09 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
One thing our kids really like is chicken breasts in cream of chicken
soup. I buy bags of individually quick frozen breasts, take out how
many I want to make, thin out the condensed soup with water (one, two
or three cans, depending on how many is eating) and then stick it in
a baking dish. Put in the oven for ~45 minutes and make either rice
or noodles to go with it. While it's not *extremely* quick, you can
get it all started and do other things while it's cooking.

Tuna noodle casseroles with garlic bread and a salad is good, too.

Crockpots are good things, too. You can either prepare everything
the night before or in the morning if it's not too labor intensive
and have it cook all day and just do a side dish or two when it's
dinnertime.

I've recently figure out that I'm being very avoidant of potatoes.
Not sure why, but we've been eating a lot of rice and noodles rather
than potatoes as a side dish. Rice-a-roni isn't bad, the bagged
Lipton noodles are pretty good, other boxed side dishes like beans
and rice or couscous have turned into hits, at least for my husband
and myself. The kids are a little reluctant to try them but they're
working on it.

I also liked bagged frozen vegetables rather than cans because you
can control the portions better. One person doesn't have to eat a
whole can of corn, for instance.

Another time-saving hint from my time as a single parent is to cook
a bit extra whenever you actually have time to cook and freeze it on
a plate. Then, nights when you're alone and time-challenged, it's
just a matter of heating up a plate and you can eat. An acquaintance
of mine would spend every other Sunday making meals for the next
two weeks and just heat things up every night after work.

Tracey
M***@tvo.org
2006-11-04 23:18:31 UTC
Permalink
I'm a mom but I work full time outside the home.

Crockpot is a life saver. You can throw things in it in the morning and
come home to meals ready to go.
I have a big one with a timer.
There are endless recipes on line
http://southernfood.about.com/library/crock/blcpidx.htm

Stir fries of all kinds (quick and easy)

Other quick kid friendly stuff - meats: fish sticks, chicken fingers or
nuggets, precooked hams, boneless/skinless frozen chicken breasts (good
for barbeque), frozen meatballs, frozen shrimp (depending on what your
kids like).
Serve with veg (I buy a lot of frozen, easier to avoid waste)
and Rice/pasta/potatoes

Mary
saulgoode
2006-11-05 01:57:02 UTC
Permalink
Keep it simple. Meat, veggie, some fruit, maybe some pasta/rice/carbs.

Example: Fish sticks, some frozen veggies, some grapes, and a dessert
of their choice.

Example: Baked chicken breast, mac-n-cheese, with some canned pears.

Milk with every meal.

And pop tarts & donuts aren't meals -- they're desserts.


- Saul
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
Joe Johnson
2006-11-05 02:07:45 UTC
Permalink
Chicken pesto spinach pasta...takes 5 minutes...

Take some cooked pasta and cooked chicken (these can/should be made
ahead in lager quantities and kept in Tupperware). Grab a bag of baby
spinach and like to keep mushrooms (pre-sliced) and canned sliced
olives. You will also need some Alesi pesto (or any basil pesto).

The above items can be kept in the fridge for about a week. I usually
cook enough chicken and pesto for three meals.

Saute mushrooms in skillet for a couple of minutes. Add chicken, pasta,
olives, spinach to taste and pesto to taste. Toss in skillet until
pesto is well mixed.

That's it...I like to add a little red pepper a fresh grated cheese.
Rog'
2006-11-05 03:04:10 UTC
Permalink
Post by saulgoode
And pop tarts & donuts aren't meals -- they're desserts.
Not really.
Try chocolate brownie, ice cream and hot fudge.
To go along with a meal of...
Hot dogs and potato chips with french-onion dip (lite).
Rodney M.
2006-11-05 13:57:25 UTC
Permalink
Post by saulgoode
And pop tarts & donuts aren't meals -- they're desserts.
Aw geez, I thought those were two of the basic food groups.
mL_
2006-11-05 03:57:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
One word: Crock Pot
ooh, wait... that's two words... anyway..

You can throw just about any combination of meat and veggies in there and it
turns out yummy. I like to use some stewing beef, cut up potatos, carrots,
celery, whatever other vegetables are hanging around the house. Misc. spices,
garlic, onion, tomatos, etc. Even wine. Only caution is to not add too much
salt, you can always add more later but you can't fix it when there's too
much.

When anyone would catch a cold i'd throw some chicken pieces in the crock
w/water, carrots, celery, onion and ginger. When done, remove the chicken and
toss out the bones, cut up and throw back in. Add some salt and egg noodles
and there ya go.

Another easy one is get a cheap steak and cut it in thin strips. Brown in
olive oil along w/garlic and onions (smells heavenly at this point!).
Thaw and throw in a package of frozen mixed oriental veggies, maybe some
'shrooms, and add some soy sauce, teriyaki if you like that, or experiment
w/other sauces like sweet n sour, or that spicy stuff with the rooster on it.
Make rice (instant or other) to dump it on. Yummy!
Tracey
2006-11-05 04:08:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by mL_
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
One word: Crock Pot
ooh, wait... that's two words... anyway..
The great thing about a crockpot is that cheap cuts of meat come
out very, very tender. I take cubed steak (a notoriously tough
meat), flour and brown it then stick it in the crockpot and cover
it with a 2 or 3 cans of Golden mushroom soup (thinned with water)
and cook it all day. It's falling apart by dinnertime. Put it
over rice or noodles and it's goooooodddd.

Tracey
Rog'
2006-11-05 04:55:28 UTC
Permalink
... Even wine. Only caution is to not [drink too much wine]
I'm reminded of an old comedy sketch (SNL?) in which "Julia Child"
gets boozy by drinking as much wine as she adds to the food she cooks.
b***@psyber.com
2006-11-06 22:07:55 UTC
Permalink
Rog' <***@bellsouth.net> wrote:
: "mL_" <***@nospammmm.com> wrote:
: > ... Even wine. Only caution is to not [drink too much wine]

: I'm reminded of an old comedy sketch (SNL?) in which "Julia Child"
: gets boozy by drinking as much wine as she adds to the food she cooks.

And cuts herself with a knife and starts spurting blood everywhere.

:-)

b.
Casey
2006-11-07 04:33:25 UTC
Permalink
said
Post by b***@psyber.com
: > ... Even wine. Only caution is to not [drink too much wine]
: I'm reminded of an old comedy sketch (SNL?) in which "Julia Child"
: gets boozy by drinking as much wine as she adds to the food she cooks.
And cuts herself with a knife and starts spurting blood everywhere.
:-)
"Save the liver!"



Casey
BP
2006-11-10 04:27:55 UTC
Permalink
Post by b***@psyber.com
: > ... Even wine. Only caution is to not [drink too much wine]
: I'm reminded of an old comedy sketch (SNL?) in which "Julia Child"
: gets boozy by drinking as much wine as she adds to the food she cooks.
And cuts herself with a knife and starts spurting blood everywhere.
Yeah, that's the part I remember.

"Oh goodness, I've cut myself!"

[tries to call for help]

"Damn, the phone's a prop!"


--
Venus Speaks
2006-11-05 07:25:08 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? ....
For nutritious foods I'd buy fresh on the day as much as possible (eg
stop by on the way back from work) and _avoid_ frozen meat, canned
vegie, frozen vegies -except for a few items like snap-frozen ones for
back up, and oven-ready frozen chips/fries.

Instead of working through recipes you might find it easier to have a
mental grouping of meals that are cooked similarly:

1) Meat + carbohydrate + salad or cooked vegies:

Grill (ie put under electric elements or gas fire) beef-steaks, and/or
sausages or salmon cutlets, or chicken breasts, or lamb chops or pork
chops. Alternatively shallw fry these or pre-coated chicken/veal
schnitzel.

For carbohydrate, make mash potato (peel then boil/steam/microwave till
soft then mash with a little salt, milk and butter) or boil potatos or
bake-in-microwave potatoes or fry chips/fries or heat oven-ready frozen
chips/fries in the oven) or boil 2-minute-noodles for 1 minute.

For salad make sure lettuce+tomatoes+onion+cucumber are washed well,
add interesting things like corn, radish, celery, fried crouton,
cheese, crisply fried bacon bits, boiled eggs, avocado. Then add
dressing of choice.

For cooked vegies, boil/steam/microwave courgettes (zucchinis) or beans
or broccoli etc etc or quickly heat asparagus or snow-peas (mangetout)
with a little bit of butter in a covered pot (shake the pot to heat it
evenly, holding the handle and the lid).

2) Pasta. Boil water till bubbling, add pasta (several varieties to
chhose from) and keep it boild till almost soft. Shallow fry chopped
garlic and chopped onion, add meat (minced beef or sliced chicken), add
bottled/can pasta sauce (several varieties to choose from).

3) Burger and hot-dogs. Make burgers interesting by adding favourite
goodies to taste (eg some people like bacon, beetroot, pineapple, mayo,
etc).

4) Breakfast of bacon/eggs/tomatos/hash-browns/mushroom or
shake-in-bottle pancake-mix pancakes.

(Some stir-fry stuff and cassaroles etc are very simple to cook but
I'll skip that for now. Gotta go cook dinner!)

Make sure you enjoy cooking and are not stressed out by it -to be a
good example for the kids. Involve them in cooking eg get them to be
the mash-potato department.

Enjoy...

Venus Speaks
http://venusonreallove.blogspot.com
Okie76
2006-11-06 04:01:23 UTC
Permalink
A Man, a Can, a Plan : 50 Great Guy Meals Even You Can Make (Board book)
by David Joachim, The Editors of Men's Health

Has some easy cheap recipes.

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGIC,GGIC:2006-36,GGIC:en&q=a+man+a+can+and+a+plan

Recipes for single dads:

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGIC,GGIC:2006-36,GGIC:en&q=Recipes+for+single+dads


I hope this helps.

Sam in OK
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Okie76
2006-11-06 04:04:54 UTC
Permalink
A Man, a Can, a Plan : 50 Great Guy Meals Even You Can Make (Board book)
by David Joachim, The Editors of Men's Health

Has some easy cheap recipes.

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGIC,GGIC:2006-36,GGIC:en&q=a+man+a+can+and+a+plan

Recipes for single dads:

http://www.google.com/search?sourceid=navclient&ie=UTF-8&rls=GGIC,GGIC:2006-36,GGIC:en&q=Recipes+for+single+dads


I hope this helps.

Sam in OK
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
b***@psyber.com
2006-11-06 22:06:10 UTC
Permalink
CM <***@hotmail.com> wrote:
: Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
: dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
: boys?

: Any suggestions welcome!

Cook in advance, microwave later. Make a batch of spaghetti sauce
with ground beef and Italian sausage. Freeze it in containers for the
3 of you. Microwave it and boil some noodles. Done!

Lasagne. Make a big batch, cool it, cut it in to squares, wrap
individually. Grilled fish, steamed vegetables, some sort of rice
or pasta. Easy if you haven't trained 'em not to like fish.

BBQ'ed hamburgers.

Chicken fillets dunked in butter, then seasoned bread crumbs. Bake
in caserole dish at 350 for about 35 minutes. "Oven fried chicken".
d***@yahoo.com
2006-11-07 15:14:57 UTC
Permalink
Make a meal, put the leftovers in the fridge.

I swear, some of you ....
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
Temily
2006-11-08 08:30:29 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up?
This is majorly lazy!

Buy a cooked chicken, pull it apart, put it in "Paul Newman's Sauce",
add peas if you want for the greens, or a salad, and serve it with
pasta!

My kids always loved it!

I've got more really quik, whip recipes too! If you want them?

Being that I was a single working mother of hungry teens that wanted to
eat 5 minutes after i got home!

Temily
Temily
2006-11-08 08:33:23 UTC
Permalink
Post by Temily
Buy a cooked chicken, pull it apart, put it in "Paul Newman's Sauce",
add peas if you want for the greens, or a salad, and serve it with
pasta!
(replying to my own post, how pansy is that! lol..)

Anyway...just thought! Add grated cheese after served! (romano/parmesan
if they like it or grated cheddar if they don't!)

Temiliy
Temily
2006-11-08 08:45:48 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
OK, i didn't wait to ask if you wanted any more quik, slap stik
dinners..but here are some!

Make a mixture of breadcrumbs, parmesan cheese, parsley and garlic and
put it in a bag or big bowl with a lid (icecream container?) and freeze
it till you need it. ( I use all fresh stuff but you guys i know from
reading the cooking newsgroup..use packet breadcrumbs and dried parsley
and granuled garlic...)

It doesn't matter...fresh, dried...whatever! Anyway...Then...buy some
thin beef, or veal, and crack an egg, or a couple, depending on how
many you need...then dip the beef,veal, crayfish in...then dip it in
the above mixture (we call these 'stekkers'..and yes, they're italian!)
and fry in olive oil....

They are yummy! My kid's favourite thing to eat in the whole
world...and their friends used to come from far and wide just to have
some! They used to call them beef, cray and chicken balls...hehe

Anyway! I use this 'mixture' to make meatballs (whether it's fish,
chicken, fish, crayfish)........to roll fish, chicken, fish or crayfish
in......and i make the 'cutlets' and then add Paul Newman's sauce ( i
know you guys have that..but we here...actually stamp on the tomatos
and make our own sauce every year..but that's another cultural thing)
then add freshly grated romano or parmesan cheese on top to make veal
parmesan!

This mixture is so versatile..and very YUMMY!

Now you've just gotten the the italian mumma's famous mixture here..and
no joke, your kids will truly ask for it everytime!

Temily
Temily
2006-11-08 08:53:36 UTC
Permalink
Temily wrote: (and replying to self again..cos i need to correct
myself!)
Post by Temily
They used to call them beef, cray and chicken balls...hehe
When you roll the beef, veal, cray, chicken etc in 'the mixture' we fry
it..and the're called 'stekkers'....

But when you add the mixture to ground beef, veal, cray, chicken etc
and egg....they're then called "balls"!

And when you use the stekkers and add sauce and cheese on op..we call
it veal (or chicken, fish, crayfish) parmesan!

Hope i haven't complicated something really simple....

Temily
Rambler
2006-11-09 15:29:58 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
There are tons. Got twenty minutes? You can get a very wholesome meal
on the table.

First off, what are your preferences? Meat and Potatoes? European?
Asian? Do you eat beans (like black beans, chickpeas, lentils)? Want
to make your own bread? Only about 15 minutes of your own time, plus 40
minutes in the oven.

Tell me what you like (chicken, fish, veggie) and I'm sure I could give
you some really easy, *really wholesome* meals.

Rambler
(as a side note, I read an article in the NYT about a New England
grocery store chain that is labeling food with three stars and causing
an outrage. I was shocked that people were complaining about grapes and
nuts as a snack. Good, healthy food is actually really easy. People
are just lazy).
CM
2006-11-09 16:07:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by Rambler
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a
single dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my
and my two boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
There are tons. Got twenty minutes? You can get a very wholesome
meal on the table.
First off, what are your preferences? Meat and Potatoes? European?
Asian? Do you eat beans (like black beans, chickpeas, lentils)? Want
to make your own bread? Only about 15 minutes of your own time, plus
40 minutes in the oven.
Tell me what you like (chicken, fish, veggie) and I'm sure I could
give you some really easy, *really wholesome* meals.
Rambler
(as a side note, I read an article in the NYT about a New England
grocery store chain that is labeling food with three stars and causing
an outrage. I was shocked that people were complaining about grapes
and nuts as a snack. Good, healthy food is actually really easy.
People are just lazy).
I'm actually pretty broad-ranging in my tastes, as are my boys (my 6-year
old loves sushi, for example). I'd like to have a meal plan that's healthy
and not to hard to whip up, but pretty much all cuisines are welcome.
Rambler
2006-11-10 17:52:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
I'm actually pretty broad-ranging in my tastes, as are my boys (my 6-year
old loves sushi, for example). I'd like to have a meal plan that's healthy
and not to hard to whip up, but pretty much all cuisines are welcome.
Great that you narrowed the field. Here are a couple of off the top of
the head ideas. You'll look at it and say, "Wah, too much trouble-la!"
I can do each of these meals in 20 minutes, save for the bean soaking
time. And it is all fresh, wholesome food.

Black Beans, rice and salad (okay, any other veggie).
-----------------------------------------------------

Feel brave? Get a pack of dried beans, soak them in water (two cups of
beans) for three or four hours, dump them in a pot, cover them with
water and bring it to a boil. Turn the heat down so that it is still
bubbling just a touch, and cook them for two hours.

Or open two 14oz cans of black beans, plus two cans of chopped tomatoes.

Chop up one onion.

Grab some garlic and peel the outer skin off. Make sure you have a
garlic press (they are real cheap, and so handy - we go through a head
of garlic a night).

Toss a pan on the stove, throw in some oil (olive oil really preferred,
but whatever). How much oil. Take the bottle, turn it upside down,
count to about three (okay maybe four) and that should be enough. Turn
on the heat. Throw in the onion. Simmer that (in other words ... just
keep the heat low). After a couple of minutes (you'll smell the onions
cooking), dump in the tomatoes (oh, btw, you can simply chop up about
five fresh ones too, but canned tomatoes are equally as good -
especially for guys - tomatoes are really important). Dump in the black
beans (either or). And let them cook over a low heat for a while (while
= 15 to 25 minutes - don't le it get too dry ... just add a touch of
water if it does).

Make salad. Lettuce, shredded. A tomatoe, chopped up. And dressing
(don't buy it .. make it): A little more red wine vinegar than olive oil
(say, 60/40). Couple of cloves of garlic, mashed up (buy a garlic
press). Cumin? Dump some in. If you have rosemary, or thyme (both
spices) add some. Voila.

Rice? Rice cooker or not, take one cup rice with two cups of water (you
and x kids? I'd do at least two cups of rice ... probably three). In a
rice cooker, dump them all in and let it happen. In a pan? Dump the
water in, bring it to a boil, and then dump the rice in. Reduce heat to
a low boil (i.e., just kind of bubbling a little), and cook. If you
use white rice, it's about 20 minutes. If you use brown rice
(recommended), it's about 40 minutes. Why brown rice? It is better for
you, more nutritious, and it will fill your kids up better. That and it
is fibre which makes them poo better.

Pizza
-----

Homemade from scratch, but takes a little planning.

Two cups of white flour (2.5 actually) and two cups of whole wheat flour
(again, 2.5). Get some dried yeast. Cup you hand and pour in a bunch
... a good bunch. Dump it in a bowl. Mix in some brown sugar (about
half the amount of the yeast). Add some warm water (warm where you hand
goes, "ooh, that's warm.") Dump some salt in the flour (a couple of
finger fulls). dump in half the water. Mix. Dump in the rest. Know
what you've got? Bread dough. Mix it in the bowl until the water is
kinda absorbed (this is about seven minutes of activity thus far) and
the ndump everything on a counter. You knead the dough (i.e. plunk it
down, stretch it out in a couple of directions, fold it back on itself,
and stretch it again. All you are trying to do is stretch the dough so
that it will rise. They'll say 15 minutes of this ... I do about five,
but I really stretch it. Then form it into a ball, give it a light
coating of oil, and place it back in the bowl with a damp cloth over it.
You've now made pizza dough (and bread as well, actually). Just let
it sit there for an hour or two.

Turn the oven on it's highest setting. Let it really heat up (20
minutes or so).

The pizza itself. Couple cans of tomatos in a pot, with some onions
makes a sauce (or buy spaghetti sauce).

Put the pizaa together. Take the dough (after an hour of just sitting
there or so) and divide it in half. Roll it out into a circle (you'll
need to have a couple of flat, round pans). Once there, dump some of
the sauce on it and then add whatever you want on top. We made pizza
tonight (which is why I recall the recipe so easy I guess.) Simple
Spinach, Mozzarella, anchovy or sardine and voila. We've done bacon and
egg, Thai curry, veggie, pepperoni ... you name it. with the base and
the sauce ... the sky's the limit.

Asian stir fry
--------------

Hell, I live in Asia. If I can't do this then I am sunk.

Grap some chicken fillets (you can get them frozen or fresh). Chop them
up into bite sized pieces. Dump them in a bowl. Dump some soy sauce,
honey, crushed garlic (remember that garlic press?), some chopped up
ginger root (peel the skin off first) and let it sit. What should you
do if you can't find one of those ingredients? I would kill myself of
course, but in truth, because I don't do that, I just ignore the
ingredient I am missing.

Take a frying pan, or heck a wok if you have one, dump some oil in
(*not* olive oil) - how much? Turn the bottle over, count "1" and then
stop - you want a tablespoon ladies. Put it on high heat, heat the oil,
and dump the mixture in and flip it around with a spatula, spoon, or
your pinky, though careful of the heat. Want to change it? WE add about
four chopped up Thai chillies (it's spicy folks) or add black bean sauce
or something else.

Cook the rice.

Veggies? Take some cabbage, chop it up, dump a tablespoon of oil into
the wok or frying pan, heat it, dump the cabbage in, sprinkle it with
sou sauce and cook it for two or three minutes, constantly stiring. I
do both the meat and the veggie in the same pan, one after the other.

Pasta
-----

The most simple pasta is a garlic pasta (you need to like garlic).

Take a large pot of water and bring it to the boil (no salt).

Six or so little/large cloves of garlic. Crush them up with that press.
Pour some olive oil into a shallow bowl (about a four or five count -
which is between four and six tablespoons). Dump in the garlic and stir
it around.

Once the water is boiling, dump a package of pasta in. Let it boil
again and turn off the heat as soon as it has. Cover it and let it sit
there for about six minutes. You can grab a strand out to see if it is
too crunchy for you. If it is, leave it in for another minute.

Dump the water out of the pasta (you need a colander, or at least one is
helpful). Dump it into the bowl. Mix it up. Take a block of Parmesan
cheese and a cheese grater and grate a healthy helping of parmesan over
the pasta. Or buy pre grated.

Remember that salad and bread dough? Both go well

Pork with pesto
---------------

This is a Jamie Oliver recipe (kind of).

Take a bunch of pork chops. Squeeze lemon juice all over them.
Sprinkle them with thyme, and a touch of salt and pepper. Let them sit
while you do homework or a bath for the kids.

A frying pan, or if you have it , a grill. For the frying pan, high
heat and a touch of oil, dump the pork chops in and cook them for maye
two minutes or three a side. Same for the grill pan.

When the pork chops are done (don't over cook pork as it gets really
tough), through a spoonful of pesto from the bottle you bought from the
store (intermediate lesson is one where you make your own, and the
advanced lesson is where you grow your own basil to make your own).

Veggies? Well, steaming is always healthy, so take some broccoli and
cut it up into bite sized chunks and steam it (buy a steamer).

********************

Tons of shortcuts, but, with a little time, you can get each of these on
the table with about 15 to 20 minutes of time in the kitchen. Yes, the
bread needs to rise, but you can be screwing your girlfriend while that
happens.

Rambler
Barbara Didrichsen
2006-11-09 22:45:09 UTC
Permalink
On Thu, 09 Nov 2006 23:29:58 +0800, Rambler
<***@yahoo.com> wrote:

[snip]
Post by Rambler
First off, what are your preferences? Meat and Potatoes? European?
Asian? Do you eat beans (like black beans, chickpeas, lentils)? Want
to make your own bread? Only about 15 minutes of your own time, plus 40
minutes in the oven.
Just for you, Rambler (and CM, if you're still listening), this recipe
from yesterday's NY Times for a no-knead bread:

Adapted from Jim Lahey, Sullivan Street Bakery
Time: About 1½ hours plus 14 to 20 hours’ rising

3 cups all-purpose or bread flour, more for dusting
¼ teaspoon instant yeast
1¼ teaspoons salt
Cornmeal or wheat bran as needed.

1. In a large bowl combine flour, yeast and salt. Add 1 5/8 cups
water, and stir until blended; dough will be shaggy and sticky. Cover
bowl with plastic wrap. Let dough rest at least 12 hours, preferably
about 18, at warm room temperature, about 70 degrees.

2. Dough is ready when its surface is dotted with bubbles. Lightly
flour a work surface and place dough on it; sprinkle it with a little
more flour and fold it over on itself once or twice. Cover loosely
with plastic wrap and let rest about 15 minutes.

3. Using just enough flour to keep dough from sticking to work surface
or to your fingers, gently and quickly shape dough into a ball.
Generously coat a cotton towel (not terry cloth) with flour, wheat
bran or cornmeal; put dough seam side down on towel and dust with more
flour, bran or cornmeal. Cover with another cotton towel and let rise
for about 2 hours. When it is ready, dough will be more than double in
size and will not readily spring back when poked with a finger.

4. At least a half-hour before dough is ready, heat oven to 450
degrees. Put a 6- to 8-quart heavy covered pot (cast iron, enamel,
Pyrex or ceramic) in oven as it heats. When dough is ready, carefully
remove pot from oven. Slide your hand under towel and turn dough over
into pot, seam side up; it may look like a mess, but that is O.K.
Shake pan once or twice if dough is unevenly distributed; it will
straighten out as it bakes. Cover with lid and bake 30 minutes, then
remove lid and bake another 15 to 30 minutes, until loaf is
beautifully browned. Cool on a rack.

Yield: One 1½-pound loaf.

By the way, I tried Laurie's (not from WA -- the other one with the
swirly sig line) meatloaf recipe recently, substituting ground turkey
for ground beef and is was delicious! If she's reading, maybe she'll
be prompted to re-post.

Barb
DrLith
2006-11-10 13:18:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by Barbara Didrichsen
dough will be shaggy and sticky.
When my dough is shaggy, it's usually because I accidentally dropped it
on the floor.
Casey
2006-11-10 14:05:24 UTC
Permalink
DrLith said
Post by DrLith
Post by Barbara Didrichsen
dough will be shaggy and sticky.
When my dough is shaggy, it's usually because I accidentally dropped it
on the floor.
When my dough is sticky, it's usually because the dollars were laying
on the bar too long after I paid my bill and I spilled beer on them.


Casey
Rambler
2006-11-10 16:55:30 UTC
Permalink
Post by Casey
DrLith said
Post by DrLith
Post by Barbara Didrichsen
dough will be shaggy and sticky.
When my dough is shaggy, it's usually because I accidentally dropped it
on the floor.
When my dough is sticky, it's usually because the dollars were laying
on the bar too long after I paid my bill and I spilled beer on them.
Damn ... beat me too it. Drawbacks of that international date line.

Rambler
Rambler
2006-11-10 16:59:13 UTC
Permalink
Post by Barbara Didrichsen
On Thu, 09 Nov 2006 23:29:58 +0800, Rambler
[snip]
Post by Rambler
First off, what are your preferences? Meat and Potatoes? European?
Asian? Do you eat beans (like black beans, chickpeas, lentils)? Want
to make your own bread? Only about 15 minutes of your own time, plus 40
minutes in the oven.
Just for you, Rambler (and CM, if you're still listening), this recipe
Sounds good. I would add that rising with yeast depends upon a) the
yeast, b) the temperature, and c) whether independents or aliens have
control over both houses of Congress (or, if you are in India, whether
they have control over Congress).

I would also add that taking out half of the white flour and simply
adding wholewheat flour is a fantastic way to improve your health.
Whole grains are really good. I used to make pancakes with Bisquick -
couldn't make them any other way actually. Joy of Cooking, their
recipe, and simply use whole wheat flour instead of white. Sooooo much
better for you ... especially with tons of Kanuckistan syrup!

Rambler
unknown
2006-11-10 18:27:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by CM
Anyone have any good quick, easy, and hopefully nutritious meals a single
dad can whip up? Some nights just for me, some nights for my and my two
boys?
Any suggestions welcome!
The kids and I love egg drop soup. Fixes fast, low mess and simple.
You can make it from a packet or your own ingredients, which are as
simple as a couple of eggs, bullion cubes and some green onions.
白雪
2014-11-28 05:43:20 UTC
Permalink
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