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Re: HE LIKES IT! new
      #276591 - 08/01/06 10:54 AM
littlelani

Reged: 06/17/06
Posts: 387
Loc: Asheboro, NC

He's very picky. But if it's a Food Network recipe he'll eat it. He doesn't like a lot of spices, but he loves garlic. (so do I--glad it doesn't bother me too much!) He likes rice,pasta,couscous, etc. But he's not fond of vegetables, except green beans & peas. I've been making 2 different main dishes for us for dinner, but same sides: I'll saute a chicken breast for myself, then make a burger or pork chop for him, and have rice & a veggie on the side. That's getting old. I need some new ideas!

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IBS-A...I can never make up my mind

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Re: HE LIKES IT! new
      #276640 - 08/01/06 05:01 PM
Sommer

Reged: 02/09/04
Posts: 283
Loc: Phoenix, Arizona USA

Quote:

FINALLY! A recipe my BF actually LIKES!! I've tried several, & I liked most of them, but he hasn't been impressed with any of them until now! He liked the oven fried honey chicken but it didn't really WOW him. But he LOVES this & wants me to make it when we have our friends over next weekend! THANK YOU! btw I made it w/ground turkey.




Hehe, I totally understand ya there. My BF is being quite the trooper, trying to accept this diet of mine. It's not practical any other way - neither of us can afford to buy/cook for ourselves (afford time, money, and space) and well, if I'm going to play housewife (I'm on disability due to IBS and many, many other problems), and he's going to work his butt off, then I try to cook as often as I can. I've been very lucky, he's liked about 98% of every recipe I've thus made, whether it was one I found here on the IBS board, one I found elsewhere, or one I attempted to make myself. I am no cook - anyone can follow a recipe, but not everyone can cook so if my BF likes what I cook, then it's a compliment for sure, hehe, a compliment on the recipes themselves and for my own efforts. The poor guy does complain, err rather he mentions that he misses the real stuff. He has a large deal of non-IBS safe food in the pantry and fridge, too - that meanie head! :P He says to me he misses ground beef, but sheesh, the guy gets pork loin now and then and on top of that about once a month he gets steak! *rolls eyes in exasperation*. At least he's trying though, and he's eating what I cook - there's no place for him to hide it and no pet to feed it too *giggle*. I've made a lot and I mean a lot of ground turkey recipes. I posted a stroganoff one and I made a really yummy tuna noodle casserole, too, adapted for IBS and inspired by the ideas of others. Sometimes I use Recipezaar and post recipes there or find recipes there that people from here have posted or that I can adapt for the IBS diet. Good luck!

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XOXO from lil' ol' me. (IBS-C, mood disorders, etc., etc.)

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Re: HE LIKES IT! new
      #276653 - 08/01/06 06:13 PM
littlelani

Reged: 06/17/06
Posts: 387
Loc: Asheboro, NC

Thank you! I will look up those recipes & check out recipezaar, soon as I get a chance! Tonight, for him I made boneless pork chops w/this applesauce mixture he likes, & I had chicken w/pasta...and we both had..you guessed it-green beans! LOL! At least he eats vegetables now, he didn't when I first met him. It's nice to know that I'm not alone as far as IBS goes or w/the issues I face w/family & friends who don't have IBS. I hope things get better for you. I'm not sure if you can take advantage of this or not, but where I live we have Sam's Club & Costco. They're warehouse clubs that offer discounts on large amounts of things you need anyway-that might help you save some money. The membership fee is kinda high, but the savings are worth it. I recently bought 11 lbs of chicken breast for $14, and 5 lbs of whole wheat spaghetti for $3! I get my Silk Soy milk there too, $6 for 3 gallons. It's a lot cheaper than the grocery store & health food store on most (but not all) things I buy.

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IBS-A...I can never make up my mind

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A long story of my cooking gone wrong... new
      #276671 - 08/01/06 09:02 PM
Sommer

Reged: 02/09/04
Posts: 283
Loc: Phoenix, Arizona USA

Earlier I'd written a post regarding our significant others liking the IBS diet recipes in reply to a post about a BF finally liking one. In that reply, I'd mentioned that I, personally, may be able to follow a recipe fairly well, but I can't necessarily cook. This story is a prime example and perhaps my prior post which was made not too long after I began tonight's dinner was a harbinger. So here I am completely freaking out wondering how I'm supposed to stuff these shells, I mean there's like these tiny little openings and the mixture is just too big to get in there without literally breaking the shells. So here I am literally trying to break these shells (omg they're sturdy!) just to get the mixture into them. Thank god my BF can cook! I've NEVER stuffed a shell, manicotti or otherwise in my entire life. He walks in from work while I'm attempting to get these shells stuffed and he's like, "Aren't you supposed to at least soak those first or something?f" "No, the recipe doesn't indicate to soak them at all, and wouldn't they get soggy cooking for 45mins?" I knew the 45mins was necessary to cook the chicken, since it's raw, but I swore that it would ruin the shells. BF says, "Actually, you'd probably burn the shells b/c there's not enough moisture; you have to cook them first, then stuff them." So, I respond, "Uh, then what, they'll be steaming hot, how am I supposed to handle them?" He says, "Cool them off first." I answer back, "But what about this layer of sauce with cooking spray underneath it, what's gonna happen to it, will it get ruined while I have to fix this? If I had been looking at him, I would have seen the exasperation in his face. "Of course not," he says. I sarcastically reply, "Riiight, of course not, cuz I know exactly what I'm doing!" I said a couple other things loudly, sarcastically and each time he's trying to go to the bathroom and he keeps opening the door and yelling, "What?! I'm trying to go to the bathroom here." I wasn't being sarcastic towards him, but myself. *SIGH* I stare downward at the plate before me with haphazardly filled broken, sad, and uncooked jumbo shells, shaking my head and thus prepare to empty the filling from them back into the pan... oh darnit, I realize, I need that pan for cooking the shells in. Aargh, my feet hurt so badly and I can't believe this is happening. It's been a long time since I've been this retarded in the kitchen. It was interesting enough trying to mince garlic and cut chicken with a dull knife (need to get a knife sharpener asap). For whatever odd reason, BF's knife block doesn't include a knife sharpener. I need a brain sharpener....

Anyway, so I scrape the filling mixture from the pan into a bowl, was out the pan and DUH! OMG! Look at those cooking directions on the American Beauty Jumbo Shells box! I can't follow this simple recipe, but thank god I can follow a recipe on how to cook jumbo shells. Hrm, so now here I am stuffing shells, hoping that I didn't lose out on the mixture somehow when I had to scrape it out of the pan, but at the same time wondering if the mixture got a nice little marinade while it awaited the pasta shells. I had had to throw away probably seven uncooked shells and salvaged all the mixture, except for the seasonings and egg beaters and oil sticking to those shells when I tossed them. I probably could have rinsed them off, but seven broken shells aren't a huge sacrifice. Besides, the box is still a "1/2 box of jumbo shells" as the recipe calls for, plus some. As many times as I've double- and triple-checked this recipe to make sure I was following it correctly, I didn't see the word "chopped" after the chicken, I thought it was ... no now that I think about it, I did see "chopped" but my insanity interpreted it as "1/4 inch cubes" or something. So now that all's well and in the oven, I'm freaking out again b/c I'm wondering if the chicken's going to get done b/c it wasn't exactly chopped. 45mins pass as I randomly converse w/BF and write this novella for all of you to read (and laugh at) and I'm nervous about how this is going to turn out.

The result? IT WORKED OUT JUST FINE! Except that I wore some spaghetti sauce while dishing this up... and BF says it's "really tasty". And yes, the chicken was done.

I'm saving the leftover cooked shells b/c the package of chicken breasts was too much for the recipe, so I have a leftover chicken breast. Guess what I'm doing for lunch tomorrow? I'm gonna turn that leftover chicken breast into really yummy garlic chicken and eat it with the pasta and some sauce, maybe garlic spaghetti sauce. Although, it might be possible that there will be leftovers of tonight's chicken-stuffed shells to snack on tomorrow, who knows.

So now that things turned out so well, I'd like to heave a huge sigh of relief and laugh at myself and with myself for nearly making an expensive screw-up of dinner. I'd also like to share how I worked this recipe out. Out of sheer laziness, I eye-balled the amount of of olive oil. I used the exact amount of basil and parsley flakes called for, and the garlic also. When I was sauteeing the mushrooms and herbs, I used the edge of the spatula to chop the mushrooms as I stirred everything. (They were bought presliced). I also tried an organic pasta sauce, mushroom flavor by a brand called Naturally Preferred. I didn't think this 1lb 9oz size jar was enough sauce for this dish when I was ready to put it into the oven, but now that I'm eating it, it's sloppy and there seems to be plenty of sauce. The pasta sauce itself is delicious (I had pondered over Garlic flavor or Italion flavor at the grocery store). I think the mushroom flavor worked out well. At $4, it was pricier than what I usually buy, which is Prego, or if I have to, I will buy Kroger spaghetti sauce (very decent but just not the same and I hate Ragu).

Heather suggests that research isn't sure yet how non-organic foods affect the GI tract. I don't mind organic foods, I just can't afford to buy them hardly at all and underlying that, organic foods may not endure the needs of the world's growing population. But if I'm able to, I will certainly not flat out say "no" to trying organic. That's an entirely different story for the other board though that I'd like to share with everyone.

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XOXO from lil' ol' me. (IBS-C, mood disorders, etc., etc.)

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Re: A long story of my cooking gone wrong... new
      #276763 - 08/02/06 02:41 PM
littlelani

Reged: 06/17/06
Posts: 387
Loc: Asheboro, NC

Awwww! I'm sorry you had such a bad experience w/the recipe, but it sounds like it turned out well. Don't feel bad, we've all been there. No one knows how to cook the first time they try! I'm good w/desserts but I'm a novice when it comes to "real" food. The first & only time I ever tried to make pizza (shudder) was a disaster!! I had flour ALL over the kitchen, on the countertops, the floor, in the sink! And it wasn't edible...I actually think it wanted to eat me! It was a gooey, nasty, bubbling gook. And that's why I will not even attempt to make the EFI pizza! I'll stick w/Amy's thank you very much!

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IBS-A...I can never make up my mind

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Re: A long story of my cooking gone wrong...LOL new
      #277032 - 08/03/06 06:17 PM
Sommer

Reged: 02/09/04
Posts: 283
Loc: Phoenix, Arizona USA

Here's a quote from my BF "OMG, $9.00 for a 9-inch pizza?" Okay that's not an exact quote, but it's close enough. I can eat an entire Amy's Soy Cheeze Pizza all by myself, sometimes in one long sitting. I dont' scarf it down, but usually finish it off within an hour. Or I maybe have a slice left, two at most that I end up eating an hour or two later. I've never made a homemade pizza.

Thanks for shring, glad I'm not the only one who goofs up. So many ppl on here seem like such pros that I felt so stupid when I realized what I'd almost done. Supposedly my mom says, a sign of a good cook is a big mess. I'm not too pleased with that. I like cleaning up as I go so that I'm not spending hours scrubbing and cleaning afterwards. I mean my biggest pet peeves were the inevitable splatters and splotches of random liquids all over the place, stove, counters... is it that hard to wipe those up as you go? :P Have fun and take care! Btw, Amy's Macaroni and Soy Cheeze entree is yummy, again, not cheap, but yummy.

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XOXO from lil' ol' me. (IBS-C, mood disorders, etc., etc.)

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Re: HE LIKES IT! new
      #277036 - 08/03/06 06:32 PM
Sommer

Reged: 02/09/04
Posts: 283
Loc: Phoenix, Arizona USA

Hi Littlelani, I hope it gets easier for you, too. Thank you for the support and the tip. Yes I have used Costco in the past, and I agree with you, for many things it's well worth the membership. I had a membership a long, long time ago, I think it was either 50 or 100 bucks for an annual membership, can't remember now. And prior to that my grandmother used to shop there and I'd go with her. Right now, I have no room for for that much, I'd end up wasting it. But, bulk is a good idea most of the time, and if I can do it, and have the room, I do buy in bulk, even if it's just from my local Fry's aka Kroger's. What a need is an entirely separate fridge/freezer and shelving units for my food... some day soon hopefully. :P Take care.

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XOXO from lil' ol' me. (IBS-C, mood disorders, etc., etc.)

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Re: Chicken Stuffed Shells new
      #282605 - 09/16/06 06:29 PM
Tilden

Reged: 08/13/06
Posts: 51
Loc: Bay Area

This is in the oven right now...and it smells really good. I was a little short on mushrooms so I threw some sun dried tomatoes in as well. The spinach that someone suggested sounds good too.

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Jen

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