Ground beef recipes ... something different
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subcounter wrote: »Pastel De Papa, they're so good.
I had never heard of this... after Googling now I MUST make it. Immediately.1 -
subcounter wrote: »Pastel De Papa, they're so good.
I had never heard of this... after Googling now I MUST make it. Immediately.
This seems pretty close to shepherd's pie (minus the veggies, plus eggs). That's definitely a must.
Sloppy Joe's?
Also, this is the bomb
http://www.skinnytaste.com/cheeseburger-casserole/0 -
Alatariel75 wrote: »My Dad's signature dish growing up was "*kitten* on a Shingle" - basically browned ground beef, a bag of frozen mixed veg (the cheap one where everything is in cubes), once cooked, mix through enough water and instant gravy to make it the consistency of pie filling and eat it on toast or crackers. It's still one of my go-to no-time dinners, or comfort foods.
Hmmm...must be a regional thing. In my SoCal family, "SoaS" was what we called chipped beef.2 -
I'll link you to one of the recipes I've posted on here with a picture! It's "dirty rice" aka rice, with bell peppers, and ground beef, lol quick, easy, and delicious
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/1106217/quick-and-super-easy-healthy-dirty-rice-with-pic#latest2 -
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CynthiasChoice wrote: »"Joe's Special"
Saute an onion in a large skillet
Add in 1 lb Ground Beef and brown
Mix in 1/2 lb cooked spinach (I use frozen) or whatever veggie you like
Mix in 6 - 8 beaten eggs and continue to turn the mixture in the pan till the eggs are set
Mix in 1/4 - 1/2 cup parmesan cheese (or sprinkle it on top of each serving)
Oh man...sounds like dinner to me! Protein, protein, and more protein and it sounds great too. Thanks!0 -
individual meat patties ... a.k.a. salisbury steak but gravy is optional. We make it by adding a couple of slices of bread (per lb of meat) that have soaked in some water, and a minced onion, salt and pepper to taste. Mix together like for meatloaf, then fashion little torpedo shaped patties and either fry or bake em. Serve with pickles or fermented vegetables.0
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I swear by these meatballs.
https://cookbookhoarder.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/swedish-meatballs.pdf
It is a bulk recipe so you can make a whole bunch at once and save yourself loads of time.
@jgnatca Are the two sauces a pick one or do you use both?0 -
Mince and doughballs:
Brown a pound of the beef, remove from the pan and add a diced onion and a diced carrot. Cook til the onion is soft. Add two or three tablespoons of flour, stir in and add the beef and a bit of beef stock (from cubes is fine, or whatever you want). Bring to the boil and simmer a bit until the beef is cooked and you're sure it's going to be the right consistency (add more stock if needed). Season to taste and put in a deep oven dish. Make sure the oven is heated (moderate, 180C/350F) and put the dish in - it needs to be hot for the next step.
Make up doughballs by rubbing 1-2oz fat (eg butter - dripping or grated suet are best if you have it) into 8oz self raising flour. Add a pinch of salt, herbs if you want them, and enough milk to mix to a soft dough, similar to scones/biscuits.
Pull off lumps of the dough and drop them into the hot mince. Don't shape or roll them, they should be irregular, like fluffy clouds. Cover with a lid or foil - make sure they have room to rise, they will about double - and bake for about 20 min until the doughballs are cooked through. If you want you can then bake them uncovered for 5 min to brown a little, but don't dry them out or make them hard.
This is not exactly low calorie but is rib-sticking and satisfying, traditional Scottish fare. Doughballs are what the English would call dumplings, but doughballs should be irregular and super-fluffy, where English dumplings are generally rolled into balls. I have reduced the fat in the doughballs - the traditional recipe is 4oz fat to 8oz flour, but I find that can make them heavy.
I didn't mention the seemingly ubiquitous fat-draining step you see in ground beef recipes as I have never needed to do that, and if your beef is good quality and grass fed, neither will you.
Enjoy your half a cow! Sounds amazing.
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Cottage pie. Dry fry the minced beef with onion, draining any liquid, add a beef stock cube crumbled, peas and carrots and a little dried mixed herbs. A tbsp of tomato puree and just enough water to cover. Simmer for 30 mins topping up with water if needed and a tiny bit of gravy granules at the end to thicken. Pour into a baking dish and once cooled top with any root veg mash of your choice, I like sweet potato, I dont mash it with butter just some fat free fromage frais. Level out and fork it up so the mash ismt smooth, this helps the mash to crisp up. If I wasent counting calories id brush with melted butter before going in the oven for 20-30 minutes till golden and crispy. Proper british comfort food.3
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Porcupines : 1lb ground beef 1 box of beef rice a roni ..mix hamburger 1 egg and the rice shape into meatballs brown meatballs use the seasoning package and water to finish cooking meatballs it makes a nice little gravy...I have made this using my own ingredients of hamburger rice garlic and onion powder and beef bouillon and seasonings..But the 2 ingredient meal mentioned above is easy quick and delicious perhaps a salt bomb and may need to watch portion..Goes well with green beans and skinny mash potatoes1
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Sugar-free BBQ Beef over veges (a take on sloppy joes)1
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Yessss an old fave of mine Minced Beef Kebab
Fry off your beef and add
Salt
Pepper
Cayenne pepper
Paprika
Oregano
Parsley
And sprinkle some dry beef stick
Cook until the moisture drys out and have it with ice berg lettuce, onion tomato and mint yogurt on a wholemeal pitta
Use a teaspoon of all spices except ceyenne just use a quarter if even
Lovely with chicken too2 -
Sloppy Joes! Oh how I miss these messy little Happiness filled buns. Dripping goodness all over my hands. Some ruffles bbq chips providing good company to the grand flavorgasm ball. A Dr. Pepper to splash your taste buds with refreshing delight.
I don't even know why I don't have them anymore, but it just so happens I took out some ground beef to defrost last night. So maybe I'll have it today.
(Midnight spontaneous brain storming)
Look across the table. Little Johnny is happy, he's on his third napkin. Mom cracks a casual smile, and reaches for tobasco. Dad gives a playful concerned look at mom and says "Really Hun?, you know what that does to you, and it's Wednesday night." Dad waits for a response, but mom slowly takes another bite, and closes her eyes as she does so. She disregards an immediate response.
Back across the table little Johnny is crunching loudly as he takes a bite from his meal. He had wedged ruffles into the last half of his Sloppy Joe.
Mom grabs a napkin with one hand, and reaches for her Dr. Pepper. She finishes off her last bit with a chug. The aluminum can slams the table top. An appropriately lady like belch releases into a napkin pressed against her tomato stained lips and she finally responds..."and?, anyways I used the headache last week". (lights dim, Curtains close)
I apologize in advance for going a bit off topic. I'm kinda bored and haven't typed up a short short story in over a decade. just out of the blue. I know it belongs in "Chit-Chat".1 -
Got this in my inbox today and thought of this thread.1
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Chef John is awesome! Such good recipes!
I made some beef and buckwheat patties this weekend. They taste like mini meatloaves but in patty form that you brown in a skillet. It was my first time using buckwheat and I thought they came out fantastic. It's just 1# ground beef, 1c cooked buckwheat, 1 egg, garlic powder, onion powder, 1/2c milk, and S&P. This recipe made 7-5oz patties at 180 cals per patty.1 -
Oh, I also made a spaghetti squash with a ground turkey and tomato sauce, but I think ground beef would sub nicely.1
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shandy82165 wrote: »Chef John is awesome! Such good recipes!
He is! His recipes are really good, but the main reason I need to get a fix of his videos is because the way he speaks his recipes makes me genuinely happy. I always watch his videos with a smile.
Edited to fix broken quote
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I agree, his narration style is the best part of his videos I think it's a love it or hate it kind of thing because some people seem really annoyed by it in the comments...lol0
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Maybe it's just me, but I used to take ground beef, diced up bacon and put it on top my kale with peppers and chipotle sauce. Called it a "man salad". It sounds weird but its good. And keto.2
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All sound so good1
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Crack slaw (Ground beef, coleslaw, ginger, sesame oil, garlic, sriracha, soy sauce), Salisbury steak, Korean beef, Picadillo, Stuffed pepper soup, Jack Daniels Burgers.1
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Im making cabbage rolls tonight prob use the allrecipe website or come up with my own im using brown instant rice in my lean ground..for a low carb low cal dish..Or a good old fashioned hamburger steak topped with pan seared onions and mushrooms..Pioneer dry brown gravy mix is only 20 calories a tbs prepared a couple of tbs wont set ya back to far..good luck with your meal plan hope I helped1
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Pioneer Woman's recipe for hamburger soup is really good. It has 12 servings for just over 200 calories each, according to the MFP calculator. Stuffed Pepper soup is another good one; not a PW though. Lots of veggies and protein in both. I usually will make a full batch, let cool, and then portion out into individual servings and freeze in ziplocs. Such is the life in a household of one1
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I make a taco meat sauce, and use it for (obviously) tacos, but then if there is any left over, it tastes great over a bed of greens and some sour cream as dressing. Sort of taco without the taco shell. I take it for lunch a lot and dont even bother to reheat the meat mixture - there is just something really satisfying about the contrast of the lettuce greens and the spicy ground beef mixture with the cooling effect of the sour cream..............2
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I made a delicious meal using ground beef, penne, acorn squash, roasted brussel sprouts, and onion, and seasoned with cinnamon and nutmeg, topped with swiss cheese. So good! I browned the beef with onion, simmered the beef with the pasta and spices in chicken broth until the pasta was cooked, tossed in the brussels and cooked squash, topped with cheese and cooked in the oven for 5-10 minutes. I have a similar recipe using ground sausage and butternut squash.1
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I brown it with taco seasoning, spread a bit over salad (weighing it, of course) and use salsa as a dressing. Super low cal. Just have to watch the sodium in the salsa.2
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Taco salad1
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http://www.food.com/recipe/crack-slaw-low-carb-434863 this
I'm low carb, but my hubby is not and he loves this too.2 -
CurveAppeal86 wrote: »Crack slaw (Ground beef, coleslaw, ginger, sesame oil, garlic, sriracha, soy sauce), Salisbury steak, Korean beef, Picadillo, Stuffed pepper soup, Jack Daniels Burgers.
Crack slaw sounds awesome!0
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