Tuesday, December 7, 2010

homefries and meatloafs....

So the Nightowl posted about the awesome home fries. And she's right - they are awesome. They last time she was here we were going to make a batch and even prepped for it.

Which is how I came to find 2 cups of nicely diced onions carefully packaged in a ziplock with the air squeezed out in the bottom of my fridge last night. I stood there holding the little cubes and realized I would have no opportunity during a work week to make the home fries. The are awesome - but they also take time. (I think this is so you can absorb enough coffee to be really awake when you taste them.)

I remembered another friend who needs recipies for food that you can set and forget... and it occurred to me that I was holding one of the base ingredients for meatloaf. And this friend - she looooves my meatloaf. She said so. Lots of times. I have no option but to believe. She was very emphatic.

So tonight I have put a meatloaf in the oven with the Nightowl's onions.  We are such pals!

Following is my go-to receipe for meatloaf. This makes one loaf

Classic Meatloaf (from Joy Of Cooking)

12 oz ground chuck
12 oz ground pork
1.5 cups finely diced onions
1 cup quick cook oats
2/3 cup ketchup
2/3 cup chopped parsley (cilantro is good too)
3 large eggs lightly beaten
1 teaspoon ground Thyme
1 teaspon salt
1/2 teaspon black pepper

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Get out your largest Cast Iron fry pan. If you don't have one of these - put it on a list of things to buy next weekend and get out a heavy duty cookie tray. It must have SIDES.

In a large bowl - combine all ingredients and knead together gently. Do not overmix.
Put the mixture into a loaf pan to create a mould and up end into the Cast iron pan preferably, or in the center of the cookie sheet.

(you can also throw in some whole baking potatoes at this same time and have roasted potatoes with your meatloaf)

Place in the oven and Bake for 1 hour or until firm to the touch and an instant read thermometer reads 160 degrees. Remove from oven and let sit for 15 minutes before cutting.

This receipe is easily doubled -- You put half the mix in the oven and half in the freezer for another meal.
After the first loaf is in the oven - line the loaf pan with plastic wrap. Pack with remaining meat. Fold over plastic on top to cover meat and place in freezer overnight. In the morning - Unpan the meat (you might have to run warm wate rover the bottom a bit to loosen things up. Double wrap in tin foil once you get it out. Will keep in freezer at least 3 months.

To Cook Frozen:  Unwrap Tin foil. DONT FORGET TO REMOVE PLASTIC WRAP.
Place in cast Iron pan still frozen. Put in 350 degree oven about 2 hours.

Enjoy!!
The DayBird

2 comments:

  1. See...that's one of my problems. I overmix. So how do I know when it's mixed? Or rather, how do I get it all mixed together without ruining the consistency of the meat?

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