Saturday, April 12, 2014

Red Quinoa Red Sauce


Is there anything like a nice red sauce.  My new neighbor, Kahty, gave me a taste of her sauce over the fence the other day and WOW,  it was all that I could think about for days.  So it pushed me into the kitchen to create.  Let me tell you right off, hers is amazing and just today she showed up at my house with a tub of her sauce.  I could not even wait until dinner,  I put the pot of water on to boil and within a few minutes I was feasting on her sauce.  But until today I had to do my own and it is great.  Fresh and tasty.  I do think Kathy would be pleased with my end result.   I like the visual of step by step instructions.  So join me now as I explain just how to make a great sauce.  And of course I added a grain to mine,  it ups the nutrition and flavor.  How could I not add a grain??

Everything Fresh and ready to go.


Fresh Egg Plants and herbs from my garden.

The Egg Plants are heirloom ones.  They are small, but tasty.

I used a jar of my bottled tomatoes with garlic.

To start I added some oil to a large enameled pan.

Chopped the fresh peppers.   Grow in my garden.

Onions and peppers sauted togethers.

Chopped bacon.

In the food processor I added the herbs and fresh swiss chard.

The jar of tomatoes.


It looks like salsa now.  This is added to the pot.

Peel the egg plants.

Chop them up.

This is the meat with uncooked red quinoa.
I brown the meat with the quinoa and than add it to the pot.

I love the Honeyville tomato powder.  It has a great
rich tomato taste.

A closer look at the red quinoa.  I love red quinoa.

Here is the sauce.   It simmers for a while and oh my, it turns out great.


Red Sauce Supreme

2 medium onions, chopped
4 sweet red pepper, chopped and seeded
4 slices bacon, chopped
small bunch rosemary, thyme, parsley, and marjoram
4 to 5 stalks of chard
Jar of stewed tomatoes and garlic
Garlic cloves, if not in tomatoes’
4 to 5 small egg plants, skinned and chopped
2 lbs. ground beef 
1 cup uncooked red quinoa
4 tablespoons olive oil
1/3 cup cooking sherry
1/2 cup tomato powder
4 to 5 cups water
1 tablespoon kosher salt
2 teaspoons fresh ground pepper


In large sauce pot saute bacon, onions,  and peppers in olive oil.    In separate pan sauté ground beef with red quinoa until done.  Set aside.  In food processor add herbs, chard, garlic, and tomatoes and chop.   Add cooking sherry to onion mixture and them add chopped egg plant.  Saute for a couple of minutes and add remaining ingredients.  Simmer for a couple of hours.  Serve over or tossed with pasta.  

Some dished take longer and require preparation,  I don't always cook dished that take time, but when I do I am always thrilled with the end result.  This sauce gets better the next day.   My family loves it, by the way I don't tell them about the egg plant.  They would not eat the sauce if they new.  Sneak nutrition does work.  Chef Brad~America's Grain Guy

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Third Sunday Dinner Report March 2014




March is the perfect Month in Mesa Az.  The weather is perfect, with orange blossoms in bloom and flower everywhere.  I love March.

It just happened that I had three turkeys in my freezer that a good friend had donated in December.  So I thought it would be the perfect meal.  I decided to smoke them and do smoked turkey tacos.  Amazing.  Smoking meat is the best way.  I love my Traeger Smoker.  It is amazing and in my smoker I can fit three large turkeys.

My method for smoking turkeys is as follows.  I brine them in buckets of water.  I put in 1 cup of kosher salt and 2 cups of sugar.  I add Seasoning also.   When I am smoking meats,  I like to add mesquite seasoning.  They have a really good one at Costco.  Cover the turkeys in the brine and place in the cooler and brine overnight.  I remove them from the brine and rinse them well  These I stuffed with lemons,  I have a lot this time of year, and fresh herbs from my garden..  I warm up the smoker according to instructions and place the turkeys on the rack.  Now I have to say I don't do the quick method,  that would be smoke for a couple of hours and raise the temp and roast.  I do a long smoke,  about 14 hours.  It is worth the wait.  With this smoker, you just add the pellets and set the temp and leave it alone.  That is why I love my Traeger smoker.  I smoked them before them on Friday all day and placed them in the frig to cool.  I had my helpers on Sunday remove all the meat from the bones and we chopped it up small and placed the pans in the oven to warm.  Amazing is all I can say. We served about 300 tacos.

About that,  flour tortillas are great, but to make that many would be a nightmare and to buy them is out of the question.  So I opted for corn tortillas.  In Mesa we have some really great places to buy tortillas. Cheap and wonderful.  We cooked them on a cast iron griddle with a small amount of oil. The end result,  wonderful tacos that were inexpensive to make.

Third Sunday Dinners are a joy,  some work, but the joy always outweighs the amount of effort.  Here is a picture review of the day.  It is hard to take pictures some days because we are so busy with everything going on, but you will get the idea.  Enjoy.  Chef Brad~America's Grain Guy

The back yard is set ready to go.

The boys.  They come early to help set up and do whatever
I need.  They are amazing and I think this experience will
have a life long impact on them. 

 For a side dish I place black beans and pearled barley in my large roaster to cook all day.   I seasoned them like Cuban Black Beans and let them cook.  They were great with the tacos.


This is Micah and William,  cooking tortillas.

Thomas cooking tortillas.  

Fresh baked gluten free cookie bars.

I love it when desserts like this show up.

The line up for dinner.

Look at all the great food.

Now that's a happy face.



 This picture is priceless to me.  This is my dearest friend Gail.  She is responsible for my grain adventure.   She got me hired years ago in a food storage place in Mesa Az.  That is where my love for grains started.  And I adore this woman.  She is a wonderful friend and I was so thrilled when she just showed up for Dinner.  You never know who will be coming to dinner.  That is the fun of it.
Happy faces eating and enjoying each other.

More happy faces.

I love the back yard filled with so many.  This is Rainy passing
out dessert.  

This is Jay,  another dear friend.  We became close at
Third Sunday Dinners.  He is an amazing man.

My newest adopted Grand baby.  Wow.

When the tables fill up they line up.  

Third Sunday Dinner is an amazing event.  Through it I have learned to love more and I have learned that when you open up your home great things happen,  no, not great things,  Miracles.