I don't know why, but I've had a hankering for stuffed peppers lately.- Cover and bake for 45 minutes; uncover and bake another 15 minutes or until peppers are tender
My attempt to blog my cooking
I don't know why, but I've had a hankering for stuffed peppers lately.
DH and I LOVED this recipe, and it makes so much food we had it for 2 dinners, and a couple of lunches! It actually re-heats really well -- better than regular lasagna!
This recipe is amazing. It's just...it's THAT GOOD. I originally saw it over at A Taste of Home Cooking -- and when she made it in back-to-back weeks, I knew it had to be good!

This is another recipe my DH has requested, and that his grandmother used to make. I really love these -- they're just delicious!
Last Saturday, while I was browsing blogs and my Google Reader looking for the week's recipes, my hubby walked up behind me and said "That. We're having that. I mean -- can we have that??"
My cute little loaves, ready for topping and baking
Chef Bradley's website says the Lean Mean BBQ Sauce is primarily a finishing sauce, but, I used it on my meatloaf while cooking as well. It had a nice, sweet flavor from cooking along with the meatloaf. I added more sauce to my piece of meatloaf, to taste the original flavor as well, and it was delicious -- it's got a little bit of zing to it, is a little peppery, but is very tasty -- AND it's healthy. How awesome is that??
Basic Meatloaf
(Makes 1 large loaf, or two small loaves)
1.5 lbs ground meat (I used ground beef and ground sausage for this -- you can use any ground meat)
1 small onion (or 1/2 large onion), finely diced
1-8oz. tomato sauce
salt and pepper to taste
1 egg
1/2-3/4 cup breadcrumbs (however much you need to make it bind)
Directions
- Mix all ingredients together, shape into loaves
- Top with BBQ sauce, ketchup, or whatever you enjoy
- Bake at 350 degrees for 45-60 minutes, or until loaves are cooked through.
My finished BBQ meatloaf. Okay, so it isn't the most gorgeous thing you've ever seen, but trust me...it was deeeeeeeeeelicious!
This recipe was one of my grandmother's -- and for some reason, old-fashioned hot dogs in casing, with chili sauce, just sounded FANTASTIC this week!
I am not Lithuanian. I'm your generic east-coast stock -- Irish, Welsh, English, German.
When my mom was a little girl, she hated goulash. But my grandmother kept making it. To show her dislike of the meal, she started calling it "dog food" -- and the name stuck. To this day, my family calls it dog food.
What is better in blustery, cold February than a hearty stew? I wanted one that I could make in the crockpot, and the ladies at What's Cooking on TheNest served up this delicious recipe!

Ahh..meatloaf. The comforting nature of this meal is just too much to resist, for me. This recipe is a solid, 1950's style, plain meatloaf. If you're looking for a fancy-pants version, this ain't it :)
A good, toasted bun with a little healthy margarine or olive oil brushed on it makes this way more than just a childhood favorite.
I served mine with steak fried and peas, because, well, I like steak fries and peas.
DH likes a little melted cheese on his, but I passed on the cheese for mine.