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Double Corn-Cornbread Dressing

In 2 days, the weather person has promised us that the first cold front of the season will be arriving. When it does, a pan of corn dressing will be in my oven. Cornbread dressing is one of my all-time favorite foods in the whole world.
No matter if I missed the 12 hour sale at Stein Mart, by 1 hour or forgot to use my coupons at Nothing Bundt Cakes before they expired, all I need is a pan of dressing to pull me out of my blues. This recipe sounds perfect for the coming cold (which means that the 90’s will be in the 80’s) front that will arrive here in about 48 hours.

1 1/2 cups cornmeal
1 1/4 cups flour
3 table sugar
4 teas baking powder
1 teas salt
1 1/2 cup milk
3 eggs
1/3 cup melted butter
3 cups fresh or frozen corn kernels, thawed
1 large red onion, chopped
1/2 cup butter
1/2 teas crushed red pepper
6 cups fresh spinach, torn into small pieces
1 3/4 cup to 2 3/4 cup chicken broth
For the cornbread, preheat oven to 400. Grease a 13×9″ baking pan; set aside.
In a large bowl, stir together the cornmeal, flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. Set aside.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the milk, eggs and the 1/3 cup melted butter. Stir milk mixture into cornmeal mixture just until moistened. Pour batter into prepared pan.
Bake 20 min or until edges are golden. Cool cornbread on wire rack. Cut into 1″ cubes. Makes about 10 cups.
Preheat oven to 325.
Spread cornbread cubes onto baking pan. Bake, uncovered, 10 to 15 min, stirring once. Cool on wire rack.
In a large skillet, cook the corn and onion in the 1/2 cup butter over medium heat 6-8 minutes.
Stir in crushed red pepper, salt and pepper to taste. In a very large bowl, combine cornbread pieces corn mixture and spinach. Drizzle with broth to moisten; toss lightly to combine.
Spoon into a 3qt baking dish, which you have lightly greased. Bake uncovered 30-40 min or until top is browned and dressing is heated through.
Makes 8 servings.
This can be made ahead up to 24 hours, if you cover and place in fridge until the last bake step. Then proceed according to baking directions.

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Free Popcorn, Flat Tires & Fresh Coffee

I am re-blogging this story as a sample of what is in my new book, which will be available next week. Several people have asked what kind of stories are in the book, so thought I would share one with you.

Chocolate Castles's avatarChocolate Castles

I thought an update might be appropriate since many of you have commented on the fun and cheap, (oops, I forgot, we are trying to be classy) I mean inexpensive Saturday that Randy and I had a couple of weekends ago.

We have now learned something else, very important. The more expensive the car dealership, the better the snacks you get. This past Saturday, we woke up to a flat tire which meant that we called AAA (the ones who come out to fix your car, no, we didn’t turn into alcoholics from just having a flat tire, that would have been AA) But back to the story. We had them put on the spare in order for us to get to the dealership where we were told it would only be a few minutes and they would have a new tire put on and we could just wait in…

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Christmas Chatter

Last night I texted (yes, I am one of those who prefers to text than use the telephone, although that does make me sound pretty cool and hip I guess) both of our daughters and told them that they needed to step it up a notch.

Yesterday,  I had a couple of friends over to help organize a party our class is having and over great (even if I say so myself) potato soup and garlic cheese biscuits, we talked about our adult children. One of the ladies there just “happened” to mention that her grandson had spent the night due to the fact that his parents, her daughter and son–in-law had gone to Ryan Secrest’s Christmas party. What? how could I compete with that? The only exciting thing I had to talk about was that one of our daughters and her husband were going to a church party where they would be taking a white elephant gift of under $5 and it had to begin with a “M” so they were taking live minnows. Our other daughter didn’t even have a story which included anything live, except her kids. Now, I love my grandkids as much as the other baby boomers, but really, how much can I brag about grandkids that their only line in the Christmas school pagent is, “I do, I do” and then proceeds to give his mom a thumbs up. Or our little granddaughter having her mom text me because she is worried that I forgot my toothbrush at their house in Florida and were my teeth getting brushed since I had left it there?

I just remembered, I have a friend who bragged that she was standing on the street corner last week and was waiting for the light to turn green so she could cross when she looked at the car right by her and realized that she was staring in the face of Jay Leno….and he even waved back when she smiled and waved at him. Maybe I could use that as my conversation subject until our kids give us a little more exciting material to use. Until then, I’m going to just have to get out my old pictures of The Fonz and me and Willy Nelson and me, Jack Ritter & me and last, Detective Green (from Law & Order) and the other guy who was his partner that I can’t remember his name and ME……why my, I think I will give Mrs. Mother of Ryan’s Christmas party invitee a call. I have a few things I can “happen” to mention….

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King Ranch Chicken Casserole ur TV

Since living in Texas over 50 years, I just assumed that everyone in the United States had eaten this casserole sometime in their lives. It never occurred to me that just because every person in Texas had this recipe posted on the inside of a kitchen cabinet, or,  it was the “go to” casserole for family gatherings, funerals (I guess that would be considered a family gathering also, wouldn’t it?), welcoming new neighbors and celebrating neighbors that we didn’t like, finally moving away, this was “the” recipe. But since moving to California, I discovered that there are actually folks that have never heard of this casserole. Who knew? To me, that is like never hearing about the blue light special at K Mart.  When several friends little eyes perked up (and at our age, that is hard to do), as I talked about making this for our kids when they come visit, I knew what my next posting would be. Just think about this, if it was printed in an old Southern Living magazine and makes enough to have left over the next day for lunch, cheap and easy to make, we have a winner. So grab your purse and head to the market. Your dinner tonight will give you a taste of Texas and it’s not even Rodeo Days.

1 (4-5 lb) whole chicken (yes, you can use store bought rotisserie chicken if you feel led, but if you do this, you will need 1 cup of chicken broth and you won’t need the celery or carrot)

2 celery ribs, cut into 3 pieces each

2 carrots, cut into 3 pieces each

2 1/2 to 3 teas salt

3 tables butter

1 medium size onion and green bell pepper, each chopped up

1 garlic clove

1 (10 3/4 oz) can cream of mushroom soup

1 (10 3/4 oz) can cream of chicken soup (or celery soup)

2 cans (10 oz each) diced tomatoes and green chiles, drained (like Rotel)

1 teas dried oregano

1 teas ground cumin

1 teas chili powder

3 cups grated sharp Cheddar cheese

12 (6″) corn tortillas, cut or torn into 1/2″ strips

Remove giblets from chicken. Rinse chicken and place with celery, carrots and salt in a large Dutch oven with water to cover. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low. Cover and simmer about 1 hour or until chicken is done. Remove from heat. Remove chicken from the broth. Reserve broth.

Preheat oven to 350. Melt butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onion and sauté 6-6 minutes. Add bell pepper and garlic. Saute 3-4 minutes. Stir in 3/4 cup chicken broth, both cans of cream soups and next 4 ingredients. Cook over low heat while deboning the chicken into bite-size pieces. Layer half of chicken in a lightly greased 9×13″ baking dish. Top with half of soup mixture and 1 cup cheese. Cover with half of corn tortilla strips. Repeat the layers again, topping with remaining 1 cup cheese.

Bake at 350 for 55 min to 1 hour or until good and bubbly. Let stand 10 minutes before serving. Put your boots and cowboy hat on and place it on the table. It will be mighty good “eatin” tonight. (sorry, but I haven’t had the opportunity to use that word in a long time)