Slow Cooker Lima Bean Soup

I’m always on the lookout for meatless dishes that are easy yet tasty that I can serve my family, hopefully without them missing meat in the dish. I had a package of dried lima beans in my pantry that I needed to do something with, so I went searching for a recipe I thought my family would enjoy. You can crumble some cooked bacon over top when serving if you prefer, but it’s perfectly delicious without it.

I found a lima bean soup recipe through Pinterest, and it linked to the Taste of Home website. Once I saw that, I knew as a subscriber to Taste of Home magazine that the recipe would be good. although I did make a few modifications. While this is delicious as is, it would be equally good adding cooked cubed chicken or some diced ham to the soup if you prefer to have a little meat in your soup.

 

lima bean soup 2

 

Slow Cooker Lima Bean Soup

 

2 boxes (32 ounces each) chicken stock

1 pound dried lima beans (soaked overnight)

3 medium carrots, thinly diced

1 small onion, finely diced

3 potatoes, peeled and diced

2 celery ribs, finely diced

1/4 cup butter

1 1/2 teaspoons dried marjoram

1 teaspoon herbs de Provence

1/2 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon pepper

1 cup half-and-half cream

3 bacon strips, cooked and crumbled (optional if going meatless)

 

In a slow cooker, combine all ingredients except for the half-and-half and the cooked bacon. Cook on high for 6 to 8 hours, or until the lima beans are tender.

Just before you’re ready to serve, add the half-and-half to the soup. Stir to combine, and let heat through. Sprinkle each serving with the cooked and crumbled bacon.

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Venison Chili

The beauty about canning your own garden vegetables, making your own chili beans and canned black beans, and having men in the house who hunt means that I almost always have the ingredients in my cupboard to make venison chili. My husband and sons hunt deer, and when they are successful, we often can deer meat. It’s a great addition to chili. We always grow tomatoes, both slicers and cherry tomatoes, and I can these as well. I’ve recently been canning my own chili beans and black beans, which I’ve always added to my version of chili, so it makes sense for me to have a bunch of these in my cupboard too.

When I make venison chili, it’s simply a “dump” recipe. Grab the quarts and pints needed off the shelves, and dump everything together in a large stockpot. Heat and serve – easy peasy!

If you don’t have canned venison, you can always substitute your favorite protein – beef, chicken or pork. However you make it, when you have canned items in your pantry, dinner is on the table in a flash.

 

 

Venison Chili

1 quart canned venison
1 quart canned tomatoes (whole or cherry tomatoes)
2 pints canned chili beans
1 pint canned black beans
Additional chili powder (optional)
Shredded cheddar cheese and sour cream for serving (optional)
Salt and pepper to taste

In a large stockpot, combine the canned venison (or other protein – browned and drained). Add the tomatoes, chili beans and black beans. Heat over medium-high heat until everything is heated through. Taste and add additional chili powder, salt and pepper as desired.

To serve, sprinkle shredded cheddar cheese over each bowl of chili, and top with a dollop of sour cream if desired.

Days of Casseroles: Day 4 – Easy Shredded Chicken Mexican Lasagna

I have this huge list of different casserole recipes I’ve been wanting to try, so can you believe I’m stumped on day 4?? Well, not really. It’s just I’m refusing to go grocery shopping until I whittle away on a few things still in the freezer and cupboards. Once I get through what’s already here, I can go grocery shopping with a more focused idea of exactly what I need to get based on the recipes I’ll be making each week. I’m such a terrible grocery shopper – I buy what I see. Yes, I make a list and get what’s on it, but I always end up spending way more than I should on impulse purchases. I’m hoping this casserole-a-day experiment will help us save on our grocery bill by narrowing my shopping list down to EXACTLY what I have to have for my meals. I should have a better idea how this will work by the end of April. 🙂

For this recipe, I used what I had in my pantry. The sauce mix was an impulse buy, with me thinking I’d use the crockpot for an easy-to-fix meal. Since that didn’t happen and it’s still sitting in my cupboard, I’m using it in this recipe, although I definitely prefer to make my enchilada sauce from scratch.

 

 

Easy Shredded Chicken Mexican Lasagna

1 package flour tortilla shells
1 package Campbell’s Slow Cooker Mexican Red Chile Taco sauce***
1 1/2 pounds cooked, shredded chicken breast
1 package cream cheese, softened
1 package frozen corn, thawed
1 can diced tomatoes, drained well (I used home-canned grape tomatoes)
1 can black beans, rinsed and drained (I found a use for my home-canned black beans!)
Shredded cheddar cheese, divided
Sour cream, guacamole, chopped onions for garnish, optional

Combine the cooked chicken, cream cheese, diced tomatoes, black beans and corn in a large bowl. Mix until well combined.

Grease a 9 x 13-inch pan. Place one layer of the flour tortillas on the bottom of the baking pan. Layer half the chicken mixture on top of the tortillas. Sprinkle some cheddar cheese on top of the meat mixture. Repeat layers. Pour the Campbell’s sauce over everything. Top with remaining cheddar cheese. Cover with foil.

Bake casserole in a 350 degrees Fahrenheit oven for about 40 minutes. Uncover casserole and bake an additional 10 minutes, or until the cheese is melted and bubbly.

Serve with sour cream, guacamole, chopped onions if desired.

***If your family loves spicy food, you’ll love Campbell’s Slow Cooker Mexican Red Chile Taco sauce. My family said it was too spicy and asked that I remake this with my homemade mole sauce, which isn’t so spicy. They did like the casserole overall, though – so fair warning to those of you who like a milder taco dish 🙂

Canning 101: Pork and Beans

I’ve always wanted to try a homemade pork and beans recipe to can, and I found several on Pinterest. Kevin and the boys love baked beans, complete with tons of bacon on top, so I thought it made sense to try and make my own version to have on hand whenever the need for a quick side dish arose.

This recipe was found on sbcanning.com, and there are tons of delicious canning recipes there that are on my to-do list for someday. I had leftover sauce from today’s canning session (I doubled the recipe for canning), so I got more beans ready to eat for supper tonight as well. I do think I’ll cut back just a little bit on the amount of vinegar next time, but I’ll wait to see how everything tastes straight from the jar in a few weeks before I decide for sure. The recipe claims to be a clone for one of the Bush’s baked bean recipes, and so far, I think it’s pretty close.

 

 

Cloned Bush’s Maple Baked Beans

1 pound navy beans, rinsed and picked over
1/2 cup chopped onion
2 Tablespoons brown sugar
1/2 cup molasses
1-1/2 teaspoon mustard powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon black pepper
2 cups ketchup (I used Heinz but homemade would be great too)
1 cup pure maple syrup
2 cups water
1/2 cup vinegar, either cider or white (I used cider)
Salt pork, cubed in 1-inch pieces (one piece per canning jar)

Add dry beans to a Dutch oven and add 8 cups of water to cover the beans. Cook on high until the beans come to a boil, for about 2 minutes, and turn off the heat. Cover and let the beans sit in the pot covered for 30 to 45 minutes. The beans will soak up quite a bit of the water during this time.

Drain the beans and add 8 cups of fresh water to the pot along with the chopped onion. Cook the beans and onions for 15 minutes at a full boil.

In another saucepan, combine the brown sugar, molasses, mustard powder, salt, black pepper, ketchup, maple syrup, water, and vinegar. Cook to get a slow boil. It will be sweet but not thick.

Prepare 6 pint jars. Fill each pint jar with 1 cup of the bean/onion mixture. Add 1 piece of salt pork. Add more beans until the jar is about 3/4 full. Ladle hot sauce over the beans, leaving 1-inch headspace. Seal.

Pressure can pints for 75 minutes at 10 pounds of pressure.

Yield:  Approximately 6 pints

I did double the recipe and ended up with 9 pints. I used navy beans that were small, so I’m sure if you use a larger white bean, the yield will be higher.