Author Archives for simplifiedbystacie

Simply Homemade: Baked Breakfast Frittata!

Admission time: I let life seem complicated and got caught up with other stuff so I missed posting last week for the first time since starting this blog. At the time, I thought I may feel some relief at taking a quick break…nope to the nope nope on that! I just felt like I missed my chance at sharing one of my go-to recipes that may simplify the most important meal of the day: breakfast. Well, have no fear, this post is now here and it’s filled with info on a breakfast dish that is relatively new to my family but that has saved the day for us multiple times over the past couple years.

I love frittatas for so many reasons and I have little doubt that you will too. First and least relevant but so amazing…the name frittata always makes me think of The Lion King movie phrase, “Hakuna. Matata. It means no worries!” It’s so fitting for frittata to rhyme with hakuna matata because it really is a no worries kind of recipe. As long as you follow the basic core ingredients and directions it’s pretty foolproof that it will turn out not only edible, but darn delicious. You can basically tweak the rest of the optional ingredients to your heart’s desire (or to your fridge’s limitations)! There are all sorts of recipes out there for flavor profiled frittatas but I’m sharing the core of the recipe because I know most of you reading this will appreciate the versatility.

Another big reason of my love for this recipe is that it is such a simple recipe to make fit into most meal plans regardless of dietary restrictions, time constraints, ingredient likes/dislikes, etc. Use egg whites instead of whole eggs, add extra veggies instead of meat, make individual portions with specific ingredients to differentiate, make smaller portion so it will cook faster, make the night before and warm it up the next day..or three..for an on-the-go breakfast meal. Not to mention the fact that you sound super healthy and chef-y when you volunteer to bring breakfast for a group and you say off-handedly that it will be an egg white, spinach, and roasted tomato frittata. Coworker of the year? I think yes.

Ok, onto the good stuff, what exactly is a frittata? It’s an egg based baked dish that is insanely easy to personalize how you (or those you’re serving it to) will like it best. Traditionally, frittatas are started on the stovetop and finished in the oven. But, with the whole point of this blog being keeping life simple, I skip that nonsense and make this a straight into the oven dish. More importantly, I make it an end of the week use-all-the-leftovers dish. Although that’s my practical (and, admittedly, lazy) self shining through. This is also a great planned meal that comes together with minimal effort.

Need a hearty breakfast for the guys who will spend that day working outside? How about a Canadian bacon, spicy sausage, and smoked turkey frittata (hold the green stuff)? Girls brunch complete with mimosas? Maybe a feta, spinach, and roasted red pepper egg white frittata?  Cinco de Mayo weekend and you need a hangover cure? Chorizo, green peppers, and salsa frittata coming right up! A meal for a neighbor or friend going through a rough patch? Let’s go with everyone’s go-to of crispy bacon and cheddar so they just warm and enjoy or they can chop up and put in a tortilla for on-the-go breakfast burritos! You getting my drift get? Keep the eggs and milk and basic seasonings and substitute away on the rest. There’s no harm in making a super basic one with no frills. You can always bring in a cornucopia of toppings that’s sure to make each person in the room swoon with happiness (salsas, hot sauces, bacon crumbles, Greek yogurt, chives).

Alright, alright, I’m sure you are all salivating as much as I am by now I think it’s time I share my simplified version of this recipe. Please enjoy and share with fellow breakfast-lovers out there!

Stacie's Simply Homemade Baked Breakfast Frittata

  • Servings: 8
  • Difficulty: Simple
  • Print

This super simple breakfast recipe can be adjusted to your heart's desire and is sure to be a hit at your next get together! Forgive the vague ingredient list but this is a blank canvas for your creative culinary mind.

Ingredients

-12 eggs

-1/4 cup milk (don’t use anything skimpier than 2% here)

-1/2 teaspoon salt

-1/2 teaspoon pepper

-1 1/2 cups shredded cheese (flavor of your choice)

-4 cups of vegetables/proteins (again, your choice but I’d recommend using pre-cooked leftovers whenever possible so those already steamed/grilled veggies and sausage crumbles don’t go to waste)

-Toppings (your choice here but I’d suggest chopped green onions, salsa, sour cream, etc)

Directions



    1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees and spray a 9″x13″ pan then set aside.
  1. Beat eggs together in large mixing bowl with milk, salt, and pepper until combined well.
  2. Add in half the cheese and all the cooked, chopped veggies and/or proteins and mix well again.
  3. Pour mixture from bowl into pan and top with remaining cheese.
  4. Place pan into preheated oven and bake for approximately 25 minutes until set.
  5. Serve immediately with toppings of choice or refrigerate and serve within a couple days.

Alrighty folks, usually there are quite a few detailed pictures in this space to illustrate the recipe and my tips. BUT…this one is so dang simple and I threw in so many veggies that my pictures don’t do the dish it’s delicious justice! For the one pictured, I used farm fresh sausage that my parent’s made a few weekends back, leftover veggies from a steamer with asparagus, peppers, zucchini, onions and I chose parmesan cheese to tie it together. I would have had more pictures but I brought it to work for ‘official blog taste testing’ and it disappeared quicker than I expected! FYI that reheating it sometimes makes the flavors mesh even better together. What’s better than a delicious breakfast? A somehow EVEN more delicious breakfast the following day with no extra work. Boomshackalacka!

Faith, Simplified

Since this past weekend was Easter and that meant I was busy with family (making memories and enjoying together time all weekend back at my parent’s farm and the house I grew up in) I thought I would venture back into a thought based post rather than a recipe based post. Frankly, I’m still so full from all the amazing food consumed over the weekend that I’m not up to the task of cooking quite yet 😉 Please know upfront with this post that I’m not out to convert anyone’s faith or to tell anyone who/what to believe in. What I would like to chat about is how important I wholeheartedly believe it is to have a simple faith in something.

The phases of faith…

As a mom, I’m now at the point in adulthood where I’m not only choosing to make my own faith a priority, but I’m also forming my child’s faith. This is a huge responsibility and one, quite frankly, I’m not entirely sure I’m equipped to handle. But, alas, I have faith that I was put into this role for a reason and that I will find a way to handle the responsibility.

When my daughter was an infant it was so simple to bring her to church each week nestled in her baby carrier sound asleep (after keeping us up most of the night before). It was easy to sit in the pew surrounded by fellow believers and feel that sense of community and an overwhelming need to thank someone much higher than myself for giving me such a precious gift.

Gradually, it became more and more difficult to keep up that routine of going to church each week because trying to corral (and repeatedly shh, shh, SHUSH) an overactive and ridiculously curious toddler was no easy feat. Let alone the fact that it was increasingly hard to feel that sense of belonging and gratefulness for the so-called gift of a child who was currently throwing her crayons over the pew while simultaneously shrieking for no apparent reason. It became easier to feel embarrassed of the attention drawn to us instead of the sermon and became more frustrating that I was missing the message of the day due to my child who was getting zero effects of the service.

Now, as we have entered the next phase of church-going-with-kids, it’s back to being easier because she’s school age and knows (most of the time) what appropriate behavior in church means. This, in turn, equates into me getting to hear the message again and gives me the chance to explain things now that my child is old enough to at least vaguely understand.All those frustrated mornings spent in the hard toddler phase are suddenly distant memories and I’m so glad we have kept this routine as a constant in our family’s life.

It’s ironic how easily these phases of faith in a religion can be compared to a general faith in anything. What do I mean? Consider your faith in your own abilities..one day you feel like the best mom or manager ever, the next you feel like you have no idea why you would even dream of being qualified to do that job. Depending on your current circumstances, you may find it insanely simple to think positively that everything will turn out alright after getting that tax refund or a promotion at work. Or, after a rough work week or bad news or unexpected price tag dipping into your savings, it may be just as easy to be a Debbie Downer and think that things will just keep spiraling out of control and never get better.

Same concept applies to kids and faith outside the church. Take a child’s faith in say, the Easter bunny. Simple enough to introduce that faith when they are an infant and could care less about those adorable bunny ears you perched precariously on their head for the cutest picture ever! It then goes on to be perhaps even more simple as kids go into the toddler phase and begin to grasp the concept of faith..believing that the Easter bunny will come around once a year with sweet treats for them. Then, somehow it gets difficult again, as kids get older and friends without their same faith try to shed your own child of their faith. Or, as their intelligence level climbs and suddenly things don’t add up (a giant Easter bunny who brings basket and hides eggs..really? Why wouldn’t it hide carrots?).

Believe in something..anything!

I’ve found that faith is just as important to adults as it is to kids and it’s somehow not important that faiths are the same. Meaning that some kids might not believe in Santa while others would literally fight you to defend his honor but, chances are, both those kids have total faith that their parents will pick them up from daycare/school each and every day without fail. Similarity, you may not believe that you are a good mom but your friends and family are looking at your same actions and believing you’re doing your best and doing quite well. I may attend one denomination of church while my parents attend another, but we all believe that we alone are not in charge of our lives and that there is someone/something guiding us. I don’t write in a journal or pray every day at the same time like some of my friends but you can bet your bottom dollar that if one of those friends of mine hit a rough patch then you know I will be first in line to pray for them and ask others to do the same.

Alright, I hear you, what’s the moral of this story? It really doesn’t matter what your faith is in as long as you have faith. It’s bound to be hard, then easy, then impossible, then effortless depending on the current phase of your life. It’s bound to change from time to time and it will unfailingly frustrate you when attempting to explain your faith to someone who doesn’t share that same faith. It’s alllllllll good!

That faith (whatever kind) is part of what makes you, you! Whether it makes you the parent you want to be, a rock solid work manager, or the friend that your friend needs, hang onto that faith. Personally, today I choose to have faith in myself that I’m doing the best I can, I choose to believe that prayers really do make a difference, and I choose to hope that anyone reading this will take just a moment to reflect on their faith, however simple it may be!

Simplify Extra Food!

When my husband and I got married about 7 1/2 years ago, I remember having to push fairly hard on our catering vendor to be allowed to bring home the extra food from our event (that we paid quite handsomely for might I add…). We did this after learning that the food remainders weren’t donated, they had to be thrown out. We got to taste test the food beforehand and no way was I going to let that deliciousness find it’s forever home in some dumpster behind the building! Anyone who knows me (and/or my mom) won’t be surprised to hear that we did eventually get the vendor to relent and allow us to have the extra food and cake packaged up at the end of the night for us to bring home.

I couldn’t believe it would even be a question that had to be asked…why in the world wouldn’t they want the food used? Oh yeah…liability and all that jazz. Heaven forbid someone leave the roast beef out overnight before consuming then sue the vendor for food poisoning, right? Le sigh… that’s a rant for another day 😉 Seriously though, thinking of this and also reflecting on some questions asked by followers about how to handle extra food, I realized there are so many simple ways to avoid waste that I’d love to share. A lot of the ways that I do this personally involve meal planning and budget skills along with cooking, prepping, and freezing food tips I’ve picked up over the years. I thought I’d share some insight with all of you today so we can all do our part to simplify extra food! 

Question 1: How can I avoid wasting food but still make that delicious recipe I found?

Answer 1: Let someone else do the math so you can cut that recipe down to your size!

  • Check out this website I found where you can copy in (or type out) recipe ingredients and tell it if you want the recipe doubled, cut in half, cut down to a certain portion size, etc: https://www.mykitchencalculator.com/vhowtouserecipeconverter.html
    • They even have an app so you could copy ingredients from a Pinterest recipe (or… from this very blog!) and have the new measurements at your fingertips.
  • What if you cut down a recipe but now have too many leftover ingredients? Too large of a package of chicken or too many veggies? No problem, just prep and freeze them for later. I’d recommend cooking the chicken simply with some salt & pepper & olive oil then shredding and tossing in the freezer for a simple customizable wrap or salad topper. Extra veggies? Slice or chop and freeze with some broth or olive oil so you can saute right out of the freezer.

Answer #2: Meal plan to re-purpose leftovers into a different meal that week!

  • Speaking of meal planning, let’s circle back to a previous post and use our  meal planning brains here. Making a pot roast but know you won’t want leftovers 3 times that week after enjoying the initial meal? Yeah, join the club.
    • What if you planned ahead and bought a couple extra grocery items (hoagie buns, provolone cheese, green peppers, au jus)? Just sauté those sliced green peppers and warm up some of the leftover roast beef and onions to fill the sliced hoagie buns. Top with some provolone and broil in the oven for a few minutes and serve with some au jus. Use some of those delicious leftover roast juices and/or buy one of those handy dandy gravy packets. Then dip and slosh that cheesy French dip sandwich for a messy and oh-so-satisfying twist on roast leftovers!
    • Or, prep a vegetable beef soup and use the super flavorful extra roast juice to “beef up” the soup broth and/or use the extra potatoes, onions, carrots, roast meat and toss in the soup. Same flavor profile but totally different meal. Too similar to serve in the same week? No problem! You can just prep the soup broth and freeze that or go ahead and prep the whole soup then freeze for another time! 

Question #2: I want to freeze food to reduce waste don’t know how to go about that, help?!

Answer #1: Research before making the recipe to make sure it’s able to be frozen and, if so, any tweaks may need to do!

  • There are plenty of websites and cookbooks out there with tips on what foods freeze well as well as what you should not freeze. That doesn’t mean you can’t make that meal if it has an ingredient that doesn’t freeze, it just means you need to think ahead and leave that ingredient out when prepping it. Did I lose you? Soups are an easy example.
    • Chicken noodle soup freezes really well but noodles aren’t always the best to freeze so you could prepare a large pot of soup without the noodles, freeze portions of it and make a note to just warm and add noodles.
    • Or, I personally love the homemade version of Olive Garden’s sausage, potato, and kale soup but I know that dairy isn’t always the best idea to freeze. Same idea here: make the soup but don’t add the half and half at the end. Freeze the rest of it with a note to just add half and half after warming.

Answer #2: Use your budget skills to freeze your savings!

  • Do you love saving money but avoid those great bulk meat sales because you will never need that amount of food before it inevitably will go bad? Not to fear, freezer meals are here! On a week when you have extra budget money or need fewer items so you can squeeze in that bulk purchase, go ahead and get that ridiculously large package of ground beef/chicken breasts/pork chops/etc. Depending on your level of ambition, you can either freeze the extra protein right away without prepping so you have that meat at your disposal when you need it and/or when your budget isn’t feeling so generous. OR, you can do a little prep work before freezing to save yourself not only that money later on from not having to purchase it but also save yourself the time in prepping it! Simply make up a couple of your favorite marinades and split the meat up into different vacuum sealed baggies to use later.

Answer #3: Freeze in portion sizes that work best for you!

  • When you finish out that tub of butter or cottage cheese wash the container and save it to use as freezable Tupperware. That way, you have all sorts of sizes you can pick to freeze different portions of food in. Bonus: you are reducing waste by not using disposable containers and also saving yourself the confusion later of being short on your “good” Tupperware because it’s all in the freezer 😉 Yes mom, I am finally seeing the genius of your ways and promise not to make fun of your 5 different butter containers in the fridge/freezer next time I come home!
  • Think ahead when freezing items so it saves you time later on. Freeze that sauce in the saucepan itself then slide it into a freezable bag after it has solidified so you can just take that bag out of the freezer and put it directly back into the pan when you are ready to warm it up to use for a later meal!
  • Make a double batch of time consuming items like lasagna and split that second batch into a couple different freezer meals. Freeze 2/3 of that full pan as a family size freezer meal and split the remaining 1/3 into a couple individual freezer meal portions.

Let’s ‘wrap this up’, shall we?

Do I tend to get on my soap box and start preaching on things once I get on a roll? Yep. Will I be able to sleep at night without sharing these thoughts? Nope. So, there you have it folks, I needed to get this one off my chest in the hopes it will make a difference to a few people out there. I sincerely hope some of these tips can be used (or already are being used) by you and your family. Please comment with other tips you have on this topic and, as always, thanks for reading!!!

PS – stay tuned for more family recipe posts coming soon, trying to track down origins of some of our favorites so I can give credit where credit is due ❤ 

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