If you’re looking for a way to cook dinner that is simple and delicious, try these shrimp and sausage boil foil packets.
You can make it on the grill or in the oven, so it’s perfect for any season!
It’s super easy to do: just combine your favorite ingredients in a foil packet and add in the spices. The best part about this dish is that there are minimal dishes to clean up-just toss the packets into the trash after you’re done cooking!
Packing your own lunch can be a hassle, but with these foil packet recipes you’ll never have to go hungry again!
These packets are super easy to make and pack up in the morning for an afternoon snack or evening meal. Plus, they’re great for camping trips too!
If you are looking for a tasty gumbo recipe to enjoy using chicken, try this Slow Cooker Chicken Chorizo Gumbo this week!
Gumbo is one of my favorite meals to make for my family. I love that you can get creative with gumbo recipes!
Chicken and Sausage Gumbo is my go to recipe for sausage most of the time, but every now and then I like to spice things up with a chicken chorizo gumbo.
This Chicken Chorizo Gumbo is made in a slow cooker and has an amazing flavor! Try this recipe soon.
What is chorizo?
Chorizo is popularly used in Spanish or Mexican cooking. It’s a pork sausage that’s highly seasoned and can be made from pork, but can also be made from beef, too. The seasonings used to create chorizo usually include ingredients like: chili peppers, paprika, cumin, garlic, cloves, coriander, cinnamon, and/or vinegar.
There are two types of chorizo available: Mexican Chorizo is uncooked and fresh while Spanish Chorizo is dried and cured.
Traditional Potato Salad is a simple and creamy recipe to serve as a side dish with your favorite meal.
One of my Cajun friends taught me the saying: “We’ve got all this Gumbo, but no Potato Salad to go with it!” Gumbo is usually just served with rice, but my family always had a side dish of traditional potato salad to be served with Gumbo. Now that I’ve moved back to Louisiana, I’ve found that potato salad and Gumbo go together like peanut butter and jelly! Check out my Chicken and Sausage Gumbo recipe.
Potato salad is also a very versatile southern side dish. It is a traditional side for all types of barbecue, fried chicken, and backyard cookout fare like hamburgers and hot dogs. I love potato salad because it’s easy to prepare and there are several different ways to prepare it.
This recipe is for traditional potato salad, but you can also check out my loaded baked potato salad, scalloped potato salad, and mustard potato salad – coming soon! This recipe serves 4 or less, and if you want to make more for a large gathering, then doubling the recipe will yield more potato salad.
Gumbo and Potato Salad
Gumbo pairs really well with potato salad. Try my Chicken and Sausage Gumbo recipe with your potato salad!
Traditional Potato Salad
Ingredients:
12-15 bite size potatoes (you can buy red skin, gold, or traditional varieties at your grocery store) (or 2 potatoes – again your choice of variety)
This Ranch House Pinto Beans recipe includes bits of pork spare ribs and sauteed onions to give it a delicious flavor!
One of the best meals that I make for the entire family is pinto beans. This was a side dish that I ate often as a young man, but we would treat it as a meal.
Especially if my mother added ham to the beans.
So the saying goes, that no one can go hungry so long as they had rice and beans to eat.
Beans are inexpensive, as they go for about $1 per pound, and they swell by just adding water.
While I was in college, I worked for two different barbecue joints. Of course barbecued meats are expensive, with some premium cuts of barbecue selling for $20 or more per pound.
The thing that I remember about both barbecue joints, was that they offered free and unlimited pinto beans!
These barbecue joints knew that they could operate giving away pinto beans because they would make up their costs selling smoked meats.
Additionally, these restaurants would also just throw out their left over pinto beans at the end of each day, so with the manager’s permission I took home a lot of pinto beans for a free meal at the end of long work nights.
This ranch house pinto beans recipe could not be easier to make, as the simplest form of this dish only has 3 ingredients.
However, I’ve tinkered with a tried and true recipe to make it my own and one that pairs well with other barbecue dishes.
What Meat Goes With Pinto Beans?
You can eat pinto beans with most meats including brisket, ribs, pulled pork, and chicken. For this recipe, I use pork spare rib extras in the pot of beans.
What Meat Do You Put in Pinto Beans?
You can use a variety of meat choices in your pinto beans. For example, many beans use a smoked ham hock for extra flavoring. You can also use sliced smoked ham, bacon and/or bacon grease, or smoked turkey leg. A smoky flavor is key here, so try to add smoked meat for delicious and flavorful beans.
How to Thicken Pinto Bean Juice
If you want to thicken your pinto bean juice, mix 2 tablespoons of cornstarch and a cup of cold water together and add to your pot of beans while cooking.
How to Thicken Pinto Beans Without Cornstarch
To thicken pinto beans without cornstarch, simply remove some of the liquid and mash about 1/2 to 3/4 cup of the beans about half an hour before they are done.
Ranch House Pinto Beans
Ingredients:
½ pound of pinto beans
2 quarts of cold water
1 packet of French onion soup mix
Keep reading for other ingredients that we will be adding in!
Directions:
First, empty the beans into the pot. Inspect the beans and discard of any mis-colored or gnarly looking beans. Often times the beans will look black, broken, or the skin has already begun peeling. Other things I’ve seen when inspecting beans is small rocks. Bottom line, look at what you’re about to cook.
Once satisfied with inspection, pour two quarts of cold water over the beans. Then walk away. The minimum time to let beans soak is 4 hours, but overnight is best. I maintain that judging when beans are saturated with water is just an eyeball calibration. I’ve cooked so many pots of beans that I just “know” when beans are ready to be cooked. The tip I can share is to look at the beans immediately after pouring water over them, and then checking them once every couple of hours. You’ll see the beans begin to swell, but eventually you’ll see that they can’t swell any more. That’s when they’re ready to be cooked.
Next, put them on to boil. I’ve seen lots of folks drain the beans and then add more water, but that’s not what I do. Just put the beans on the stove on boil. Once the beans have come to a boil. Add the packet of French onion soup mix. Stir in well, and then turn the heat to low and cover. Once every 20 minutes give the beans a stir and then cover them up again.
After letting the beans simmer on low for a couple of hours, the beans will be ready. You’ll also see that some of the water will evaporate and the bean soup will thicken. You can eat these right away or serve over rice or as a side with barbecue.
If you want something a little extra try my ranch house pinto beans. It starts with the basic pinto bean recipe. Next, I add 4 more ingredients.
8 ounces of pork spare rib extras
½ onion sautéed
Juice from ½ lemon
¼ tsp cumin
When making spare ribs or St. Louis ribs, there is a flap on meat on the inside of the ribs. I will cut that flap of meat off before putting the ribs on the smoker. However, I still grill that flap of meat and then I’ll cut it up into fine pieces to add to my ranch house beans. You can also add smoked sausage or ham pieces to your beans.
Next, I’ll squeeze the juice of half a lemon into the beans. The lemon gives the ranch house beans a bright counter to go with the smoky flavor of the added meat.
I’ll also give a rough dice to half an onion and then sautee the onion with about a tbsp of cooking oil.
I’ll also add a pinch of salt a pepper to the onions too. Once the onions are translucent and the edges start to brown, I’ll add to the beans.
Finally I’ll add a ¼ tsp of cumin into the ranch house beans. I’ll give the beans another good stir, and then let them simmer for a few more minutes before they’re ready to serve.
One more thing about beans in general, is that they will almost always taste just a little better when they’re eaten a day later.
I’m not sure why that’s the case, and I can’t prove it scientifically, but it’s something that my family and I have noticed over the years.
The message that I’m really trying to convey is don’t be in a hurry to eat these beans. Give yourself enough time to prepare them.
The secret to good ribs is the rib rub! Learn how to make this simple rib rub for your rack of ribs.
There are lots of different ways to enjoy ribs.
Most folks prefer them smoked low and slow in a barbecue pit, but there’s no wrong way to to enjoy them! Ribs can also be cooked in an oven, in a crockpot, or even hot and fast over a grill.
I have found that there are sometimes when I need to stray from my own tradition of cooking either due to time constraints or availability of my preferred cooking medium.
The common theme for any way to cook ribs is the way they are seasoned, because it doesn’t matter how they are cooked, it is all about the taste!
I’ve tried several different combinations of rib rubs over the years, and some of them can be very complex with their flavor profiles.
I love to try and taste new things, especially barbecue ribs, but I’ve also found that the simplest recipes are not only quicker, but they are usually the most delicious.
Simple recipes give just enough flavor, but they also let the flavor and tenderness of the meat speak for itself. I have tinkered with several different rubs and this one I’m sharing with you is my favorite.
Most all good rib rubs start with some kind of sugar, and I love the flavor that dark brown sugar gives to ribs. It also gives ribs a deep mohogany color when the dark brown sugar caramelizes.
Of course, humble salt and pepper give all food great flavor. Next, the savory flavors of onion and garlic give great compliment to all of the sweet with the brown sugar base.
Finally, I believe that just a small amount of cocoa powder gives the rib rub that added richness and perfectly balances out the sweet and savory from all of the other flavors.
What’s really great about this rib rub recipe is that is can be used on just about any piece of meat for barbecue including other cuts of pork, beef, and chicken.
Rib Rub
Ingredients:
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
2 tsp. salt
2 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. garlic powder
1 tsp. onion powder
1/2 tsp. cayenne
1/2 tsp. cocoa powder
Directions:
Add the sugar and spices to a mixing bowl.
Mix up well.
Once well combined, add the rib rub to an air-tight jar. Secure the lid.
Store the rib rub until you are ready to use it to coat your ribs.
Rib Rub
Ingredients
1/4 cup dark brown sugar
2 tsp. salt
2 tsp. black pepper
1 tsp. garlic powder
1 tsp. onion powder
1/2 tsp. cayenne
1/2 tsp. cocoa powder
Instructions
Add the sugar and spices to a mixing bowl.
Mix up well.
Once well combined, add the rib rub to an air-tight jar. Secure the lid.
Store the rib rub until you are ready to use it to coat your ribs.