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January Cook-At-Home Resolution Challenge

CDKitchen Cooking Columnist Amy Powell
About author / Amy Powell

World traveler; gourmet 30 minute meals; lover of exotic ingredients; winner on FoodTV's Chefs vs City; graduate French Culinary Institute. Her recipes will tantalize your taste buds.


Welcome to a new year and a new opportunity to fulfill those resolutions we always aspire to. If you take a look at most January magazine covers, it is pretty clear that this is the time of year to lose 10 lbs., go to the gym 4 days a week, organize your finances, and spend more time with your family. While spending more days a week in the kitchen may not necessarily tone your biceps and guarantee dramatic weight loss, it might surprise you to learn that, by making a resolution to cook more this month, you might get a little bit closer to achieving some of those other goals you are shooting for.

Depending on which report you are looking at, the average American eats dinner out between 2 and 4 nights per week. When the top item on most Americans' New Year’s resolutions is weight loss and fitness, you have to wonder how much all that sneaky fat in restaurant and fast food meals contributed to our nationwide need to lose weight. When it comes to your personal finances, unless your idea of eating out is the dollar menu at McDonald's, it is pretty clear that home cooked meals for one’s family are more economical than dinner for four at a restaurant. And as far as spending time with one’s family, nothing makes for better bonding than breaking bread together at the family dining table.

The problems with New Year’s resolutions are many as evidenced by the fact that most have been abandoned by Week 2. Resolutions can be unrealistic, overly ambitious, or you may lack the tools to make them achievable. Making a plan that is challenging but realistic, while maintaining access to the help you need to make it work, is a safe way of making sure that follow-through on that resolution is possible.

In an effort to get you closer to achieving all those resolutions while expanding your personal cooking horizons I welcome you to the January Cook-at-Home Challenge. Now that the holidays are out of your way, what better resolution than resolving to cook more meals at home, either for its own sake and for achieving those other resolutions? Should you choose to accept this challenge, the rules are realistic, the plan is achievable, and over the next several weeks I will be giving you some tools to get dinner on the table more often.

The Rules

1. You must cook dinner at home (even if it is reheating leftovers) an average of five nights a week for the month of January for a total of 20 nights.

2. Unless you are reheating leftovers of a meal you cooked from scratch yourself, to qualify the meal cannot have come from the microwave, emerge from the freezer, or be eaten out of a takeout box, even if that takeout box came from the salad bar at your grocery store.

3. Dinner must be eaten at the dining room table, kitchen table, or other such table meant for eating food around (TV tables do not qualify).

4. The TV must remain off for the duration of the meal.

I am often asked how, while growing up in a small rural town in California, I came to develop a taste for cooking and the pleasures of eating. A large part of that answer is because The Rules listed above are rules my mother and father followed for the majority of my childhood. Cooking dinner at home and eating dinner as a family is a way to be economical with your family’s finances, eat healthy, and most importantly, guarantee quality time spent daily with the ones you love, and there is no better resolution than that.



Mexican Chicken Tortilla Soup

photo of Mexican Chicken Tortilla Soup


Get the recipe for Mexican Chicken Tortilla Soup


Made with chicken broth, onions, red potatoes, green bell pepper, garlic, chicken, Mexican-style stewed tomatoes, jalapeno peppers, ground cumin, corn tortillas


Serves/Makes: 4

  • 3 cups chicken broth
  • 1/2 cup sliced onions
  • 1 cup diced red potatoes
  • 1/2 large green bell pepper, seeded and diced
  • 2 teaspoons minced garlic
  • 2 boneless skinless chicken breast halves, cut into thin strips
  • 1 can (14 ounce size) Mexican-style stewed tomatoes, undrained
  • 1 teaspoon seeded and chopped jalapeno peppers
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 4 (6-inch size) corn tortillas
  • olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon fresh lime juice
  • 1/4 cup chopped fresh cilantro

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Bring 1/2 cup of the broth to a boil in a large pan over medium-high heat. Add the onions, potatoes, bell pepper, and garlic. Cook, stirring occasionally, for 5 minutes.

Add the chicken and cook for 1 minute. Add the tomatoes, jalapenos, cumin, and remaining broth. Bring the soup to a boil then reduce the heat to a simmer. Cook, uncovered, for 15 minutes or until the vegetables are tender and the chicken is cooked through.

Meanwhile, brush both sides of the tortillas with olive oil (or use a sprayer). Slice the tortillas into thin strips. Arrange the tortilla strips in a single layer on a baking sheet and place in the oven. Bake at 350 degrees F for 15 minutes or until crisp, gently stirring the tortilla strips once during the cooking time.

Stir the lime juice and cilantro into the soup and divide the soup between individual serving bowls. Garnish each serving with the tortilla strips.


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2 comments

   First of all thank you! Cooking more at home in '08 is my personal goal for my family! Even though I am a stay home mom with a daycare business...dinner time can get very challenging. By the end of the day it is much easier to go else where...but it is so costly. I cringle that as a family of 5 our bill can be $35 easily. That $35 at the grocery can buy a few things of meat and other essentials. I started the New Year out my creating a menu for the month. Then I created a excel documnet that lists just main dish ideas. I made columns for special ingredients & tpye of meat. This allows me to sort my document by meat choice it also helps with the grocery list. Then I have also been reading my cookbooks. I created another document for new recipes to try. Seeing how today is the 13th and we have only eaten out twice. Once being mom & dad only night. That is really good because we would normzlly eat out twice in a week and then one night we will eat at my in-laws.

Comment posted by Michelle

   WOW! Thank you! I struggle with how to utilize a box of recipe clippings I've had for yrs and all of my cookbooks. What a great way to utilize them and be organized! Thank you for submitting your idea! Now if only I could use excel!

Comment posted by G

 

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