Time Warp Food and Cooking: Are You Stuck in Your Comfort Zone?
What Are You Having for Dinner Tonight?
Do you often find yourself spending longer deciding what to have for dinner than cooking dinner? Are you constantly frustrated by trying to come up with original recipe ideas to feed your family at nights and the grumbled comments of, "Not again!" when you lay the plates on the table? Do you get the impression at dinner each night that you are caught up in a time warp with no visible means of escape, or respite from the monotony?
If you answered yes to any of these questions - or if they even sound familiar - you may simply have become stuck in a form of culinary comfort zone, perfectly proficient or better as a cook but unable just to find that route to new and innovative recipe ideas. This means that you may be in need of a little help when it comes to creating your family's ongoing dinner menus.
On this page, you will find six original dinner recipes to help you get started. You will find one in each instance for fish, poultry, red meat, vegetarian and white meat, arranged in alphabetical order by category, concluding with an extra one thrown in under the magical title that is, "Miscellaneous." Above all, however, you will find the recipes interspersed with genuine, practical ideas for quickly and easily coming up with new dinner recipes to delight your own tastebuds and those of your family.
Fish: Poached Salmon Fillet with Buttered New Potatoes and Broccoli
Remember!
There is an old saying that vegetables which grow above the ground should be started cooking in boiling water, while vegetables which grow below the ground should be started off in cold water. This definitely seems to be good advice and is more than worth remembering.
This is an incredibly easy recipe to start off with. Although not the quickest in the overall length of time it takes to prepare, there is very little actual hands on cooking required.
Ingredients
1 salmon fillet (skin on)
5 to 7 new potatoes (as desired)
½ head of broccoli
Dried dill
Butter
Salt and white pepper
Method
Place the salmon fillet(s) in a pot large enough that you can lay them out flat. Season with salt, white pepper and a generous sprinkling of dried (or fresh) dill leaves. Pour in enough cold water to comfortably cover the salmon and place the pot on to a high heat. When the water boils, simply turn off the heat, cover the pot and leave the salmon to cook in the residual heat as the water cools. This is likely to take a couple of hours.
Wash but don't peel the potatoes and add them to a pot of cold, slightly salted water. Bring the water to a boil and simmer for around twenty-five minutes until soft. Drain the potatoes through a colander and return them to the empty pot. Add a little bit of butter and some more dried dill and gently swirl the potatoes around to achieve even coating.
One of the biggest mistakes made when cooking broccoli is cooking it for too long. Around eight minutes is the optimum time for blanching broccoli. Bring a large pot of slightly salted water to a rolling boil before carefully adding the broccoli. Drain well and serve with the hot potatoes and cooled, beautifully moist salmon, the flesh from which should slide easily and completely off the skin at the touch of your fork.
Think Ingredients - not Recipes - when Contemplating Dinner
There is a fabulous way of using the medium you are viewing right now - the Internet - to find an almost infinite amount of new, tasty dinner ideas to suit all tastes and all the family. In order to use this system most effectively, however, it is best to think of the basic ingredients you wish to include in your dinner, rather than specific recipes. Let the wonders of the Web come up with the recipe for you and don't limit your choices by searching for an actual preconceived recipe idea.
In order to use this incredibly simple system, all you have to do is think of some key words you are going to input to Google. These key words should take the form of basic food types, such as chicken, onions, potatoes, etc, as well as perhaps some qualifying words such as quick and easy. Including the word recipe is also a good idea in your searches.
The table below gives a better idea of how you should form your searches. Simply take one word from each column to form a search, along with the word, recipe.
Qualifier
| Main Ingredient
| Accompaniment
|
|---|---|---|
Quick
| Chicken
| Broccoli
|
Easy
| Beef
| Onion
|
Spicy
| Pork
| Pineapple
|
Healthy
| Potato
| Spinach
|
Vegetarian
| Salmon
| Tomato
|
As an example, I searched for each of the top three words above, along with the word recipe. Google returned almost 8 million results for "quick chicken broccoli recipe."
Experiment with this system and refine your own search terms and key words. It is likely to pay huge dividends in the long term.
Top Tip! When you get a chance, browse your local supermarket, notepad and pen in hand, and note down some ingredients which are available and which you are likely to want to include in your searches. This will not only help provide inspiration but confirm that you do have access to those ingredients which you may wish to eat.
Poultry: Turkey Schnitzel with Homemade French Fries and Trimmed Green Beans
It is not necessary to prepare the French fries the way they are prepared here if you are short of time. Where time permits, however, you will find the effort more than worthwhile.
Ingredients
1 large, floury potato
6oz turkey breast fillet
2oz trimmed green beans
2 tbsp fresh breadcrumbs
1 small egg
Salt and pepper
Vegetable oil for shallow frying
Method
Peel the potato and slice and chop it in to the shape of French fries. The first step is to parboil the potato fingers and it is a good idea to incorporate them in a deep frier's wire basket. This makes them far easier to drain and less likely to break. Add the basket to a pot of cold water, bring to a boil, then reduce the heat setting to simmer for five minutes only. Lift the basket from the pot at the sink. Empty the pot, fill with cold water and place the basket back inside for five minutes to cool the potatoes. Transfer the potatoes to a plastic dish with a lid and refrigerate for at least half an hour.
Lay a clean tea towel out on a dry surface. Remove the chilled potatoes from the refrigerator and lay them in a single layer on half the towel. Fold the towel over and gently pat the potatoes dry. Deep fry at medium heat for five minutes. Drain on kitchen paper, allow to cool and return them to the dried plastic dish and the refrigerator for at least a further half hour.
Beat the egg in a flat-bottomed bowl, seasoning with salt and pepper. Spread the breadcrumbs evenly on a dinner plate. Dip the turkey steak firstly in the egg, ensuring it is coated on both sides, then pat on both sides in the breadcrumbs. Repeat this process, taking your time to ensure that the turkey has a thick and even coating of breadcrumbs all over.
Add a tablespoon or two of vegetable oil to a non-stick frying pan and bring it up to a medium heat. Gently fry the breaded turkey on that medium heat for seven or eight minutes each side, until the breadcrumbs are beautifully crisp and golden.
When the turkey is almost ready, put the fries back in to the deep frier for a further five to seven minutes, to crisp them up and turn them golden. Add the beans to a pot of boiling, salted water and blanche for two to three minutes only, before draining through a colander.
Drain the French fries on kitchen paper. Plate the turkey steak and the beans before laying your beautifully crisp on the outside, fluffy on the inside fries alongside and serving.
Note that although this is a recipe for any time of year, a small spoonful of cranberry sauce or jelly would give this dish the perfect seasonal touch and a little bit of extra taste appeal.
Two, Tasty, 30 Minute or Less Dinner Ideas
Red Meat: Quick and Easy Beef Chilli
Beef chilli forms a delicious meal but when prepared to a great many recipes, it can take quite a while to cook. This is a version of beef chilli which, although recognisably authentic, is on the table within around half an hour of starting its preparation, perfect for those nights when the family are hungry but time is relatively short. The quantities listed here are for two people.
Ingredients
½ lb minced/ground beef
1 14oz can chopped tomatoes
1 8oz can red kidney beans in water
½ small white onion
2 cloves of garlic
1 small red chilli pepper
1 tsp ground cumin
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
4 mini naan breads
2 sprigs of basil for garnish
Method
Put the beef in to a large pot and on to a medium heat. Stir with a wooden spoon to evenly brown the meat. This should take three to four minutes.
Finely slice the half onion and the peeled garlic cloves. Add them to the beef for a further couple of minutes' cooking time. Finely chop the chilli and add it also to the pot. Removing the seeds is optional but be aware that they will add extra heat to the finished dish. Make sure you wash your hands thoroughly in hot soapy water after handling the chilli.
Put the red kidney beans in to a colander and wash them under running cold water. Tip them in to the pot along with the tomatoes. Add the cumin and season with salt and pepper. STir very well and bring to a simmer. Reduce the heat and continue to simmer gently, stirring occasionally, for twenty minutes.
Heat the mini naan breads according to the instructions on the packet. This usually only takes a couple of minutes. Spoon the chilli in to serving bowls, garnish with the sprigs of basil and serve immediately with the heated naan breads.
Vegetarian: Mixed Cheeses with Bruschetta and Side Salad
Vegetarian Dinner Recipes
This is an incredibly quick and easy dish to prepare, with the only significant cooking required being the boiling of the egg. Although this dish is completely vegetarian, it is clearly not suitable for vegans. The cheeses available in different locales will of course vary but be inventive and adventurous. Take the time to check what's available in your supermarket or deli and push the boat out a bit for some variety and variation in flavours.
Ingredients per Serving
3 slices of edam
3 slices of camembert
3 slices of apple wood smoked cheese
3 slices of bread stick
1 egg
1 tomato
3” cucumber
2 tbsp canned red kidney beans
2 wedges of granny Smith apple
Torn basil leaves to garnish
1 clove of garlic
Extra virgin olive oil
Salt and black pepper
Method
Place the egg in a small pot or saucepan and add enough cold water to comfortably cover it. Bring the water to the boil and reduce the heat to simmer for seven minutes. Take the pot to the sink and run cold water in to it until the egg is cool enough to handle. Crack the shell and peel under a trickle of running cold water. Submerge the egg in cold water to cool quickly while you prepare the remainder of the dish.
Thinly slice the cheeses, tomato and cucumber. Add the red kidney beans to a colander and rinse under running cold water. Put the slices of bread under an overhead grill to toast to golden on both sides.
Lay the cheeses on the main serving plate with the slices of apple. Arrange the tomato and cucumber alternately in the side salad bowl. Quarter the egg lengthwise and prop each quarter up in the bowl by adding the red kidney beans. Scatter torn basil leaves over the side salad.
Peel and lightly crush the garlic clove. Rub it over the top of the hot toast slices. Drizzle with extra virgin olive oil, season with salt and pepper and plate for immediate service.
Immediately below is another great vegetarian dinner idea, suitable also for vegans by simply eliminating the little amount of parmesan cheese which is added prior to service.
Vegan Dinner Recipe - Tomato and Mango Pasta
White Meat: Spicy Pork and Pineapple Stew with Pan Roasted Potatoes
This is another recipe which does not require a great deal of hands on cooking time and can largely be allowed to gently cook away while you take care of other business.
Ingredients per Serving
6oz shoulder of pork
Baby new potatoes (quantity as desired)
2 rings of pineapple (canned in own juice)
½ medium white onion
1 small red chilli pepper
1 pint fresh chicken stock
Salt and pepper
Basil leaves to garnish
Method
Cut the pork in to approximately one inch pieces. Drizzle a very small amount of olive oil in to a large stew pot and brown and seal the pork over a medium heat. Roughly chop the onion and pineapple and add them to the pot along with the preheated stock. Chop and deseed the chilli pepper before adding it to the pot, remembering to wash your hands thoroughly immediately afterwards. Bring the liquid to the boil and reduce the heat to simmer very gently for an hour and a half, until the pork is tender. Stir occasionally and top up the liquid with a little boiling water if required.
Wash the potatoes and add them - skins intact - to a large pot of cold, slightly salted water. Put the pot on to a high heat until the water boils and reduce to simmer for twenty minutes. Drain the potatoes and submerge in cold water. This will cool them quickly and the extreme temperature variance will help to loosen the skins. Drain again and the skins should easily be removable by rubbing the potatoes with the ball of your thumb.
The peeled potatoes should be deep fried in hot oil for five or six minutes until beautifully crisp and golden on the outside. Drain them well on kitchen paper. Spoon the pork stew on to a plate, lay the potatoes alongside and garnish with some freshly torn leaves of basil or sage.
Culinary Inspiration Failure - Remedy Option One
Further up this page, we looked at how it is possible to come up with fabulous dinner recipe ideas by searching Google for a number of basic ingredients and qualifying key words. What if, however, our inspiration has completely deserted us and we have no idea of even what basic ingredients we wish to include in dinner?
There are two very simple ways in which we can tackle this problem and the first is almost as old as the hills...
Some people believe that cookbooks are soon to be a thing of the past. Why do we need them in times of Internet, when the sum of all human knowledge is only a click or two away? The reason why cookbooks are so useful in this situation is that we can simply pick one up and quickly browse its pages in search of inspiration for dinner. We have no need to consider or input search criteria, without which search engines are of little use. Consulting, therefore, a couple of extremely varied cookbooks, which afford tasty dinner recipes of many different types, should be option number one when total culinary inspiration failure strikes.
Featured to the right are a couple of hand-picked, bargain books which you should definitely at least check out and may wish to consider buying.
Miscellaneous: Mixed Grill with Real Chips
What could be more worthy of the term miscellaneous than a mixed grill? Even the names it is known by are extremely varied, from mixed grill, to fry up, to all day breakfast and more. It can be prepared on an outdoor grill, indoor grill, or even in frying pans and made to suit just about any and all varying tastes. This is a simple idea for preparing a mixed grill using a combination of frying pans and an indoor, overhead grill.
Ingredients per Mixed Grill
1 large, floury potato
Pork loin steak
2 beef sausages
2 rashers of bacon
2 closed cup mushrooms
1 medium tomato
½ small onion
1 slice of bread
1 egg
Salt and pepper
Vegetable or sunflower oil for frying
Method
This mixed grill is served with large, British style chips. The chips are prepared exactly the same way as the French fries in the poultry/turkey recipe further up this page, except that they are cut larger. Scroll back up if you need to revisit the instructions. Only when your chips have been cooled and returned to the refrigerator following their first frying should you begin to prepare the remainder of your meal.
Add some oil to a large, non-stick frying pan. Add the sausages and seasoned pork fillet. Fry for ten minutes on a low to medium heat.
Half the tomato and remove the stalks from the mushrooms. Roughly slice the onion. When the pork and sausages have been frying for ten minutes, turn the pork and add the tomatoes (flesh side down), mushrooms (open cups upward ) and onion to the pan.
Use an egg cup to cut a hole in the centre of your bread. Add some oil to a small frying pan and bring up to a fairly high heat before adding the bread. Break the egg firstly in to a cup and pour it carefully on to the bread, so that the yolk falls in to the hole. Fry for three minutes, while you start your chips on their final frying.
Very carefully, turn the eggy bread and fry for a further three minutes on the second side. Turn the mushrooms cup side down for the final minute or so of frying. Grill the bacon for two minutes each side.
Remove your chips from the deep frier to drain on kitchen paper. Plate the eggy bread and lay the bacon on top, followed by the pork steak. Assemble the remainder of your ingredients, serve with your condiments of choice and enjoy your thoroughly miscellaneous dinner idea to the full.
Culinary Inspiration Failure - Remedy Option Two
We have looked at cookbooks as being an excellent option for helping you find dinner recipes when inspiration deserts you. It may be, however, that you don't have any in the house and can hardly wait for them to be delivered before you cook dinner!
A second option you can consider in this instance is searching for dinner dedicated blogs. There are a great many magnificent blogs which are dedicated to helping people decide what to have for dinner, as well as providing a whole variety of recipe ideas.
Below are the very latest posts on just one such blog, to help you get started.
- Hot and Spicy Chilli Chicken Wings
How do you like your chicken wings? Sadly, a great many people will say straight from KFC or any one of a number of other fast food outlets. The reality is, however, that chicken wings are not...
- Mixed Bell Peppers and Anchovy Naan Bread Pizza Feast
Naan bread pizza is something which I make quite regularly and have actually featured on this blog in the past. This particular version of naan bread pizza is different however in that not only...
- Sweet Pudding or Savoury Cheeseboard? Diamond Jubilee Armed Forces' Tribute Meal (Part Three)
Which do you prefer as the final course of your meal: a sweet, succulent pudding or a tantalisingly taste-rich cheeseboard? Opinions vary significantly and this was the problem that faced me when...
- Diamond Jubilee Armed Forces' Tribute Meal (Part Two)
This is part two of the three course meal I have devised to represent the three major branches of the Armed Forces in celebration of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee. Yesterday's post saw the concept...
- 3 Course Diamond Jubilee Meal Tribute to the British Armed Forces (Part One)
This is my second post dedicated to celebrating the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II with appropriate food and meal creations. Given that Her Majesty is Commander-in-Chief of the British...
Lots More Great Food Ideas Right Here on Hub Pages
Below are just a few further ideas for dinner, or even lunch, that you may wish to consider.
- Pizza Recipes: How to Make Pizza Dough and Homemade Pizza Sauce
Pizza is a lot easier to make from scratch at home than you may think. This page guides you easily from the stage of making the sauce and the dough to coming up with tasty topping ideas to suit you and your family. - Chicken Wings Recipes and Different Ways to Cook Chicken Wings
Are chicken wings to you just something you would buy from a fast food outlet? If so, take a look at the different, delicious ways in which it is possible to cook perfect chicken wings at home - easily and inexpensively. You may just be surprised and - Bruschetta Recipes: How to Make Bruschetta
Bruschetta is an Italian appetiser, originating simply as a means of using up stale bread. This page looks at lots of different, tasty ways in which it is possible to enjoy bruschetta. - How to Cook Rainbow Trout and Rainbow Trout Recipes
Simple tips for cooking rainbow trout and delicious recipe ideas for serving it to your family or guests. - Summer Salad Wrap Recipes for Omnivores and Vegetarians
A look at salad wrap recipes for summer, focusing particularly upon how they can be made to suit not only vegetarians but even the most ardent meat lovers and omnivores. - Calamari Recipes and How to Cook Calamari
Calamari recipes are about more than calamari rings deep fried in batter. Shallow fried calamari presented on a salad, stuffed and poached calamari and calamari in a meuniere sauce are all featured in this calamari recipe collection. - How to Poach a Whole Chicken and Prepare an Easy Chicken Salad
Poaching chicken is incredibly easy and poached chicken need never be bland nor dry. This page looks at a simple way to poach a whole chicken and serve it cold with a refreshing summer salad.
- Sustainable Fish Recipes: Spotlight on Discard
There are a great many species of fish in our seas and oceans which are desperately endangered due to inappropriate fishing practices. This page is devoted to looking at delicious recipes for sustainable fish and how each of us can help the Big Fish - Different Ways to Cook Potatoes
Potatoes are an incredibloy versatile cooking ingredient. This page is devoted to exploring a number of less obvious ways in which potatoes can be cooked and enjoyed to perfection. - Good Food Ideas for Fishing Trips or Other Outdoor Adventures
Practical tips and recipes for food which is ideal for your fishing trip or other outdoor adventure, when what you can carry and how you can eat it may be significant issues. - Delicious Homemade Burger Recipes of International Origin
This page begins by examining how we should actually define a burger. It goes on to look at different ways in which we can devise burger recipes by looking at cuisines and cooking ingredients from around the world. - Bean Salad Recipes: Borlotti, Pinto, Cannellini Beans and More
Bean salads of different types can very effectively be served as antipasto, side salads, or as a light lunch. The number of different types of beans readily available in modern times, from cannellini beans, to borlotti beans, to pinto beans also mean - Black Pudding Recipes (Also Blood Pudding Recipes or Blood Sausage Recipes)
Black pudding is a huge favourite in many parts of the UK and elsewhere around the world. This site is devoted to suggesting a number of different tasty ways to cook and serve black pudding. - Chip Shop Recipes Made Healthier: Recipe for Fish and Chips and Other Traditional British Favourites
Fish and chip shops in the UK are the number one type of fast food outlet. Traditionally, however, the food from fish and chip shops is not particularly healthy in nature and this site takes some fish and chip shop classic fayre and tries to make it
What Are you Having for Dinner Tonight Now?
Has your dinner menu for tonight changed since you started reading this page? Have you found these recipes and ideas helpful, or likely to be so in future? Hopefully, this page will have given you some food for thought and that its basic principles will help you out at some point.
Thank you for visiting the page and taking the time to read through it. Any comments or feedback which you have may be left in the space below.
Hello, Paradise7. Thank you for the visit and the comment. Turkey schnitzel is something I first encountered in Germany and I hope you very much enjoy it, as I have on a great many occasions.
Hi Gordon
fantastic hub, wow great ideas for ,meals.
It is true sometimes, however good a chef you are you get sick of your own food. The same flavours and tastes seem to come through, I swop and change even my curry spices to try and stop this. When all else fails I ring the Indian take away around the corner and have one of theirs. vote up & awsome. cheers
Cheers, Tony
Yes, variety is definitely the spice of life as well as food. It always make me sad that so many people don't realise this and try more possibilities for themselves.
I'm gonna try some of there. Never seen the bread and egg trick before. Looks good and I think kids would like that too.
Thanks for the visit and the comment, Lauryallan. I hope you and your kids enjoy the breaded turkey. This is also an excellent way of cooking fillets of white fish, which obviously cook quicker than the turkey.
I've learned a couple of good cooking ideas from this first look at your hub and am booking marking for future reference. Thanks much! Voted up.
Thanks very much for the visit and comment, RTalloni. I'm glad you found the page useful and hope it proves useful to you again.
Nice hub and recipes, as usual! I like the idea of searching for recipes by using the ingredients you have in mind as keywords. I actually do that all the time, but I browse the images first.
Thanks very much, iZeko. Yes, this method definitely produces far better results than searching for named recipes.
Some nice ideas Gordon and I am sick of eating the same things week in and week out so I will try some of these. Love the photos too.
Hi, Jools99. It's a common problem. I strongly recommend the Google search tip - as well as these recipes, of course! :) Good luck and I hope you enjoy what you come up with. Thanks for the visit and comment.




Paradise7 8 months ago
The turkey schnitzel looks great to me and is a completely new recipe--I've never heard it before. Thanks, we'll definitely be having something DIFFERENT for dinner tonight!