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Showing posts with label Indiana Soybean Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indiana Soybean Alliance. Show all posts

Friday, September 11, 2020

Tater Tot Casserole

Casseroles are one of my favorite types of dinners! Combine everything in a casserole dish and bake and there you have it dinner is ready! Tater Tot Casserole is a super easy recipe to make, with only a few ingredients, its perfect for families on a busy night! 

Tater Tot Casserole


I know we have busy nights during the week and sometimes preparing dinner isn't something I want to spend a lot of time doing. Or creating a lot to clean up either. This is where simple meals come in SO handy! Another great one is my Broccoli Cheddar Casserole

Tater Tot Casserole

This Tater Tot Casserole comes together easily and is super cost effective to make. Bonus, its large enough that you might have leftovers for another meal. 

Tater Tot Casserole

Tater Tot Casserole

PRINT RECIPE HERE

Ingredients for Tater Tot Casserole 

2 lbs ground beef, browned
1/2 small onion, diced
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 Tbsp Worcestershire Sauce
2 - 15 oz cans green beans, drained
2 - 10 oz can cream of mushroom soup
2 cups shredded cheddar cheese
3 cups frozen tater tots
salt and pepper to taste

Directions for Tater Tot Casserole

1. Lightly grease a 9x13 baking dish with cooking spray and set aside. 

2. Brown the ground beef and drain off the excess grease. 

3. Add the diced onion and saute until translucent. 

4. Add the minced garlic and cook for about 2 additional minutes. 

5. Add in the Worcestershire sauce, salt, and pepper and mix in well. 

6. Spread out prepared ground beef in the baking dish. 

7. Next add the layers, cream of mushroom soup, then green beans, then the shredded cheese. 

8. Lastly, top off the casserole with the tater tots layed out on top. 

9. Bake for 35 minutes at 375 degrees F. 

10. Ready to serve. 

Tater Tot Casserole



                This post is sponsored by the Glass Barn, Indiana Soybean and Corn Farmers, but                                                            all thoughts and opinions are my own. 






Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili

With cooler temperatures brings chili season! This hearty and flavorful Crock Pot White Chicken Chili doesn't disappoint for nice pot of chili. It is deliciously savory, but also has just the right amount of spice that blends with all the flavors to make it oh so good! 

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili


In the Fall and Winter season my crock pot gets used so much. With busy days helping in the field with harvest, picking pumpkins, and the kids in sports, easy crock pot meals are perfect for dinner. Just dump everything in and let the crock pot do all the work for you! Sounds good to me! 
This recipe is so so simple and who doesn't love chili? This white chicken chili is a fun twist to  the traditional chili. 

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili

White chicken chili is made up of White Northern Beans, chicken breasts, chicken broth, and jalapeno and green pepper. Combined with cheeses and a variety of seasonings you'll enjoy all the amazing flavors in one bowl when it is ready to serve! 

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili

Simply prepare the veggies, and place everything in the crock pot, add the spices, pour in the broth and you're good! Set on HIGH for 4 hours. Then your meal is almost ready!! Remove the chicken breasts to shred the meat. Return the shredded meat to the pot and add the cream cheese and milk. Give the chili a good stir and then dinner is ready!! 

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili

We always look forward to chili for dinner in the cooler months! Rather its this Crock Pot White Chicken Chili, Instant Pot Chili, or traditional stove top chili, we our are enjoying comfort food for some of our family favorites!

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili




Crock Pot White Chicken Chili 

PRINTABLE RECIPE HERE

Ingredients for Crock Pot White Chicken Chili 

1 green bell pepper
1 jalapeno
1 medium onion, diced
1 tbsp olive oil
2 garlic cloves
1.5 lbs boneless, skinless chicken breasts
2 cups low-sodium chicken broth
2 15 oz cans Great Northern beans, drained and rinsed
1 15 oz can whole kernel corn, drained 
1 tsp salt 
1/2 tsp pepper
1 tsp cumin
3/4 oregano
1/2 tsp chili powder
4 oz. cream cheese, softened 
1/4 cup milk


Topping ideas: 
dollop of sour cream 
cheddar cheese
tortilla chips or strips
sliced jalapenos
sliced avocados

Directions for White Chicken Chili 

1. Add chicken breasts to bottom of the crock pot. 

2. Add dice onion , minced garlic, beans, diced peppers, corn, and chicken broth to the crock pot insert. 

3. Top with the salt, pepper, cumin, oregano, and chili powder. 

4. Cover crock pot with lid and cook on HIGH for 4 hours. 

5. Remove chicken to cutting board and shred. Then return to the crock pot. 

6. Add cream cheese and milk. 

7. Stir well until everything is well combined. 

8. Serve with toppings. 

Crock Pot White Chicken Chili



This post is sponsored by the Glass Barn, Indiana Soybean and Corn Farmers, but all thoughts and opinions are my own. 




Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Top 9 Thanksgiving Desserts


The month of November is here. Thanksgiving.  A month we celebrate being Thankful! Time to think about what we will bring to Thanksgiving celebrations with family and friends. Here is a collaboration of delicious desserts from myself and some farmwife friends that are perfect for that Thanksgiving feast.


The fall season is also the harvest season! For many of us we are busy helping bring in the bounty, whether it be directly in the field running equipment to harvest or preparing meals to feed our farmers on a daily basis and everything in between.


Fall season on the farm means a final harvest in the produce fields, harvesting the last of the seasons' vegetables.



Fall season on the farm means preparing for winter so livestock are well cared for. Silage may be chopped and packed, the last cutting of hay may be baled, repairs on barns, fixing fences while the weather is nice.


November, the end of fall season, when all the hard work comes together and looking back at the whole year and can celebrate the growing season. Thankful.

We celebrate with a bounty of food at our Thanksgiving meal. Just like we celebrate bringing our harvest in!

Enjoy these delicious desserts to top off your Thanksgiving meal as we celebrate another year of growing crops and raising livestock.



Pumpkin Pie from Stacy at The Backroad Life


Cake Mix Pumpkin Caramel Cookies from MaryBeth at The Fearless Kitchen


Pumpkin Sheet Cake with Cream Cheese Icing from Liz at Farmwife Cooks


Pumpkin Chiffon Pie from Leah at Beyer Beware


Easy Vanilla Sheet Cake from Jeanette at Fencerow To Fencerow


Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Muffins from Megan at These Old Cookbooks


Pumpkin Pull Apart Bread from Crystal at Chasing Saturdays


Pumpkin Hand Pies from Jent at Farmwife Feeds


Apple Cream Pie from Stacy at The Backroad Life


This post is sponsored by Indiana Soybean Alliance, but all thoughts/opinions are my own. 



Monday, September 1, 2014

Local Dine & Discuss Event


With a great amount of the population being off the farm, it is important to share what happens on the farm, modern day farm practices, and how farming is an important part of everyone's lives. On Thursday evening, Scott and I had an opportunity to attend the Dine & Discuss Event at Culp Family Farms, a farm in our community. Kendell and Tammy Culp welcomed many from the community to their farm. We were among several others in attendance ranging from local community leaders, board members, farmers, and bloggers. The event was sponsored by Indiana Soybean Alliance.

 

Once we arrived and parked our vehicle, we were offered a ride on a Gator up to the event area. The event started with reception where attendees checked in, received name tags, and mingled. There were cheeses from Fair Oaks Farms and wine from Carpenter Creek Cellars for sampling. There were also farm equipment parked around the area for viewing. They had a combine and a tractor out with a price tag on them. This gave attendees an idea of some of the costs of farming. Kendell Culp welcomed everyone to the event and introduced his family. He mentioned the point of this event was to share with our community the importance of agriculture, what modern day agriculture is all about, and Jasper County's role in agriculture. Guests were then divided up into three groups according to the color on their name tag. Each of these groups was a short presentation station about different aspects of modern farming.


Our first station was about technology in agriculture. Brian, with North Central Coop, talked about modern day agriculture and the use of auto steer, the ability of modern farm equipment to steer by itself. They can be programmed to stay on the same path, resulting in less compaction in the field. He then shared with us about soil sampling and farm mapping and how it is used to determine how to take care of the land. Taking samples from the field allows the farmer to see what fertilizers need to be applied and in what amounts to improve their soil. Combines can also show field yield data as they combine showing the farmer the yields overall and how they vary within the field. By doing this, farmers can see what kind of improvements they need to do to their land to increase their crop yield. He demonstrated how a quadcopter is used for scouting. A quadcopter, also known as a drone, can be remote controlled or have a path programmed into it and uses a camera to scout the field.


Our next station was livestock. Culp family farms raise pigs and beef cattle. Dr. Kenneth Culp III, a professor at the University of Kentucky, shared with us their operation. The family buys the young pigs when they are just over a few weeks old from a farrowing operation. They feed them out for five months, then they are taken to market for meat. He explained the differences in the feed the pigs and cattle eat. Pigs need their feed ground up finely, while cattle can eat more course food. Cattle have 4 stomachs that the food travels through and the food breaks down, while pig's are not as complex. Ken explained how his cows are brought into heat on Memorial Day weekend and artificially inseminated. Some of the cattle are surrogate mothers and have embryos implanted. He passed out a flyer with a variety of interesting farm facts of American agriculture and some specific to Indiana. Even more specific to our county, Jasper County is #1 in agriculture sales among Indiana counties.


Our last station was about corn and soybeans, which are the two major crops produced in Jasper County, presented by Stuart and Kayla with Vision Ag. Kayla, who is Kendell's daughter, explained that the break even point for a corn farmer is $3.60 a bushel, which is just higher than the current market price. Adam, from IBEC, the ethanol producer at Pleasant Ridge, shared with us how much corn the plant uses each year. This corn is turned into alcohol from the starch and the rest is a by-product called DDG, dried distillers grain. These DDG's are mixed with other ingredients for livestock feed. We also talked about GMO crops. Round up ready corn and soybeans have improved agriculture practices and are produced this way. These are created by agriculture scientists, inserting genes from species into the DNA of another. By improving our crops and planting GMO crops, the need for herbicides and pesticides are decreased. American farmers are feeding an ever growing population and feeding more on less ground to produce. Kayla shared that today's American farmer feeds about 155 people worldwide, while in 1960, that number was 25.8 people. Jasper County currently has 615 farms and is first for corn production in Indiana, among other things. A flyer was also handed out at this station listing some of the numerous uses of corn and soybeans.


After the 3 presentations, was the dine portion of the evening. The dinner consisted of food produced in Jasper County. We enjoyed pork from Culp Family Farms, sweet corn and melon from Gilmore Green Acres, green beans from our farm Walker Farms, tomato slices from Luttrell's, and homemade blueberry pie with blueberries from Van Kley Blueberry Farms. The dinner was under a tented area in the Culp's beautiful yard.



Kendell shared some closing statements after the dinner. Science is the root and has an important role in modern day agriculture. Agriculture today is different that it was generations ago and is always changing and improving. People are becoming more interested in where their food comes from and how what is happening in agriculture affects will affect them. He shared with us that in the drought of 2012, four television crews, including 2 from over seas, interviewed him as a typical American farmer as they were interested in what was going on in Midwest agriculture and how it was affecting their food prices. Kendell also shared that they are partnering with IBEC to use the DDG to feed their pigs and have for the local food pantry. He also talked some of property taxes and although they have decreased for most people, they are on the rise for farmers as the value of land has increased greatly over the last decade. He shared that there are 3 generations of Culps farming the land and that they work with 160 different businesses through the farm, most of Jasper County.

As the sun was setting, the event was coming to an end. The FFA members were thanked for helping with the event. The attendees were thanked for coming out and "dine & discuss" agriculture overall and in our community. Every couple left with a cooler bag of pork burgers from Culp Farms, dozen eggs and garden fertilizer from Rose Acres, mint oil from Kanne Farms, mint candy from Dobson Farms, and popcorn from Con Agra, all items also produced in Jasper County.

This was a great event to learn about modern day farming and the importance of agriculture in Jasper County, which was the reason for the event. It was very informative for promoting agriculture in our area. Thank you Culp Family Farms and Indiana Soybean Alliance for putting on this event, we had a great time!





This post was sponsored by Indiana Family of Farmers. 
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