Welcome
to my annual Month-of Recipes on this blog. Go rummaging in the attic here and
you’ll find past recipe months for appetizers, chicken, soup, mini-desserts,
and more. The way it works is, for each day in February I post a recipe that
fits the category. This month is one-pan meals, excluding pizza, most
casseroles, and slow cooker recipes.
Are you enjoying this month of menus? If so, it would be a huge
favor if you would share links to recipes you like on social media. Bloggers
depend on readers. So please share the word and the recipes you especially
enjoy! Thanks so much. Now, on to our regularly scheduled show!
You know how I’ve
told you that you can serve some of these meals with leftover rice or noodles?
Well, this recipe has noodles and rice built into it. That’s a nice principle
to know. Some of the previous recipes this month could have used instant rice
(or broken noodles) as an added ingredient, providing those extra carbs that
some in your family crave.
I adapted this
recipe (as is my wont), from Eating Well’s Rice Pilaf with Shrimp to make it
even easier and faster by using pre-cooked shrimp and adjusting for our taste
with extra green onions. My reason for using pre-cooked shrimp? That’s what I
had in the freezer. Now, to be clear, raw shrimp is better and not that much
longer to cook (once you peel and devein—not my fave job), so choose what you
want.
Rice Pilaf with Shrimp (serves 4)
4 teaspoons olive
oil
½ cup sliced green
onions
¼ cup prosciutto,
chopped
¾ cup noodles,
broken into small pieces
¾ cup instant
brown rice
¼ cup dry white
wine
1 cup baby lima
beans, frozen
1 ½ cups chicken
broth
1 pound shrimp (if
using frozen, thaw first)
2 teaspoons lemon
juice
1 tablespoon dill
Heat 1 tablespoon oil
in a large skillet over medium heat. Add green onions and prosciutto and cook,
stirring frequently, until onion are translucent, about 2 minutes.
Add noodles and
rice, stirring often, until noodles begin to brown, about 3 more minutes.
Add wine, stir,
and cook until evaporated, 30 seconds to 1 minute.
Add lima beans and
broth and bring to a boil. Cover and reduce heat to a simmer and cook for 10
minutes longer.
While noodles, rice,
and beans are cooking, toss shrimp with remaining oil and lemon juice.
Scatter the shrimp
in an even layer over the pilaf, drizzling remaining lemon juice and oil over
the shrimp. Cover and remove from heat (if using pre-cooked shrimp. Cook 5
minutes more if using raw shrimp).
Remove from heat
and let stand, covered for three minutes. Still in dill and season with pepper.
Serve immediately with crusty bread and a salad if desired.
DH’s Rating: 5 Tongues Up
Him: “This was
really good. Did you think so?”
Me: “Yes, I liked
it, too. Different”
Him: “I don’t usually
like lima beans, but they were different in this. 5 Tongues Up or whatever you
want.”
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