Ground Beef
Hot Tamale Soup
By Tammy Randerman
Curried Beef Puffs
A favorite of my mom's and a bit of an ethnic twist! It tastes best if freshly made. Direction #5 is very important, otherwise the triangles will look pale and sickly. Also, don't roll the sheets. The puffs will not be as flaky.
By Maggie Shi
Meatball and Vegetable Soup
By Sylvia Pease
Two-Bean Chili with Vegetables
Here's a chunky, hearty beef stew that's just right on a cold winter day.
By Sharon Borchers
Beef, Black Bean, and Corn Nachos
Susan Richardson of Edina, Minnesota, writes: "My mother worked full-time when I was growing up, so as the oldest daughter in a family of six children, I did a lot of cooking. From the time I was seven years old, my mom taught me how to cook and bake — salad, bread, vegetables, and dessert were pretty much part of every dinner. Even today, I make it a point to prepare and eat dinner with my two teenage children. Though we're very busy, we'll never abandon our dinner ritual. It's the time when we can talk and reconnect."
By Susan Richardson
Meatballs with Parsley and Parmesan
Try these flavorful meatballs on their own, in a tomato sauce or in a submarine sandwich.
By Gayle Gardner
Potato Gnocchi with Beef Ragù
At the restaurant, the gnocchi are shaped in a time-honored manner that includes pressing each short dough piece against the tines of a fork. Home cooks may find it simpler to roll the dough along the wires of a whisk, as outlined here. Also, if you can't get ground chuck, buy a boneless chuck roast, and ask the butcher to grind it for you.
Baked Potatoes with Spiced Beef Chili
Microwaving the potatoes before baking helps cook them quickly, but the regular oven will produce a crispy skin. Have a mixed green salad garnished with Greek olives and roasted red peppers to start. End with vanilla custard and butter cookies.
Savory Hamburgers
By James Beard
Crusty Mustard-Dill Meat Loaf
Using meat loaf mix — a combination of ground beef, veal, and pork — ensures a juicy result. While the meat loaf cooks, mash some potatoes and boil some green beans. Warm apple pie from the bakery is a perfect finale.
Hamburger Pie
Now and again all a recipe requires to embitter a child is one fatal ingredient. My siblings tell me that they recall Hamburger Pie as a kid-friendly favorite. I dreaded it. Spying its mashed-potato crust through the oven window, I always groaned. Today my stomach still sinks with recollection, and here's why: sliced green beans from a can. Yes, they're fast, but can anyone defend the taste, texture, or color of canned green beans?
My sister has tried to gussy up this dish, and I'm sure you can find many hoity-toity versions (usually called Shepherd's Pie). But here, taken from the brittle pages of her kitchen scrapbook, is the very recipe my mom prepared for her ungrateful son. Everything in it could be found in our house on any day.
Mothers take note: This recipe would allow fresh green beans, cooked. Unless, of course, your little epicure insists on canned!
By Lois Pascal
Sloppy Joes
By Melinda Anderson