The best part: if you go to a networking event every night of the week, you may never have to
cook dinner again!
But, most importantly, her book contains recipes that actually make me excited about
cooking dinner again.»
Not exact matches
You know the type of person I mean — that guy or gal who manages to run a successful business, work on a side project or two, keep in shape, be available to friends and family, and even
cook an amazing three - course
dinner now and
again.
I'm going to make it
again next week with chickpeas for an easy nights
dinner (my lentils took awhile to
cook).
I can not wait to
cook it
again for a
dinner party.
It's hard to care about
dinner when you
cook at juvenile hall from 12 - 8 3 days a week — but
cooking is my passion — i just have to light the fire
again — my real fav is the Cuban pot roast — I may be doing it with some pork this weekend
I made these for
dinner — we got impatient and didn't
cook them for 40 minutes but instead about 20... but they were delicious and I'll try
again soon.
In a world filled with aspirational recipes and preciously staged photos, one
cook finds that true comfort comes from replaying the same simple
dinner... over and over and over
again.
I couldn't face
cooking again for another night and we live too far from a restaurant to make it an attractive option for
dinner on most nights.
We hosted my parents for
dinner and
again, I
cooked the turkey... but not just any turkey.
I have the motivation to start exercising
again, to
cook dinner more regularly, to plan a family vacation, to think and care about the future.
As the mom of four small kids (whose previous
cooking experience was limited to watching the Barefoot Contessa on TV then doing my best to replicate her moves for
dinner parties), I've finally figured out that feeding kids well is equal parts simple recipes, steady parenting, and plain ol' trying
again.
You discover that if you want to ever eat
again, you will now have to
cook dinner while safely jiggling a tired baby in your favourite carrier.
Don't eat anything more until
dinner, when you
again have protein and unrefined carbs, along with healthy fat (maybe fish,
cooked vegetables, and butter).
I would work until 5 pm, drive the 45 minutes home and then would
cook dinner so it would be ready by 7 pm, have a shower, and then have about 1 hour to chill with my husband (boyfriend at the time) before I went to sleep and did it all
again.
Dinner: Gary's
cooking again.
I'm committed to
cooking dinner more as a way to eat healthier once
again.
Making the most of your
dinner cooking efforts on Day 2, I want you to enjoy this meal
again for lunch the next day.
Also, after
cooking, I usually put it into a casserole dish and either serve immediately or refrigerate until an hour or so before
dinner and put it in the oven to heat up
again.
My order of events for the day was adjusted
again after (1) realizing I was out of tomato paste for our slow
cooker chili
dinner, (2) I was completely out of pecans that I desperately needed for some reason and now can't remember why (but I definitely haven't used them, yet, so...) and (3) I changed my mind about my recipe for this week's Sunday Supper, and now needed ingredients for that, too.
I probably don't even need to tell you, but this bread is kind of my jam right now because Beer Beef Stew and Slow
Cooker Chili are finally on our
dinner menu rotation,
again.
If I could get up at 5 a.m., make breakfast for everyone, then get dressed (with heels, natch), drop my kids off at daycare, go to work for 10 hours, pick the kids up, come home,
cook dinner, clean up, put the kids to bed, work in bed «til midnight so I don't get behind at work, then do it all
again tomorrow on 5 hours sleep.»
It will open up to the kitchen & breakfast nook area,
again providing a better flow, but also keeping me a little more connected with the kids while I'm
cooking dinner.
«Being able to
cook proper meals
again and have friends round for
dinner or drinks is wonderful,» they say.