I Need Plain Recipes

Updated on September 27, 2013
S.J. asks from Cherryville, MO
20 answers

My mother is visiting soon, and I need some easy, simple recipes with very few ingredients. She has trouble digesting anything not "real", (for ex, chicken breasts alone are great, add spices and cream of mushroom soup and it may cause her digestion issues). She loves chicken breasts, and I would love to be able to put them in the crock on low for a few hours. Any suggestions on how to cook in the crock? Just throw some veggies and chicken broth in? I am so not used to cooking "bland". Any other suggestions? Thanks!

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So What Happened?

ETA: She just has issues digesting anything not "plain". Not sure how else to explain it. She has IBS, so the more mild and "real" the food, the better. No greasy, no msg, no spicy. So it isn't just spices, but that is a part of it. So what I am looking for are essentially paleo recipes or "clean eating". I can google some, but I wanted to hear experiences from you moms. I cook paleo quite a bit, but I also use things I know she cannot eat, such as spices and creams and things that would be hard for her to digest.

ETA: Yes, I have already asked my mom what she wants. She just eats VERY few things, and I wanted to be able to throw the chicken in the crock while we were out for the afternoon and come home to it ready, as opposed to baking, etc. If I ask her for more details, she will insist I not cook for her or go to any trouble, to which I willl not listen. =)

Featured Answers

C.V.

answers from Columbia on

I do "crock pot rotisserie chicken" all the time. It's delicious. 1 whole chicken, wash and pat dry, season lightly with seasoning salt, put 3-4 crumpled balls of aluminum foil in the bottom of the crock pot, put the chicken on top and set the crock pot on low for the whole day.

Before dinner time, remove the chicken and put under the broiler in the oven to crisp the skin.

Use the AMAZING drippings and a roux (google it) to make the best gravy you've ever had.

I don't add veggies to my crockpot as I find that it affects the flavor of the gravy. I steam veggies separately.

3 moms found this helpful
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J.G.

answers from Chicago on

Do you have a grill? I roast chickenk on the grill over indirect heat for about 60 minutes. I usually do leg quarters. No cooking involved, just spray the grill with Pam, spray the meat with Pam, add a little salt and pepper, and walk away. Hubby does whole chichens all the time. Everyone says its the best chicken they have ever had.

Breast in this crock tends to be dry.

I highly suggest you use a grill if you have one. Takes no time, and it's just meat as it should be eaten, with no fuss.

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J.D.

answers from Minneapolis on

How bout basic salt and peppered chicken that has been roasted in the oven over quinoa made with chicken stock and zuchinni, steamed and salt and peppered. I am a plain jane and this is delish. It is also easy to season it up at the table for the rest. My hubby would dip the chicken in bbq, sprinkle a touch of cayenne and grated parmesean on the zuch, and some extra black pepper, grated parmesean and powdered garlic on the quinoa. All could be make pretty easily and in under an hour. Another idea would be some sort of fish. Fish is good plain or lightly seasoned with buttered brown rice and a simple vegetable like maybe mashed sweet potatoes on the side. Most could be seasoned with only salt and pepper or oil. Good luck.

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M.R.

answers from Seattle on

If it were my mom visiting with specific cooking directions, I would probably ask her to prep the first meal or two so you can see how she likes things. Ask her to give you a shopping list, which veggies/sides, etc and then enjoy what she whips up.

Then have a go at her style of cooking.

2 moms found this helpful

Y.M.

answers from Iowa City on

I would cook a whole chicken the the slow cooker and then use that meat as she see fit.

2 moms found this helpful

C.T.

answers from Santa Fe on

Roast a chicken...serve w sides of rice and steamed veggies

Can she have spaghetti and meatballs?

Grill a pork loin, serve with salad and baked potatoes

Hamburgers and corm on the cob

Grilled salmon (put a little soy sauce mixed w brown sugar on it), serve w asparagus, crusty bread and a brown/wild rice mix

Sautéed pork chops, mashed potatoes and a veggie.

Ask her what she likes! My mom likes plain meals best too.

2 moms found this helpful

L.A.

answers from Austin on

If it is plain, no need for a crock pot.

Plain rice, cook it in the microwave.. The instructions are on the bag. I use chicken broth instead of water.

Salt and lightly peppered chicken breast, cook in a skillet with a little olive oil or you can poach it in Chicken broth. it will only take about 15 to 18 minutes.

Then you can steam some fresh green beans or carrots again in hte microwave.

Here are some recipes.
http://heartburn.about.com/od/maindishes/

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B.C.

answers from Los Angeles on

I like a recipe site called allrecipes.com.

Good luck to you and yours.

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E.B.

answers from Denver on

Do you have time (before she arrives) to make a simple chicken stock? If you do, get some chicken backs and wings (ask the meat manager) or roast a chicken with no seasonings, remove the meat, and save all the bones. Spread the bones on a sheet pan and roast them for about an hour at 400 degrees until they're a rich dark (but not burned) brown. I usually cover the sheet pan with non-stick foil so I don't lose any of the meat or small pieces that may fall during the roasting time. Transfer all of the bones and any juices and bits and pieces to a large stock pot and cover with cold water. Simmer for a couple hours, then strain all the pieces out. Use a fine mesh colander or a colander with cheese cloth to strain the stock well. Then you can either use it as is, or reduce it by a third to concentrate the flavor. Then you have a beautiful chicken stock with no seasonings, just flavor.

If you don't have time to do that, buy the Kitchen Basics brand low sodium chicken stock. It's in a box, like a juice box, and the ingredients are about as close to real as you can get without making your own stock.

I would then place some carrots and celery on the bottom of a crock pot, lay chicken breasts on top of them, add enough stock or plain water to cover the vegetables, and cook it on low for the day while you're out. Have some white rice ready to cook when you get home.

Another thing you might do is poach some chicken breasts beforehand. I poach chicken by first flattening out the chicken breasts (I just kind of split them with my hands so they aren't too thick, or else I use a knife to butterfly them), then covering the chicken breasts in cold water, and then I bring the water just to a boil (when large bubbles just begin to break the surface of the water). You have to watch it carefully so you don't let it boil any more than that. When large bubbles reach the surface, take the pot off the heat and cover it tightly. Leave it, without touching it or uncovering it, until you can comfortably hold your hand on the side of the now-cooled pot. That usually takes a couple hours (the cooling) but there's no work involved. At that point you will have tender, never-rubbery, chicken breasts. You can dice them up and add them to a soup made of pure stock, some plain noodles, some boiled carrots. Or you could combine diced poached chicken with a little good quality mayonnaise and some halved green grapes on lettuce leaves for a nice salad. Or you can serve poached chicken with tomatoes (squeeze the seeds out and quarter them) and a bread roll.

One thing my daughter loves is panko crusted chicken. I marinate chunks of chicken (a little bigger than bite size) in organic plain Greek yogurt (thinned with water), then dry the chicken and coat the chunks in panko crumbs. I brown them very briefly in pure olive oil and then bake them just until they're 160 degrees. I let them sit for several minutes at that point to get the temp to 165 without over baking them. They just take a few minutes to prepare. I serve them with tender roasted carrots.

You can also make a simple soup of good quality chicken stock (either your own as described above or the Kitchen Basics), carrots and some kind of winter squash (butternut or acorn or pumpkin) that have been steamed without seasonings until they're very tender. Puree until smooth and heat through. You can add a swirl of plain organic Greek yogurt on the top.

Another idea is eggs - scrambled, or a simple omelet or frittata with just some good quality mild cheese, diced and seeded tomatoes, and if your mom can tolerate it, some cooked crumbled natural bacon or good quality ham in a small amount. But a nice simple supper would be scrambled eggs and white bread toast with maybe some quartered, seeded tomatoes on the side.

Also, an acorn squash, halved and seeded, baked cut side down until tender. Then turn them over and fill the hollow with diced apples, and a little cinnamon (just a pinch if your mom can handle that) and some butter. Bake until the apples are tender. Or you can fill the baked squash halves with diced cooked chicken and apples. Sprinkle with a little real Parmigiano Reggiano cheese. I haven't looked, but I bet acorn squash halves would do well in the crock pot too. I'm sure there are recipes online that you can adapt. Or you could bake the empty halves the night before, and then when it's time for supper, fill the hollowed baked squash halves with your fillings and bake them quickly.

If you cook with cream, you can often substitute plain organic Greek yogurt and it is often more digestible. And cultured butter (available in a lot of health food stores like Whole Foods) is much more digestible than regular butter due to the culturing process.

My daughter is on a very restricted diet due to medical issues, so I'm learning a lot about this type of cooking. What is recommended for her sounds like it would work for your mom. We buy only white rice, no brown or wild. We have to only use fiber-less white bread, and she can't have oats or quinoa or any other grains. We were told to serve canned or steamed carrots, green beans and squash only (and I don't buy the canned - I steam them myself until they are really soft). Organic Greek yogurt is allowed, and if I need a cream sauce I make a simple sauce but I use just a touch of cream and use homemade chicken or beef stock for the other liquid (more of a Veloute than a white sauce). For seasonings, I use only Himalayan pink salt (sparingly) and lemon juice or a little white wine. The panko crumbs are from a special white bread so they've been great. I make simple meatballs from good quality ground beef or turkey, panko crumbs, some yogurt, and a small amount of vegetables (a little shallot, carrot, garlic) that have been sauteed well and pureed. I bake them with just a spritz of olive oil. You could serve that on plain egg noodles. I also use real Parmigiano Reggiano cheese (a little goes a long way since it's such good quality).

I hope your mom appreciates your meals!

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T.S.

answers from Philadelphia on

I know it doesn't sound appealing but boiled chicken is actually very tasty. You just need to watch it. Cook time depends on the size of pieces. It doesn't take long at all. If she can have bread, you can put a piece on a roll for a sandwich for her then hand shred the rest and add BBQ sauce (I like to use a combo Sweet Baby Rays regular and any brand of honey BBQ) and have pulled BBQ chicken. It's a nice quick meal, especially for lunches. And you can dice up some red potatoes spray or toss with a bit of olive oil and bake for a side dish.

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F.B.

answers from New York on

Go straight to the source on this one. Ask your mom. Explain that you want to be a good hostess and want to accommodate her dietary needs are there any recipies that she could share. shop and cook accordingly.

among our plainer chicken foods are-

chick cordone blue- chicken breast pounded flat, swiss cheese and sliced ham. wrap everything like a jelly roll, skewer with a toothpick and bake.

chicken breast with roast veg. cut up potato, carrots, onions, asparagus and tomato, toss with oil, salt and pepper, place in a baking tray, cook until chicken is done.

pan fried chicken with tomato, onion, and sausage. brown chicken onion and sausage, but not until fully cooked, add tomato (canned plum peeled) allow to simmer.

chicken kebabs marinated in yogurt, mint, garlic, salt and pepper. the yogurt keeps them moist on the grill.

pan fried chicken with asparagus, and roasted tomato. pan fry chicken. set aside, but don't pour off fat. then put parboiled asparagus and roasted tomato in the pan. complete the cooking, put chicken in at the last minute to re-heat and combine flavors if desired.

any and all of these would be fine with pasta, rice pilaf, potato, a garden salad.

Good luck to you and yours,
F. B.

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S.F.

answers from Fargo on

Hi S.! I made homemade chicken noodle soup today and was wondering if that would be something that your mom would like.

I don't know how well onions work for IBS sufferers, but you could leave them out. I use organic, low sodium chicken broth, chicken breast, sea salt and a bay leaf. I add celery, onions and carrots, but that's optional!
You can add any kind of noodle (or rice) that you want. I make my own using flour, egg and salt. I can PM the recipe to you if you want.

This isn't a crockpot recipe, but you could make it ahead of time because it's MUCH better reheated, oddly enough. :)

I hope you have a wonderful visit with your mom!

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S.H.

answers from Honolulu on

Ya know, why don't you just grill the chicken.
Just plain.

Or, maybe just ask her how she likes her chicken, cooked? Since she needs to have a very plain and basic, cooked chicken?

Or, simply boil it. With a tad salt in the cooking water.
Then, when it is done, simply shred it, and you can use it to top a salad.
Boiled chicken, is actually very, tender.
Or you can boil it in some chicken broth for a subtle flavor.

Just don't give her any processed foods/ingredients. Or spices.
On the foods she eats.

What else, can she eat besides plain chicken?
Quinoa, for example, just cooked PLAIN, is very good. It is full of protein actually, and healthy and can be a good substitute for a "starch" with an entree. And is has soluble fiber in it.
Even my kids, love Quinoa. Easy to make.
Just put 1 cup quinoa, in 2 cups of boiling water, and simmer it until all the liquid is absorbed. Then eat it hot, cold or room temp. And it keeps in the fridge for a good amount of time.
For me/my family, I toss it with extra virgin olive oil/salt/halved grape tomatoes/basil. My family loves that.
BUT you can also eat it just plain. Nothing on it. And it is so good that way too.
Quinoa, is also supposed to be good for IBS.
Just Google search "Is Quinoa good for IBS sufferers.."

Can she eats things with olive oil? Or garlic?
Because you can cook the chicken with a little drizzled olive oil and minced garlic, to season the chicken breast.
Or, pound the breasts to flatten it and make it thinner, then cook in a pan, searing it and browning it until cooked. And then, add a nice thickened chicken broth "sauce" on it. Just put chicken broth in a pot, heat it up, then add a tad of cornstarch to it (if she can have cornstarch) to thicken it to your liking. Then it becomes a nice "sauce" for the chicken.
And add a tad of salt if she can have that.
Or, basil leaves. For taste.
And/or you can add some sliced fresh mushrooms to the sauce too. Mushrooms are very healthy! And it will make the sauce all "fancy" looking. Not boring.

As for veggies, if she can have that, then slice it up, then steam it.
Or, slice it up, drizzle with extra virgin olive oil, and salt or no salt, then put on a foil lined sheet pan, stick it in the oven and "roast" the veggies until browned. ie: roasted veggies. It is very plain and good. Roasting veggies brings out the flavors.

Or, get some squash, and slice it up and boil it or roast that too.
Plain.

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B..

answers from Dallas on

I cook chicken tenderloins (naked) in the crockpot on a bed of chopped onions (sometimes with chopped celery and carrots) with about 8 oz of water. You can salt and pepper them if you wish. Takes about 2 hours on high, 3-4 on low. If you have bigger pieces, it will take longer.

If you want, you can take the chicken out for her and use the broth and onions and other veggies for a base for a great soup for everybody else.
Put in what spices you like, I use garlic, salt, pepper, oregano, basil, thyme, for Italian or make it Mexican with cumin, garlic, cilantro. for Italian, put in white beans or pasta with canned tomatoes. For Mexican, try corn and rinsed black beans, canned tomatoes and a can of green enchilada sauce.
You can put in a can of chicken broth to thin it.

Really, just cook her chicken, along with extra for y'all. Use it for any cooked chicken dish. It won't be a problem.

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K.S.

answers from Miami on

Two plain dishes. Cut the chicken breasts in small squares. A little olive oil (or another oil i fyou prefer) on the botton of the frying pan. Cook on medium until cook through. In a small sauce pan use those packets of chicken broth and cook with water. In another pot cook some white rice. I also usually try and steam some fresh green beans. If its just me I throw the broth packets in with the chicken at teh end but my mom is picky so I will heat it up on the side when she is eating with us.

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M.H.

answers from Chicago on

Is it an issue with Spices? I think if you can be a litte more explanitive that might help.

We are gluetn free, so we can nto use a standard Cream of mushroom soup..

It might help if you knew what she could not have.. it might be helpful if she was tested.

Yes, Chicken broth with veggies .. would be possible..

E.A.

answers from Erie on

You can braise anything in a liquid of your choice (water, broth, orange juice), the key is to keep the temp low and don't let it boil. That's basically how a crock pot works, too. It cooks it at such a low temp that the meat doesn't "seize up". Chicken, fish, pork loin, veggies. And yes, you can just throw some chicken, veggies and broth in it and let it cook all day in the crock pot.
If you want unadulterated broth, make your own using plain chicken thighs and water, boil for a half hour and strain through cheesecloth or a kitchen towel. The thighs make a wonderful tasting broth and you can leave all the spices out of it, just let her add salt if she wants.

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A.V.

answers from Washington DC on

Chicken breast or thighs in the crock pot with veggies will be fine. Add a little water for juice and then everyone else can add spices after it is done. If she can tolerate chicken broth, then add some of that and your veggies. I've done that for "soup". Offer with salad and bread.

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❤.M.

answers from Los Angeles on

Chicken breasts (boiled or cooked plain on the bbq), side: plain white rice
Tacos w/plain ground beef (no taco seasoning added)
Salad topped w/grilled chicken
Salmon (grilled), veggies
Steak (no spices addes), grilled veggies

Add salad & soft dinner rolls to any of these

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R.K.

answers from Boston on

Hi S.,

First, let me say what a lovely daughter you are!

As for the cooking, each person with digestion difficulties reacts well or poorly to different diets. But having read some of the other posts, I thought I might share my family member's diet.

Broiled or boiled chicken, beef, lean pork or mild fish.
Steamed veggies. Each vegetable separate, no mixing.
Boiled or baked starches - potatoes and noodles.
Crock pot - not so much. Sorry!
Rolls or bread.

No salt, pepper, lemon, soy sauce , gravy, salad dressing, butter, etc., added. I put these on the table and the person can add as much or as little as they judge they can digest that day. It's a balancing act best done by the person themselves.

I add salad and sauces on the side for other family members. No comment is ever made about what anyone chooses to eat or not. I realize this sounds very boring. But boring can be quite relaxing. All my best.

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