TETRAZZINI ~ BLOG 365.105
Nothing says comfort food like gram’s chicken tetrazzini. Her recipe called for stewing her own chicken with celery and carrots before being shredded into a rich cream sauce made with sherry and tossed with al dente spaghetti and freshly grated Parmesan cheese and then topped with a butter crumb topping. It was then slow baked until it was bubbly and just starting to crisp at the edges.
The creation of tetrazzini is widely debated as to whether it was Auguste Escoffier of French fame, the Knickerbocker Hotel in New York City or Ernest Arbogast at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco in 1905 that originally created the recipe. Most sources lean more heavily on it having been Arbogast. But, sources do agree that it was definitely named after the Italian opera singer, Louisa Tetrazzini who made her American debut at the Tivoli as Gilda in Rigoberto. In those days recipes were often named after famed celebrities.
No matter who originally created it, from that day on the comforting chicken casserole with the Italian name, Tetrazzini would become a large part of the average American home recipe box and morphed into the recipe we know and love today. It was highly Americanized for the middle class in the 1960’s by many a housewife using Campbell’s condensed soup, velveeta cheese and wide egg noodles or spaghetti and more iconically as a frozen dinner. Tetrazzini began appearing in many a cookbook, including Betty Crocker.
Tetrazzini is considered an Italian American dish made with diced poultry or seafood in either a butter, cream, milk and cheese sauce flavored with white wine or sherry. It was often made with a béchamel or mornay sauce originally that incorporated linguine, spaghetti or egg noodles. It was then topped with cheese and bread crumbs before being baked.
From 1950 to 1980 many upscale restaurants including Sardi’s and Mamma Leone’s featured tetrazzini on their menus. Southerners began referring to it as chicken spaghetti and it became a soul food classic and readily available in-house and on catering menus in places like Baton Rouge’s Piccadilly cafeteria or Durham’s Foster’s Market where it remained a customer favorite for many decades.
When I was a kid this recipe was used by my family as a go to for holiday leftovers – it was made with turkey or ham and mom would make it with canned mushrooms and Campbell’s soup – YUCK!
CHICKEN TETRAZZINI
8 ounces bucatini spaghetti, broken in half, prepared al dente’
3 cups chopped or shredded cooked chicken
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 cups sliced mushrooms (see notes)
1/2 cup small chopped onion
1/2 cup small chopped celery
1 can baby sweet peas, drained well
3 tablespoons AP flour
2 cups homemade chicken broth
1 cup heavy cream
3 tablespoons sherry
FRESH ground salt and black pepper, to taste
1 cup FRESH grated Parmesan cheese
- In a large bowl toss drained pasta chicken pieces together.
- Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium heat.
- Add the mushrooms, onions and celery and cook 3-4 minutes until soft.
- Reduce the heat to medium-low and whisk in the flour, cooking a minute or so until golden.
- Whisk in the chicken broth and cook 1-2 minutes until it begins to thicken.
- Stir in the cream and sherry, season to taste with salt and pepper, and continue to cook 2-3 minutes, stirring, until the sauce comes JUST to a boil.
- Remove from the heat and fold in 1/2 cup of the Parmesan.
- Pour the sauce into the bowl with the chicken and noodles and stir to combine.
- Fold in the peas.
- Transfer the chicken mixture to a 9×13 inch baking dish.
- Sprinkle with the remaining 1/2 cup Parmesan or optional butter crumbs and Parmesan.
- Bake 25-30 minutes slightly covered until the last 5 minutes and then until the casserole is bubbling.
- Let rest for 10 minutes before serving.
OPTIONAL BUTTER CRUMB TOPPING
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1/3 cup Panko bread crumbs
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
- Mix together well.
- Sprinkle over top before baking.
NOTE:
- The original recipe called for thin spaghetti, but we prefer bucatini.
- I also often use rotisserie chicken pieces unlike gram’s original stewed chicken.
- I also use whole Beech mushrooms for their nutty flavor.
HAPPY HOMEMAKER MONDAY, MENU & RECIPES week 15 of 2025 ~ BLOG 365.104
Be sure to join Happy Homemaker Monday with our host, Sandra at Diary of a Stay at Home Mom
LAST WEEK RECAPPED
I can’t believe we’re already half way through April!! I worked several events at the Eagle’s last week on top of my normal duties. It seems like every minute was spoken for. I did get the tomato seedlings planted and the wrought iron porch furniture painted with fresh Rustoleum™ to cover the winter rust that settled in.
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
THE WEATHER OUTSIDE
I’m afraid to trust the weather prediction! Supposedly it will NOT rain this week, just be cloudy and is supposed to be in the 60’s and low 70’s. We’ll see – yesterday it said it was going to be sunny all week and in the upper 70’s and 80’s – it changed that quickly!
It’s still supposed to be in the high 30’s at night so each day will take a while to warm up and the breeze has been down right cold. Even working up a sweat yesterday while taking care of very manual labor, the minute I quit working and stood still for five minutes I had to put my sweatshirt back on.
TO DO LIST, APPOINTMENTS & PROJECTS
THIS WEEK’S TO DO LIST, PROJECTS & APPOINTMENTS
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DVR/TV TIME
WHAT’S ON THE DVR/TV
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READING TIME
I need to start the book for book club, but right now I’m reading The Wyvern Protection Unit by C.D. Corri
FUNNIES
MENU PLANS
BREAKFAST is always a work in progress for me – it will generally be hot water and a fruit yogurt 😀
4/14 MONDAY
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4/15 TUESDAY
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4/16 WEDNESDAY
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4/17 THURSDAY
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4/18 FRIDAY
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4/19 SATURDAY
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4/20 SUNDAY
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DINNER
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MEATBALLS SANDWICHES
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BLACKBERRY BAKED CHICKEN and FRIED CORN
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YUMMY BALLS aka OLD FASHIONED PORCUPINE BALLS
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CHICKEN PARMESAN
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working at the EAGLES
CHILI BURGERS
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MEXICAN STUFFED PEPPERS
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~EASTER~ PINEAPPLE GLAZED HAM, MASHED POTATOES, GLAZED CARROTS |
DESSERT
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APPLE WALNUT CARROT CAKE with CREAM CHEESE FROSTING
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FAVORITE PHOTOS FROM THE CAMERA
Worked at the cemetery yesterday to help my girlfriend and her hubby clean up the winter debris. We had an extremely stormy, windy and wet winter that took down a few of the BIG trees and tons of limbs that had to be cleaned up. I should have taken a picture of the burn pile that we’ll do later with hot dogs and marshmallows. 🙂 The burn pile is about 8 feet tall, 40 feet long and 20 feet wide! That doesn’t include the big tree pieces that she’s trying to give away for firewood.
Her family has “owned” the cemetery since 1926 and someone from her immediate family has been the caretaker ever since. Al and Mary Pepiot were her parents and she maintains the family plots. They sell affordable plots with deeds and each plot is maintained by that family, but she does the overall mowing and general clean-up of the overall cemetery.
I especially love her aunt’s headstone. One side looks so traditional and then the backside lists all the men she was married to over the years. The oldest headstone I could find was mid 1800’s. Unfortunately a few years back some teenagers went out and broke several of the older headstones 🙁
So I did the drastic change. It’s supposed to be a silver/gray sable combo. Unfortunately, my hair doesn’t take dye well and I’ll probably be back to my god given beach blonde within the month. Oh well.
INSPIRATIONS
LIFE TIP
HOMEMAKING / COOKING TIP
RECIPES COMING UP THIS WEEK
- TETRAZZINI
- SALSA VERDA PASTEL AZTECA
RECIPE LINKS FROM LAST WEEK & A FUN ONE FOR EASTER
WEEKLY FEATURED PARTY LINKS
SILENT SUNDAY ~ BLOG 365.103
SATURDAY COFFEE ~ BLOG 365.102
ITALIAN PAN-FRIED CHICKEN ~ BLOG 365.101B
Simple, delicious and can be dressed up for a company meal or down for a casual weeknight meal.
ITALIAN PAN-FRIED CHICKEN
1 tablespoon softened butter
2 tablespoons avocado oil
6 LARGE bone-in chicken thighs
FRESH ground sea salt and black pepper
1/4 teaspoon smoked paprika
2 teaspoons FRESH minced rosemary
1/2 teaspoon FRESH minced oregano
1 teaspoon FRESH minced basil
3-4 LARGE garlic cloves, minced
1/4 cup QUALITY merlot
1/4 cup QUALITY chardonnay
1/4 cup QUALITY balsamic vinegar
1/2 cup red wine vinegar
1/4 cup chicken broth
1/4 cup heavy whipping cream
1 tablespoon COLD butter, diced
- In a large skillet, melt butter and avocado oil over medium-high heat.
- Season chicken generously with FRESH ground sea salt and black pepper.
- Brown chicken 4-5 minutes on each side.
- Add garlic and simmer 1 minute more.
- Add vinegars and wines.
- Reduce heat to medium; cook 10-12 minutes, covered until a thermometer reads 165°-170°.
- Bring to a SLOW boil, stirring to loosen browned bits from pan; cook 5-7 minutes or until reduced by half.
- Remove chicken to a serving plate and keep warm.
- Stir in cream, butter and herbs.
- Return to a SLOW boil, cooking 3-5 minutes more or until slightly thickened.
- Serve over chicken and potatoes.
TGIF ~ BLOG 365.101
MARMALADE LIME GLAZED PORK CHOPS ~ BLOG 365.100
The original recipe called for JUST enough glaze to coat one side of the chops. We LOVE the glaze so I doubled the amount because we like to coat both sides of the chops as well as drizzle it over the stuffing!
MARMALADE LIME GLAZED PORK CHOPS
3/4 cup orange marmalade
1 jalapeno pepper, seed and FINELY chopped
Juice of 1 LARGE lime
1 LARGE lime cut into wedges
1 teaspoon FRESH grated ginger root
4 bone-in pork chops or 2 pork sirloin steaks
FRESH ground sea salt and black pepper
Prepared stuffing – homemade or Stove Top
- In a small saucepan whisk together the marmalade, jalapeno, lime juice and ginger, cooking 5-7 minutes over medium heat until marmalade is melted.
- Season pork chops with FRESH ground sea salt and black pepper.
- Heat grill to medium-high.
- Reduce grill heat to medium and lightly oil grates.
- Grill chops 4-8 minutes depending on chop thickness until cooked through to 145.
- Brush with glaze during last few minutes.
- Let rest 5 minutes before serving.
WORDLESS WEDNESDAY ~ BLOG 365.99
OLD FASHIONED WACKY CAKE aka DEPRESSION CAKE or WAR CAKE ~ BLOG 365.98
I’ve been obsessed with WWII lately. I’ve also been researching recipes that were popular during times of rationing and this one caught my attention, so much so that I JUST had to try it! I’m so glad I did – it is completely scrumptiously rich and moist and uses NO eggs, milk or butter! I’ve updated the original ingredients and instructions a bit.
OLD FASHIONED WACKY CAKE aka DEPRESSION CAKE or WAR CAKE
1½ cups flour
1 cup sugar
4 3 tablespoons QUALITY cocoa powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons NEUTRAL oil
1 tablespoon vinegar
2 1 teaspoons PURE vanilla
1 cup water
- Preheat oven to 350°.
- Spray 8×8 inch cake pan with Baker’s Joy.
- Whisk together the flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt in
an 8×8 inch panlarge bowl. - Make 3 wells in the flour mixture.
- Pour the oil into one well, the vinegar into another well, and the vanilla into another well.
- Pour the water over everything.
- Whisk the mixture until cake batter forms.
You may need to use a spatula on the corners of the pan to make sure all of the dry ingredients get mixed in.Spread into prepared cake pan. - Bake for 30–35 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.
- Let cool, slice, and serve.
- Top the cake with powdered sugar, whipped cream, or frosting (chocolate or cream cheese are best).
HAPPY HOMEMAKER MONDAY, RECIPES & MENU week 14 of 2025 ~ BLOG 365.97
Be sure to join Happy Homemaker Monday with our host, Sandra at Diary of a Stay at Home Mom
LAST WEEK RECAPPED
It was a busy week! I was dog sitting, spring cleaning and baking for a bake sale yesterday. During the spring cleaning I was also de-cluttering and trying hard to downsize. 🙂
THOUGHT FOR THE DAY
THE WEATHER OUTSIDE
We had an absolutely beautiful Saturday last week. Compared to the poor people in the south I will not complain. Our cold and rain are both back and spring is once again on hold. My tomato starters are up on the porch as the garden will have to wait a couple more weeks. I did plant a few flowers on Saturday, but they are in raised planters under the eave so I think they’ll be okay this week.
We’re supposed to be in the low 50’s during the day and 30’s at night with lots of rain. It’s only the beginning of April, but our rain fall totals are equal to the yearly average already this year.
TO DO LIST, APPOINTMENTS & PROJECTS
THIS WEEK’S TO DO LIST, PROJECTS & APPOINTMENTS
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DVR/TV TIME
WHAT’S ON THE DVR/TV
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READING TIME
I’m trying to stick with book club, but a few of us are not liking the direction of book choices and may break off on our own. The club chose 2 books this month so that those that read faster have a back up to get through the month.
I read to escape reality most of the time so one of these titles is NOT speaking to me and my girlfriend said the same, so we may not finish that one. 🙁
This month’s choices are The Drowning Woman by Robyn Hardingand First Lie Wins by Ashley Elston
FUNNIES
MENU PLANS
BREAKFAST is always a work in progress for me – it will generally be hot water and a fruit yogurt 😀
4/7 MONDAY
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4/8 TUESDAY
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4/9 WEDNESDAY
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4/10 THURSDAY
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4/11 FRIDAY
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4/12 SATURDAY
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4/13 SUNDAY
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DINNER
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WILTED GREENS with HOT BACON DRESSING
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PORK CHOPS with APPLE STUFFING and HERB GLAZED CARROTS
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CORN/YOYO clean out refrigerator or you’re on your own
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out to a favorite indulgent restaurant TRUE KITCHEN – going to see LITTLE WOMEN with a friend
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MEATBALL SANDWICHES & BROCCOLI SALAD
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SAUCY BAKED CHICKEN and FRIED CORN
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PARMESAN CHICKEN and BROCCOLI |
DESSERT
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FAVORITE PHOTOS FROM THE CAMERA
Friday and Saturday were sunny! Daisy loved laying in the grass for a bit.
INSPIRATIONS
LIFE TIP
HOMEMAKING / COOKING TIP
RECIPES COMING UP THIS WEEK
- WACKY CAKE aka DEPRESSION CAKE
- MARMALADE LIME GLAZED PORK CHOPS
WEEKLY FEATURED PARTY LINKS