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Canny Canadian Chili



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INGREDIENTS:
1/2 to 1 pound ground beef
1 or 2 cooking onions
1 can of Maple Baked Beans
1 can Romano Beans
1 can Spaghetti Sauce
1 tablespoon chili powder

METHOD:
Brown the ground beef, breaking it into small peices. Finely chop the onion and add it to the ground beef, cook until the onion is transparent. Add the can of spaghetti sauce and deglaze the pan.
If using a large saucepan, add remaining ingredients and heat through. If using a frying pan, transfer the beef mixture to a crockpot, add remaining ingredients and cook on low for an hour or more or on high for about an 30 minutes.

Note:
I also like to add fresh chopped garlic, when we can get it, with the chopped onions.
This recipe is great to put together in the morning, pop into a crockpot and have hot chili ready for dinner when you get home from work.



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Recipes

Appleberry Pie
Apple Butter Crockpot
Applesauce Crockpot
Beans, Dried, Crockpot
Arroz Con Queso
BBQ Fish
Canny Canadian Chili
Chicken & Broccoli Alfredo
Christmas Pudding
Ciambotte or Cabbage Soup
Cornbread
Cucumber Salad
Date Pudding Cake
Fluffy Meatloaf
Giant Oven Pancake
Granny's Upside-Down Cake
Granola Crockpot
Herbed Salmon Bake
Hummus
Lazy Lentil Soup
Lemon Pudding Cake
Lemon Curd
Macaroni Salad
Mincemeat
Mincemeat Squares
Oatcakes
Orange Loaf
Pear Chutney
Pumpkin Muffins
Refried Beans
Spiced Squash
Squash Soup
Sumac Jelly
Tamale Casserole
Yogurt
Zesty Zucchini

Recipes

Appleberry Pie
Apple Butter Crockpot
Applesauce Crockpot
Beans, Dried, Crockpot
Arroz Con Queso
BBQ Fish
Canny Canadian Chili
Chicken & Broccoli Alfredo
Christmas Pudding
Ciambotte or Cabbage Soup
Cornbread
Cucumber Salad
Date Pudding Cake
Fluffy Meatloaf
Giant Oven Pancake
Granny's Upside-Down Cake
Granola Crockpot
Herbed Salmon Bake
Hummus
Lazy Lentil Soup
Lemon Pudding Cake
Lemon Curd
Macaroni Salad
Mincemeat
Mincemeat Squares
Oatcakes
Orange Loaf
Pear Chutney
Pumpkin Muffins
Refried Beans
Spiced Squash
Squash Soup
Sumac Jelly
Tamale Casserole
Yogurt
Zesty Zucchini
 

Page by Page: A Woman's Journal
Photography
Poetry
by Maggie Turner

Canadian Maggie Turner writes and publishes poetry, photography, and a personal journal online. Her work reflects the current way of life in Canada, embracing Canada's past, present, and future in a unique portrayal of everyday life. Maggie's voice is one of the many that actively depict the rich diversity of Canadian culture.

Photography: "a term which comes from the Greek words photos (light) and graphos (drawing). A photograph is made with a camera by exposing film to light in order to create a negative. The negative is then used in the darkroom to print a photograph (positive) onto light-sensitive paper.
Source: University of Arizona Glossary

Poetry: "a form of speech or writing that harmonizes the music of its language with its subject. To read a great poem is to bring out the perfect marriage of its sound and thought in a silent or voiced performance. At least from the time of Aristotle's Poetics, drama was conceived of as a species of poetry."
Source: Creative Studios

Journal: " "Though a journal may be many things - a treasury, a storehouse, a jewelry box, a laboratory, a drafting board, a collector's cabinet, a snapshot album, a history, a travelogue..., a letter to oneself - it has some definable characteristics. It is a record, an entry-book, kept regularly, though not necessarily daily.... Some (entries) will be nearly illegible, written in the dark in the middle of the night.... Not only is it a record for oneself, but of oneself. Every memorable journal, any successful journal, is honest. Nothing sham, phony, false...." (Dorothy Lambert from Ken Macrorie's book, Writing to be Read )
A journal is a way to keep track of your thoughts about what you read... as well as what you did on any given day."
Source: Journal Writing

A Blog is an online journal created by server side software, often hosted by a commercial interest.

"The term "weblog" was coined by Jorn Barger[4] on 17 December 1997. The short form, "blog," was coined by Peter Merholz, who jokingly broke the word weblog into the phrase we blog in the sidebar of his blog Peterme.com in April or May 1999.[5][6][7] Shortly thereafter, Evan Williams at Pyra Labs used "blog" as both a noun and verb ("to blog," meaning "to edit one's weblog or to post to one's weblog") and devised the term "blogger" in connection with Pyra Labs' Blogger product, leading to the popularization of the terms."
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_blogging


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