Skip to main content

Foil Dinners


FOIL DINNERS

1 lb. ground beef, divided
3 potatoes, peeled and cut into 3/4-inch cubes
4 carrots, peeled and sliced julienne
3 cloves garlic, sliced
1 onion, sliced with rings separated
2-3 Tbsp. olive oil
2-3 Tbsp. Ranch dressing mix
salt and pepper
foil, cut into about 15-18" long by the width of the foil tube; you need one section of foil for each dinner you're making

Roll each portion of ground beef into a ball and place onto foil. (Be sure to divide the ground beef into the number of dinners you need. For, example, I need six dinners [one for each member of my family], so I divided my pound of ground beef into six portions. Use more than one pound if you like more meat.) Flatten out the meat, but not too thin. Sprinkle with salt and pepper according to your liking. Layer onions and garlic atop the ground beef.
Place potatoes and carrots in a gallon size ziploc bag. Pour oil and ranch dressing mix into the bag and give it a good shake; make sure the veggies are coated. Place a good amount of potatoes and carrots on top and around the ground beef.
Now's the fun part: folding the foil. Bring the two long sides together in the middle, matching the two edges with the inside part of the foil touching. Roll it down (like you would a brown paper sack) until you lightly touch the insides of the foil pack. Now do the ends. Roll them up. Don't roll them up too tightly because you'll need a little venitlation.
Place a sheet of foil on a cookie sheet; transfer foil dinners to the cookie sheet. Bake in a preheated 350 degree oven for one hour (adjust the cooking time if needed; the smaller the foil dinner the fewer minutes you'll need cooking; check the inside of the meat before serving to be sure it is done, as well as the tenderness of the veggies). Enjoy!

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Pink Day

Today I was sifting through all the clothing and pulling out clothes that were stained and torn, as well as clothing the children had outgrown. There was a huge pile of clothing to sort through, and an ever growing pile of clothes to donate.  At one point, I pulled out a pink t-shirt and asked, "Whose is this?" Someone said it was Maryanne's, which couldn't have been true because it was a size 8. It wasn't her color anyway ... So I tossed it in the donate pile. (In hind sight, I now think my mom gave it to Maryanne for Christmas, and she said that she wasn't sure what size to get for Maryanne. Whoops on my part.) That's when Adam exclaimed that he wanted a pink shirt. Other children chimed in with, "It is his color." (Referring to his Dressing Your Truth type.) Adam bolted toward the donate pile and seized the shirt, promptly pulling it over his head and the collared shirt he had on. (Later he removed the collared shirt, after much cajoling from ...

85+ Books!

It's been almost a year since I started keeping track of all the books I've read.  When it's all in a list ... by date ... it really makes me realize how much I read!  I burned through almost a book a day in the month of January: 24 books total ... the greatest number of books in one month!  After compiling the list, I figured I may as well share it with all my friends!  I've organized them by genre/topic ... and now I realize I need to branch out more!  Books I read multiple times this year have asterisks. REGENCY/HISTORICAL ROMANCE The Apothecary's Daughter, Julie Klassen Edenbrooke*, Julianne Donaldson The Girl in the Gatehouse, Julie Klassen The Heiress of Winterwood, Sarah Ladd The Maid of Fairbourne Hall, Juie Klassen Lady of Milkweed Manor, Julie Klassen Short Straw Bride, Karen Witemeyer The Silent Governess, Julie Klassen The Tutor's Daughter, Julie Klassen CLEAN ROMANCE Bah, Humbug!, Heather Horrocks The Cubicle Next Door*, Siri L....

My Two Teenagers

As personalities come, these two girls are like night and day. Both are silly at times, and both can be serious at times. And yet, that rarely happens at the same time! We have entered the world of teenagers, and it is quite the dramatic world! My oldest daughter is dealing with all the drama that teenagers bring: ostracism, judging, and feeling friendless. My younger teenager is just full of fun dramatics: silly faces and expressions, acting wonky and crazy, and saying that "everyone is my friend, even their mom and dad!" At any rate, I couldn't be more in love with these two. They fight over their littlest sister ("I get to hold her!"  "You've been hogging her all day!"), fight over who spends more time in the shower ("I do NOT spend an hour in the shower!"), and fight over who gets my MacBook ("She always gets to do her school on your computer!"  "But, all my stuff is on there!").  My world would be quite dramatical...