
Fall & Autumn
Comfort Food for Cooler Days
18 Recipes
August turns into September, and I notice it first in the kitchen. The harvest vegetables start appearing at the market — the good squash, the heavy tomatoes, the last of the stone fruit. Fall is comfort food season at our place, but it’s also the expensive season — back-to-school, heating bills, the end of cheap summer produce. It’s the time when Nana Ruth’s recipes — the ones built for feeding a family through the cooler months on a real budget — start making sense again.
Nana Ruth used to say that fall was the season that taught you who you really were as a cook. Summer is easy — everything is fresh and ripe and practically cooks itself. But fall asks you to take tough, cheap ingredients and make them tender. These are the recipes we reach for when the days get shorter and the kitchen becomes the heart of the house again.
Soups That Warm the Whole House

Homemade Chicken Noodle Soup
The one that fixes everything — colds, bad days, and the kind of tired that sits in your bones. Nana Ruth’s answer to every ailment.

Creamy Potato Leek Soup
Velvety, warming, and deceptively simple. This is the soup I make when I need the kitchen to feel like a hug.

Slow Cooker Chicken & Wild Rice Soup
Set it in the morning, come home to a house that smells like someone’s been cooking all day. Wild rice, tender chicken, and a creamy broth.

Loaded Potato Soup
The $8 dinner that feeds the whole family — loaded with cheese, bacon, and sour cream. Budget-friendly comfort at its finest.

Easy Tomato Basil Soup
When September’s last tomatoes are too good to waste, this is where they end up. Paired with grilled cheese, it’s the perfect fall lunch.

Minestrone Soup
The soup that uses up everything in the crisper drawer. Thick, hearty, and the kind of meal that costs almost nothing and feeds everyone twice.

Nana Ruth’s Lasagna Soup
All the flavors of lasagna — sausage, ricotta, broken noodles — in a one-pot soup that takes half the effort and none of the layering.

Chicken and Dumpling Soup
Fluffy dumplings floating in rich, herby broth with tender chicken. The kind of bowl that makes October feel like a gift.
Hearty Mains & Casseroles

Grandma’s Church Potluck Casserole
The one she never wrote down, the one everybody asked for. Chicken, rice, and a crispy Ritz cracker top that feeds the whole congregation.

Tater Tot Casserole
Crispy tater tots over seasoned ground beef and melted cheese. The weeknight dinner that the kids request every single week.

Cheesy Baked Potato Casserole
Loaded baked potato flavors in casserole form — sour cream, cheddar, bacon, and chives baked until golden and bubbling.

Slow Cooker Family Chili
The secret ingredient cook-off recipe — rich, smoky, and simmered all day. The chili that settles every argument about who makes it best.

Nana Ruth’s Brown Sugar Meatloaf
The recipe that almost disappeared — a sweet-savory glaze over tender meatloaf that makes the whole kitchen smell like fall.

Simple Roast Chicken
The Sunday dinner that started everything. One chicken, a few herbs, and the oven does the rest. Leftovers become tomorrow’s soup.
Breads & Baking

Cast Iron Skillet Cornbread
Baked in the skillet that’s been in the family longer than I have. Crispy edges, honey butter, and the perfect side for every fall soup.

Hot Honey Skillet Cornbread
Nana Ruth’s cornbread with a spicy-sweet twist. Drizzled with hot honey and jalapeño butter — the upgrade that changes everything.

Easy Banana Bread
The overripe rescue — those brown bananas on the counter become the best thing the house has smelled all week. No mixer needed.
Warm Drinks

Slow Cooker Hot Chocolate
Rich, creamy, and ready for the whole family when they come in from the cold. The slow cooker does the stirring so you don’t have to.
Kitchen Tip
Fall is the season to stock up on root vegetables and dried beans — they’re cheap, they keep forever, and they’re the backbone of every budget-friendly dinner in this collection. A bag of dried beans, a few potatoes, and whatever’s on sale at the market will get you through the week.
These are the recipes that prove skill matters more than spending. A pot of soup from bones and root vegetables. A casserole that stretches one chicken into three meals. Cornbread from a cast iron skillet. Fall at our farmhouse tastes like abundance and anticipation, grounded in recipes that have always worked and cost almost nothing.


