Hello December 9: Cooking Edition

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Wow – the holidays are upon us and there is much activity in my kitchen. I’m glad the oven and stove will be on more because that means I can stand where its warm most of the time but not crank up my heat in our home.

Here is what’s planned for this week:

plates

Chicken Noodle Soup: via Tyler Florence
Smoky Grill Rub: via Southern Living for a gift
Peppermint Divinity Bars – via Southern Living (which I’m so excited to have a subscription for)
Nutella Sea Salt Truffles – via On Sugar Mountain
Chai Truffles – via Southern Living
Chicken Spaghetti – for lunch during our marshmallow making
Salted Caramel Swirled Marshmallows – via Bake or Break
Salted Caramel Sauce – via Brown Eyed Baker
Strawberry Margherita Mini Cupcakes – via A Helicopter Mom (virgin, don’t worry)
Homemade Herbed Salt – via 5$ Dinners
Refried Beans for Taco Tuesday: via Simply Recipes and Camille Styles
Curried Hummus: via Heather’s Dish
Chocolate Pistachio Thumb Print Cookies – via How Sweet It Is for the ARWB Cookie Swap on Friday

Here we go. What are you cooking this week, for the holidays, for gifts, for your family? What recipe are you most excited about?

Creamy Wild Rice Soup

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Creamy Wild Rice Soup

All most people want when it is cold outside and when they are sick is something warm, served in a bowl, eaten with a spoon.  Preferably with some type of broth involved.

Well, it is both cold outside and we are sick inside.  So, all I wanted was a soup.  Since I couldn’t get out to go the store – I had to use what I had.  So, when my husband said, “that’s a keeper!” I was excited!  So, no matter if you are sick, or if it is cold outside, make this soup to warm your hands as you hold a mug or bowl of it (I had mine in one of my husband’s grandmother’s mugs that we have).

Creamy Wild Rice Soup

evoo

1 T unsalted butter

3 carrots, pennied (cut into rounds)

2 celery stalks, diced

2 garlic cloves, minced

1 box beef broth (or chicken, or vegetable)

1 1/2 cups wild rice blend

1 can cream of mushroom soup

1/2 tsp each of sage, rosemary, and oregano

pepper to taste

Heat old and butter in a pan – sauté vegetables.  Pour in broth and bring to a boil.  Add rice and cook according to directions.  (I used slightly less rice to broth ratio that the directions called for because I wanted more liquid in my soup.)  When rice is done, whisk in creamed soup and spices.

If you want – add in diced, cooked chicken as well.

Enjoy!

Breakfast Tacos

posted in: Arkansas, food, Uncategorized | 0

breakfast taco salsa

We don’t own chickens, nor do I ever plan on it.  Might be nice to walk out and get fresh eggs every morning, but I’d rather rely on a company like Great Day Farms eggs – local, natural, gorgeous, and absolutely healthy and delicious!  I heard there company at the AR Women’s Bloggers event here a few months ago – and loved their story, their company, and now go to Wal-Mart to buy my eggs!  If I’m going to feed my family, especially my young boys, I want them to be the best eggs they can be!

My plans starting out Tuesday was to make a different type of taco for taco Tuesday, but with small children, plans change almost immediately.  So, I had delicious eggs in my fridge and opted for a breakfast taco.

What you need:

great day farm eggs

Great Day Farms eggs – I scramble mine mixed with half and half and pepper, with butter for the pan (gives it more flavor) – and salt the eggs when they are almost done cooking

seasoned cooked black beans (I use garlic, cumin, salt, pepper, and some Cuban seasonings)

Rotel

Corn

Sharp cheddar cheese

Flour tortillas

Avocado

salsa

Super yummy, inexpensive, and delicious and healthy!

 

Carrot Raisin Pom Salad

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carrot salad

Real Food.  We are trying to eat more of it.  And what I love about it is you can find so many beautiful colors in the nature that God created.  pomegranates are very beautiful and perfect for the Christmas season

Carrot Raisin Pom Salad

(4-6 servings)

2 1/4 fresh grated carrots (carrots are so much sweeter than the baby carrots)

1/2 cup pom arils

1 honeycrisp apple, diced

1/4 raisins

1/3 craisins

2 T raw honey

2 T raw milk yogurt

Mix all together – serve chilled.

 

Thanksgiving Leftovers: Turkey & Vegetable Soup

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turkey and vegetable soup

Thanksgiving is over.  I still have some cranberry sauce and green bean casserole in my fridge, but now I can say the turkey has been put to good use.  I cooked a turkey breast in the crockpot since there were only 4 of us (and 2 children) for Thanksgiving lunch.  I wanted something simple that wouldn’t give me week’s worth of leftovers (and I have no room in my freezer).

I looked at this soup and decided to change it up somewhat, and came up with this: a simple, healthy soup.

Turkey and Vegetable Soup

(serves 4-6)

1 onion, chopped

1 celery rib, chopped

1 red pepper, diced

garlic (to your liking)

3 cups homemade turkey stock (I just boiled my turkey carcass with 12 cups of water, carrots, and seasonings for 2 hours on medium).

1 1/2 cup chopped turkey

1 cup frozen corn

1 can diced green chilis (small can)

cumin

chili powder

salt

pepper

cheese or salsa for topping

Heat a stock pot on medium and cook vegetables in evoo for about 10 minutes.  Add garlic and green chilis, cook another minute.  Add in stock and corn and seasonings.  Finally add in turkey and bring to a simmer until heated through.  Enjoy with cheese (I liked sharp cheddar on mine with a side of sourdough bread toasted with some unsalted butter on it).

Thanksgiving Menu 2013

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Thanksgiving menu

Thanksgiving – a time to eat, right?  And a time to be grateful!

I always love trying new recipes at big meals – when else are you going to try them?

So, here it what will be on our table come Thursday!  Glad my parents are in town to watch the boys and chop veggies!

For the Turkey: Closet Cooking’s Herb Roasted Turkey Breast

For the Sides:

The Pioneer Woman’s Balsamic Roasted Brussel Sprouts with Cranberries

Green salad

Green Bean Casserole (as a request by my husband)

Black Pepper Buttermilk Biscuits

Carrot Souffle recipe by my friend Lindsay

Dessert:

Joy the Baker’s Sweet Potato Pie (with cool whip of course)

Pesto Tortellini Soup

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Pesto Tortellini Soup

Ask my husband and he will readily tell you that my favorite condiment might just be pesto.  I seldom make it, but I love it on sandwiches, in soups, as pasta sauces.  No doubt amazing goodness from the oil, basil, and pine nuts.  So simple yet completely flavorable!

I started with a recipe from Tracy over at Shutterbean (I love her photography and her recipes, so go check her out if you haven’t).  I knew I had some pesto in the fridge that I needed to use and I know my husband loves soups but needs protein to make it more filling.  That is how I made the soup my own.

Pesto Tortellini Soup

Olive Oil (just swirl in your pan)

1 onion, chopped

1 lb ground turkey (or Italian sausage which would make it better but is not as healthy)

1 1/4 tsp dried oregano

1/2 tsp red pepper flakes

s/p to taste

1 clove garlic, minced

1 box low-sodium chicken broth

1/4 cup pesto (I used Kroger Private Selection brand)

1 can chickpeas, drained (more protein)

1 Bertolli pkg cheese tortellini (or your favorite tortellini or mini ravioli)

1 bag fresh baby spinach

 

Cook onions, garlic, and turkey together until done.  Let drain.  Add the seasonings, broth, pesto, chickpeas and bring to a simmer.  Add back in the turkey and onions and garlic.  Add the tortellini and cook until done.  Then at the very end add your spinach.

Serve with croutons, toasted bread, or parmesan cheese (or all three).

Pumpkin French Toast

posted in: food, Uncategorized | 0

When the husband is gone, its a good idea to tantalize him to come back home if you send him delicious pictures of pumpkin French toast. Really – I did send him a picture and he said I was mean. I’ll make these again for him.
But, these are perfect with a topping of real maple syrup and whipped cream.

Pumpkin French Toast
Pumpkin French Toast

Serves 2-3 (depending on how hungry you are)

6 slices of day old bread (I used Panera’s Honey Wheat)
3 eggs
1/4 cup whole milk
1 1/2 T sugar
1 T light brown sugar
1/2 tsp almond extract
cinnamon and allspice to taste
1/3 cup pumpkin puree
butter to cook with (gives it much more flavor than Pam or others sprays)
syrup, butter, whipped cream for topping

Creatives: Jayme of Holly and Flora (Garden, Beauties, Recipe)

posted in: creatives, food, Vegetables, vegetarian, Women | 1

I love sweet friends.  This girl has been a friend since high school – our cheerleading days – and we got reconnected on FB (that is the blessing of Facebook), then when I went to Denver a few years back we got to hang out and take some beautiful photos, now she is loving her garden and seeing all the beautiful things she can create from it.

What I learned this week about being Creative: I’m not a gardener.  It takes a lot of time.  There are many other interests in my life that take up that time.  But, I can and do enjoy goodies from other people’s gardens.  I talked with Jayme last week and she agreed to come up with a new recipe, show us some of her garden, answer some questions – and hopefully inspire you to live a fresh, local life!  Another way I love this story – is because it started when J was growing up.  Moms/Dads – you have a huge influence on your children in many way.  Don’t neglect the non-spiritual ways you influence your children!

Holly and Flora

1.  How did you begin your creatives lifestyle?
Growing up, every Tuesday night, my mom would conduct “Home Together Nights.”  We would select recipes to reproduce, as a family, and we would laugh, create, and bond together.  My sister and I still make recipes from those memorable evenings, and we are much more adventurous and creative in the kitchen, and in other areas, as a result.  A creative upbringing definitely made it easier to embrace a similar lifestyle as an adult, but having a garden, working within the hospitality and restaurant industries, training as a sommelier, and traveling to different parts of the world have greatly shaped the way that I view my place in the world, as well.
2.  What drives you to continue (especially in a time of convenience)?
As I answer this question, I am up late, tending some stock.  It would be so easy to simply throw away the day’s carrot greens, chicken bones, and onion skins and conveniently purchase stock at the grocery for my next batch of soup.  However, I feel a strong sense of responsibility with the bounty we have been given and the talents we possess; I feel a deep pull to squeeze every gift to the very last drop, reuse it, repurpose it, and share it.  It is intensely rewarding.  Almost always, I save money by doing and making things, myself, and the more adept I become, the more beneficial and far-reaching my deeds become.  I take immense pride knowing that I am capable and knowledgeable to provide for myself and my family.  Creativity applies not only to the artistic realm, but it also applies to the practical realm.
3.  What is the thing you’ve learned most about yourself in this creative journey?
The mess-ups and mistakes are usually the most memorable, educational, and exciting.  I do not always operate on this precept, but I really try to learn from my perceived mishaps.  For example, I try to sketch or write about something I am creating each day.  A lot of times, those messy sketches or scribbled words become foundations for a future project.  If I were to discard them because of their imperfections, I would limit my creative potential.  I tend to be very good at limiting myself and comparing myself and my progress to others.  That aspect of my personality is challenging.  I am trying to let go, unleash what holds me back, and get my blank canvas absolutely messy, both literally and figuratively.
4.  What is your favorite recipe?
My favorite recipe to make is zucchini cake.  You can find my recipe here (link:  http://hollyandflora.com/2012/08/26/theres-no-such-thing-as-too-much-zucchini/).  However, this gardening season, I have had an abundance of eggplant, herbs, and tomatoes, which prompted me to create this recipe for my version of an eggplant tapenade/caponata.  Being in the midst of a kitchen remodel, I have not had access to a stove, dishwasher, proper storage options, or even a sink, which is why I have had to create new recipes, using either a grill or crockpot.
5.  What has been your greatest joy in this creatives process?
I am very much inspired by my garden.  I feel that it feeds almost every area of my life right now.  I am inspired by its color, its movement, its inconsistencies, its demands, its continual state of flux.  I find inspiration from its parallels to our daily lives.  So many of life’s lessons can be likened to a garden.  The seasonal change of a garden mirrors the growth of an individual, but gardening is not just about an individual effort.  I have found deep satisfaction involving myself with the gardening community here in Denver.
Grilled Eggplant “Caponade”
  Eggplants from the Garden
Ingredients:
20 small fairytale eggplants, halved, stems removed (or substitute 2 medium regular eggplants, quartered)
8 medium to large heirloom tomatoes, quartered
1 head of garlic
1 cup extra virgin olive oil
juice of one lemon
1 tablespoon white vinegar
1 bunch green onions, finely chopped, whites and greens together
1/2 cup olives, chopped (mostly Kalamatas, with some mixed green olives)
1/8 cup capers
1/4 cup freshly chopped parsley
1/8 cup freshly chopped basil
1 tablespoon freshly chopped thyme
salt and pepper, to taste
dried chili flakes, to taste
Steps:
1. In a deep saucepan, simmer the tomatoes in 1/2 cup olive oil, over low to medium heat, for about 30 to 40 minutes, or until most of the liquid is gone, and it starts to thicken.  The longer you can draw this process out, the better and more concentrated the taste will be.
2. In another pan, add the peeled and separated garlic cloves to 1/4 cup olive oil.  Simmer over low heat for about 20-25 minutes, or until lightly browned and caramelized.  Remove from heat, set aside to cool, and then chop coarsely.  Do not discard the oil!
3. Pre-heat the grill on high heat, and then turn down to low heat.  Brush the eggplant slices with olive oil and lightly salt.  Grill the fairytale eggplants for two minutes on each side.  If you are using regular eggplants, grill four to five minutes on each side.  Remove from the grill, set aside to cool, and then dice into 1/4 inch pieces.
Grilling Eggplants
4. Once each component has cooled, mix the tomatoes, garlic, and eggplant in a large bowl.  Add the last quarter cup of olive oil, as well as the oil that you reserved from simmering the garlic.
5. Add the lemon juice, vinegar, onions, olives, capers, and herbs to the mixture.  Stir to integrate.
6. Season with salt, pepper, and chili flakes to taste (I used about 1 tablespoon of salt, 1 teaspoon of pepper, and 1/2 teaspoon of chili flakes).
This recipe tastes great the first day, but even better the next, so feel free to prepare in advance.  This recipe yields about four cups and keeps, refrigerated, for a week.  Serve with crostini or grilled bread.  What are some other uses for this recipe?  Serve alongside hummus or crumble in feta or serve on top of baked or grilled salmon and pork tenderloin.
Grilled Eggplant Tapenade
Be on the lookout for spice rubs, spice blends, and notecards all inspired by Jayme’s garden!  And Be Creative!
Eggplants for Everyone

Peanut Butter Chunk Blondies

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The other day I was watching The Chew, the foodie talk show that comes on right during the lunch hour – making this pregnant girl even hungrier!  One of the chefs was making blondies – I thought, hmmm, blondies.  I knew I was going to the store later and just had to pick up a couple of things to make this.  So good – we were inhaling the crumbs (and gave some away to friends here in town).

Adapted from Hersheys, a book that sweet Louisville friends gave me a while back:

Makes 9-12 bars depending on how big you cut the bars (a 9×9 pan)

3/4 cup creamy pb (not all natural)

1/2 stick unsalted butter, softened

1/2 cup brown sugar

1/4 cup sugar

1 egg

2 T milk

1 tsp vanilla

1 cup flour

1/2 tsp baking soda

1/3 tsp salt

1 bag reeces mini cups

Preheat oven to 350 and grease pan.  Cream ingredients peanut butter through vanilla.  Add in dry ingredients. Fold in the reeces mini cups (wrapper-less, how kind are they)!

Bake for about 25-30 minutes until done. Serve and enjoy!