8/15/19
2/16/15
Edamame Hummus Crostini
I know it has been some time since my
last post. I recently was hired by a weight management company to work as a
weight loss coach. In that I had to travel for training and work with others to
get the center up and running as well as assist with business development.
On
top of my personal training work, recruiting, my personal life had come to a
standstill. I have only been cooking on
the few days I have had off, IF I had the energy.
Excited to have a 2 day weekend, my first
order was to get my home in order and to make some room in my freezer. I also
wanted to eat as my diet has been less than interesting lately. Most of the
time my lunch has been a small can of tuna and some crackers eaten in my car while making recruiting calls.
I had a bag of edamame in the freezer, so
I decided to make some edamame hummus. Having perused the internet for recipes,
I managed to combine them into a recipe that turned out pretty darn tasty. Admittedly, I was surprised. I wasn’t really
sure edamame and hummus were a good match. It is!
I had planned on eating the hummus with
some vegies and some Naan bread. Once made, I used the slices of ciabatta bread
I had in the fridge, instead and some avocado slices to make edamame crostini.
I didn’t have it for lunch. I also didn’t have if for a snack or for dinner. I
had it for breakfast! What a great, healthy way to start the day.
With St. Patrick
’s Day coming up, you might want to save the recipe and have it with some green
tea (or green beer I suppose) to celebrate. Of course, it is really too good to
wait that long for. Maybe that will be
your second batch.
I hope you will try this. Enjoy.
Edamame
Hummus
Yield:
1 cups
Ingredients:
1
cup frozen shelled edamame
1
garlic clove, peeled
Juice
from 1/2 fresh lemon
1/8
cup tahini (stir well before measuring) More if needed.
1
tbsp extra virgin cold pressed Greek olive oil
2-4
tbsp water,as needed
1/4
to 1/2 pink sea salt, or to taste
1/8
tsp each ground cumin and smoked paprika
Dash
cayenne pepper
Olive
oil for drizzle
For
crostini:
Ciabatta
bread slices
Avocado
slices
Smoked
salt, optional
1. Rinse the edamame and place in a
microwave safe bowl with about 1/8 cup of water. Cover with a paper towel.
Microwave 4-6 minutes, until just cooked.
2. With the motor running on a food
processor, drop in 1 garlic clove to mince. Scrape down bowl.
3. Next, add edamame to the processor and
process until smooth, stopping to scrape down the side of the bowl as
necessary.
4. Add in the lemon juice, tahini, olive
oil and process again until smooth. Add
water to get it to your preferred consistency (soft but not runny) Add the
salt, pepper, cumin and smoked paprika. Pulse to combine.
5. Remove hummus to a lidded bowl.
Drizzle a small amount of olive oil on top. Cover and refrigerate until needed.
Labels:
appetizer,
breakfast,
crostini,
easy recipes,
Edamame,
green food,
healthy meals,
Hummus,
protein,
soy,
vegetarian
9/21/14
Know your passion
I didn’t start out as a “Foodie”. In fact, I paid no attention to cooking until
I was in my mid-teens. I mentioned this in a previous post, but what started
this lifelong interest began with a pineapple upside down cake.
I was about 15 if I recall. Kevin was my “heart throb”. As teenage relationships go, we started our
relationship when I was 13 with a ring from a Cracker Jack box. I can still
recall the green ring around my finger it left.
In any case, Kevin loved pineapple upside down cake. Being the adventurous type (not), I wanted to make him one for his birthday. Armed with a package of Betty Crocker (or was
it Duncan Hines?...Who is Duncan Hines anyway?) pineapple upside down cake mix
and an older brother that was happy to teach me how to break an egg. I baked my first
cake.
Kevin never did eat the cake. He went AWOL for a year….but that is another
story. Somehow in spite of my lack of
knowledge, I managed to hook him and we moved in together when we were in
college.
Hamburger Helper was my friend along with several recipes
from my grandmother (take a little bit of this and a little bit of that) and
some from my mom.
Well that wasn't enough for me so I started cutting out recipes and I haven’t stopped since. I have been cutting them out for 40 years
now.
Have I cooked them all? Not a chance. So why do I do it? As
I grow the collection, I often ask myself that same question.
I have a healthy imagination and thinking
about food nurtures my creative side. Food isn’t just about taste. It includes
all our senses, touch, sight, sound (snap crackle pop) smell all come together
to form our taste preferences.
So how do you know your passion? Well, all I have to do is
look around my home to figure that out. Years ago a guy I was dating came over
and said “Sheila, Sheila, Sheila what is it you want to do in life?”
He looked around my place and commented, “you want to be the
best darn cook ever!” Of course
he
missed the closet full of fitness books and exercise equipment. Now that would
really have confused him!
What is your passion?
This is what my passion looks like to me:
These are recipes I have cooked |
These I haven't yet tried. |
8/28/14
Healthy White Bean Burgers
Being a pescatarian, I have found that I often get
into eating phases. Sometimes my meals are more focused on seafood and then I
change back to a more traditional vegetarian focus. Rarely I go the vegan route
but for me that is experimental.
More recently, I have been in my vegetarian phase.
Over the summer, I was grilling a lot, spending time with friends at the pool.
Now that everyone is busy, I began making portabella burgers on the stove. I
love, love, love them but it was time for a change.
Perusing the internet, I found a recipe in the NY
Times for White Bean Burgers. The recipe was developed by one of my favorite
cookbook authors, Martha Rose Shulman. I have a number of her cookbooks. She
assisted Dean Ornish in developing the diet plan to reverse heart disease so
her recipes are oriented toward optimum health.
White kidney beans (and other beans) are high in dietary fiber, both soluble and insoluble. A 1-cup serving of kidney beans, cooked, meets roughly 45 percent of the Recommended Daily Intake for fiber. Beans are also an excellent source of folate.
White kidney beans (and other beans) are high in dietary fiber, both soluble and insoluble. A 1-cup serving of kidney beans, cooked, meets roughly 45 percent of the Recommended Daily Intake for fiber. Beans are also an excellent source of folate.
As always, I have made changes to the original recipe
to suit my taste. Since I am a single girl these changes included reducing the
serving size. You can go to the original recipe if you prefer to make more http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/12/health/nutrition/12recipehealth.html?_r=0
.
The burgers turned out great. I highly recommend you
form them and refrigerate them so they hold together better on the stove. A
good wide spatula will help you turn the burgers without them breaking apart. I
found they stayed together pretty well though.
I mention tomato slices as a condiment. Since my basil
is growing leaps and bounds and tomatoes are at their best, I used the slices I
had in the fridge which were marinated with basil leaves, slivers of garlic and
a little balsamic vinegar. Regular slices work fine too.
As for the basic recipe, you can experiment with
different combinations to see what best suits your taste. Other options I thought of would be using
dill, lemon pepper and feta or cilantro, jalapeno, cumin topped with low fat
cheddar. Another topping might be sautéed onions, mushrooms and low fat
swiss.
I hope you will try these.
White Bean Burgers
These should be cooked on a flat griddle or pan; don’t
try to grill them on a barbecue.
1 can white
kidney beans, drained and rinsed
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1/2 small onion, finely chopped
Salt and fresh cracked pepper to taste
1-2 large
garlic cloves (to taste), green shoots removed, minced
1/3 cup shredded carrot
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
2 tbl finely chopped parsley
½ (or more if you prefer) tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary
1 teaspoon minced fresh thyme (optional)
1/8 cup panko bread crumbs (I like the seasoned
crumbs)
1 egg, beaten
Freshly ground pepper to taste
Dash Himalayan pink salt
Small ciabatta buns or wholegrain hamburger buns
Condiments of your choice:
Vine ripe tomato slices, Avocado sliced or mashed, Roasted
and sliced green chile (hatch), thin slices of reduced fat cheddar or swiss
cheese, sautéed mushroom slices, tzatziki
(http://preview.tinyurl.com/m5pn5xq)
or sriracha mayonnaise (mix 2 parts low
fat mayonnaise with 1 part sriracha sauce or to taste), pickles.
1. Heat 1 tablespoon of the olive oil in a medium-size
skillet and add the onion. Cook, stirring, until tender, about 5 minutes. Add a
pinch of salt, the garlic and the grated carrot, and continue to cook for
another minute or two, until fragrant and the carrot has softened slightly.
Remove from the heat.
2. In a food processor fitted with the steel blade,
puree the beans with the lemon juice. Transfer to a bowl and stir in the onion
mixture, the parsley, rosemary and thyme , the bread crumbs and the egg. Season
to taste. Shape into patties, ½- to ¾-inch thick. Set on a parchment-covered
baking sheet and cover with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for 1 to 2 hours.
3. Heat the remaining oil in a large, heavy skillet or
on a griddle over medium heat and brown the patties for 4 minutes on each side,
being very careful when you turn them over. An offset spatula works well for
this. Serve on whole grain buns, with tzatziki or sriracha mayonnaise and the
condiments of your choice.
Yield: 3-4 patties depending on the size. I make mine
small
Advance preparation: You can make the patties up to a
day ahead; cover and refrigerate.
My apologies for not providing a photo. I was too hungry to wait for a photo shoot! :)
8/2/14
Grits, not just for southerners anymore.
I grew up in the South and being a Southern girl (y’all), I
love grits. Nutritionally, grits are not
a power house, but most grits you buy today have been fortified to increase the
B Vitamins and Iron. They are a natural source of selenium. One cup of yellow
grits has about 150 calories and 3-4 grams of protein.
Typically if you order grits in a restaurant they are made
in the traditional way, with water.I don’t love grits with water. First, I like
to have some protein at breakfast. Second, grits made with water are just….flavorless.
I do love grits made with milk. The milk adds a creaminess and mouth appeal and
protein too.
One thing I learned from my mother was to treat the grits
like risotto, adding the milk in stages.
It makes for a wonderful creamy texture.
Southern chefs favor the organically grown, stone ground
heirloom grits from Anson Mills in Columbia, SC. I have not tried them as yet, but I suspect
they are the “premium” grits to buy and eat. Emeril, Thomas Keller and Tom Colicchio are all fans.
The grits from Anson Mills http://www.ansonmills.com/products/8 must be soaked overnight and
cooked for up to 90 minutes. I would love to try Anson Mills grits. I can
almost taste the difference in my imagination.
Sadly, I have given in to poor old instant grits due to time
constraints. I also may shortcut the stove top cooking by using the microwave. In that, I feel I really need to trump up the
flavor to make them palatable.
Milk is always the base I use for my grits but I branch out
from there as my moods change. Shrimp
and Grits to me are more of a dinnertime food (breakfast for dinner) so I don’t
make them in the morning.
These are some of the ways I have varied my morning grits.
When cooking grits, I add:
Shredded cheddar cheese, roasted chopped green chiles and
chopped tomato for New Mexican Style
Pieces of goat cheese and Herbs de Provence for French style grits
Feta cheese and sometimes chopped Kalamata olives for Greek grits
Italian is Parmesan
and fresh chopped basil
This week I went to a Parmesan Cutting event at Scardello’s
Cheese shop http://scardellocheese.com/. I brought home a round of Cypress Grove Purple Haze Goat Cheese http://www.cypressgrovechevre.com/our-cheese/fresh-chevre/purple-haze.html#.U9xiY-OJGRM
It is goat cheese with fennel pollen and
lavender. I added some to my morning grits. Deeeelicious!
Other ideas I have thought of or seen online but have not
tried are:
Mascarpone and grits
Black bean and cheddar cheese grits topped with avocado chunks
Goat cheese and garlic grits (thanks Bobby Flay!)
Corn and green chile grits
Fried grits (from cold leftover grits…thank you Mom!)
I am not a meat eater but you can also make your grits with
some ham, green pepper, tomato, mushrooms and cheese, like a country omelet without the egg.
Hmmm and now that I am thinking about it, what about meat
ball, marinara sauce and grits for dinner?
So you see, grits are not just for Southerners anymore. They
are for those of us with a great imagination and the love of variety in our
foods. I hope you will experiment with
your own ideas and make the most of your morning grits. I would love to hear
about your favorites.
4/27/14
Guiness book of records
We did it! We broke the record! http://www.myfoxdfw.com/story/25351252/fox-4-viewers-help-break-a-guiness-world-record-on-shred-day
Shred Day and Feeding the Hungry
Before I moved to
Florida I volunteered often for the North Texas Food Bank. Since my return, I haven’t had the chance to
help them (short of asking for food donations for them during my holiday party), until today.
It may be hard for those of us that have so much and some of
us that struggle with overeating to recognize that hunger does exist here in
the North Texas area, but it does.
Hunger has a different face in the US as compared to third
world countries. Still there are families that struggle to provide adequate
food for their needs. Some that miss meals due to finances and children that
fail to get adequate nutrition due to lack of education or money. More
recently, pets have also been affected by the economic downturn.
The North Texas Food Bank has expanded its programs to meet
the needs of North Texans. Since the economic downturn the need is greater and
they have worked to provide services to make a difference in our community.
I reviewed their present services and was
impressed with how much they have expanded their scope. They provide reduced price
school meals and back packs of food for
kids to take home for the weekend. They distribute cat and dog food
(those that have lost jobs may not have the funds to keep their pets
otherwise) and have programs for seniors as well.
In addition, they offer nutrition programs that target low income people educating
them on how to provide balanced meals for their children. Food distribution is
at the forefront of the role NTFB plays in our community
Today, I participated in a fun event that raised money for
the NTFB. It was Shred Day in conjunction with Comerica Bank, Fox 4 and Iron
Mountain. If you had sensitive documents
that you needed to shred, you could come by the bank, offer a donation of food
or money (or not if you couldn’t manage it) and Iron Mountain would shred your
papers at no cost. We were also vying for the world record in paper shredded,
so there was no limit on the amount of paper people could bring.
I arrived at 7am. The event was to start at 8 but already
there was long line of cars and trucks
waiting. At about 7:45 the flood gates opened. Some had a few boxes or bags of
paper to shred. Others, filled flat beds or U-Haul trucks.
As volunteers we walked from car to car taking their food
donations and placing them in bins for the food bank.
I love this type of event because you really see the best in
people. The donations ranged from 0 to
one can to boxes of food. Monetary donations ranged from the change in the
bottom of someone’s purse to a 500 dollar check and maybe more.
People not only gave donations but often thanked us for
volunteering to help the community. No one was impatient although the line was
long and it was fun seeing people pull up with one hand on the wheel and the
other holding a bag of food out the window for us to take (sometimes with the
car still moving!)
As volunteers we worked together to not only collect the
food but to help each other. At times we
worked as a tag team and sometimes with more than two of us it looked more like
a relay. I was there for 3 hours and we
all agreed 3 hours seemed like 5. We worked hard and my newly healed thumb was
hurting by the time I left and is feeling it now.
Here is the Fox News report and video. http://tinyurl.com/mebtdho
You might see a motley looking blonde tag teaming with
another volunteer to take a food donation. That would be me!
I don’t know how much food was gathered or if they made the world
record but no matter the outcome it was all good. People helping people. It was
a great day!
I hope you will consider donating, food, time or money to
help us help each other. http://web.ntfb.org/page.aspx?pid=272
I have signed up for their next event, Taste of the NFL. http://web.ntfb.org/page.aspx?pid=364
I have worked this event in years past and it was first
rate. I am looking forward to it. Of course, I would love to see you there too whether as a
participant or volunteer. You can smooze with the Cowboy’s and have some great “vittles’
prepared by celebrity chefs, all the while doing your part to feed the hungry.
Labels:
charity,
food,
food bank,
food distribution,
hunger,
hungry,
identity theft,
North Texas,
nutrition,
SNAP
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