Thursday, December 11, 2014

Quick Roasted Potatoes


Even with the very best meal plan in place, real life often intervenes and and that gorgeous but time-consuming meal you had planned gets replaced by a conference call or trip to the pediatrician. That is why it pays to have a few tricks up your sleeve and a few bags of frozen steam-able veggies in your freezer.

My family loves roasted potatoes, but the traditional method takes 45 minutes to an hour. On school nights I need dinner on the table in the shortest amount of time possible and on our busiest nights 45 minutes for a side dish is out of the question. That's where this recipe comes in to play. You can still have the crispy, oven-roasted potatoes you love...in about 20 minutes.

Here is what you'll need:
Fingerling potatoes or new potatoes, about 4oz per person. 4 servings = 1lb of potatoes.
1tbsp olive oil
1tbsp dry parsley
1/4tsp garlic powder, or more to taste
1/4tsp salt
1/4tsp black pepper
non-stick spray
Press and Seal plastic wrap

1. Pre-heat oven to 450 degrees. Clean and rough chop the potatoes into small pieces and place in a large microwave safe bowl. 
2. Toss with olive oil, then add seasonings and mix well until evenly coated with seasonings and oil. I find it easiest to do this with my hands instead of a spoon.
3. Cover bowl with Press and Seal wrap or cling wrap and microwave on high for 7 minutes for 1lb of potatoes. Reduce microwave time for smaller portions.

4. Carefully pour microwaved potatoes into a baking dish sprayed with non-stick spray. Arrange potatoes in one layer and bake for 15 minutes, stirring once half way through cooking to brown potatoes on all sides and prevent them from sticking.

5. After 15 minutes, stir once more, and set oven to broil. Continue cooking on broil for 4-5 minutes, keeping a close eye on your potatoes. You want them browned, not burned.
6. Remove from the oven and taste for "doneness" and season if needed. We had these delicious potatoes with steamed green beans and (bunless) Morning Star Farms Chipotle Black Bean Burgers topped with cheddar cheese.

There you have it. Quick roasted potatoes with slow roasted taste. Enjoy! Feel free to leave comments or suggestions.

Monday, December 8, 2014

Guilt-free Shrimp and Grits




I was raised in the South, but somehow I can't remember a single time that shrimp and grits ever made it onto our dinner table. I can't even remember grits being on the menu at all for that matter. Cream of Wheat, yes. Grits, no. I blame that one on having parents raised far closer to Canada than Mexico. And yes, I said blame because its a shame we weren't eating this more often. Its so good!

This recipe requires you to pay a little more attention than most of my recipes, mostly because of the shrimp. They overcook quickly if you aren't watching what's happening in the pan. However, the extra effort is so worth it. The creamy, cheesy cheddar grits are perfect with the heat of the shrimp and the crispy, salty bacon adds...who am I kidding...its bacon. It makes everything awesome.

Here is what your'll need:
1lb Large or Jumbo shrimp, raw, shelled, de-veined
3/4c quick grits (not instant)
1 14oz can chicken broth
1c water
1/4 tsp black pepper
1/2c sharp cheddar cheese
2 strips of bacon
1/2 a large yellow onion, finely chopped
1/2 a green bell pepper, finely chopped
1 tsp garlic, finely chopped
1/4c fat free half and half
1 tsp Tabasco sauce (optional, omit for non-spicy shrimp and grits)


Here's how to make the recipe:
1. In a sauce pan bring 1c chicken broth and 1c water to boil and whisk in grits and black pepper. Cook according to the package directions.

2. In a large sauté pan over medium heat, fry bacon until crispy. Remove bacon from pan and transfer it to a paper towel, leaving he residual bacon fat in the pan. 

3. Add finely chopped onion to sauté pan and cook until translucent, 3-4 minutes. Add finely chopped bell pepper and garlic and continue to cook until peppers are soft, 2-3 more minutes.

4. Push onions, peppers and garlic to the outer edge of the pan and add shrimp in a single layer in the center of the pan and lightly season with salt and pepper. The shrimp cooks quickly. It only needs about 2 minutes (or less) on each side. You want to cook it until it is no longer pink and translucent, but is still tender.

5. As soon as shrimp is cooked through, lower the heat to simmer and stir in half and half, being sure to scrape up all the tasty bits of bacon and veggies off the bottom of the pan. Add Tabasco sauce, if desired. I loved the spicy kick, but I removed the kid's shrimp from the pan before I added the Tabasco sauce.

6. Turn your attention back to your grits. Give them a good stir. I like my grits to be a little looser, so I ended up stirring in the remaining chicken broth, about 1c of additional broth. Add cheddar cheese and mix well.Continue to stir until cheddar is melted. Season as needed with salt and pepper.

7. Divide grits into serving bowls and top with shrimp and sauce. Serve immediately. Enjoy!

I served ours with a side of zucchini. It is just two rough chopped zucchini sauteed with 1/2tbsp olive oil and 1tsp minced garlic with salt and pepper. Cook over medium heat until tender, about 5-7 min.



I’d love to hear what you thought of the recipe. Please feel free to leave comments!


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Easy Personal Pita Pizzas


"Any pizza is a personal pizza if you try hard and believe in yourself"
- Bill Murray, via Twitter

That quote has always cracked me up, but seriously who doesn't love a pizza catered to what you love? I was always the whiny kid picking the mushrooms and olives off of the supreme pizza while complaining that the residual olive flavor had ruined any hope of a good-tasting piece of pizza. Don't even get me started on picking those things out of spaghetti sauce. I could make a meal last hours if there was an errant vegetable in my sauce. Thankfully I've embraced vegetables as an adult and gotten creative about sneaking them into my kids meals. Its true...learn from the past or be doomed to suffer through the behaviors your children surly inherited from your own olive-hating DNA.

Tonight we went vegetarian with our pizzas, but you could easily add any protein you like: chicken, turkey pepperoni, thinly sliced steak, ground turkey sausage, ham/ bacon or even shrimp. Basically any fully-cooked protein will work. We are a pretty basic bunch so (not so) plain cheese works great for us.

Here's what you'll need per pizza:
1 Joseph's Pita
1/2 tsp olive oil
2-3 shakes of dry garlic powder
2 tbsp marinara or pizza sauce of your choice
2 tsp basil paste or fresh herbs
1/3 cup mozzarella cheese or part-skim mozzarella
1/2 tsp dry parsley
drizzle balsamic glaze
Protein of choice (optional)
Veggies of choice (optional)

Method:
1. Pre-heat oven to 450 degrees.
2. Line a cookie sheet with foil and lay pitas on the sheet without overlapping the edges.
3. Spread olive oil over the pita concentrating on the "crust" edge, then sprinkle crust with garlic powder.
4. Spread marinara sauce and herb paste over the oiled crust.
5. Top with any meats you might be adding and sprinkle cheese evenly over the crust.
6. Sprinkle top of pizza with dry parsley.
7. Slide your cookie sheet in to the oven and lower temperature to 425 degrees.
8. Cook 8-10 minutes or until cheese begins to brown and bubble.
9. Drizzle with balsamic glaze and enjoy.

*Note that if you add vegetables with a higher natural water content, like zucchini and tomatoes, they will affect the crispiness of your crust. I prefer to de-seed fresh tomatoes to cut the moisture content or better yet try sun dried tomatoes.

**If you want to take these to the next level, try thinly slicing fresh mozzarella in place of the shredded cheese and broil on low for the last minute or two of the cooking time. So good!

If you are unfamiliar with any of the ingredients this recipe calls for, here is a little help:






Sunday, November 9, 2014

Perfect Slow Cooker Pork Tenderloin


I'm a big fan of any weekly menu plan that uses the same protein for more than night of dinners to feed our family. This recipe fits the bill perfectly. It tastes great as is as the main protein on your plate or with a few simple additions, its the perfect filling for pork enchiladas, tacos, soups, BBQ sandwiches, Hawaiian pineapple pork, Italian pork sandwiches and whatever else you can dream up. Dang, now I'm thinking how great this would be on a salad with pear, pecans and Gorgonzola cheese. We need more meals in a day...am I wrong?

This recipe is one I often recommend to folks new to food prepping. Mainly because it couldn't be any easier. When I started meal prepping I would often feel overwhelmed by the process because it seemed like too many elements to juggle and keep strait. Was that chicken for lunch or dinner? Did I put the garlic in the right dish? That's the beauty of this recipe. You put the pork tenderloin in the slow cooker, top with the seasonings, add the vegetable broth and forget about it. In fact, leave the lid alone. It is cooking, I promise.

Here is how to make the recipe:

First of all, I highly recommend using a slow cooker liner when you make anything in your slow cooker. It makes clean up a breeze and saves you a lot of soaking and scrubbing especially when you're making chili or dips. Back to the recipe-- Place your pork tenderloin in the slow cooker and liberally salt and pepper the meat then sprinkle evenly with the remaining seasonings.

Add vegetable broth and cover. Cook on low setting for 5-6 hours. Prepare for your house to smell amazing.

Regardless of the size of your tenderloin, you really need a relatively small amount of liquid to cook the meat. As you can see, even fully cooked, there is still plenty of liquid and I feel that cooking the meat in too much liquid changes the texture of the tenderloin in a not-so-great kind of way.

After the tenderloin is fully cooked, remove it from the slow cooker, reserving the cooking liquid. Shred the meat with forks while it is still hot. It should fall apart easily. 

After you've shredded the meat pour 1/4 cup of the cooking liquid over the shredded pork and give it a little stir. You are ready to eat! Serve it up or portion it out for lunches for the week.

And here is the best part. When you are done, just lift out the slow cooker liner and throw it in the trash. Occasionally there is some minimal clean up needed even with the liner, but usually I can just do a quick rinse and its done.


Here's the Recipe: Perfect Slow Cooker Pork Tenderloin
1-2lb pork tenderloin
salt- season liberally
black pepper- season liberally
1/4tsp garlic powder
1/4tsp cumin
1/2tsp dry mustard
1/2tbsp dry parsley
1c vegetable broth

Cook on low 5-6 hours



Monday, October 27, 2014

Creamy Pumpkin Pie Overnight Oats




If you follow me via Instagram, you've probably witnessed firsthand my current obsession with Creamy Pumpkin Pie Overnight Oats. I've been eating them for breakfast for so many days in a row now that I don't even post pictures of it anymore.

Breakfast is absolutely my favorite meal of the day. Sadly, so many of the things that come to mind when we think of amazing breakfast foods are not so good for you. These oats give me that "wow, these are delicious" feeling of eating something warm and satisfying without downing a giant-sized calorie-bomb of a cinnamon roll.

In fact, since I don't want to give these up, I've resorted to eating my other favorites as "breakfast" for lunch and "breakfast" for dinner. I remember as a kid thinking it was such a treat when my mom would come home from work and declare it a Breakfast For Dinner night. It's all just food, right? Eggs for dinner aren't really any different than a chicken breast for breakfast if that's really what sounds good, but those were some magic words in my seven-year-old mind. So that being said...feel free to have some overnight oats for dinner tonight!



Here's the recipe:
1/3c Old Fashioned Oats (not quick or instant oats)
1/2 scoop of Cinnamon or Vanilla Whey protein powder (optional, but recommended. I like About Time Cinnamon Swirl)
1/2tsp ground cinnamon
1tbsp Chia seeds
1/4c low fat cottage cheese
1/4c unsweetened vanilla almond milk (or milk of choice)
1/4tsp vanilla extract
1/4c pumpkin puree
1-2tbsp Maple sryup or sugar-free maple sryup
(Reserved) 1tbsp natural peanut butter or nut butter of choice (top warm oatmeal with peanut butter just before serving)

Mix all ingredients well in a air-tight container and store in refrigerator overnight. In the morning, remove the lid and microwave for 1 minute. Stir thoroughly and microwave for an additional 30 seconds or until the cottage cheese is melted and oatmeal takes on a creamier texture. Top with peanut butter and chow down.

***Quick disclaimer: If cottage cheese is not your thing, you should still give these a try. Once the oatmeal is warm, you'd never know its in there! It makes these oats creamy and packs a good protein and calcium punch.



















I make five servings at a time to last the week. It is just as good the first day as it is the last. Just make sure to choose air-tight containers to keep your oats fresh.

I hope you love this easy, healthy breakfast as much as I do. Its the perfect start to your Fall morning, plus with only 10 minutes of prep involved in making an entire week's worth of healthy breakfasts, you'll have plenty of time left to squeeze in a walk around the block or get a jump start on your meal plan for next week. Enjoy!

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Meal Prep Lunch: Chicken Salad Two Ways



And, wow! It has been entirely too long since I posted. It's been an interesting last year or so since I sat down to write. I became a Barre3 instructor, accepted and quit a job, sent a child to kindergarten and cooked about 1,ooo healthy meals, many of which should have ended up here...and hopefully still will in the not too distant future.

I have been getting quite a few questions lately about meal prepping,mainly from followers of my Instagram account. For me, like I've told so many folks, meal planning and prepping is essential for me. Not only does it keep me sane when our schedule seems so hectic, but it also saves our family money. Going to the store with a plan keeps me from throwing extra food into the cart that we will inevitably toss in the trash. I mean, who among us has not pulled that wilted bag of yellowing and slimy bagged lettuce out of your veggie drawer and thought Dang! I totally forgot I bought that or Man! We should have eaten out one less time this week. It hurts even worse when the "bag of lettuce" is actually an $8 package of out-of-date chicken breasts.

Planning our meals out for the week takes a little effort over the weekend, but because I've made so many meal plans over the past couple of years, we've settled into a comfortable rotation of favorites that work for our family. I like to throw something new in here and there to keep it form getting totally monotonous, but we definitely have meals that just always seem to work. Some newbies make the cut and a whole lot don't. Don't beat yourself up when a meal goes wrong. Two weeks ago I made what was most definitely the nastiest textured chili to ever come out of a crock pot. I can't really even say what went wrong...think chili flavored baby food. Or don't. You probably shouldn't. It was that gross.

But back to why you're here--a meal prep recipe. In the spirit of keeping life simple, here are two of my favorite lunch meal preps. These are my go-to chicken salads. Simple, fresh, healthy and delicious---prep one of these recipes tonight and you'll have lunch for the next week ready and waiting in the fridge. I suggest portioning the salad out into individual containers to keep serving size in-check and ensure that your prep lasts you through the week. Plus, portioning out your servings eliminates excuses. You have a last minute meeting...forgot that dentist appointment? There is no reason to hit the drive thru when you can borrow your kid's lunchbox from last year (the one that obviously will not work for him this year, you know, because it already kept his food cold for an entire school year) throw in an ice pack and take that meal with you. Both of these salads taste great at your kitchen table or in the DMV parking lot.

Hope you enjoy! I'd love to hear your comments and suggestions!


Cran-Apple Chicken Salad:

16 oz of cooked, shredded chicken breast
3/4c plain Greek yogurt (add an additional 1/4c of yogurt if you prefer a creamier salad)
1 tbsp grain mustard or Dijon Mustard (optional)
1 med apple, diced (I prefer Fuji or Honeycrisp)
1 rib of celery, diced
2 tbsp dried cranberries (I prefer Ocean Spray 50% less sugar cranberries)
1oz toasted walnuts, rough chopped
1/4 tsp garlic powder
salt and pepper to taste
Combine all ingredients in a large mixing bowl and mix well. Taste and season with additional salt and pepper, if needed. Serves 4-5.


Sante Fe Chicken Salad:

16oz of cooked, shredded chicken breast
1/4c plain greek yogurt
1/4c light or regular sour cream
1/3c mild chunky salsa
1/2c sweet corn kernels
1/2c black beans
1/2c reduced fat or regular shredded cheddar cheese
1 tsp cumin
1/4 tbsp garlic powder
1/4 tbsp red pepper flakes
1 rib of celery, chopped
a handful of fresh cilantro, de-stemmed and rough chopped
Juice of 1/2 a lime
salt and pepper to taste
Combine all ingredients in a large mixing bowl and mix well. Taste and season with additional salt and pepper, if needed. Serves 4-5.

I like these salads best on a Joseph's pita bread or toasted Ezekiel bread. I find the pitas at Wal-Mart in the deli section. I'm hoping more retailers will begin to carry Joseph's products, but for now its the only place I can find them. Either salad is also great on its own or on a bed of romaine. Enjoy!



Sunday, February 2, 2014

Creamy Lentil and Potato Stew

For the longest time my idea of protein meant one thing... meat. I definitely grew up in a meat and potatoes household. Chicken, ground turkey, ground beef or the occasional steak: one of these was almost always the shining star on our dinner plates. Letting go of that traditional notion of what makes a "meal" is pretty liberating. I rarely set out to plan meatless meals, but they have slowly crept into our dinner rotation and have become some of my very favorites.

This creamy lentil stew has become one of my go-to recipes during this exceptionally snowy winter. It's filled with veggies and packs a protein punch with green lentils and great northern white beans. It is thick, creamy, warm-your-bones comfort food. This stew also works perfectly for meal prep. I like to make this and serve it to my family for dinner, then use the leftovers for lunches or busy weeknights. I hope you love it!

Creamy Lentil Stew:
Begin by warming 2 tbsp of olive oil in a large stock pot. Add your finely chopped yellow onion, carrots, celery and garlic and saute for 6-7 minutes until onions are translucent and carrots and celery begin to soften. Season well with salt and pepper.

Next add your chopped potatoes and continue cooking for 5 more minutes.

Next add chicken broth, herbs, beans, lentils and water to your soup pot and bring to a rolling boil. Continue cooking at a low rolling boil for 10-15 minutes to soften potatoes and lentils.

I like to let the stew simmer for as long as possible --an hour or two-- to let the flavors develop, but if you are short on time, it really only needs to boil/simmer until the veggies and lentils are soft. After potatoes and lentils have softened, remove 2 cups of the soup and transfer it to a blender. **Let the soup cool for several minutes before blending- boiling hot soup will cause excessive steam and could cause your blender lid to fly off your blender and cause a huge mess** Blend the soup until smooth.

Return the blended stew to the pot and stir to combine. This is when your stew will really thicken and become creamy---transforming it from a soup to a stew. I like to continue to simmer the soup for a little while after this point, but you are ready to eat at this point. 

This stew reheats really well and like most stews and soup, I think it tastes even better the second day. I usually garnish mine with dry chili flakes for a little heat. It would also be great garnished with fresh avocado or some crispy crackers. Enjoy and stay warm!

Creamy Lentil Stew
Ingredient List:
2 tbsp olive oil
1 med onion, chopped
4 ribs of celery, chopped
1.5 cups carrots, chopped
3 large or 4 medium red new potatoes, cubbed
2 tbsp or 4 cloves of garlic, finely chopped
4 cups or 32oz of Organic vegetable stock
1 cup water
1 15oz can of Great Northern Beans
1 cup lentils
1.5 tbsp dry parstly
1 tsp dry basil
1/2 tsp cumin
1/2 - 1 tsp Salt, or more to taste
1/2 tsp ground black pepper, or more to taste