Today I went out into my garden and picked a large yellow zucchini squash and a handful of peas. Yesterday I went to the farmers market and bought a bag of skinny green beans and a red onion.
Here is my recipe:
Pad of unsalted butter
Two handfuls of Green beans
Handful of Peas
Clove of garlic
Thin slices of onion
Salt and pepper
Boil a pot of water. Submerge beans, peas, and squash for three minutes. Scoop out and submerge in ice water. Empty hot water and melt the butter. Add the onion and saute until soft. Add the veggies and salt and pepper to taste. I like to grate the garlic over the pot and add the 'zest'. Sauté.
Enjoy.
Namaste
Natasha
I love to cook for my family and friends. I try to make all my choices healthy and natural. I want a place to put down my thoughts on food, feeding kids and to share what I create.
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Friday, July 13, 2012
Dinner in China
Dinner was really good in China tonight. We have a friend who lives 30 minutes away and says we live in China. I guess Patrick invited him to dinner and he turned us down because we live "in China". Well let me tell you it was really good "Chinese" food. You missed out Max! :) There is always next time.
I made Portobello summer squash lasagna. I found the recipe on pinterest. You can find it here. I didn't put as much cheese. In fact I put probably half the cheese. The recipe called for a layer of mozzarella and Parmesan for each layer. I only did that on the top. I also half baked it around 3 pm. Then finished it before dinner. It worked great and was super yummy and best of all vegetarian!!! I love cooking vegetarian meals. They just don't have that heavy feel to them after you finish. This is a really bad picture of it because I only decided to take a picture last minute once the dish was already cold. :/. Sorry.
Anyhow, just an update on my dinner. What did you eat tonight? :)
Side note: my garden is doing awesome even for starting so late. Here are some pictures of my tomato plant, pepper plants, corn and yellow squash. Tomato salads are days away.
I made Portobello summer squash lasagna. I found the recipe on pinterest. You can find it here. I didn't put as much cheese. In fact I put probably half the cheese. The recipe called for a layer of mozzarella and Parmesan for each layer. I only did that on the top. I also half baked it around 3 pm. Then finished it before dinner. It worked great and was super yummy and best of all vegetarian!!! I love cooking vegetarian meals. They just don't have that heavy feel to them after you finish. This is a really bad picture of it because I only decided to take a picture last minute once the dish was already cold. :/. Sorry.
Anyhow, just an update on my dinner. What did you eat tonight? :)
Side note: my garden is doing awesome even for starting so late. Here are some pictures of my tomato plant, pepper plants, corn and yellow squash. Tomato salads are days away.
Namaste
Natasha
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
107 degrees
Okay. The other day it reached 107 degrees. HOT. It hasn't been that hot in Idaho on that date for 20 years, or so they said on the news. It has been over 100 for the last 5 days. It is a dry heat so more tolerable than humid heat, at least for me. We have been hot and wishing we had a pool. An in ground nice pool. For now our blow up pool will have to do. I still don't get in but London loves it. Pure torture is when I have to sit in the sun and watch while London swims in a nice in ground pool during lessons at the hottest time of the day, 4:30. Bleh. It is then that I have little pools of sweat accumulating in those little spots on my body. Oh and nice arm pit sweat too. Pure torture! As so many people I know are into watermelon right now, we are too. It is the time of year when mass quantities of watermelon are sold. We were going to grow watermelon this year but got a late start. On a side note, I picked my first red tomato yesterday! Super stoked about that and the millions more to come. Back to watermelon. I like to make it into a drink but this time I decided to cut some up and to freeze some on Popsicle sticks. If you know me, you know my obsession with Popsicles. It has passed on to London and her friends that come to play. I get into so much trouble if I don't have any made. So I sliced some melon and placed sticks into them. Placed them on baking sheets lined with wax paper and stuck them in the freezer.
So easy peasy. No molds or pureeing. Girls came over, melon was frozen and they were stoked! Lucca was too. Then they jumped in the blow up pool. In a while it's time for torture mom time but for now I'll stick my feet in and cool off.
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Watermelon before freezing |
So easy peasy. No molds or pureeing. Girls came over, melon was frozen and they were stoked! Lucca was too. Then they jumped in the blow up pool. In a while it's time for torture mom time but for now I'll stick my feet in and cool off.
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Lucca loved it too! |
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London enjoying her melon. |
Namaste!
Natasha
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Dehydrating
Some days I don't drink enough water and I feel dehydrated. No silly, that's not what this post is about! It's about playing with my friend Kerry's dehydrator, and fruit of course! I know I said I wasn't going to go on about cherries anymore but I still had some in the fridge and I had to do something before they went bad. I even made more pop tarts. My neighbor and friend Kerry mentioned that she had a dehydrator in her pantry. I asked her if I could play with it and she so nicely said yes. I have had a dehydrator on my wish list of some time now, at least 2 years. I've researched them and forgot and researched them and forgot and the cycle goes on.
Fast forward to yesterday and I got the dehydrator from my friend and started to use it. I got to work pitting the rest of the cherries. After I pitted the cherries I pureed some raspberries, that I picked, strawberries that I bought and cherries that I, well you know the answer to that. I also wanted to try my hand at fruit leather. I looked up how long to dehydrate for and the answers varied tremendously. One site even said 90-100 hours for dehydrating cherries!! That's a LONG time! Someone else's blog said 8 hours. So I figured I would wait until morning and see how long it took. That way they wouldn't finish in the night and then keep going until morning and I wouldn't wake to ashes. :/ That wouldn't be very tasty. Well I put the puree on the special mats and I think I will need to try my hand at leather another time. This batch didn't turn out well. Some of it did. I didn't make sure it was all even thickness. So some parts of the leather were too dry and others too moist. I couldn't peel half of it off and some was still mushy. I did get some and the strips that I did get off were tasty. In the future I will try it again so that I can get good at it. Maybe when I get my own machine? (I hope my husband is reading this although he already bought my birthday present. Maybe anniversary? hint hint) Did I mention I love him? A lot? :)
This morning I halved the pitted cherries and placed them skin side down on the trays. I turned on the machine and let it go and looked at the clock, 8:30 am. At around 5 pm was when I finally liked the texture of some of the cherries. Some where done and others needed more time. I took the ones that were done out and let the others keep going. I think they are finally all done, it's 9:00 at night now. So I'd say anywhere from 8-12 hours for all my cherries. (Some were fatter than others.) Now, I have not too many but some delicious dried sweet cherries. I am going to put these into my granola bars right away. If I have more left over I think we will just eat them as snacks. Maybe if I have my dehydrator by next cherry season, ahem!, I will be able to dehydrate a bunch more and then we will make them last and I will figure out the best way for us to store dried cherries. For now, I'll just gobble them up and I bet both kids and the husband will help. (I'll be out by tomorrow night!)
Namaste!
Fast forward to yesterday and I got the dehydrator from my friend and started to use it. I got to work pitting the rest of the cherries. After I pitted the cherries I pureed some raspberries, that I picked, strawberries that I bought and cherries that I, well you know the answer to that. I also wanted to try my hand at fruit leather. I looked up how long to dehydrate for and the answers varied tremendously. One site even said 90-100 hours for dehydrating cherries!! That's a LONG time! Someone else's blog said 8 hours. So I figured I would wait until morning and see how long it took. That way they wouldn't finish in the night and then keep going until morning and I wouldn't wake to ashes. :/ That wouldn't be very tasty. Well I put the puree on the special mats and I think I will need to try my hand at leather another time. This batch didn't turn out well. Some of it did. I didn't make sure it was all even thickness. So some parts of the leather were too dry and others too moist. I couldn't peel half of it off and some was still mushy. I did get some and the strips that I did get off were tasty. In the future I will try it again so that I can get good at it. Maybe when I get my own machine? (I hope my husband is reading this although he already bought my birthday present. Maybe anniversary? hint hint) Did I mention I love him? A lot? :)
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The berries before puree. |
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The fruit leather dehydrating. (I did get a picture of the actual leather but on my other camera. It's getting late, so they will have to wait.) |
This morning I halved the pitted cherries and placed them skin side down on the trays. I turned on the machine and let it go and looked at the clock, 8:30 am. At around 5 pm was when I finally liked the texture of some of the cherries. Some where done and others needed more time. I took the ones that were done out and let the others keep going. I think they are finally all done, it's 9:00 at night now. So I'd say anywhere from 8-12 hours for all my cherries. (Some were fatter than others.) Now, I have not too many but some delicious dried sweet cherries. I am going to put these into my granola bars right away. If I have more left over I think we will just eat them as snacks. Maybe if I have my dehydrator by next cherry season, ahem!, I will be able to dehydrate a bunch more and then we will make them last and I will figure out the best way for us to store dried cherries. For now, I'll just gobble them up and I bet both kids and the husband will help. (I'll be out by tomorrow night!)
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The pitted cherries before dehydration. |
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During dehydration. |
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Finished product in a bowl 1/4 the size of the original blue bowl. Yummy! |
Namaste!
Monday, June 18, 2012
Cherry Mania
I love pop tarts, but hate how horrible the store bought kind are for your health as you might remember, I blogged about it a couple years back. I even gave you a recipe for them that I got off of Smitten Kitchen's blog. I made some chocolate ones. Well this time I made cherry pop tarts. Not only did I make cherry pop tarts that were so so so so good but they are soy, dairy and egg free! (I am amazing!) ;) If you have been following me I was on a very restrictive diet for the baby and am now able to eat anything. However, I still am trying to avoid most dairy and like to substitute to make things healthier even more than I did before. Today I decided to play around with an already fabulous recipe and try to change it. Here is my new recipe.
Soy, Dairy and Egg Free Pop Tarts
Jam Filling:
3/4 cup jam
1 tablespoon cornstarch plus 1 tablespoon cold water mixed (TIP: cornstarch and flour mix better with cold water as opposed to hot.)
Put both jam and cornstarch water mixture into pot over medium heat. Bring to boil and let simmer for a few minutes stirring until thickened. Turn off heat and let cool.
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The jam with the cornstarch before mixing. |
Dough:
2 cups flour
1 tbsp sugar
1 tsp salt
1 cup Earth's Balance soy free butter substitute (Butter if you don't care about being soy/dairy free)
1 tbsp ground flax seed mixed with three tablespoons water
2 tablespoons dairy free milk (I used vanilla almond milk)
In a small bowl mix the ground flax seed meal with the 3 tbsp water and let sit.
In a mixing bowl combine flour, sugar and salt. Add butter substitute or butter cut into small pats. Mush with hands until dough is crumbly but sticks together when squeezed. Now add the flax seed meal and milk. Mix together with a wooden spoon. If your kitchen is warm place the dough in plastic wrap into the fridge to cool it off.
When ready roll out dough and cut into desired shapes. I used a small Ikea bowl to make the shape I wanted. You could do circles or rectangles too. Place one cut shape onto your lightly greased baking sheet. Because I was doing egg free, using my finger I dabbed a bit of water all around on the edge of the dough. Place a dollop or two of jam in the middle. Place another piece of dough on top and seal the edges together. Using a fork, poke some holes onto the top to let the steam rise out while baking. You can crease your edges or not.
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Place in fridge and preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Once preheated take the pop tarts out and bake for 20 -25 minutes. Take out and PLEASE wait to bite into one. It will be soooooo tempting to just take a big bite, but then your mouth will be on fire and you will end up either burning your esophagus, because you swallowed so fast, or spitting out a perfectly good piece of pop tart. So wait, and then you can enjoy the entire tart.
London and I enjoyed these and we agreed they tasted like personal cherry pies. So yummy. And remember if you only want to bake a few you can freeze the rest, pre-made but not baked, in between wax paper and in a plastic bag. Then when you want one or two you can take them out of the freezer and place into the oven to bake. Or bake them all, place them on a plate and watch them disappear faster than it takes you to wash all the dishes and clean the counters off. Freeze them, they'll last longer. :)
(Off the topic of pop tarts, tonight for dinner I made pork chops. I used a red wine as the liquid and some cut up cherries and it came out divine. One of the many uses for cherries.)
I think I am done blogging about cherries. What will my next topic be about? Stay tuned!
Namaste
Natasha
Friday, June 15, 2012
Cherry Rhubarb Crisp
First of all we had to take a trip to Target to buy a cherry pitter. I saw ways I could do it without this handy device but I figured I would spend the $12. on a pitter that got good reviews, OXO brand, since I have so many cherries to pit. This is the coolest device! I love a good kitchen gadget and this one works like a charm. London and I had fun pitting some cherries just to eat this afternoon. She thought the pitter was "awesome".
For my first cherry recipe I followed a recipe I found on twopeasandtheirpod.com. I followed it almost exactly except I added vanilla to both the crumble topping and the cherry rhubarb filling. I can tell you this, the topping is excellent but the filling was too tart for my liking. (I ate my serving anyways, all of it.) If I were to make this combination again I would add sugar to the filling. But I think in a few days I will try a crisp again but only cherry.
3 cups chopped cherries
2 cups chopped rhubarb
1 tbsp cornstarch
1 tsp vanilla
2 tbsp flour
1 cup old fashioned rolled oats
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp salt
4 tbsp unsalted butter cut into small bits
1 tbsp honey
1/2 tsp vanilla
Pre-heat oven to 375. Prepare an 8 x 8 pan or similar sized pan. In one bowl mix cherries, rhubarb, cornstarch and vanilla. Set aside. In a new bowl combine oats, flour, cinnamon and salt. Add butter bits and mix by hand until crumbly. Then add honey and vanilla. Stir with a wooden spoon. Pour cherry mixture into pan and then top with oat topping. Place in oven for about 30 minutes. Until the top is golden and the cherry rhubarb filling is bubbly red. :) Eat warm plain or with ice cream. We ate it plain.
Like I said before, for me it was tart but London ate it up and said it wasn't tart but perfect. She can be sweet at times. Oh and my baby boy is the best! He is an avid reader at 13 months and will drop any tantrum if you offer him a book. I'm serious. So I wanted to bake. I plopped him down in front of his book collection and kept checking back only to find him in the same position. Love this baby!
Tomorrow I will make another cherry recipe. I think it will be another sweet one but I am thinking on Monday we will try a savory cherry recipe. Hmmmm, did I mention that a few weeks ago I won 10 pounds of organic pork? Stay tuned!
Namaste!
For my first cherry recipe I followed a recipe I found on twopeasandtheirpod.com. I followed it almost exactly except I added vanilla to both the crumble topping and the cherry rhubarb filling. I can tell you this, the topping is excellent but the filling was too tart for my liking. (I ate my serving anyways, all of it.) If I were to make this combination again I would add sugar to the filling. But I think in a few days I will try a crisp again but only cherry.
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The cherry pitter in action. The only sad part is that it pops out a tiny bit of cherry on the other end that had I put that cherry in my mouth would end up in my tummy instead of the pit jar. : / |
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The pit jar, with tiny bits of good yummy cherry in it. |
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The pitted cherries |
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Chopped up cherries! |
3 cups chopped cherries
2 cups chopped rhubarb
1 tbsp cornstarch
1 tsp vanilla
2 tbsp flour
1 cup old fashioned rolled oats
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp salt
4 tbsp unsalted butter cut into small bits
1 tbsp honey
1/2 tsp vanilla
Pre-heat oven to 375. Prepare an 8 x 8 pan or similar sized pan. In one bowl mix cherries, rhubarb, cornstarch and vanilla. Set aside. In a new bowl combine oats, flour, cinnamon and salt. Add butter bits and mix by hand until crumbly. Then add honey and vanilla. Stir with a wooden spoon. Pour cherry mixture into pan and then top with oat topping. Place in oven for about 30 minutes. Until the top is golden and the cherry rhubarb filling is bubbly red. :) Eat warm plain or with ice cream. We ate it plain.
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Finished crisp. |
Like I said before, for me it was tart but London ate it up and said it wasn't tart but perfect. She can be sweet at times. Oh and my baby boy is the best! He is an avid reader at 13 months and will drop any tantrum if you offer him a book. I'm serious. So I wanted to bake. I plopped him down in front of his book collection and kept checking back only to find him in the same position. Love this baby!
Tomorrow I will make another cherry recipe. I think it will be another sweet one but I am thinking on Monday we will try a savory cherry recipe. Hmmmm, did I mention that a few weeks ago I won 10 pounds of organic pork? Stay tuned!
Namaste!
Thursday, June 14, 2012
It's Raining Cherries!
I am so so lucky to live in Idaho. (I never in a million years would have thought that statement would have come out of my mouth but it just did.) When my parents moved to St. Croix in the USVI my Dad told me that in his mind he was going to give it 5 years. If after that they didn't like it they would move. At 5 years he liked it and didn't hate it so they decided to give it 5 more years. After those 10 years he said he was stuck. He loved it so much he never wanted to move away. When Patrick and I moved to Idaho he gave me that advice, give it 5 years. Well we are now on 6 and I would have to say that at year 5 something magical happened. I realized that I had made friends, discovered places that I love to eat and frequent, we had two children that have friends, well the older one does at least, and I have decided I really like Idaho. :/ (Still can't believe that is coming out of my mouth! I'm freaking out a bit as I write this, really!) Anyways aside from the freak out going on right now, I do, I really like it here. Part of this is because I've moved to Eagle and into an awesome neighborhood. We always lived in West Boise. I liked it okay. Actually I was pretty miserable. I was begging Patrick to let us move, hoping he would want to move to an island that has a lot of mosquitos that leave me alone and bite the hell out of him. At one point he was seriously considering it. He even interviewed at some jobs and was offered one. But life changed in a big way and we decided to stay put. We moved to Eagle and magic happened. I love it here. A simple change in scenery and I was hooked. Eagle is close enough to downtown Boise but far enough away to feel more country. The downtown is quaint and the library only 10 minutes away by bike. The neighborhood has lakes and ducks and geese, there is even a resident beaver that they are trying to get rid of but we've been lucky enough to spot it. London can fish in the lakes, catch and release and we can bike to our hearts content, which is never enough for Lucca. Even better is that Emmett, Idaho is only 25 minutes away. What is in Emmett you may ask? Orchards of course!
Cherries are in season. In fact the orchard just opened on Wednesday for u-pick cherries. I couldn't pass up the opportunity to pay $1.05 per pound for cherries. (At the store they range from $2.98 - $4.98 per pound. I know because I bought some two weeks ago and almost fell to the floor when I saw the total.) So I got London super excited and used the opportunity to re-teach pollination to her. This helps her to also understand why we should be kind to bees seeing that they help our garden grow. (Wasps are another story.) Off we went, leaving the house at 9:30 am to beat the heat and pick some cherries!
A few hours and a picnic later, we were done. We took our time, Lucca strapped to my back made the picking slow and we both had to stick to the lower branches which was actually just fine for us. As is the case with most children, London ate more that she picked, well maybe it was a draw. Either way she had a blast, I had a blast and Lucca enjoyed my back. No he liked it. We played peek a boo and stuff like that.
At this moment in my extra fridge in the garage, which we were just about to unplug since we've gone through all our organic beef, is twelve, 12!, pounds of cherries. I guess we picked enough. I'm not sure yet if we picked enough but I will soon find out. Tomorrow I am going to buy a cherry pitter and get to work. What is in the works? Well you will have to tune in to find out. I promise I will post more. I have some things planned and guess what they involve? You guessed it! Cherries!!
Namaste!
Tyler's Rocky Point Orchard in Emmett Idaho Cherries, Apricots, Apples and Plums (We will be going back for Apricots.) |
A few hours and a picnic later, we were done. We took our time, Lucca strapped to my back made the picking slow and we both had to stick to the lower branches which was actually just fine for us. As is the case with most children, London ate more that she picked, well maybe it was a draw. Either way she had a blast, I had a blast and Lucca enjoyed my back. No he liked it. We played peek a boo and stuff like that.
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The Cherries were pulling the branches down so far that some were touching the ground. Easy picking for a 5 year old. |
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London picking, she either put it in the cup "for Daddy" or ate it. Not sure which but both are probable. |
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Trying to get a portrait of Lucca on my back by myself is hard. London was too busy eating, I mean picking, to help. (Where did her helping spirit go?!) |
At this moment in my extra fridge in the garage, which we were just about to unplug since we've gone through all our organic beef, is twelve, 12!, pounds of cherries. I guess we picked enough. I'm not sure yet if we picked enough but I will soon find out. Tomorrow I am going to buy a cherry pitter and get to work. What is in the works? Well you will have to tune in to find out. I promise I will post more. I have some things planned and guess what they involve? You guessed it! Cherries!!
Namaste!
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