Pages

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Grammy's Apple Crunch

With our weekly deliveries and trips to the farmer's market, we have an abundance of fresh apples and pears. There is nothing better than biting into a freshly picked apple from a local farm. Honeycrisp, Liberties, you name it--we love it! One child likes them peeled, one child likes them whole, and one likes them run through the apple slicer. A sprinkle of cinnamon adds a new flavor to an afternoon snack.
In the Fall and Winter, the only thing better than a fresh, crisp apple, is our favorite apple dessert: the apple crisp. We use Burton's grandmother's recipe as our base; variations are endless.
3 cups delicious apples, sliced thin (any apple will do, or mix types)
1/2 cup sugar mixed with one tablespoon cinnamon
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup flour
1 stick butter, softened to room temperature
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Peel and lice thin 3 cups apples. Put in baking dish and sprinkle with sugar with cinnamon. Cream brown sugar, flour and butter. Spread mixture over top of apples. Bake slowly 40-50 minutes, until crust forms on top.
Variations and notes:
  • Doubles/triples easily but with longer cooking time.
  • May add one cup oats to topping mixture.
  • Add fresh or dried cranberries, raisins, or currants for added flavor.
  • Substitute fresh pears for some of the apples.
  • Mix leftovers with plain oatmeal in the morning for a breakfast treat!
  • Warm butter 12 seconds in microwave to "soften" it.

Kale Salad with Lemon Vinaigrette

I fell in love with raw kale at Leopold’s Cafe in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. This is my imitation of their amazing salad. 

Serves 6

I go easier on the lemon juice than most vinaigrettes call for, because it makes it more wine friendly and you can always add more to taste. Using a Microplane® grater results in soft fluffy cheese that coats the kale well. Another type of grater might require that you use slightly more cheese.

1 bunch Italian or lacinato kale, washed, ribs removed

2 teaspoons freshly squeezed lemon juice

Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper

½ cup olive oil

3 ounces Parmigiano Reggiano, freshly grated

1/3 cup pine nuts, lightly toasted

1/3 cup raisins, optional

Whisk lemon juice, salt and pepper together. Whisk in oil. Roll the kale leaves and cut into very thin strips. Toss kale with vinaigrette. Add cheese and toss again. Plate the kale and sprinkle each with pine nuts and raisins.

Kid's Breakfasts/Smoothies

How do you do it? Feed 1+ children a healthy breakfast before school, work, in addition to getting them dressed, teeth brush, medicine fed, backpacks packed.

It isn't always so smooth around here. My daughter busted me with my mother in law recently by responding to her question, "What do you eat for breakfast?" with "We eat waffles in the car on the way to school." I was mortified. Even though that happens, but is not the norm, I vowed to make a different impression on my children this year. Also, my husband was threatening divorce if we didn't tighten up the morning routine around here. He was in charge of giving the five and six year olds their morning "to-do's": brush teeth and hair, make beds, get dressed, clothes in laundry hamper, pull up in trash, beds made, lights off, downstairs at their stools by 7:20 am and the get to put their initial on the calendar. (Lots of initials in one month=pennies!) I would never have implemented this system (I'm not the systems person, he is!), but I'm reaping the benefits. We are having smoother mornings, and I'm getting to make breakfast with a reasonable amount of time. Here are the favorites so far this year:

I've outlawed strawberries in our house, unless they are organic or seasonal and it is not too often that you can find them in the grocery stores or farmer's markets. My solution is strawberry smoothies made with frozen, organic strawberries, which are very easy to find.

Smoothies:
1 cup vanilla yogurt
1 bag frozen strawberries
splash of apple or orange juice
tablespoon of flax seed (optional)

Pulse in blender and serve!

Options: My way of preserving bananas is to keep a plastic container in the fridge and add sliced bananas at the first sight of brown skin. If I have bananas I add a handful of those and cut down on the strawberries. My friend Elizabeth Smyth adds a handful of spinach or chopped carrot for more nutrients!

Waffle options: I purchased a waffle maker and have been making my own. It really isn't hard and I make the wheat version. Pro: You save on the boxes upon boxes of waffles required to feed a family of five waffles 2x/week. Good for the environment, trips to your backyard recycling bin, and your control of ingredients. If we have waffles for breakfast--the deal is a protein comes with it: smoothie, yogurt, scrambled eggs, organic sausage, or peanut or soy nut butter.

Special breakfasts (usually on the weekends) are pancakes and cinnamon toast. See other blog postings for methods/recipes. The Deal: if the kids are treated to this during the week then there is that protein requirement again. Best with soft scrambled eggs or a quick "juice egg." Coined by our Aunt Liz, "juice egg" means a runny yolk; so over-easy or sunny-side-up fried eggs qualify.

And, we often have the non-original cereal and oatmeal...but when we do, we try and stuff a spoonful of some kind of nut butter or a piece of stick cheese in their mouth before they run to carpool! And, always use unsweetened oats. Even if you use cinnamon-sugar (as we do) and raisins or cranberries to dress it up. Again, you control how much sugar is going in...I've recently been using agave nectar in place of sugar with a touch of cinnamon.

Fruit, fruit, fruit. In our house breakfast is (almost) always served with seasonal fruit. It's apples and pears around here these days and the girls are now old enough to use the slicer and can help with breakfast. Sprinkle with cinnamon for variety.

Finally, one last family law that has been key to our smoother mornings is no individual service. Over the past year I've switched my role from short order cook to head chef. Breakfast is breakfast and if it is not your cup of tea than there is always fruit. The end! It has worked wonders around here--I should have done it when my kids were younger.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Trader Joe's Fast Food

In a pinch, like tonight, when I swing through the door at 5:45 and don't have a thing planned, I resort to some healthy (and some not so healthy) pantry meals. Here are my favorite Trader Joe's fast food picks:

Chicken or frozen shrimp served with Indian Masala Simmer Sauce or Indian Spinach Sauce add some frozen or fresh spinach if you have it! My sister Ashley likes their Thai sauce (although I haven't tried it).

Frozen chicken tamales served with corn chips and guacamole

Canned turkey chili served over corn chips and shredded cheddar, pinch of cilantro and dab of sour cream if you have those things on hand. (Or, next time you make chili be sure and freeze in small batches and use in the same way).

Their frozen bags of brown rice are great to have on hand.

Love making pizza with the kids:
Wheat crust with very little tomato sauce, shredded mozzarella. Top with leftover sauteed veggies from another night. Mozzarella and prosciutto on wheat. Serve with spinach or arugula salad with simple lemon dressing.

Before I had chicken breasts delivered from our local farms I bought their frozen chicken breasts and cooked them in their pre-made sauces. This worked really well on work nights!

Cream of tomato soup for the kids and adults with cheese toast makes an awesome fast food. Throw in some of their broccoli in a bag steamed in the microwave with a little butter and your set!

Scrambled eggs in their pita bread or wheat tortillas with a side of veggies are excellent. Best supermarket eggs in town!

Happy Trading!

Fresh Tomato Tart

Along with every other fresh food lover, September means farmer's market fever. Even with arms full of goods and and hands locked with three young children, when I've left the stroller at home and it is not possible to carry one more thing, I spot one vendor who still has a few heirloom tomatoes and stop. Even though there is a chill in the air, and I've tired of my many many favorite fresh summer tomato treats--no-cook tomato sauce, tomato-squash-parmesan bake, and my all time favorite--a tomato sandwich, a shared love I had with my father in law, Burton White, Jr., I still can't resist. I throw a few (or dozen) into the top of one of my bags and head home.

A fresh tomato tart is the perfect answer--warm but still preserves the freshness of the tomatoes. Serve with a green salad (or warm dressing over greens) and you have the makings of a fantastic meat-free meal.

Yield: 8-10 servings

TART:
1 1/4 cups flour
1 T sugar
1/4 t salt
1/2 cup (1 stick) chilled unsalted butter, cut into 8 pieces
2 T cold water

OR, substitute pre-made pie shell (Whole Foods has gluten-free pie shells)

FILLING:
8 ounces Shredded Mozzarella Cheese (good quality)
2 T chopped, fresh basil leaves
4-5 ripe Roma tomatoes, or 2-3 heirloom farmer's market tomatoes, cut into 1/4" slices
1/2 t salt
1/4 t pepper
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
3-5 small basil leaves for garnish

PIE SHELL
Combine flour, sugar, and 1/4 teaspoon salt in a food processor. Add the butter. Pulse until the mixture resembles dry oats. Add 1 tablespoon water and pulse for a few seconds. Add the remaining 1 tablespoon water and pulse 3-4 times. Place the dough in a bowl and form into a ball. Cover and chill for 30 minutes. Place the dough on a floured surface. Roll the dough into an 11-inch circle. Fit the dough into a 10 inch tart pan. Arrange the cheese over the dough and sprinkle with the two tablespoons of basil. Arrange the tomato slices on top. SPrinkle with 1/2 teaspoon salt and pepper and drizzle with the olive oil. Bake at 400 degrees for 30-40 minutes or until the crust is golden brown. Garnish with basil leaves. Serve hot or at room temperature.

NOTES:

This is best with farmers' market tomatoes but if you must get a summer fix in the winter, you could use some Roma tomatoes, the final result will not have as much flavor but may satisfy the craving.