Showing posts with label foodie fun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foodie fun. Show all posts

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Spring Cooking Grocery List


Did you know that March is National Nutrition Month? Now that we are nearly through the month, I happened to learn that this week.

I plan special events and work with donor membership groups at a large pediatric hospital here in Dallas. One part of my job is working with one of these membership groups, The Children's Trust, filled with over 500 individuals, predominately moms and dads with young kids. Each year they have an Education Event but this year we got to change it up - instead of a luncheon or evening reception with a clinical physician and hot topic, we are involving their kiddos for a family event, what I call Healthy Choices, Healthy Family. We will have a clinical nutritionist, along with two fabulous executive chefs that will join us and walk through everything from cooking demonstrations, gluten-free diets to how to involve your kids in the grocery planning/shopping so that they are excited about the food. The more interaction they have with it, the more comfortable they become trying it.

The event is this Sunday, and conveniently falls during this celebrated month of nutrition! In my preparation for it, I've been reading through several helpful handouts, including a list of fresh produce by season. I decided since that pertains to everyone, I would share it with you as we move into April and fresh Spring produce.

Fresh Produce Grocery List for the Spring:
  • Apples
  • Asparagus
  • Artichokes
  • Arugula
  • Avocados
  • Bananas
  • Bell Peppers
  • Broccoli
  • Carrots
  • Green Onions
  • Green Peas
  • Lettuce
  • Pears
  • Pineapple
  • Spinach
  • Strawberries 
  • Sweet Onions
  • Valencia Oranges
So whatcha waiting for? Go shop and enjoy the fresh seasonal tastes!

    Wednesday, February 29, 2012

    The Rule of Thumb


    In a Central Market class last year, Mr. Max and I learned one of the most helpful tricks when it comes to cooking meat. As you may or may not have noticed, as soon as you stick a thermometer or a knife in to test meat, juices ooze out. If you pop it back in because it has not reached your desired level of doneness, it actually becomes tougher than it would have been before.

    To combat this, we learned a literal Rule of Thumb for cooking meats. For this exercise, you will refer to the patch of your palm, directly below your thumb. You will compare each thumb-to-finger firmness to the feel of your meat when you press on it after cooking. Let's get started!

    For rare (steak only), the meat should have the same feel of your thumb pressed to your pointer finger. Make the "okay" sign and press the thumb pad to feel the level of firmness.
     

    For medium-rare (steak only), the meat should have the same feel of your thumb pressed to your middle finger. Press the thumb pad to feel the level of firmness.
     

    For medium-well (for steak, fish and now pork is reported to be safe to consume with a hint of pink), the meat should have the same feel of your thumb pressed to your ring finger. Press the thumb pad to feel the level of firmness.
     

    For well-done (for steak, fish and chicken), the meat should have the same feel of your thumb pressed against your pinkie finger. Make a number three sign and press the thumb pad to feel the level of firmness.
     

    After doing this exercise, did you notice the firmness increase as you switched to each finger? Use this trick from now on to check your meat without compromising the final product by puncturing it with a meat thermometer or knife. We've relied on this method for a year now, resulting in 100% accuracy each time!

    Thursday, February 23, 2012

    Fresh and Fabulous!


    This weekend, my little supper club group travels down to Austin to visit Greer! Since her Dallas departure last fall, Meredith, Amy and myself have been conspiring a Hill-Country weekend getaway to visit and this weekend could not be more perfect. Unnaturally warm again, we are going to spend the last weekend of February in 70-degree weather, doing yoga in the park, visiting the Farmers Market, sipping tasty libations on a patio looking over the lake, and most importantly, cooking our little hearts out!

    Many ideas floated around but we finally chose a theme: Fresh and Fabulous (hence the doctored photo above). We are going to Bess Bistro on Friday night to plan out our strategy but the initial concept will go a little something like this.
    • Each of us will choose 5 ingredients to get from the Farmers Market on Saturday. 
    • Those 5 ingredients will be combined with the others for 20 total. 
    • We will make 3 meals with those 20 ingredients, focusing on the fresh produce and local flavor. A literal farm-to-table weekend of meals! 
    • Common items such as garlic, herbs and spices are not considered in our 5 ingredients.
    I can't wait to share the fun creations and full account of the weekend with my three favorite foodies who will hopefully do some guest blogging to share their dishes with you as well.

    Tastefully yours,

    Wednesday, December 28, 2011

    A Year in Review

    Foodie friends,

    I hope you have been having a very enjoyable holiday season with your friends and family! My kitchen welcomed some highly anticipated new arrivals from Santa including an 11-cup food processor, chef's saute pan and some helpful gadgets I look forward to using. It is that time of year where we begin to reflect on what the past twelve months have brought us. There is so much to be grateful for, appreciate, and motivate us for the upcoming year. It has been a very busy two months and I regret the lack of recipe creativity. Unfortunately my most recent meals for December are captured on my camera that has a dead battery and I haven't been able to charge it. There are some great dishes including garlic-Parmesan veggie ribbons, roasted tomatoes and asparagus with balsamic glace, broiled salmon in an white wine and herb sauce, butternut squash polenta, and truffle mashed potatoes. I promise these posts for next year!

    Last year Mr. Max and I went through and chose our favorite meals from each month for an end-of-year recap in 2010. This year, I'm going to allow the reader stats from my 2011 posts dictate the top ten favorites. For any blogger, it is always interesting for us to see what posts garner the most activity: where your traffic sources come from, what google search terms land people on your blog and what seems to be the most popular thing people look at. Therefore, here are the readers most-read posts of 2011!

    Top 10 Favorite Meals of 2011

     
    Bacon wrapped beef tenderloin with a madeira sauce - the meal that we welcomed 2011 with!

    Buttermilk Cauliflower Mashed Potatoes - that pot roast was simply divine as well!

     
    Chicken Spaghetti - Made in both a pasta version and a spaghetti squash version for the carb-consciousand packed with delicious veggies

     
    Gnocchi Mac n Cheese - Such a fun cooking experience with delicious results!

     
    Cilantro Lime Chicken - Included a tasty avocado salsa and saffron rice to compliment the chicken

     
    Black Bean Veggie Enchiladas - One of my favorites, glad this was a reader favorite as well!

     
    Chimichurri Salmon and Black Bean Succotash - Inspired by my birthday trip to New Orleans,
    Emeril's NOLA Restaurant menu item. I've used this chimichurri on several dishes since!

     
    Caprese Salad - Loved the preparatory addition of grilling the heirlooms!

     
    Lasagna Roll Ups  - A delicious method to create lasagna at your control

     
    Cider Ginger Brisket - Such a favorite of this fall season, a no-hassle dish that is perfect comfort in colder weather, and doesn't break the waistband!


    Thanks for following throughout this year, I am looking forward to sharing more new recipes in 2012. Wishing you all a very happy and safe new year!
    Tastefully Yours,

    Thursday, September 1, 2011

    Recipes: Fall Favorites

    On the first day of September my blog-reel gave to meeeeee... Some delicious and easy fall recipeeees!

    You know you sung it while you read it. I cannot believe it is the first day of September. I know, we all say this, but this year has really gone by so fast. Even though it is still so warm, September always signifies the start of fall for me. As we gear up for changing seasons, tastes begin to vary into richer flavors with different kinds of spices, fruits and vegetables. I wanted to give you a week's worth of some of my favorite fall recipes for you to try in the coming month. I'm entering into event season part two, so expect more 30-minute meals, and crock pot classics during the month of September. Enjoy!







    Monday, August 29, 2011

    A Thank You and Four Cheese Baked Penne Repost

    I want to take a moment to pay my thanks and appreciation to my community of support - this has grown beyond what I could have ever imagined! I've been out of town since Thursday and when I returned late last night, I learned that Carol Toler with the Lake Highlands Advocate had done a write-up about this blog contest, my church is circulating emails to vote, my blog traffic stats are rockin off the charts and this little "hobby" of mine needs to pick it up because requests for new posts are coming in. THANK YOU seems like an incredible understatement. Regardless of the outcome, my heart is touched and I'm sitting here like a goof crying at my desk because it means so much to me. I appreciate you, your votes and your kindness, please keep voting through September 9!

    Because I have been consumed with traveling, meetings and events lately, I don't have new material right now to post. However, I wanted to give new readers some past recipes as you begin your week and may want some (easy) dinner ideas.

    As Carol wrote, I used to make a ton of pasta dishes in college. I refer to this time as my "getting the feet wet" stages of cooking. My baked ziti approach has evolved and I wanted to share our favorite recipe adapted from Elie Krieger in the link below. Enjoy this delicious dish and watch for an upcoming remake post of the Hatch Chili Chicken Enchiladas from the lake last summer as the gnocchi girls and I make them again tonight! Have you voted today?

    Have yourself some Italian tonight - http://kitchenwithkate.blogspot.com/2010/11/four-cheese-baked-penne.html

    Wednesday, August 17, 2011

    DFW Most Valuable Blogger


    I interrupt the food posts to bring you a plea for a favor. I awoke this morning to an email saying that I had been nominated and chosen as a candidate for the DFW Most Valuable Blogger in the Dining and Entertainment category by CBS. I am not sure that my little food blog completely fits this category but I am very humbled and honored to be considered, especially with such great company.

    So here is my plea for subscribers, followers and secret followers: Let's get some votes and try to win this thing all in the name of FOOD and recipe lovers everywhere! You can click on the widget above (and on the side of the blog when I can figure out how to imbed it) to vote for Kate's Cure for the Common Cuisine once a day, until September 9. That's right, you can vote every day!

    Thank you so much for your support and interest in my posts. I have slacked a little this summer but this has lit a fire in me to keep inspiration coming for new recipes to share.

    Let the voting begin - I appreciate your time and support!

    Monday, June 20, 2011

    True Texas Traditions: Chevrolets and BBQ

     picture from inside of Sonny Bryan's

    On June 11, Max Man and I got to partake in a little activity out of our realm of regular and venture on a scavenger hunt, hosted by Chevy and their Driving Heartland initiative, along with 4 delectable barbecue restaurants around the Dallas area (click the linked words to view our YouTube video - we are interviewed and you can hear Max using the OnStar!) Chevy lent various models out for a group of people to use for the weekend, genius promotion if you ask me. The car I received, no, I'm sorry, the tank I received caught me off guard at first. Let me be honest with you: I am not the best driver out there, I can admit that. When that big black Suburban pulled up in my parking garage on a Friday afternoon I had two thoughts: secret service and 15 year old self. Secret service is a "duh" factor, the black tinted windows and shiny black tanker made me feel like I would be carting around George W. on his personal around town errands. Then I went to the nostalgic thoughts of when I was 15, with a permit and mom's suburban learning to drive in the local high school's parking lot thinking how will I ever be comfortable going over 17 mph.

    Though I am far from Suburban years, as in needing one for myself, I did enjoy my temporary ride for the weekend aside for some of the maneuvering methods such as merging, parking, backing out... that was a little more challenging than my liking. When I am in prime-time soccer mom years, I'll think back and remember my Chevy Suburban!

    We started the day at the original Sonny Bryan's BBQ, which was conveniently close to my apartment and work. It was a tiny little shack that reveled in tradition and brought a taste of small country life to the big city. The restaurant was comprised of a small room with the counter and condiments, then an equally small room of old school desks with plaques above them for valued customers and family  this was where you ate. The only tables resided outside under big yellow umbrellas but with that triple-digit heat, we opted for the school desks. At this location we sampled some of the best brisket I've ever had, ribs, sausage and one of their specialty sides, onion rings. They were HUGE. What was also really impressive is that they've had the same smoker on-site since it opened in 1958 - it was very well seasoned, that's for sure, and you could definitely taste it in their meat.
    Mr. Max and I enjoying our first plate of BBQ - I'm glad we went the sharing route....
    I personally adore the Corona BBQ Sauce bottles.

    After receiving our first clue envelope, we hurried to the Suburban - let's call it the 'Burb - and drove it like my old Jetta to the next location. Both of us felt this was a race to get there before everyone else. Sidenote: it wasn't. We got to Sammy's BBQ and had more amazing food. While I felt their meat lacked a little in comparison to Sonny's, their sides were amazing. The owner's wife came over and told us a little about their start, how her husband only wanted to serve meat but she insisted on creating sides from her own book of family recipes. This is a perfect instance of how the man may be the head in the relationship, but the wife is the neck and turns the head in the right direction. I heard that somewhere... 

    Here I focused on a delicious spinach salad, a twice-baked potato dish and Texas Toast.
    With our friends Wes and Lindsey at Sammy's - I'm proud of Lindsey and myself for not staining our white attire when we were sampling BBQ all day
    This next stop in the 'Burb was perhaps my favorite as we ventured from Uptown to Bishop Arts District to Lockhart's Smokehouse. Everything about this place impressed me, including the fact that you ate on butcher paper, no plates! It is a family inside joke that I once told my mom that having china was stupid and when I grew up, I would register for decorated paper plates (this was after watching all the women in our house polish silver and clean the china for hours after a Christmas dinner). Lockhart's provided a different array of food which I appreciated, there was a wonderful originality to such a common genre. My favorite meat was their smoked turkey breast, it was just to die for! We also sampled tasty sides such as macaroni and cheese, jalapeno baked beans, sauerkraut-slaw, potato salad, deviled eggs and their own creation - rib rub. The rib rub was a combination of rib meat, jalapenos, brown sugar, cocoa and that's all I can remember. It was great by itself or on a cracker! This was definitely a place I look forward to coming back to.
    Our last and final stop was an "upscale" BBQ joint called Smoke, located at the boutique Hotel Belmont in South Dallas. I have been to the patio bar at the Belmont before but had not tried Smoke yet. I loved this restaurant for several reasons but one of the main things is that they used their own homegrown ingredients from a garden behind the restaurant and local produce. They also brought unique twists to their menu including their drink and dessert selections. I managed to try their incredible hominy casserole and a bite of brisket even though I had O.D.'d on meat for the day, I had to compare. The stellar features were a vanilla infused rum made in-house using wooden plank boards soaked in natural vanilla extract and large honey tubs to soak the rum and planks in. Add a splash of coke and a little maraschino cherry drenched in fruit juice - mmmm! Then, there were the desserts... We got to try Max Man's favorite dessert, keylime pie dressed up with a fabulous meringue topping, and my BBQ dessert favorite, banana pudding but this was complimented by chocolate sauce and peanut butter crunch bites. There was also a chocolate cake with a caramelized banana topping. The perfect end to a fun day, thanks Chevy!

    Tuesday, May 17, 2011

    One-Year Blogiversary: Get the Skinny

    I seem to find myself in conversation over this heavy topic (pun intended) more often than not. I find that it has become a natural subject brought up in day-to-day exchanges with friends, family, coworkers - even the lady standing next to you in the grocery store checkout line wants to disclose her issues with you. Through these conversations, I hear my personal struggles reiterated by others on a daily basis. I wanted to share this cartoon with everyone for my 1 year blogiversary post along with a little background to the genesis of this blog.

    I have weeks where I feel really on target and even if the scale isn't necessarily showing it, I'm feeling slimmer because I'm eating well and making it to my workouts, clothes are looser, it feels great! Other weeks, I feel blah - my clothes are tighter than they were last week but all I did was have a burger on Saturday and missed yoga on Thursday because of a work conflict, ok some wine with friends over the weekend too. Sometimes I feel that I work so hard to "be good" but I have one cheat meal and skip the exercises, so I have blown all progress. 

    Then I look beyond the way I feel to determine what factors assist those thoughts and feelings. I had lunch yesterday with a coworker who said "I just don't get it, I work out but I eat half a lunch portion and feel like I have to unbutton my pants afterward. Then I look at her (her = a very slender woman in a slinky pink dress) and I'm like, does she eat??!" - shortly after that, I got in the elevator and listened to a woman complain to her friend about feeling "obese" because she put on her "fat pants" today, a size X (which I won't share because I think it provides an inappropriate, unhealthy image for this person to think that size is considered obese). I think we all feel this way at times, "why can't I look like that," or "according to that person, I'm overweight because I'm a size X," - we get so caught up in listening to how everyone else says we should look, or how they deem a certain size or weight to be "so huge", we never feel comfortable or confident enough in our own skin. 

    Last year I sat down because I had reached a point where I realized I was lazy. I couldn't complain anymore because I wasn't actively doing anything about it and despite my best believe-and-it-will-happen efforts, it just wasn't going to magically go away. Going to the gym once a week and having the occasional fruit and salad, skipping meals, where not going to get me anywhere. I needed to examine my unhealthy habits and figure out where to trim the fat (another pun intended). This is why I started this blog to begin with and that my friends is the purpose of this post.

    My story: I took a new job a little over three years ago, it was my dream job at 24! A special events coordinator for a major non-profit hospital in a big city. The new longer hours that running events entailed, on top of a new boyfriend routine (Mr. Max!), coupled with our then active social life in which we were going out 5 nights out of the week, all resulted in the inability to keep off those L-Bs like I used to. I was only helping them find a permanent new home on my thighs, hips, arms and belly with poor diet choices and the lack of exercise. After yo-yo dieting, thinking Healthe Trim would really get me "high school skinny" (yes, I buy into radio/infomercial gimmicks from time to time) and infrequent workouts for a year, my metabolism was shot and I decided to buckle down and get serious. Something had to change.

    Is this a success story telling you how I lost 20 lbs just after eating right for a year? Nope, sorry. But it was a year ago that I made the decision that if I couldn't always rely on the physical activity because of an erratic schedule, the one thing I really could take control of was eating right and that did make a big difference. Not a 20 lb difference, but enough of a difference to know that it does really help. It is still something I have to work on every day.

    The old me: Mr. Max and I formerly relied on Chipotle, La Madeleine, Panera, our neighborhood prepared-food market Eatzi's and the occassional "upscale burger place", meaning, not a drive-thru, or "gourmet pizza", because that's better than a Papa John's.... The decision to change my eating habits meant he did too, we couldn't succumb to the take-out meals anymore. I leaned that I had to cook so that I was in control of the food I consumed, both the nutritional aspects and the quantities. Luckily, Max Man was pretty healthy as it was and already bought organic food only. The boy liked cooking, and was good at it too - this was already looking up. I started only shopping at Whole Foods because I found that my willpower was always tested at a Tom Thumb or Kroger by the snacky foods or Kraft macaroni boxes. Without fail, I would get the frozen dinners full of preservatives, goldfish and what? they have PopTarts, man I haven't had PopTarts since I was a kid so let's get those, 5 for $5 mac and cheese - amazing.... Funny, I don't have those distractions at Whole Foods. I don't see a difference between my old grocery bills and my new ones and feel good knowing that I'm buying everything for a purpose and putting the best I can in my body.

    The new me: In this quest, I started going to a health coach to get on the right track and re-learning what I should be eating for a balanced diet, doing it the healthy way. I began buying magazines advertising healthy meals of under 500 calories or less. Then for my busy seasons, I looked for magazines that had 30 minute or less healthy meals (where my Low Stress God Bless label was born). I read America's Test Kitchen practices, learning ways to cut back on fats, sugars and calories by substituting other ingredients and adding more herbs spices to give bland food flavor without racking up the bad stuff. In the beginning, I had a hard time finding recipes to support the goals I was trying to meet and still sounded appealing to my tastes. As I discovered new recipes and sources, I decided to share them with those that were looking for healthy meals or simply loved to cook and thus, a blog was born. 

    Here's a secret: I used to dislike cooking. It was a chore, why do it when I could just run up the street and get take out already made for me. I worked hard every day, I am tired when I get home, I don't want to spend an hour making food. I did enjoy it every now and then - my college roommate and I would have fun whipping up some concoctions in the kitchen: shrimp and avocado salad, pork tenderloin with roasted potatoes, and we thought anything pasta was fancy. This carried into the real world, every now and then I found it to be enjoyable but not every night, not things from scratch. I used to dislike almost every vegetable that wasn't potato or broccoli and thought cheese was it's own food group category. I slowly began trying new combinations and realized: this is good, I can make stuff and I'm not bad at it. 

    Starting this blog was a tangible accomplishment, it made me want to cook because then I had something to show for it and the ability to share with others. I learned about different tastes, I became challenged to find new recipes that were not only good for me, fun to make and tasty, but ones that I hoped others may find useful too. Through this, I learned to try new things! My very first post, the halibut en papillote is a true testament and perfect example for that. I didn't really care for tomatoes, I had never tried halibut or quinoa, I hadn't made my own pesto before and I didn't think I liked zucchini. Now I use all of these things quite often and it turns out, I love them!

    While I still have my problem areas and struggle at least twice a week with wanting to be "smaller," I have more energy than I used to which allows me the chance to make it to the gym after a long day of running around. I never used to have energy. I would hit 3:00 PM and not come back from the slump. Well, I don't always make good use of this energy by diligently visiting the gym daily, sometimes I slip and it is used for happy hour or shopping, tee-hee. That is something I am still working on but I feel like I've been able to conquer cooking, and have something to show for it now 1 year later and can confidently say that I am 1-2 dress/pant sizes smaller (depending on the store) than 365 days ago, so if anything, there's a result.Am I at my ideal size? No, but at least I feel good and overall healthier now than before. I plan to continue and work hard for the results I want to attain while advancing this little hobby I've grown to love, cooking.

    Thank you for allowing me to share this compilation of recipes with you so far. Whatever reason you have for following - whether you are looking for healthy recipes, you love to cook or just enjoy blog surfing - I hope to continue to give you what you are looking for and thank you for your support. You encourage me to do this.

    Sunday, April 17, 2011

    Meal Planning

    What a weekend! Mr. Max and I went down to Florida to experience an Indian wedding for one of his friend's from home. The food was definitely interesting, but what a kind and hospitable culture - very helpful as we tried to understand the customs and rituals of the weekend.

    Here are just a few pictures to share...
     Mr. Max and myself with the groom riding in on the ceremonial horse behind us

     A sampling of the food....

    Inside the wedding ceremony

    After the last few days, I'm looking forward to getting back into the swing of cooking and consuming more familiar foods! Last week at the store, I picked up the new Cooking Light all recipe magazine edition. This week the lineup will consist of three meals from this new recipe source.

    Monday: Salmon with Maple-Lemon Glaze and a Tomato-Feta Couscous

    Tuesday: Teriyaki Pork and Pineapple skewers with stir fry rice

    Wednesday: Breakfast for Dinner! A goat cheese omelet with sauteed vegetables, think bell peppers and zucchini

    Thursday: Undecided, most likely a dinner out because it is an event night

    Friday: We will have another cooking school date night at Central Market for an American Steakhouse theme where we will cook a menu of a classic chop salad, beef fillet, lobster mac n' cheese (which I will be morally obligated to pass on because I will be shy just 30ish hours from the end of Lenten season, yet foodie-faithfully tempted to at least try), onion rings, roasted broccoli and mushrooms, and finally Kentucky Almond-Bourbon cheesecake.

    Saturday I'm going to help my mom prepare for Easter brunch with the family on Sunday! I know a ginger-cider brisket is in the works but I'll be working on the rest of the menu this week.

    Sunday, April 3, 2011

    Meal Planning

    This next week, I want to get back into the swing of things with healthier eating, last week went a little awry. I'm going to be cooking through some of my dog-eared pages of must-try's in the Cuisine Light Fresh-Flavorful-Healthy magazine.

    Monday: Family Dinner, Tapas theme - Mr. Max is anxious to make a "fried" goat cheese, and I still really want to make "fried" zucchini sticks so I think those will be our contributions.

    Tuesday: I have a Roasted Marinated Peppers recipe that I would like to try for 37 calories per serving and serve with a poached halibut and wilted spinach for 305 calories per serving.

    Wednesday: Dinner at home is up in the air on this night but in the event it's needed, I will plan to make Squash and Chard Enchiladas - the original recipe is a manicotti, but I'm using tortillas rather than pasta shells. I wanted to get in another butternut squash recipe before spring was fully underway and this one uses chopped swiss chard which we've never tried, the delicious gruyere, and calls for minced sage but I'd like to "fry it" up like we did in the gnocchi cooking school and create an amazing little crisp leaf. We'll serve with a simple salad for a 294 calorie meal.

    Throwback Thursday: Chicken Lettuce Wraps, after making these last year, I swore I didn't need Pei Wei anymore and that has held true.

    Friday, April 1, 2011

    Sneak Peek: Gnocchi Mac 'n Cheese Girls Night!

    I'm going to get real with you for a second, this whole "no pasta" thing that I inflicted on myself for Lent is really started to get to me. I've been around pizza several times and can manage - okay, I slipped once at the bachelorette weekend when that is what we had at the house for dinner Friday night. I mean really, I had no choice, a girl's gotta eat! I took the rule that I think I once heard about being able to indulge in what you give up and have it on Sundays, and just applied it to that particular Friday night. That works - right?!? Let's just all agree, "yes".

    Pasta, however.... ooooo I am missing you, my stomach yearns for you, mainly macaroni and cheese. I didn't realize how much it tempts me until now when I can't have it. Well, I found a loop hole.

    My friend Meredith sent me a recipe for a mac and cheese gnocchi, and she instantly became my favorite person on the planet. Gnocchi is not pasta, it is a potato dumpling. Since Greer and I just took the gnocchi class at Central Market, what had started as a girl's happy hour turned into a full blown fun night in the kitchen sipping some wine, snacking on some "hummi" (we decided we needed to make a distinction between singular and plural use since we had 3 different kinds), and making dinner together. I give you three awesome fellow foodie guest bloggers with me tonight as we make gnocchi from scratch and into a non-pasta macaroni and cheese. Welcome to the ladies! Say (gnocchi mac and...) CHEESE!

    (Meredith, Myself, Amy, Greer)
    This was attempt 6/6 on self-timer with the camera that was set on a shelf. I debated adding the whole
    "photo shoot" but realized only the 4 of us would find it truly humorous.

    This was a pretty big cooking spree so it will take me a little bit to sort through the step-by-step photos and type out both recipes, but I wanted to leave a little teaser for what is to come!
       
    Greer's Garlic, Regular and Roasted Red Pepper "Hummi"

    Meredith's delicious roasted asparagus with Gruyere
    Starting the potato-ricing process
    

    Combining the egg mixture with the riced potatoes


    Kneading the dough

    Cut the dough, rolling them out to then cut off the individual gnocchi

    Rolling the gnocchi on the board to create grooves

    Making the cheese sauce with fontina, Parm and gruyere


    Fresh baked Gnocchi Mac and Cheese!


    

    Friday, March 18, 2011

    Meal Planning

    Happy Friday, my little foodies! Typically this is a Sunday afternoon post, but I did my meal planning a little earlier this time because I'm heading to the beach this morning and won't be back until late Sunday afternoon. It's another bachelorette party weekend, a slew of girl friends got a beach house in the gulf and we are heading down to celebrate! Therefore, I knew I would want to be prepared by Sunday because after spending three days in the sun for some fun, the brain power just won't be there. Battery, dead.

    What excites me is that it looks like spring, it feels like spring..... it is spring time in Texas! That opens a door to new seasonal tastes for cooking. In the meal planning for this week, I created a quasi spring-like menu. Let's kick it off....

    Sunday: Salmon with Pineapple/Mango Relish taken from America's Test Kitchen Light and Healthy 2011 (the cover shot!). I'll serve this with some fresh haricot verts and a little pineapple quinoa concoction. In my head, I'm thinking it will be like the butternut squash risotto except with pineapple chunks, delicious and nutritious quinoa and a little tamari.

    Monday: I found a Hot and Sweet Pork Tenderloin with a Sweet Potato Hash. I love the spicy/sweet combination and this pork will bring that to the table - but intrigued with this sweet potato dish using some sweet corn, little poblano pepper, onion, chive, a little cheese.... It needs some green so I may throw some asparagus spears in, we'll see.

    Tuesday: Event night, not cooking

    Wednesday: Breakfast for dinner! Cuisine Light has a tasty looking rendition of what they call "Healthy Scrambled Eggs" so I'm going to try them, with a little shallot, fresh basil and feta. Then in the not-so-healthy realm of things, I will attempt to make Honey Wheat Toast in Buzzbrew's fashion, our favorite breakfast spot. This toast is to die for, honey/syrup just leaks from the pores of the bread when you take a bite, it's fantastic.

    Throwback Thursday: This week I'm going to revive another dish that is picture-less, the Chicken Florentine from America's Test Kitchen's Light and Healthy 2010. The first time I made this was my first time to really work with spinach, I had also combined this recipe with another Mediterranean chicken dish. I found a sauteed spinach recipe in the Light and Healthy 2011 which I plan to incorporate in the spinach preparation to change it up, yet again. The first time taste was a little bland, so this time, let there be flavor.

    I hope everyone has a wonderful weekend, I look forward to sharing these with you next week!

    Sunday, March 13, 2011

    Gnocchi and Gnudi Cooking Class



    Miss G and I recently bought Groupons and got into a Central Market Cooking class, Gnocchi and Gnudi this past Friday night. We had a blast learning how to make the delicious, pillowy potato and ricotta dumplings. On the menu for the night was Potato Gnocchi with tomatoes, basil and olives, semolina gnocchi with lamb ragu, herb gnocchi, sweet potato gnocchi with sage and prosciutto, and a ricotta gnudi with wild mushrooms and truffle sage.

    This was the first time they taught the class so it was a learning experience for the chefs as well. Overall, both gnocchi and gnudi are rather difficult to make and very time consuming. I'm not sure if this is really something I'll be able to take away to make myself, hopefully at some point. In order to make them, I'll need to get a ricer as seen below to get the potatoes in prime form to make the gnocchi dough. This gets the potatoes into the size needed to blend with the other dough ingredients that you work into the dumplings.
    Here are some pictures of our creations!

    The delicious sweet potato gnocchi with fried sage and prosciutto, one of my favorites!

    So good, this was the original potato gnocchi with tomato, basil and olives with Pecorino Romano, this was my absolute favorite.

    Herbed gnocchi - we squeezed this out of an icing tube to give it this shape. Didn't care for this one as much, very doughy but it pictured well.

    So glad these are not really pasta so that I didn't have to ruin lent so early on!
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