Showing posts with label vegetables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetables. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Sweet and Sour Bok Choy with mushrooms
CSA ingredients: Bok choy
Ingredients
1 tablespoon canola oil
1 tablespoon hoisin sauce
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1/4 tsp red garlic chili paste (or more to taste)
1 cup sliced mushrooms (any kind you like baby bella was used above)
3 bok choy greens and stems
Procedure
Wash bok choy and thinly slice the thick white stems.  Chop the greens and keep the white and green seperate.
Heat oil in large skillet or wok.
Add mushrooms and white part of bok choy.
stir fry about 4-5 minutes until started to soften.
Add hoisin sauce, soy sauce and chili paste. Stir fry one minute.
Add greens and cook 2-3 more minutes until greens start to wilt and get tender.
You can find garlic chili paste and Hoisin sauce in Asian food section.  You can add more chili paste f you like it spicy.   The sweet hoisin and firey chili paste gives this the sweet and sour flavor. 


Thursday, June 21, 2012


BLACK BEANS AND RICE WITH GREENS
Starwberry-rubarb Crisp for dessert

It has been a year since I have worked on this blog.  Life is just so busy!  But I am inspired to try to get a weekly post back on with the theme "Using your CSA box".   CSA stands for Community Suported Agriculture.  It is a program where you support local farms but paying up front and getting a weekly "surprise box" full of local goods.  There is a post about this if you look under old post. In my initally post I said it was more expensive- a year later I can say the meat is but the produce is actually a big savings over organic produce from the grocery.  In additon it holds up much longer since it is so fresh not having been shipped across from the country but grown right here near home!

 The items below were from my recent box and are the main ingredients for tonights meal.  We have kale, beets (I am only using the beet tops for this meal) swiss chard, onion, garlic, and local black beans.  Not included in the photo is local Monterey Jack cheese and bacon.













 Black Beans and Rice
serves 6

Ingredients
6 slices thick cup local bacon cut into bite sized pieces
1 cup chopped onion
3 cloves garlic, minced 
2 cups dried black beans, dried
4 cups vegetable broth (can substitute chicken broth)
2 tsp cumin
2 tsp Kosher salt
1 tsp black pepper
1 tsp dried oregano
1-2 hot peppers
1/2 tsp red chili powder (optional)
2 green onion, green parts, sliced
1 cup shredded cheese (I used Monterey Jack but could use Chedder or a Mexican blend)
3 cups brown rice, cooked


Night before preperation: Rinse beans in water and pick out any old beans or debris. Drain beans and pour into crock pot.  Saute bacon over medium heat about 5 minutes until just starting to crisp on edges.  Add onion saute 3 minutes.  Add garlic for an additional minute.  Put this mixture into crock pot.  Add vegetable broth and spices.  Soak the mixture overnight. 

In AM put on LOW on crock pot 8 hours. 

Prepare brown rice according to package directions (you need about 45 minutes to cook brown rice). Kitchen TIP: did you know you can double to amount of brown rice you cook and freeze the rest for another meal.  Simply put cooked brown rice into freezer bag and freeze. About an hour into freezing time shake the bag a bit to decrease clumping.  To reheat put into microwave safe bowl, add about 1/4 cup of water and microwave 5-7 minutes covered.  This is much less expensive than purchasing pre-cooked brown rice at the grocery.


I used pre-cooked rice tonight so the main course was basically done when I got home from work!

The ratings:  4 stars across the board!












Meredith's Greens

Every week in the CSA box there are alot of greens so about once a week I cook them down and they get eaten up every time!  This week I had kale, swiss chard and beet tops.  To prepare the greens I rinse throughly.  For the kale I simply pull the greens from the stem and break it up to bite sized pieces by hand.  The swiss chard I cut the stems onto 1/2 inch pieces and set aside.  Then cut the greens into bite sized pieces.  For the beet tops I removed them from the beets cut off the tough part of the stems and cut the rest into bite sized pieces.

6 servings

Ingredients:
Greens (lots- need enough to full a large pot to the top and if more it is ok)
1cup red onion, chopped
1 tbsp olive oil
3 garlic cloves, minced
2 cups vegetable broth
1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
1 tsp lemon juice
2 tsp Sorghum (local) can use raw local honey or agave nectar instead
1 tsp Kosher salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 red pepper, dried

Heat olive oil in large pot.  Add onions and saute over medium heat about 5 minutes. Add garlic and swiss chard stems and saute one more minute.  Add broth and greens.  If greens fill the pot let them cook down a few minutes and add the rest.  Add remaining ingredients.  Simmer 30 minutes. 

This recipe is vegan. If you prefer a meat version use 2-3 sliced diced bacon in place of olive oil and chicken stock (instead of vegetable).

Ratings: 5 stars from everyone!!


Strawberry-rubarb crisp

This went so fast I did not get a picture!  In the CSA box there was a bunch of rubarb.  I made this simple crisp. 6 servings.

Ingredients
4-6 stalks of rubarb, sliced into 1/4 inch thick slices (like slicing celery)
1 pint strawberries (or one bag frozen) hulled and rinsed
1/4 cup whole can sugar* (can use white sugar if desires)
1 tbsp raw local honey**
1 cup oats
1/4 cup butter
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Mix rubarb, strawberries and whole can sugar.  Put into 9x9 baking dish. Drizzle with honey.  Mix oats, butter, brown sugar and cinnamon- blend by hand until it forms a crumble.  Put evenly on top of fruit mixture.  Bake 40 minutes.  Allow to cool 10-15 minutes.  Serve warm with whipped cream.

Ratings:
Clay 4 stars
Lexi 5 stars
Colin 5 stars
Meredith 4.5 stars
Jamie 4 stars


*Whole cane sugar is sugar before it gets processing.  Since it is not processed it does not form glucose in your blood stream as quickly meaning it has a lower "glycemic index".  It also has a pleasant and stronger flavor.  You can find it at health food stores and some groceries.
**Raw local honey also is unprocessed and therefore offers a lower "glycemic index".  It is delicious!  Local honey helps your immune system fight off local allergens.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Maple Kale

Today we visited a maple syrup producing farm.  The kids loved seeing the process of turning sap to syrup and getting to taste several maple syrup treats. They had a pancake breakfast with maple syrup of course.  A savanger hunt was thier favorite.  Insipired by the days event I came up with this simple recipe.  We had it with Lemon Chicken from the Rao's cookbook over brown rice.  This was our first meat from the CSA and the chicken was excellent.  I am still not convienced the whole chicken will be a long term thing for me since it is more time cousuming but on occasion was a treat.

If you have not cooked with kale it is a leafy green vegetable- it is in the cabbage family and close relative to collards. It has a different flavor then spinach closer to collards but even more mild.  Kale has powerful antioxidant and is considered to be anti-inflammatory and thought to have anti-cancer properties as well.  It is rich in in beta carotene, vitamin K, vitamin Avitamin C, calcium and others.  

Maple Kale

2 pounds kale chopped in bite sized pieces
4 cups water
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
1 tablespoon maple syrup
1 tsp salt
4 slices maple cured bacon (optional)

Brown bacon in pan until crisp then set aside.  Alternatively heat 2 tsbp olive oil in pan.  Add water, vinegar and maple syrup and bring to a boil.  Add kale.  You may have to add some and allow it to cook for a few minutes and then add the rest- it wilts quickly.  Allow to simmer 20-30 minutes until tender.  Serve with crumbled bacon on top.

Ratings:

Jamie *****
Meredith ****
Clay *****
Colin *****
Lexi **

I can do without the added sweetness- but the added maple flavor was a huge hit with the boys who all had 2 servings.  I made enough we were able to reheat as a side the next day. 

If you are omiting the bacon you can add some garlic to the olive oil for some additional flavor.