I adapted this recipe from the most excellent Muffins: A Cookbook
Monday, February 18, 2013
Orange Cherry Oatmeal Muffins (Monday or President's Day Muffins)
I cannot tell a lie. Yesterday morning we were walking the dog to the grocery store to pick up cream for my tea when we saw some guys cutting down a tree. I admire their gumption--it was cold as heck out, and to be hanging from a rope way up high, with a chainsaw? Yipes. Then I got to the store and saw cherry pies on sale. It wasn't until after I bought the pie that I realized it was for President's Day. So here's a President's day muffin recipe for you, using cherries and oranges. These muffins are perky, if a muffin can be called that. The flavor is bright and brightens my morning. My kids eat them for breakfast and after school snacks, so perhaps they brighten the whole day! Sunny citrus in action.
I adapted this recipe from the most excellent Muffins: A Cookbook
by Joan Bidinosti and Marilyn Wearing. I made these before the Band Fruit Fundraiser oranges arrived. Had I been swamped with fresh oranges, I'd substitute a blended navel orange for the juice. The original recipe called for raisins, but I've got a lot of dried cherries so I snipped them in small pieces and used those instead.
I adapted this recipe from the most excellent Muffins: A Cookbook
Friday, February 15, 2013
Five Cheese Pizza with Indigo Rose Tomato and Almond Pesto on a Butternut Squash Crust (Pizza Night!)
Did you get roses for Valentine's Day? After reading about this pizza sauce, I bet you wish you'd gotten Indigo Rose tomatoes from your local Community Supported Agriculture farm share instead.
One of the reasons I love my CSA is the variety of colorful produce that shows up in the box each week. It's like my own personal Iron Chef challenge to figure out what to make with each week's box full of secret ingredients. And the taste--fresh produce just tastes so much better.
If you've never heard of a CSA farm share, check out Local Harvest. There you can use your zip code (in the US) to search for CSA farms that deliver to locations near you. Late winter is the time to join a CSA. By paying in advance you enable your farmer to purchase seeds and repair equipment at the beginning of the growing season. In return, you get a share of the farm fresh produce all season long. You're supporting a local business and you get to taste delicious veggies like these Indigo Rose tomatoes!
And now for something completely different.
Not really. When I made the spinach dough I knew that I was going to continue to explore adding veggies from my CSA farm share into my family's pizza crust--not just on top of it.
But where to start? To not quote a Monty Python film involving a lecture in a British boys' school, I can't go leaping into, for example, mustard green pizza crust. Though the idea is intriguing . . . I wonder what I'd top it with? More greens? Bacon?
Ahem. Move your coat to the lower peg and let's move on.
Instead of going to the freezer stash for slow-roasted tomatoes, or pesto, or pumpkin to try in a crust, I turned right and looked at the Strategic Winter Squash Reserve. Specifically, because they stand head and shoulders above the rest (get it? above?)
And play I did! If you're on my Farm Fresh Feasts Facebook page, you've seen the golden and pillowy eggnog and butternut squash crust. The recipe will be up here during eggnog season, because I'm all about eating seasonally with my CSA vegetables (and good deals on eggnog after the holidays).
To start us off here though, I also made a plain cheese pizza with a shredded butternut--nog free--crust. If you are going meatless on Fridays, keep in mind this pizza! Using one of the packages of Fresh Tomato Pesto I'd put up in the fall, from Heather at In Her Chucks' wonderful Cherry Tomato Pesto recipe, this pizza is another not-so-simple cheese pizza. Sure, it was simple enough for me to truthfully tell my daughter:
It's a cheese pizza.But in reality it is a Five Cheese Pizza with
And with that lofty name, let's get to it--shall we?
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Chicken Spinach Artichoke Pesto Pasta (Quick Take)
A simple & fast skillet supper with sautéed chicken breast, fresh spinach, prepared pesto and marinated artichoke hearts. Six ingredients, about 20 minutes, and you've got a tasty meal.
![]() |
Updated in 2015 with new photos! |
If you want to prepare a special meal that appears as if you've given a lot of thought to it but in fact you just realized that tonight was The Night and need to pull something out of your ear, read on.
I had a chicken breast, a bunch of spinach from the farm share, and a lot of cans of cream of chicken soup because they were a good price so I stocked up. Yes, I use canned soup. I tried making my own but it didn't come out as well as this stuff. Everything in moderation. While looking for inspiration for dinner, I decided to read the recipe on the can. In the surprise of the century, the recipe called for mixing the can of soup with pesto to make a sauce. Hey, you know I've got pesto in the freezer! I could make that recipe!
Not content to merely follow the recipe, I decided to boost the veggie content with my farm share spinach and some marinated artichokes. I think I was in a race to see how fast I could empty a giant Costco-sized jar. I did it in about a week, between pizzas, dips, and this. New record.
This was fast and very delicious, if you are older than 14 and love the taste of artichokes. The kids ate everything but the artichokes. If you were going meatless I'd sub mushrooms for the chicken and use the soup of your choice.
Labels:
artichoke,
community supported agriculture,
CSA,
CSA Recipes,
Dayton,
fall,
Ohio Food Blog,
pesto,
quick take,
spinach,
spring,
winter
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)