Have you ever made a recipe for the first time, in someone else's kitchen, for a crowd?
Scary thought, no? I'd bookmarked this recipe, Slow Cooker Chicken Tikka Masala by Rebecca of Foodie With Family because my family loves Indian food, I love my slow cooker, and her directions seemed clear, easy, and very do-able for me. I just didn't know when I'd get around to making it.
The wonderful thing about joining a CSA is that you've got seasonal farm fresh vegetables flooding into your kitchen every week. The annoying thing about being in a CSA is that you've got seasonal farm fresh vegetables flooding into your kitchen every week.
What if you feel like eating tomatoes, the canned ones you've put up, but you've got fresh spinach, Band Fruit Fundraiser citrus, and the Strategic Winter Squash Reserve staring at you reproachfully?
You use the spinach in this, or this, or this.
You use the citrus in this, or this, or this.
You use the Strategic Winter Squash Reserve in this, or this, or this.
You regretfully turn away from your canned tomatoes, knowing that they will be waiting for you when you've dealt with all the fresh stuff. And then you run away!
You run away to visit your in-laws. You know that everyone likes to sit down together around the big table and enjoy a meal, and it's awfully nice not to always be the one to make the meal. So you offer to make a meal one of the nights of your visit. But what to make? What will appeal to 4 generations of eaters?
I decided to go for it and make this meal. For the first time. Not in my own kitchen. Not just for my family. Sure, I played it safe and brought with me almost all the ingredients (since I had everything but cilantro on hand already). I brought my own slow cooker and my own rice cooker. I even brought my own measuring spoons!
You know what happened? Thanks to the clear directions, great photos, and excellent recipe it worked out just fine. It went together easily, the whole crowd ate it, and some even went back for seconds.
This recipe is easy to make. Click here to read it! This post is the second in an on-going series about how Food Bloggers Change My Life. You don't remember reading the first in the series? Yeah, you're fine, it's not live yet. I wrote it up after making Chicken Cider Stew from Alanna of Kitchen Parade and A Veggie Venture, but since I'm all about seasonal eating and it's really not cider season, it will be up in the fall. Meantime, since you've hopefully got jars of crushed tomatoes you put up in the fall . . .
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Monday, March 18, 2013
Molasses Date Oatmeal Muffins (Monday Muffins)
I started posting Monday Muffins when I realized I was accumulating a pile of muffin recipes and I ought to get them posted with some sort of regularity. So on my old-fashioned paper calendar pages <gasp> I plotted out all the recipes I had in the can. So to speak.
Some of these were easy to schedule. Pink Beet and Horseradish muffins? They go in February before Valentine's day. Butternut Squash and Ham muffins? They will go in the fall. Creamy Banana and Dark Chocolate Chip muffins? They can go up any time (and will appear in a month, if you're worried the link isn't yet live).
I'd originally scheduled a batch of Nutella and Zucchini muffins to appear here today. They are the Matt Damon of muffins on the Jimmy Kimmel of this blog--they keep getting bumped! It's a great recipe, but I've decided that most other people don't have bags of shredded zucchini in their freezer in late winter, and teasing you with the enchiladas was enough, so I've permanently moved Nutella and Zucchini muffins to the summertime. You can see them here!
Why did I bump those muffins? Because I could. not. wait. to share this recipe with you. It's delicious! I picked up a vat of dates at Costco during sled hockey practice, and after we enjoyed a bunch
Because I thought of this at suppertime, I was able to soak the oats, dates, and buttermilk overnight. I like soaking oats overnight, but even an hour helps break down the whole oats into great-for-baking consistency.
If you have fresh dates--eat some. When you get sick of them, or if you have a package of dried out dates in the back of the pantry--make these muffins!
Labels:
breakfast,
CSA Recipes,
dates,
Dayton,
muffins,
Ohio Food Blog,
winter
Friday, March 15, 2013
Mushroom Medley with Caramelized Onion and Gorgonzola on Boboli (Pizza Night!)
I've been sharing a lot of meat-heavy recipes this week, so I thought I'd change it up a bit and share a meatless pizza. It's inspired by a pizza I had when we got invited out for pizza by some friends.
I will never turn down a chance to share a meal with others, even if it's at a local pizza place and I already make a great pizza, exactly the way I like it, in my own home, nearly every Friday night (sled hockey/wheelchair basketball seasons and marching band season notwithstanding).
Do I sound like a Pizza Snob? I hope not. I really love food, especially when someone else makes it for me. I do think that I make each pizza for my family with more love and care than the machines at the frozen pizza factory or the under-appreciated minimum wage workers at the local delivery place. You can see it in the finicky way I separate and space my toppings, if not from the farm fresh and wholesome ingredients.
I'm so glad my friend Rose Ann invited the kids and I to join her family out for pizza at Pie-tanza. I got a chance to scope out some different pizza topping combinations. My favorite was caramelized onion and gorgonzola.
I was planning to make that pizza for this post--I had caramelized onion packages in the freezer and there was fresh gorgonzola marked down. But we'd just come in from out of town, had no dough made, and were at the grocery store on a beer/milk/eggs/pizza crust run.
At the store, a box of marked down Gourmet Medley mushrooms caught my eye. Why not? To the best of my knowledge I've never had oyster, cremini, or shiiiiiiitake (say it like a penguin) mushrooms on a pizza. First time for everything. Glad I tried it--those mushrooms took an already awesome combination over the top!
I will never turn down a chance to share a meal with others, even if it's at a local pizza place and I already make a great pizza, exactly the way I like it, in my own home, nearly every Friday night (sled hockey/wheelchair basketball seasons and marching band season notwithstanding).
Do I sound like a Pizza Snob? I hope not. I really love food, especially when someone else makes it for me. I do think that I make each pizza for my family with more love and care than the machines at the frozen pizza factory or the under-appreciated minimum wage workers at the local delivery place. You can see it in the finicky way I separate and space my toppings, if not from the farm fresh and wholesome ingredients.
I'm so glad my friend Rose Ann invited the kids and I to join her family out for pizza at Pie-tanza. I got a chance to scope out some different pizza topping combinations. My favorite was caramelized onion and gorgonzola.
I was planning to make that pizza for this post--I had caramelized onion packages in the freezer and there was fresh gorgonzola marked down. But we'd just come in from out of town, had no dough made, and were at the grocery store on a beer/milk/eggs/pizza crust run.
At the store, a box of marked down Gourmet Medley mushrooms caught my eye. Why not? To the best of my knowledge I've never had oyster, cremini, or shiiiiiiitake (say it like a penguin) mushrooms on a pizza. First time for everything. Glad I tried it--those mushrooms took an already awesome combination over the top!
Labels:
community supported agriculture,
CSA,
CSA Recipes,
Dayton,
fall,
freezer cooking,
mushrooms,
Ohio Food Blog,
onion,
pizza night,
spring,
summer,
winter
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