Monday, August 21, 2017

Chorizo and Green Tomato Chili


Green tomatoes simmered with ground pork and chorizo sausage makes an amazing green & white chili. Served over spaghetti noodles and topped with cheese, this is a great Fall meal.

photo of a bowl of chorizo and green tomato chili atop spaghetti noodles


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This post is sponsored by the Ohio Pork Council. My goal is to share a recipe using ground pork, but I've got much more for you today. First off, I've got a little video I put together about the many uses of ground pork. When I visited the Surber farm I knew I was going to do a post about ground pork later in the summer, but I didn't know that Connie Surber was going to give me such a wonderful content about the uses of ground pork! I'm really glad I happened to have my phone on video, to record her conversation, although I apologize for standing near a wind chime. I'm still learning this video stuff, and if I knew how to make the images of my recipes into clickable links within the video I'd've done that. Instead, scroll down to the bottom to find links to my recipes that appear in this video.


I credit my spouse as the inspiration for this chili. I knew I wanted to make something special with the chorizo given to me during my visit with the Runyan family of Oakview Farms, so I asked my husband if he'd be game to try a Chorizo Chili. He'd just returned from a 2 week trip eating at a dining facility on a base in Alabama, so he was up for anything other than institutional food. Since he's a fan of Cincinnati chili, he asked, "can we eat it over spaghetti, with cheese?" and BOOM! I was inspired.

Monday, August 14, 2017

Roasted Zucchini and Yellow Squash with Parm and Garlic

A fast-to-fix, colorful, and flavorful side dish, this recipe combines bright green zucchini and sunny yellow summer squash roasted with garlic and topped with parmesan cheese.

photo of a plate of seasoned roasted zucchini and summer squash, topped with parmesan cheese

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Sometimes all I can think about are the sides to a meal, and sometimes the sides are an afterthought. In the summertime, when the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm share box brings copious amounts of fresh produce into my house on a weekly basis, the sides are the Main Event. Sure, I throw in a protein here and there--but my goal is to incorporate as many farm share vegetables into our meals (and get them out of my crisper) as possible.


pic of a plate of roasted summer squash topped with parmesan cheese


I'm not trying to use All The Vegetables for health reasons, it's really more of a decluttering issue, but the end result is that we eat more plant-based foods and that's always a Good Thing. Remember the movie Bull Durham? If you build it, they will come. I'm finding with my kids that if I serve it, they (eventually) will eat it. The more I prepare vegetable side dishes, the more vegetables end up on my kids' plates, and the more my family eats vegetables. The key is to actually prepare the side dishes, not just think that I ought to make a side dish.


image of kitchen area where roasted zucchini and summer squash is prepared, plus a plate of the finished dish


Since my day job is a prep cook, I'm pretty efficient at chopping up a mess of vegetables. I find myself starting the prep work without knowing where the dish is going. Often with the abundant summer zucchini, my prep steps involve shredding and freezing bags of squash for Zucchini Pancakes or Zucchini and Refried Bean Enchiladas. Other times I'll grill a mess of squash--for Grilled Zucchini with Feta, or to use on a Grilled Vegetable Ciabatta Pizza. It's rare that I roast zucchini, primarily because I live in an old house and if I'm using my oven, my bedroom gets pretty darn uncomfortable for sleeping. But that shouldn't deter me from providing more options to my readers, so today I'm sharing a roasted vegetable side dish recipe.

Monday, August 7, 2017

How to Make Kalua Pig in a Slow Cooker

Bring the luau out of the back yard and into the slow cooker with this simple 3 ingredient recipe for slow cooked pork. This is a great meal to take to friends, and the leftovers freeze well.

a plate of slow cooker kalua pig with fresh pineapple, hot cooked rice, sweet Hawaiian roll, and cabbage


Disclosure--there is nothing to disclose. This post is not sponsored by anyone--it's just for me. I'm putting on the 'blogger' hat and writing a web log about recent events, primarily to help me debrief myself as much as to have a record on my website of this recipe, this experience. Scroll down (there's a video!) if you're just interested in the recipe and not my life.

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Earlier this year I read a book called The Year of Yes [Amazon link below with some other stuff. You click, you find something else to buy, and I may get a couple of pennies for my annual website costs. Up to you. Thanks.] In the book, Shonda Rhimes wrote about choosing to say Yes to projects outside her comfort zone, and I decided to do the same thing. When my local community center asked me to teach another canning class I said yes and developed a pickling class I'll be teaching next month. When Jennifer of the Ohio Pork Council asked me to do a cooking demo at the Ohio state fair? Of course I said yes.


Bring the luau out of the back yard and into the slow cooker with this simple 3 ingredient recipe for slow cooked pork. This is a great meal to take to friends, and the leftovers freeze well.


The schedule looked busy. The dates of Fair Week included the time I'd be up in Minnesota having a family reunion celebrating my folks' 60th anniversary and visiting my spouse at his new assignment, meaning I'd come off driving 2200+ miles and jump right into cooking? It seemed reasonable 3 months ago, and in fact it was just fine. I was crazed and harried, but just fine. Jennifer asked me to cook something easy, and after about 30 seconds of thought I knew I'd be grabbing a lei and channeling my time in Hawaii. I could cook this with my eyes closed, although there are knives involved so I don't recommend you try it.





I lived in Hawaii, on Oahu, twice--both times courtesy of the military. During my first stay, my son was born in a Pepto bismol pink hospital on the side of a mountain while I was assigned to the patient squadron and waddled around exploring as much of the island as I cared in my heavily pregnant/postpartum state. [You might think that's not much, but you don't know my spouse. He had us hiking up to see waterfalls the day after our baby was released from the NICU--2 weeks after my C section.] My spouse was the one stationed in Hawaii the next time we lived on Oahu. He likes to refer to the assignment as my 3½ year "Hawaiian Honeymoon". [We had a JoP wedding in the States and I'd flown back to Germany 2 days later, so no honeymoon. The marriage was the important part, not the vacation.] When we arrived in Hawaii, our kids were 2½ years old (returning to his birthplace) and 8 months (our baby girl). They were 6 and 4 when we left. Yes, I changed a lot of  diapers. I don't think you're supposed to wash diapers on a honeymoon, nor have your spouse go on a deployment, so I'm still waiting for my trip.