Vegetarian

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I served this salad twice this past weekend.  Two times when Crissie from Design Eat Play was at my house. Once for Easter and once for a bachelorette party for my friend Julie.  Here she is prior to our cowgirl extravaganza:

 More on her wild party in a later post.

Crissie will not leave me alone until I post the recipe.  Apparently she liked it. She even shot and edited the pics for me in hopes that I would post it.

She sent me this message yesterday:                 

 Dear Cordon Pink,

I was thinking of making your salad as a main dish with steak. Wouldn’t that
be yummy? Like a big, fat steak salad. Or actually I have pork in the crock
pot today…that could be good.

Ah hem. Recipe?

Give it to me or you will never see your dog again…(this part may have been exaggerated)

This salad is wonderful for entertaining because you can make the two parts in advance and just combine them when you are ready to serve.  No worries about your salad getting soggy prior to your main dish being ready etc.  Plus, it is very refreshing and light for spring.

Avocado, Orange and Fennel Salad with Citrus Vinaigrette

2 Avocados Diced

3 Oranges Cut into segments with white pith removed

½ Fennel Bulb chopped into small pieces

Citrus Vinaigrette (Recipe below)

2 Heads of romaine or any mixed greens washed and cut into bite size pieces

Add avocados, oranges and fennel to a small container with a lid.  Pour dressing over fruit and fennel.  Let marinate in the fridge for 2-3 hours.

  When ready to serve, remove from fridge and pour entire mixture over the mixed greens.  Mix well and eat!

Citrus Vinaigrette

Zest of one lemon

Juice of one lemon

1 Tablespoon Red Wine Vinegar

1 Teaspoon Dijon Mustard

1 Tablespoon White Sugar

1 Clove Garlic Minced

Lawry’s seasoning salt to taste (or any seasoning salt)

¼ Cup Olive Oil

Add zest, lemon juice, red wine, mustard, sugar, garlic and seasoning salt to a small mixing bowl. 

Mix well. 

 Slowly drizzle in olive oil whisking well to combine until it emulsifies. 

Enjoy!

Love,

Lindzee

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What is it about Kale? Everywhere I turn it seems I hear about Kale.  Kale is all over the place!  It is on all the food trend lists and it seems every food blogger is coming up with their own version of kale chips.   The fact that I am talking about Kale being trendy probably means that it has reached its tipping point and it is no longer cool to cook with Kale.  Oh well.  I still thought this recipe was pretty good and thought I would share. 

Awhile back, some girlfriends and I went to a super duper Boise restaurant called Red Feather for dinner.  It is a very cute place with great food.  I ordered the grilled Kale Caesar to start and it was AMAZING.  At least, I thought it was amazing.  Some of the other girls thought it tasted like burnt lettuce, but I thought the smokey greens were fantastic.  Of course, I went home and tried to copy the recipe.  I hope you like the result!

 

Grilled Kale Caesar

Printable recipe here

1 or 2 bunches of Kale (don’t cut into bite sizes pieces until after grilling)

Shaved Parmesan

Garlic Croutons – Recipe below

Caesar Dressing – Recipe below

Pre-heat grill to medium heat.  Grill Kale over medium for 30 seconds – 1 minute each side. 

 Watch carefully, because it will burn and not be edible.  A few of the edges should be crispy and a little burnt, but the leaves should mostly be green.  Remove from heat and toss with dressing, croutons, Caesar and parmesan shavings.  Enjoy!

Caesar Dressing

2 Cloves Garlic

2 Tablespoons Mayo (I use this in place of a raw egg)

½ Teaspoon Dijon Mustard

3 Tablespoons Fresh Lemon Juice

1 Teaspoon Worcestershire Sauce

1 Teaspoon Anchovy Paste (this won’t make it fishy.  At least I don’t think it does.)

5 Tablespoons Olive Oil

¼ Cup Freshly Grated Parmesan plus another ¼ cup for top of salad.

Salt and Pepper to taste

In a food processor grind up garlic, mayo, Dijon, lemon juice, Worcestershire and anchovy paste. Salt and pepper to taste, but it won’t need much due to the cheese and anchovy paste.    Pour over Kale.

Croutons

1 Loaf of Fresh Sourdough bread chopped into small crouton sized cubes. (I like sourdough, but you can use any kind you want.)

¼ Cup Olive Oil

2 Cloves Garlic Crushed

Lawry’s Seasoning Salt to taste

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Mix olive oil, garlic and seasoning salt together in a small bowl.  Put 1/3 of the bread cubes in a large bowl and pour 1/3 of oil mixture over the bread. Mix well. Continue this process until all the oil and bread cubes are used.  Add to a cookie or baking sheet and bake for 15-20 minutes until hard and toasty brown.  Watch carefully or you might burn.

 

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Hi all!  I decided to get a little frisky today and try something that I totally made up.  I didn’t even look on the internets for advice. I love Panzanella salad and every time I go to Bardenay in Boise I order their version of the Panzanella.  Since, tomatoes (typically in Panzanella) are not exactly in season ‘round these parts I thought I would try to make it with root veggies and some sourdough bread I bought at local bakery Zeppole.

Root vegetables are amazing and great in the winter when you don’t have other summertime fresh fruits and veggies available. I included some parsnips, beets, carrots and onion in my panzanella.   My roommate Katie said “I think beets taste like dirt, but I really kind of like it”. 

 I totally agree! Except, they are messy!!  I forgot to wear gloves while chopping and this happenened. 

 

Doesn’t  this look like rat tail carnage?

 

 Everyone seemed to really enjoy this little concoction and said they felt healthier after eating it.  Apparently, root veggies are packed full of precious vitamins and minerals.  Even Jav (Mr. Meat and Potatoes) gave it a really strange look at first but went back for more.  Potatoes (also a root veggie) would be good in this too though!

 

Roasted Root Vegetable with Sautéed Beet Greens Panzanella Salad

4 Beets with Beet Greens

2 Parsnips

5 Carrots

1 Red Onion

1 Small Loaf of Sourdough Bread Day Old ( 3 Cups in Cubes)

2 Cloves Garlic

½  Lemon

2 Tablespoons Rosemary Chopped

1/2 Cup Olive Oil + 4 Tablespoons

2 Tablespoons Red Wine Vinegar

¼ Cup Parmesan freshly grated

Salt and Pepper

Preheat oven

Peel and chop the beets into chunks reserving the beet greens for later.  I used a normal peeler for all the veggies in the recipe

 

Peel Parsnips

 

 – See that lighter center? It is woody and icky.  Chop around it into chunks.

Peel and chop carrots and onion.

 

Add all veggies  into large baking dish

 

Grate part of lemon peel for about 1 teaspoon of peel without the white pith.  The microplane is one of my favorite kitchen tools – Thanks Crissie

 Chop garlic and smash with lemon peel and about a teaspoon of salt to make a paste.  

Add to small mixing bowl with olive oil and a teaspoon of the lemon juice and the Rosemary.  Mix together well and pour ½ of the olive oil mixture over veggies. Reserve other half of oil mixture.  Mix well to coat.

 Bake for 45 minutes.

Take other half  of oil mixture and pour over the sour dough bread cut into cubes just a little larger than typical croutons. 

  Add cubes to baking dish and mix the olive oil mixture over the cubes to coat well.  Season with salt and pepper. 

 

Bake for 10 minutes on 400.  Remove from oven and let cool.

Meanwhile, take the beet greens and chop them into large pieces. 

Saute them in about a tablespoon of olive oil until just wilted over medium heat in a medium skillet.  Sorry! Forgot to take a picture of this.  Remove and set aside.

Mix 3 Tablespoons olive oil and red wine vinegar.  Set aside.

Remove veggies from oven after 45 minutes.  Mix veggies with bread cubes, sautéed beet greens and red wine vinegar and parmesan.  Season to taste.  Can be served warm or cold.

Enjoy!

Love,

Lindzee

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Here is my very good friend “Yumm Sauce”.

Have you tried this stuff? If not, I would recommend not trying it. Ever. Why? Because you will become addicted and there is no substitute for the Yumm. It is god’s gift to sauce. It has a lemony, curry, spicy, tangy goodness that just can’t be matched. I think I have gained 10 pounds since discovering the Yumm. I put it on EVERYTHING (rice, pasta, eggs, crackers, cake, ice cream).

They actually don’t make or sell it any where near Boise, so once every few months my friend Crissie visits Oregon and brings back bottles for our household.

 I have attempted to make Yumm sauce from scratch and was unsuccessful after many attempts. It cannot be duplicated. Don’t even bother trying.

I had some bell peppers from Costco and decided to make some Quinoa Stuffed Peppers with Yumm Sauce.

The Yumm sauce is quite rare in certain parts of the country, so if you don’t have access then you can always substitute with a little lemon and olive oil. It won’t be as Yummy though. Snort.



Quinoa Stuffed Peppers with Yumm Sauce

 4 Bell Peppers
1.5 cups of Quinoa
Chicken Broth or Stock (enough according to package of Quinoa)
1 tablespoon olive oil
1 onion chopped
1 clove garlic chopped
2 tablespoons basil chopped
1 teaspoon dried oregano
½ cup Feta Cheese
2 Roma tomatoes chopped
3 Tablespoons Yumm Sauce (or olive oil and lemon mixture)
1 cup Parmesan Cheese freshly grated
Salt and pepper

Preheat oven to 350.

Halve peppers and scoop out membranes and seeds.

Prepare Quinoa according to package directions with chicken broth.

Meanwhile, in a medium skillet sauté onion and garlic over medium until onions are translucent. Add basil, oregano and Feta.

Add cooked Quinoa and tomatoes. Then comes the Pièce de résistance, Yumm Sauce. Salt and Pepper to taste. Spoon Quinoa mixture into bell pepper halves.

Sprinkle with parmesan. Bake for 25 minutes.


Try not to bathe yourself in Yumm. It is that addicting.

Love, Lindzee

A few months ago, my friend Crissie and I visited our good friend Cindy and her husband Aaron in Seattle.  Well, technically they just moved into a brand new house in Kent which is outside of Seattle.  Their house is super charming and we had a fantastic time!  Cindy is pregnant and about the cutest thing you have ever seen. Crissie is a talented photog and arranged a little photo shoot…

 5610_1199907364904_1445151537_583154_2774101_n

Aaron was a wonderful host and cooked for us the whole weekend.  He made us some very delicious steak tacos with chimichurri sauce and jalapeno pickled onions for dinner one night.  I wish I would have taken a photo of those.  Before dinner the group decided to have a few glasses of red wine (minus Cindy).   I, being the huge klutz that I am, dropped my glass of wine in their brand new living room and broke Cindy’s brand new wine glass.  Yes, I felt awesome.  They didn’t seem to mind too much, but I think they were just being nice. 

On our last day, we went down to Alki Beach and had lunch at Cactus.  Cactus is a cute little Mexican/Southwest restaurant that overlooks the beach.  The food was spicy but our waiter was H-O-T.  Crissie and I could barely look him in the eye. Serious movie star caliber good looks.   I asked if I could take a picture (the pic does not do him justice).  Aaron was disgusted and mortified.

waiter

Anyways, I ordered some amazing Butternut Squash Enchiladas at Cactus and have been dreaming about them (and the waiter) ever since.  I decided to try and make them since it is the perfect time of year for gourds. Let me give you a little warning.: This recipe was not quick in any sense of the word, but truly is worth it.  The Manchamanteles Mole took the longest and was unlike anything I have ever made.  If you want to take a few shortcuts, I would make a tomatillo sauce or buy some Mole, but the real stuff was yummers!

Roasted Butternut Squash Enchiladas with Goat Cheese and Mole

 plated

Manchamanteles Mole

I found the recipe for the mole here.  As I mentioned, quite the time consuming process, but it made a ton of sauce that I can keep for another recipe.  The flavor is very nutty and spicy.

6 Dried Guajillo Chiles
1 Dried Ancho chile
4 c Boiling water
1.5 Cans of 14.5oz  chopped tomatoes
Olive Oil
1/2 c Toasted Sesame Seeds
1 White onion; roughly chopped
1/4 c Whole raw almonds
1/4 c Raw pecans
1/4 c Raisins
4 Garlic cloves; halved
2 Whole cloves(or 2 pinches ground cloves)
2 Black peppercorns
1 Whole Allspice
1 Cinnamon stick -; (2″ long) (or 1 tbspn ground cinnamon)
2 Fresh oregano sprigs (or 1/2 tspn dried oregano)
 1 c Chicken stock ( I used store bought, but you could make your own)
1 16oz Can of pineapple sliced (drained)
Salt
1 1/2 Tablespoon Sugar

Remove stems, seeds and veins from both kinds of chiles ( I wore gloves).  Toast chiles in skillet or on griddle over low heat until slightly fragrant and beginning to blister. Be careful not to burn chiles. Put chiles in bowl and pour boiling water over them. Let soak 20 to 30 minutes (the longer they soak, the less hot they become).

While waiting, Cook tomatoes in dry skillet over medium heat until dry, about 20 minutes.  Blend well in blender. Transfer to bowl. Grind the toasted sesame seeds in a spice grinder or with mortar and pestle. Once chiles are done soaking transfer chiles from bowl to blender with slotted spoon and puree, adding some of soaking water if needed to blend well. Pass pureed chiles through sieve or food mill and set aside.

Return skillet to medium heat, add 2 tablespoons oil and onions and cook, stirring occasionally, until onion is soft and transparent, about 10 minutes. Add almonds, pecans, raisins, garlic, cloves, peppercorns, allspice, cinnamon and oregano and saute, stirring constantly, until brown and fragrant, about 10 minutes.
mole
Transfer to blender and add 1 cup chicken stock and pineapple. Blend until smooth.

Put 2 tablespoons oil in large pot and heat over medium heat until slight haze forms over oil. Add chile puree and fry, stirring constantly, until dry, about 20 minutes. Mixture will splatter, so carefully partially cover pot with towel. Add tomatoes, sesame seeds and onion mixture and cook, stirring constantly, 10 minutes. Add chicken stock to make fairly loose mixture, 4 to 6 cups, and continue cooking, adding more stock as necessary.   Set aside or if you make it the night before you can put it in the fridge.  It should keep for about a week.

Mole recipe is heavily adapted from the Los Angeles Times – 04-28-1999 Recipe from Billy Cross, founder of the Napa Valleys Great Chefs of France Cooking School

Now that part is finally done, we can start on the actual enchiladas!

 Butternut Squash

 2 Large butternut squash peeled and chopped into 1”cubes (remove any seeds)
½ Cup olive oil
1 Tablespoon chipotle chili powder
2 Teaspoons cumin Powder
2 Teaspoons garlic Powder
2 Sprigs thyme chopped
2 Sprigs oregano chopped
1 Tablespoon brown sugar
Salt and Pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.  Mix olive oil, chili powder, cumin, garlic, thyme, oregano, sugar, and salt and pepper to taste in a small bowl.  Put squash in a large roasting pan and cover with olive oil mixture.  Bake for 40-50 minutes until soft and brownish. Once you remove them from the oven smash them up a bit with a fork.  Not too much as there still should be chunks.

 butternutsquashinpan

Meanwhile, you can start carmelizing some onions. 

1 Tablespoon Butter
1 Tablespoon Olive Oil
1-2 Red Onions sliced ¼ inch thick.
Salt

Add butter and olive oil to a medium skillet pan on medium heat until butter is melted.  Add the onions and stir to coat with oil/butter mixture. Spread the onions out evenly over the pan and let cook, stirring occasionally.

onions

After about 15 minutes add a dash of salt.  Keep stirring every few minutes for about 30 minutes total.  You can lower the heat if they start to burn.  You want them just slightly brown.

 While the onions are carmelizing, you try and sauté some spinach if you are good at multi-tasking.  However, if you have problems with this, then just wait until the onions are done.

 Sauteed Spinach

½ Bag of fresh spinach (2 or 3 cups)
1 Tablespoon olive oil
2 Cloves of garlic minced (Do not use the jarred stuff.  It is disgusting.  Just sayin)

Add olive oil to a medium skillet pan on medium heat until oil shimmers.  Add garlic and sauté for a minute or so until fragrant.  Add the spinach and sauté until wilted. 

 Finally time for assembly!!!

8 Burrito Size White Corn Tortillas  ( lightly fry each one in small amount of oil for aboutt 30 seconds each)
Manchamanteles Mole
Roasted Butternut Squash
Sautéed Spinach
Carmelized onions
2 small rolls of Goat Cheese
2 cups of Shredded Monterrey Jack Cheese
Pico de Gallo and Sour Cream for serving

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Spray a 9 x 13 glass baking dish with cooking spray.  Cover the bottom of the dish with about a cup of the mole sauce.  Next setup an assembly line with all of the ingredients.  Dip 1 tortilla in the mole and cover completely.  Add about a ½ cup to 1 cup (depending how big you want the burrites) of the squash.  Add a spoonful of the onions and spinach each to the tortilla.  Spread out evenly.  Add a few Tablespoons of goat cheese.  Roll it up with the edges tucked in.  Continue this process for all 8 burritos adding each one to the pan when completed.  Cover with Jack cheese and bake for 30 minutes until cheese is bubbly and browned in spots. 

Serve garnished with Pico de Gallo and sour cream. 

burritoplated

Yay! Eat up!  My kitchen is now destroyed.

Love,

Lindzee