Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Slow Roasted Lemony Kale Chips

Beautiful Kale from my Know Your Farms CSA
I received some really delicious kale in my CSA box last week. The leaves were dark green and very tight and curly. The stalks were thin and not at all tough so I knew that very little preparation would be needed to get these greens ready for cooking.

While I was out in San Francisco a couple of weeks ago, I had the best kale chips of my life while perusing the Ferry Building Marketplace. (By the way... What an amazing place for enjoying local food!!)  The woman who made these delicious kale chips said that she used a dehydrator set to 110 degrees for 30 hours. Wow! That's a long time and I don't own a food dehydrator (yet) so I decided to test out something similar in my oven. It was a huge success. Now I need to get some more kale and make some more chips...

Kale sprinkled with sea salt
Ingredients: 

Kale, rinsed, dried, tough stalks removed
Olive oil, 2 tablespoons or so
Lemon juice, 1 to 2 tablespoons
Coarse sea salt, a sprinkle

Directions: 

For this version of kale chips, I decided to toss my kale with a little bit of olive oil and lemon juice, sprinkle the leaves with a little coarse sea salt and then let it cook for a long time at a low heat. One bunch of kale (enough to fill my colander) was enough to make 2 cookie sheets full of kale chips.

I combined the kale leaves, olive oil, sea salt, and lemon juice in a large bowl using my hands and then spread the kale on a cookie sheet covered with aluminum foil to minimize any clean-up mess.

Let the kale cook for about 2 hours at 200 degrees. Remove from the oven and enjoy!!

Slow Roasted Lemony Kale Chips

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Not-Fried Refried Beans

Not-Fried Refried Beans
We love to have beans with our tacos on Taco Tuesdays but I never buy canned refried beans anymore because my kids just wouldn't eat them. Honestly, now that I make up these not-fried refried beans, I don't blame them. This version is so much tastier!!

Grab a can of your favorite beans - really any type of bean will work. All you need is some onion, garlic, a little olive oil, and a dash of coarse sea salt and you will have yourself some yummy not-fried refried beans in minutes.


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Bok Choy, Potatoes, Carrots, and Sausage in a Slow Cooker

I met a new friend this weekend who was raving about the benefits of participating in a weekly CSA (Community Supported Agriculture). She was singing to the choir, of course. I love all my local fruit and veggie options here in North Carolina. If you are not familiar with a CSA model, basically once a week for a set number of weeks, you get a box of produce from a farm (or, like I do here in Charlotte with Know Your Farms - a collection of farms) and then you are tasked with figuring out how best put your veggie assortment to good use!

This is a pleasurable challenge for some, a daunting task for others. My friend said that, for her, the best part about participating in a CSA is that she has completely shifted the focus of her dinner preparation so that she starts with the veggies and works her meal around that as her star ingredient instead of trying to throw veggies in at the last minute to make her meal "balanced." I completely agree! Did you know that only 4% of our country eats five or more servings of fruits and vegetables per day? Those poor, unloved veggies! Our sad, sad arteries! Participating in a CSA is not only good for our farmers and our community, but it is really great for our health.


Bok choy, Carrots, Sauerkraut, Potatoes, and Sausage ... Yum!

Yesterday, I had potatoes, carrots, and bok choy that really needed some love before my next CSA delivery was ready. Slow cooker at the ready, I simply added some sliced Italian sausage from Glenreid Farms, (a family farm located 50 miles from Asheville, NC) and 8 ounces of sauerkraut and presto. Dinner was cooking. It really was that easy. Four veggies plus one meat = delicious.

Ingredients: 

The beautiful bottom of the bok choy
5 or 6 small potatoes, slightly peeled and chopped
1 bunch of bok choy, chopped (you can use almost all of it)
2 or 3 carrots, sliced
8 ounces sauerkraut (I like Boar's Head)
1 pound sausage, sliced

 Directions: 

In a large slow cooker, combine the potatoes, sauerkraut, and sausage. Heat on high for 2 to 3 hours. Add the carrots and bok choy and let it cook for an additional hour.


A few notes ... I was pressed for time, so my sausage was thawed just enough so that I could slice it. I didn't brown it - although, if you have time, I recommend you do so. I didn't start dinner prep until my littlest one went down for a nap and I was rushing out the door to get to carpool but this recipe would work just as well on low for 6 hours or so. Because sauerkraut has so much liquid in it already, you don't need to add any additional liquid. I like to add the bok choy and the carrots at the end so that they cook a little but still have a little bit of crispness to them.

Serve with ... Spicy Brown Mustard. My favorite mustard is locally made here in NC. If you are in North Carolina, you need to find this mustard - The Lusty Monk. So good! It is made in Asheville, but I have picked it up in Charlotte at the Simply Local stand at Atherton Mills Market. Try it!

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Shredded Chicken Tacos in a Slow Cooker

Shredded Chicken Tacos
We love Taco Tuesday around here! Unfortunately, sometimes as easy as tacos are to make, our evenings are just too nuts to cook. Thank goodness for slow cookers! For Taco Tuesday this week we dropped two chicken breasts into the crockpot with a cup of water mixed with taco seasoning and let it cook for a few hours on high. It was truly that simple. I feel silly even writing this up as a recipe but here goes ...

Friday, February 3, 2012

Easy Crunchy Cheesy Meatloaf

Easy Crunchy Cheesy Meatloaf
My oldest kiddos are almost seven years old and they claim that I have NEVER made them meatloaf. What a mean mommy! That is, of course, not true. I have made meatloaf... just not in a really, really long time. Meatloaf can get a bad rap but, with a few little additions, meatloaf can be really delicious and something to please both the kids and the adults.