This recipe from Martha Rose Shulman turned out really well. Ours may not have been as pretty as the NY Times photo, but it sure tasted good!
Category: Recipes
Honey Yogurt Waffles
We made these Honey Yogurt Waffles this morning. I modified it a bit, doubling the dry ingredients and bumping up the wet, but not double…should have taken better notes…The outmeal adds a nice texture and they turned out really nice and brown and crispy–maybe the yogurt or honey?
Sweet potato chicken curry
I mostly followed this recipe from myrecipes.com, but after sauteing the onion and browning the chicken pieces, I threw everything in the crock pot. I turned out really well, and made for a nice quick dinner when we got home.
Sweet Potato, Ham and Cheese Salad
We made this recipe from Fine Cooking (also in Fine Cooking v. 102, p. 108). We used some of the Queso Fresco that we had left over instead of the goat cheese, you could also use feta or other cheese.
The caramelized onions and sweet potatoes offer a great balance to the balsamic vinegar–a great salad.
Whole wheat buttermilk blueberry creamcheese scones
I had some buttermilk leftover from the amazingly good Grilled Buttermilk Chicken from last week’s menu. So I was Googling around for a good way to use that up. We have a long-time favorite scone recipe that has served us well over the years. But I decided to give this recipe from 101 Cooking for Two a try. Yum!
Asparagus tart
After looking at several recipes for this, I more or less followed the Good Housekeeping one. Here’s my adaptation of that:
- 1 3/4 cup White-wheat flour (the whole-wheat white flour)
- 2 Flax-paks (~1 oz Flax seed)
- 1 tsp Baking powder
- 1/4 tsp Ground pepper
- 6 Tbs Unsalted butter
- 4 Tbs Cream
- about 4 Tbs milk
For the filling:
- 1 lb asparagus, ends trimmed
- 3 Eggs
- 1 1/3 cup Milk
- 1 tsp mustard
- 2 tsp Lemon peel, grated–though we didn’t have this
Make the tart crust and bake for 15min at 425F.
Cut the bottoms off the asparagus so that they are about 5in long (1/2 the size of the tart pan). Boil the asparagus for 5 min, drain and rinse in cold water.
Arrange the asparagus in a spoke fashion with the tips out. Mix the other ingredients in a bowl and whisk with a fork. Pour over the asparagus and bake the tart on a cookie sheet for 20-25 min.
Sausage and rice stuffed portabellas
The Publix Arpon meal last week sounded really good: Sausage and rice stuffed portabellas. We mostly followed the recipe, but cooked the rice from scratch, actually we had several meals that used brown rice, so I made a big batch on Sunday and put it in the fridge to use during the week. To up the veggie content, I added a pack of frozen spinach, thawed and drained. We also used cheddar cheese in place of the Gorgonzola, I am sure that would have been good, but thee kids aren’t that adventurous…
Whole-Grain Spaghetti with Garlicky Kale and Tomatoes
Wow, what a colorful dish! This one was a great, healthy and fast meal! The recipe is from Real Simple.
We added some sun dried tomato sausage, though the original was veggie. You could also add some white beans or garbanzos instead. I think I would increase the garlic a bit. And the spaghetti was a bit hard to mix everything together…maybe a smaller noodle would work better with this.
Blueberry Yogurt Muffins
Somehow our family of 4 managed to finish off 2 gallons of milk this week, so when I went to make breakfast, the options were a bit more limited than normal. We had about 1 cup of yogurt leftover from the Chickpeas and Pita Casserole (which the parents really liked, but the kids found a bit garlicky), so I figured I could use that in something. We have tons of frozen blueberries still, so when I found this recipe at For the Love of Cooking, I knew I had a winner! I changed it up a bit, partially based on what we have in the kitchen. One thing I am always trying to add is flax seeds. Our oldest has fish allergies, so there goes one source of omega-3s. Flax seeds are another great source, and the Flax Paks make it really easy to throw into recipes.
Blueberry – Yogurt Muffins:
Adapted from For the Love of Cooking
1 cup white flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 Flax Pak
1/3 cup sugar
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1/4 cup juice
2 tbsp vegetable oil
1 tsp vanilla extract
1 cup yogurt
2 large eggs
1 1/2 cups fresh or frozen blueberries
1 tbsp sugar
Preheat the oven to 400. Mix the try ingredients in a large bowl. Mix the wet ingredients and stir into the dry. Spoon into greased muffin pan. Cook 18-20 min.
Rotini with Butternut Squash
I adapted this recipe from this post at Former Chef’s blog, which was in turn adapted from Giuliano Hazan’s 30 Minute Pasta book. It’s a really fast, really good meal, especially if you cut up the squash in the morning so it’s ready to go a dinner time.
Rotini with Butternut Squash and Bacon
(Adapted from Former Chef and Giuliano Hazan’s Thirty Minute Pasta
1 yellow onion, diced
3 Tbsp. butter
3 oz Pancetta, cut into 1/4″ pieces (could use bacon)
1 medium butternut squash, diced into 1/2″ cubes
1 cup water
salt and pepper to taste
1 lb pasta
3 oz Grated parmesan cheese
Boil water for the pasta. Add the butter to a large saute pan and add the diced onion. Cook over medium heat until golden brown. Add the panceta and cook until it starts to crisp, about 2-3 minutes.
Add the squash and season with salt and pepper. Add the water, stir and cover with a lid for 10 minutes until the squash is soft. Check after 5 minutes and add more water in 1/4 cup increments if it’s drying out, until the squash is soft enough to mash with the back of a spoon.
Cook pasta and reserve about 1/2 cup of pasta water before draining.
Add 1/4 cup of the reserved pasta water to the sauce, smashing the butternut squash with the back of a large spoon. If it seems too thick, add the other 1/4 cup. Toss the sauce with the cooked pasta and the grated cheese and serve.