Orange Cream Smoothie & A Blogaversary
Brittany wrote this on 22 July 2012
Wow! Has it really been two years since I started blogging? Two years of recipes and a whole lot of food? Two years of home renovations (Oy), watching my eldest start school (boo), and welcoming a new baby (yeah!)? A year ago I gave the blog a new look, made a bunch of changes, and ventured into the world of photography. This year? *sigh* I am exhausted! Between the heat, swimming lessons, loss of sleep, travel, and the need to get my tonsils out (weird, but true) I am thrilled to be able to continue to post great food for all of you! Hence, today’s simple-but scrumptious-recipe is how I am celebrating.
Before I continue, please know that I send my heartfelt thanks to all of you. From the bottom of my heart, I am so grateful for you, my readers. Your support, encouragement, comments, ideas, questions, and random raves about the recipes here keep me smiling. You, along with my husband and kids, make every moment I spend in the kitchen and on my computer absolutely worth it. Even on those days when I am typing one handed, baby on my hip, 7 different batches of cookies cooling on the counter, a full dishwasher, and a stack of books to read to the kids…worth it. So…umm…thanks.
Enough of the mushy stuff! On to the food! Forever ago, years and years actually, I was at a friends house and she was desperately trying to get rid of the last of an entire case of oranges. Her answer was to peel them and puree the sections in a blender with vanilla ice cream. It worked. We sucked that down like Darjeeling! So good. So fresh. Was it a drink? Dessert? Smoothie? Who knows. Who cares! She doesn’t know this, but ever since that day, I have been drinking vanilla ice cream and orange juice together. Tart and sweet. Refreshing and pretty much like drinking a creamsicle. The perfect way to celebrate just about anything.
One Year Ago: Grilled Pizza
Two Years Ago: Basic Wheat Bread, Three Lemon Chicken, Turkey Meatballs, Margarita Pasta Salad
Orange Creamsicle Smoothie
Fill a glass with vanilla ice cream. New York Vanilla is the BEST! Pour orange juice over. Slurp.
Fried Rice Scramble
Brittany wrote this on 19 July 2012
Without really meaning to, I have been making some gradual changes to the weekly menus that I plan for my family. Over the last several months, in the interest of time, money, health, and wanting to use up those items exiled to the bottom corners of my chest freezer, I have been making two meals a week that are meatless, one meal that contains some kind of fish or seafood, and the rest centered around a common protein of chicken, beef, or pork.
Generally, the only rule I really try stick to when cooking for my family is variety. When I hear people tell me that they need ideas for dinner because they are making the same ten dishes over and over, I inwardly cringe. The majority of the time it has nothing to do with food allergies or outrageously picky individuals. Usually, it is just the comfort of making something that they know tastes good, is reliable, and the safety of knowing the people they are serving it to will actually eat it. Often times, it is these same people that complain that they can’t get their kid to eat anything other than macaroni and cheese when they have been making it for them for dinner (out of a box) once a week since toddler hood.
So I tell them it is never too late to try something new. It doesn’t have to be complicated, fancy, or time consuming. You don’t have to make something you know your crowd will hate. And you don’t have to suddenly start trying to up your game by mastering culinary techniques that are beyond your ability or even your desire to try. I’m talking about switching out your go-to barbecue chicken for shrimp kabobs once in awhile. Or trying pasta scuie scuie (which you can make in the time it takes your pasta to cook) instead of spaghetti sauce from a jar and reheated frozen meatballs. There is a time and place for convenience foods but they should not be in your weekly rotation. And if small changes help you eat healthier, save money, and keep your family-and you!-interested in dinner, it is a big victory.
Take the meal pictured above. It is hot outside! And I was planning to make something for dinner that was light, healthy, did not heat up my house, and wasn’t going to completely undo all the good stuff I had done for myself that day. I had a super healthy breakfast and lunch, narrowly avoided eating an entire box of honey Wheatables, got in 45 minutes of cardio, and was managing to ignore my craving for fresh from the oven chocolate chip cookies. My solution? Breakfast for dinner!
When I was a kid, my Mom used to make fried rice as a kind of side dish. It was years and years before I realized that the rest of the world did not eat fried rice like our family ate fried rice. Our version? Leftover white rice-usually from chow mien, a dish I hated as a child and still loathe with the fire of a thousand suns-bacon, onions, and some egg. I am fairly certain that is the entire ingredient list. And yowzer! it was good. But my favorite part was always the bites of rice and egg together. OK and bacon too. About a year ago, after glaring at the leftover white, sticky rice from Chinese take-out that was slowly drying out while taking up precious room in my fridge, I thought to myself, I am going to make some fried rice like my Mom used to make! Only I had no bacon. And I really didn’t feel like dicing an onion. So I threw some rice and bit of butter in the pan and added all the eggs I wanted! Bingo! My new favorite breakfast food! Eventually, I moved onto brown rice and added cheese and leftover veggies, but the basics stayed the same. I cannot tell you how many times I ate this when I was super sick while pregnant with Lane. It was comforting, filling, warm, and good for me.
If you are looking at the mushrooms in the picture and shaking your head at the computer screen, stop it! If I had a nickle for every person who told me that they hated mushrooms growing up but that they love them now as an adult, I would be…well, I would have a lot of nickles! The common thread with all of them? They were fed canned mushrooms as a kid. Blegh! Give real, fresh mushrooms a try and see if it works. The flavor, obviously, isn’t even comparable. And while you can obviously serve this scramble for breakfast or brunch, it is so filling you won’t miss the meat at dinner. It is just a simple, minor adjustment.
One Year Ago: Cornmeal Pancakes W/ Blueberry Sauce
‘Fried’ Rice Scramble
I made this once with leftover quinoa and it was absolutely killer!
1 c leftover, cooked brown rice
1/2 lb sauteed sliced mushrooms
6 eggs
1/4 c cheese
snipped chives
salt and pepper
Add a small pat of butter to a medium nonstick pan and put over medium heat. Add the rice and stir around in the butter until hot. Turn the heat down to medium low and add the mushrooms and eggs. Break the yolks and stir everything gently together, patiently letting the eggs cook slowly and gently. Just before the eggs are done, stir in cheese and snipped chives. Season with salt and pepper. Along with 12-grain toast and fresh plums, this feeds three adults. Or two adults and two children that eat like adults.
Note: Obviously, you can add whatever you want to this. Cooked crumbled bacon, leftoverroasted broccoli, cut into smaller pieces is fantastic, diced tomato, sauteed zucchini is awesome-endless possibilities!
Super Creamy Strawberry Ice Cream
Brittany wrote this on 16 July 2012
We never made strawberry ice cream when I was a kid. My parents had a huge, old fashioned crank ice cream maker that we would pull out a few times a summer and vanilla was the easy flavor of choice. We would stir in mini chocolate chips and, if we were lucky, Hershey’s syrup and WOW! There was nothing better. I have mentioned it before, but my ice cream maker attachment for my Kitchen Aid is just about the best thing ever. I highly recommend them.
For years, I didn’t have real strawberry ice cream unless it was accompanied by equal parts of chocolate and vanilla, i.e. Neapolitan. Not real strawberry ice cream. Then, a few summers ago, I started experimenting and settled on this recipe. And it is really great. Rich and wonderful. But the simple ingredients of today’s recipe intrigued me and…oh my goodness. So creamy. So perfectly strawberry. A little bit tangy and a little bit sweet. And only four ingredients people!
So now you have options. If you have a bit more time and want something traditional, make the Classic Strawberry Ice Cream. If you want to try something just a bit different, that is less rich and a touch refreshing, with less overall steps and totally fantastic, this is your recipe. And hey! I hear it is national ice cream month! Time to celebrate!
One Year Ago: Oatmeal Raisin Snack Bars
Super Creamy Strawberry Ice Cream
Adapted from David Lebovitz
1 lb of strawberries, rinsed, hulled and cut into quarters
3/4 c sugar
Stir fruit and sugar together and let sit out at room temp for an hour or so, stirring occasionally. Dump it into the bowl of a food processor (or blender) and add:
1 c sour cream
1 c heavy cream
Pulse a few times just until combined, but fruit is still chunky. Freeze in an ice cream maker according to package directions.