The days just fly…

I keep meaning to be a better blogger, and I honestly don’t know what happens, but it seems I just never quite get around to it. Summer is just flying by, as it often does. July has been beautiful here weather-wise. Cool nights (sometimes dipping into the 40s!) and days that reach the high 70’s or low 80’s. I think I could live with a year of this! Of course, I’m sure we’ll be in for the dreaded heat and humidity eventually. Let’s see, what’s been going on? The house is nearly all stained! I am just in love with the color. Here’s a shot I took this morning:

stain going up on house

And here’s one just of two of the dormers. You can see how faded the siding was! Granted, the new stain is a redder shade than the old one, but still… the house was never that light!

old & busted | new hotness

My dining room is nearly back in order. There still are some things to put away, but at least it’s not jam-packed anymore. I think I might even be able to see a little bit of the surface of the dining room table! 🙂 The boys’ rooms are all decorated and basically finished. Laura’s room is getting there, and our room will just have to wait. Although I am very excited about my new sewing desk in our room! It’s actually the desk that used to be in the kitchen, but we’ve been rearranging furniture and found it a new home. I hated having the sewing machine on the dining room table, yet I hated putting it in the box every night, too. This should be great!

I’m still working on this crochet bag from Attic24. I haven’t had tons of craft time lately (understandably, I would think!), but it’s working up nicely. I’m excited to do a little more on it. Other than that, it’s just business as usual here! Diapers and dishes, LOL. I’ll leave you with a recipe I tried last week for Indian Spiced Kale & Chick Peas. While I like kale well enough, I don’t love it. If we didn’t get it from our CSA I probably would not go out of my way to buy it, but this recipe was a good use for it. I used less kale than the recipe called for and should have cut down on the broth accordingly. It made for a more soupy dish. I’m not sure if I’d make it again, but if you enjoy kale and Indian flavors, chances are you will love this!

Indian Spiced Kale & Chick Peas

indian spiced kale & chick peas

1 Tbsp. olive oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 pound kale, ribs removed, coarsely chopped
1 cup reduced-sodium chicken broth or vegetable broth
1 tsp. ground coriander
1/2 tsp. ground cumin
1/4 tsp. garam masala
1/4 tsp. salt
1 15-ounce can chickpeas, rinsed

Heat oil in a Dutch oven over medium heat. Add garlic and cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add kale and cook, tossing with two large spoons, until bright green, about 1 minute. Add broth, coriander, cumin, garam masala and salt. Cover and cook, stirring occasionally, until the kale is tender, 8 to 10 minutes. Stir in chickpeas; cover and cook until the chickpeas are heated through, 1 to 2 minutes.

Week’s Eats

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Well, now that I am totally back up and at ’em, it’s time to start meal planning again! I have lots of ideas and hopefully this will be a stress-free, easy week and I stick to my menu. Here you go:

Sun: Take-out
Mon: Homemade pizza, salad
Tue: Turkey tacos
Wed: Escarole & white bean soup with mini sausage meatballs (a.k.a. “beans & greens”)
Thu: Jammin’ Jerk Chicken (this is SO good!), steamed veggies, cole slaw
Fri: Chopped steak with sauteed onions and mushrooms, cole slaw, veggies, oven fries
Sat: Chicken Ceasar salad

For more menu planning ideas, be sure to visit Organizing Junkie.

CSA 2009: Fourth Share

CSA 2009: Fourth Share

Such a bounty this week! Two heads of lettuce, escarole, kale, a bunch of carrots, basil, an onion, scallions, broccoli, yellow summer squash and garlic scapes. Also PYO flowers. Dishes I see in our future include beans & greens and Indian-spiced kale & chick peas. Of course, we’ll also have some great salads this week (I’m so looking forward to a Caprese salad with that basil.) I want to look up some scape recipes. Last year I liked to use them raw in salads, or mixed into cream cheese and those are delicious ways to eat them, but maybe I can do something else.

I found it pretty amazing how everything looks so beautiful, even with the near record-breaking amount of rain we’ve had. A lot of farmers are worried about their crops. Maybe they’ve got magic soil over there, I don’t know… but everything is picture-perfect to me!

Green Smoothies

green smoothieSeveral months ago I started reading about green smoothies on some of the natural living blogs I like to read. Basically, you just add some sort of green (usually spinach, sometimes kale) to a fruit smoothie. The idea seemed a little yucky, yet somehow interesting. Since I have a wealth of spinach in my fridge, and I could surely use some extra greens in my diet, yesteray I decided to give this a try.

Basically, I took a big handful of spinach and threw it in my blender (just a regular blender, not a Vita-Mix or anything fancy), added some orange juice, and liquified it. Then I added some frozen fruit — raspberries that we’d picked last summer and some peaches I had hanging out in there as well. I blended it all together and added a little more juice as needed and voila! I had a green smoothie. I thought it looked like a big glass of pea soup, and I was a little scared, but truthfully it was really good! I swear to you that I could not taste the spinach at all. I think I want to blend up a smoothie with frozen banana and strawberries and see if I can get the boys to drink them. Maybe I can position it as a “Popeye Smoothie” or maybe even an “Incredible Hulk Smoothie” (as I’d read someone else did).

If you want to sneak some extra greens in your diet, I’d urge you to give this a try. I’m hoping to make this part of my regular diet and have maybe 3-4 per week. I think it will be fun to experiment with different combinations of fruit. I also wonder if this might be a way to sneak in the beets I know we’re going to get eventually!

Weekend Wrap-Up

For the first time in several months, we headed up to Massachusetts to visit my family this weekend! Actually it was the first time I’ve gone anywhere (besides doctors’ offices) since coming home with the baby. Needless to say it was much-needed and I had a great time hanging out with family and friends. Laura did well on the drive up, sleeping the whole way. That was a relief! When we got to my parents’ house my friend Jenn visited for a bit and then my sister-in-law Kathy came by. She, my mom, and I all were going to my cousin Angie’s baby shower in the afternoon. So I had a nice long visit with  Kathy and we all got to eat yummy food at the shower. I especially loved Angie’s grandmother’s “Cheesy Potatoes.” Oh my goodness — I wonder if she would part with the recipe! So yummy. The cake was adorable (as well as delicious). Don’t you agree?

After the shower we just hung out at my parents’ house for a while. Drew enjoyed looking through my Dad’s tool catalogs and shopping at his favorite store (Ocean State Job Lot) where he was psyched to have found a little tent package on sale. He wants to try taking the boys camping this year. At any rate, we didn’t see my brother this time because he was fishing in Rhode Island. Crazy boy had to get up at 3 a.m. to get down on the water, but at least he caught something — a 36-inch bass! Still, that’s mighty early.

Dad grilled steaks for dinner and we enjoyed them with salad, baked potatoes, and corn on the cob. Basically my all-time favorite dinner! We then got all the kids in their PJs and headed home around 7. It was a long day, but a good one. I’m hoping to go back for a longer visit next month, but this time I just wasn’t up for packing for everyone. Hope you all had great weekends too!

CSA 2009: Third Share

CSA 2009 - Third Share
It’s so striking to me how much changes in two weeks! I was really surprised by the variety in this week’s farm share. Things are really starting to rev up! We got:

  • 2 heads of lettuce
  • a small amount of basil
  • bok choy
  • cabbage
  • radishes
  • spinach
  • mixed Asian greens
  • PYO (pick-your-own) sugar snap peas
  • broccoli

Oh, the peas are so good! I was really happy that Drew took the time to get some (he knows how much I love them). Those will probably be devoured as a snack between today and tomorrow. The bok choy… Oy. Still have last week’s and still at a loss. I did find a bok choy salad recipe that I’m going to try. Basically it sounds like the Asian cole slaw I often make, but using the bok choy instead of cabbage. I’ll do that either tonight or tomorrow. With the broccoli I plan on making a broccoli and chick pea salad. The basil with be used maybe for a margarita pizza. Cabbage… lots of ideas, but nothing concrete yet. Cabbage is one of my favorite veggies! Maybe I’ll do some lazy golumpkis next week. The rest will go into salads. I never know what to do with the asian greens, so we usually just eat them raw. We’re not huge stir-fry fans here, so… salad it is! (And the kalanchoe is obviously not from the CSA – it’s the plant Drew brought to me in the hospital after having Laura!)

CSA 2009: Share #2

CSA 2009: Second share

Since I can’t drive, Drew was on farm share duty this week (he even took the photo for me!). We got two heads of lettuce, mixed greens, arugula, spinach, kale, bok choy, and turnips. I’ve convinced Drew to try roasting some of the kale to have with tonight’s dinner. Usually he makes a soup with kale, beef, mushrooms, and feta but I want to try something new. Since he’s doing the cooking these days, I had to convince him 😉 I’m not sure how much longer I can take this “not doing anything” stuff, so in the next couple of days I’m planning on easing back into cooking a little bit. I won’t be standing for hours on end or doing any cooking marathons, but I think one dinner will be good for me. I plan on making some cream of spinach soup, along with a new batch of artisan bread. We can add a side salad and I think that will be such a yummy dinner. The bok choy… I don’t know. We never got around to using what we had from our last share. Still have to figure out a good use for it. The turnips will go sliced raw into salads or on sandwiches, or roasted along with a protein for dinner. (The option to the turnips was kohlrabi, which I would have totally grabbed but Drew didn’t know what to do with it. Hopefully next time it’ll be there again. Last spring I was making a delicious carrot-kohlrabi slaw.)

I’ve been watching a lot of Food Network, as well as going through my cooking magazines and tagging recipes I want to try. Hopefully between nursing, healthy eating, and exercise (once I’m given the OK) the pounds will peel off pretty quick. I’ve seen a lot of diet pill ads and infomercials late at night lately, and while pills like Apidexin might be the choice for some, for me I’d rather keep it as natural as possible. I got my stitch out today and at the doctor I found out that I’ve lost 8 lbs. since last Wednesday. I have 15 lbs. to go to reach my pre-pregnancy weight and 27 lbs. until my official goal weight from back when I started South Beach a couple years ago. I’ve learned a lot about nutrition over the last couple years and my eating habits have greatly improved, so I’m feeling pretty good about my goals. Plus, I find it’s easier to lose weight in the summer, with the abundance of fresh produce. We’ll see how it goes.

Artisan Bread in Five Minutes A Day

Several months ago I heard about this book, Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day. Basically, it showed you how to make artisan-quality bread with minimal effort. The “five minutes a day” part is a little misleading, but nevertheless the method is quick and easy. My experiences with bread baking have been restricted to my bread machine because I’ve been intimidated by all the kneading and rising and punching that real bread baking requires. As I mixed up a batch of the artisan bread dough yesterday, I thought that the process was way too easy and there was no possible way this was going to work.

Here is the dough right after I made it. Notice how wet it is:

Dough, ready to rise

I covered the bowl (you don’t want a tight-fitting lid, just something that covers it) and let it rise. Oh, and rise it did! It spooged over the sides a bit. Clearly I need to use a bigger bowl next time. Here is the same dough, two hours later:

Looks like I need to use a bigger bowl next time

At this point, it was time to stick the bowl in the fridge. The book recommends refrigerating the dough overnight or at the very least for three hours after you make the dough initially. This is because refrigerated dough is easier to handle. Naturally, I could not wait that long! After about one hour in the fridge, I lopped off my grapefruit-sized chunk and formed it into a ball, being sure to slash the top as directed in the recipe. Since I don’t own a pizza peel, I decided to use my wood cutting board and that worked fine:

My first boule

It didn’t really rise as much as I expected it to and right about now was when I started to think that there was no way this was going to work. Imagine my surprise when I peeked in the oven and saw it looking, well, like I figured baking bread should look!

Baking

And the final result…

Fresh out of the oven

I could not believe how well this bread came out. The crust was nice and chewy. The inside was soft and “bready” (for lack of a technical term). It was perfect with our dinner — onion soup and an arugula salad with pears and walnuts with balsamic vinegar and olive oil.

 

Chewy crust, soft inside Arugula and pear salad with walnuts and slice of homemade bread

I have enough dough in my fridge for three more loaves. The dough lasts between 10 and 14 days and I’m going to try my best to make it stretch! I promised my dad a loaf when he and my mom come down next Tuesday and I don’t think I will want to make a new batch of dough between now and my C-section. I love this method of bread baking and hope to continue it. Normally we try to not eat too much in the way of carbs (though I’ve gone way overboard during my pregnancy — that’s got to stop soon). But the way I see it, if I’m going to enjoy some bread, I would much rather be the one making it so I know exactly what goes into it. The book also has whole-wheat and rye breads, both of which I’d like to try at some point.

I waited for this book for nearly two months (I borrowed it from the library and there was a huge wait list), but I have to say that it was worth it. This is one I might consider buying for all of the extra bread recipes. Good stuff.

CSA 2009: Share #1

CSA 2009 - Share #1

I’ve been waiting for this day since the depths of mid-winter, when our calendar for bi-weekly shareholders arrived from Sisters Hill Farm. Yes, today was our first pick-up of the season! As I’ve mentioned before, this year we are opting for a bi-weekly share. It was a little bit cheaper and the produce load should not be so heavy on us this year. Last summer got a bit overwhelming!

Our first share included:

  • 2 heads of lettuce
  • 3/4 lb. arugula
  • 1 head bok choi
  • 1/4 lb. mixed Asian greens (I went heavy on the red mustard, which is quite spicy and really delicious)
  • 8 radishes

The arugula, in particular, is amazing. It has a divine nutty/spicy flavor and I couldn’t help but pick a few leaves out of the bag and munch on them while driving home! Not a bad way to start the season, don’t you think? 🙂

Week’s Eats

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Well it’s been quite a while since I participated in Menu Plan Monday. I’ve been winging it lately, and sometimes that works, sometimes it doesn’t. This is just a general guide. With lots going on, both socially and with the construction work on the house, some nights it might be easier/less stressful to just run out or get a pizza or something. It’s certainly a “play it by ear” kind of week! But anyway:

Sunday: Sausage parm sandwiches – Drew made a big pot of delicious sauce, but in the process we discovered that the Sclafani tomatoes just aren’t as good (in our opinion) as the Tuttorosso. The Sclafani are more acidic or something. The sauce was still delicious, but… we both admit that it’s so much better with our preferred brand.

Monday: Chicken scarpariello – I’m reworking the version I made last year. Last week Dara tried a new version and between her post, and my mother-in-law mentioning a chicken scarp slice of pizza she had the other day, it’s been on my mind. I’m using bulk sausage (a mix of hot and sweet), a different brand of hot vinegar peppers (and perhaps fewer of them), and this time including potatoes in the dish to hopefully soak up extra heat. I’ll let you know how it goes.

Tuesday: Soup and sandwiches or leftovers – I’ll be driving down to Westchester to drop Noah off at his grandma’s, so no major cooking for me. I want to make it quick and easy

Wednesday: Grilled steak, grilled vinegar potatoes (recipe from the new issue of Martha Stewart living), chop salad – I’m lucky to have a “me day” on Wednesday (until 3:30 when Jake gets home from school), so I’m planning on one of my favorites for dinner 🙂 I’m also getting a haircut, believe it or not. I made the appointment and everything! The last time I had a trim was in August, so I figure that I am due.

Thursday: Go out (?) We’ll be attending the K-2 concert at Jake’s school in the afternoon, so maybe afterward we’ll go to Texas Roadhouse. Maybe.

Friday:  Burgers, potato salad, black bean salad

Saturday: Let me think about this one…

For more menu planning ideas, visit Organizing Junkie.