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Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Reduced Guilt Brownies


I know I should be thinking skinny and bathing suits, but I have had the worst sweet tooth lately. Cooking Light offers some great lite desserts that are some of my favorite desserts of all time.

Recently, there was a contest to see what was the best fat substitute in brownies to reduce the guilt. The three alternatives were: canned pumpkin, apple sauce and refried black beans. And believe it or not the black beans were the winner. This tasteless substitute keeps the richness of the dark chocolate without adding any funky after taste like pumpkin. I replaced half the fat in a regular brownie recipe with refried black beans and added a little flavor.

Reduced Guilt Brownies
1 box dark chocolate brownie mix
2 eggs
1/4 filtered water
1/4 vegetable oil
1/4 refried black beans (unseasoned)
1/3 cup no sugar added preserves, such as cherry or raspberry
1/3 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips

I have made brownies from scratch and I will be honest, they taste the same as from the box. Luckily you can still doctor up what comes from the box. There are a lot of brownie options out there and a lot of different opinions about what is best. My only suggestion is look at the ingredients. Make sure you can pronounce at least the first three ingredients. Do not look at nutritional information since there are dozens of ways to avoid certain factors being included on that list. Ingredients will be your best indicator of a good box.

Unseasoned refried beans are a pill to find. I have found some at Trader Joes, but if you are one of the poor blokes without a Trader Joes, then you can make your own. It is easier to find unseasoned black beans. Boil the beans in a skillet until soft. Use the back of a spatula to mash the bean. If you want the beans finer, use a chopper or blender. You only need a quarter cup so save the rest for a bean dip or tasty Mexican meal.

I recommend using a hand blender for this dish. It takes seconds to mix all ingredients and fill a 9x9 pan. Bake according to package instructions. These brownies are rich and flaky and fudgy. Even for reduced-fat, you only need one to satisfy a chocolate craving. Enjoy!

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Sacred Heart Soup detox























I have tried fasting in the past, but I tend to eat too much coming off a fasting or eat too much in the evening and it doesn't really help the "detox" part of fasting. I heard about this soup from a friend whose family had great success. I am anti-diet fads, but detoxing is a great way to flush out the impurities of eating even the least bit of processed food.

This detox does take away my favorite ingredients and that is cheese, but cheese is an over-processed and fat-heavy reason I need to detox. For the most part, the detox is vegetarian and since I don't eat steak anyway I have adjusted the detox for non-meat eaters.

I have also included ingredients that I like, but you can view the entire list of acceptable ingredients at the website Sacred Heart Soup. After the first day's attempt, I needed to cut back on salt. This soup is surprisingly tasty.

Sacred Heart Soup
2 cans Hunt's roasted tomato soup (no seasoning)
1 can whole cut green beans, reduced sodium or salt-free
3 green onions, sliced
2-3 cups vegetable or beef broth (fat free and/or low sodium)
Nestle chicken noodle soup mix, extra noodles
4 stalks celery, chopped
4 carrot sticks, sliced
3 cups chopped kale or Japanese cabbage
1 tbsp soy sauce
black pepper
2 tbsp fresh Italian parsley, chopped
1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce

Spray soup pot with a little PAM. Saute green onions, celery and carrots. Cover with two cups broth. Beef broth offers more flavor to this soup, but I like it with vegetable broth as well. Add soup mix, cover pot and let simmer until vegetables are tender - 10 minutes. Add two cans tomatoes, with juice. Drain and rinse green beans - they tend to be canned with more salt. Add to soup. Add Worcestershire and soy sauce and black pepper and stir. Taste test for saltiness.

Add more broth if needed. Stir in kale or cabbage and parsley. TMI section: if you have never detoxed, it is not a pleasant week. You will detox from every place in your body, including your pores. I don't like cabbage anyway and I fear the consequences of using it in a detox soup. Kale is more nutritious and few side effects. Kale is very cheap and available this time of year.

This will make about six bowls of soup. I eat one for lunch and two at night, which takes out the soup in a day for two people. You can incorporate other foods during the week, but the schedule is strict. I have not been completely on target with the schedule, but this is what I do.

Day One: soup and fruit salad

Fruit Salad: tropical fruits are the mos nutritious and will provide the most beneficial calories
  • fresh cut pineapple
  • naval oranges
  • kiwi
  • mango
  • strawberries
Day Two: soup and vegetable salad and baked potato

Salad:
  • bibb lettuce
  • shredded carrot
  • sliced cucumber
  • sliced radishes
  • chopped tomato
  • one tsp olive oil and vinegar

Baked potato
  • 2 russet potatoes
  • 1/4 cup reduced-fat Greek yogurt
  • 1 tsp dry ranch
  • 1 head broccoli
Microwave potatoes for six minutes to soften. Bake at 400 degrees for 35 minutes. Mix ranch and yogurt and refrigerate. Meanwhile boil broccoli for 3-5 minutes or until bright green. Once potatoes are cool, cut and remove stuffing. Mix potato with yogurt ranch. I KNOW I am cheating by adding ranch, but I am not adding any cheese and yogurt is high in protein. Use a potato masher to mix. Stir in broccoli. Bake again for 10 minutes.

Day Three: soup and salad

Day Four: soup and bananas (at least three) and skim milk

For some reason I am not good about eating bananas raw. For a "dessert" I will slice two bananas and heat them in a skillet for a few minutes until soft but not gooey. Pour into a bowl and had a pinch of coarse salt. They are goooooood.

Day Five: This is the tough day because you are supposed to eat at least three steaks. I do not like steak. If you don't eat steak, then disregard this addition. If you do eat meat, here is what I suggest: beef tips from a reputable butcher. I don't recommend ground beef unless you ground your own because you don't know is going into it. I buy organic beef from a local farmer. I add the beef tips to my soup recipe on day five as well as an additional can of tomatoes. Double the amount of tomatoes on your salad also.

Eat fruit to fight off dessert cravings. Cherries are also a great way to detox this week.

Day Six: soup, salad and beef

Day Seven: add wild rice to soup mix or add cooked vegetables to brown or wild rice.

I lost four pounds, which isn't bad, even for Biggest Loser standards. It's not a noticeable difference for other people, but it taught me a good lesson - I don't need nearly as much food as I think I do. Other people I know have done this diet with great success. You can lose 10-17 pounds in one week depending on how strict you are to the schedule and how much you have to lose in the first place.

Shop of the perimeter of the grocery store. Travel down the aisles only for canned vegetables, juice and spices. The fewer processed foods you consume, the easier your body can handle them. I gulp down my food and don't pay attention to when I get full. I have since been more conscious of when I am full and stop eating immediately. It is just as wasteful to eat food your body doesn't need than it is to throw out food you don't eat.

Good luck and please post success stories if you have them. You will get tired of the soup by day five but if you can make it to day seven you will feel a great sense of accomplishment.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Easter Strawberry Shortcake




















This is an easy, festive dessert that will compliment your spring-inspired Easter dinner this weekend.

Shortcake comes in a lot of varieties, including the most calorie punch with shortbread. I have also seen a nice variety with biscuits. I find lady fingers to be the most convenient because (1) they are pre-made and (2) the individual size helps keep my serving size in check.

I do void all cream from this recipe, instead choosing to use a reduced-fat cheesecake pudding recipe. You can make the "pie version" which calls for less milk and creates a creamier texture.

Strawberry Shortcake

1 pint fresh strawberries, sliced
1 package lady fingers (12 total)
1 package instant pudding, cheesecake flavor (or white chocolate)
1 3/4 cup low-fat milk (1%)
1-2 tbsp cocoa powder

Make your pudding according to package instructions except substitute 1 3/4 cup milk. Do not use soy milk! The fattier the milk, the creamier the pudding but I find that 1% milk is great. I wouldn't recommend fat free unless you are really trying to cut back on fat.

Spread a generous portion of pudding on each side of the lady finger. Top with 2-3 strawberry slices and "sandwich". Using a sifter, lightly dust cocoa powder on top of strawberries. Garnish with a whole strawberry and serve in threes.

Best enjoyed on the deck while watching the birds and celebrating Easter with family and friends. Have a great holiday!


Thursday, March 24, 2011

Power Snack

















Snacks are difficult for calorie-cutters. Easy snacks are bags of chips or popcorn that provide instant gratification. Healthy snacks still require preping.

Any of my AppState alumn followers will remember AppWraps. One of them was an adult peanut butter and jelly, which has inspired my power snack that is ideal for post-workout relief, a lite dessert or even breakfast on the go.

Power Snack (makes 2)

one ripe banana, thickly sliced
2 whole wheat tortillas
2 tbsp peanut butter
2 tbsp pecan pieces
1 tbsp honey

This snack provides a lot of natural protein and fiber along with potassium for sore mussels. It still takes an effort for me to buy and eat whole wheat tortillas but that less-processed wrap does help in nutrition and ease of digestion. The homemade version at Trader Joes has a great texture.

I also love Trader Joes reduced-far peanut butter. Other commercial low-fat peanut butters replace fat with sugar, which does not aid in reducing unneeded fats and sugars. Trader Joes reduced-fat peanut butter actually de-fats the peanuts. You get a peanut butter that keeps its shape better than all-natural peanut butter and is super-tasty.

Spread one tbsp peanut butter onto a tortilla. Layer one half of the sliced banana and top with one tbsp pecans and half tbsp honey. Wrap tortilla, making sure the bottom is securely closed - honey will tend to drip out otherwise. The natural sweetness in the banana and honey make this power snack a satisfying dessert if you have a sugar craving. If you don't have or prefer pecans I recommend walnuts.

Repeat with other ingredients and share your power snack with a drowsy co-worker or workout partner. Enjoy!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

In season: Pineapple
















I have had a hard time finding a salsa recipe that works for me. I love black bean and corn salsa because of the smoky flavors, but I also enjoy a sweet and spicy version as well.

This is where pineapple comes in. To my surprise most tropical fruits - pineapple, kiwi, mango etc - are considered some of the most nutritious fruit you can eat. Pineapple's high vitamin C, magnesium and anti-oxidant power contribute to better eye sight, digestion and works as an anti-inflammatory.

Pineapple is prime in late winter/early spring so find yourself some FRESH pineapple at the grocery store. You can buy a pineapple corer/slicer for less than $10 at Target or other kitchen-aid stores and it's worth the freshness. Canned fruit can often come with added sugar and unnatural preservatives. Once you have your pineapple tower, cut into quarters and use for a breakfast fruit salad or this wonderful salsa recipe.

This recipe is rather simple and you can easily adjust the ingredients to impact the flavors you prefer in a salsa recipe.

Fresh Pineapple Salsa

1 ripe pineapple
1 green apple, finely chopped
1 shallot, mined
1 ripe lime
fresh cilantro
pickled jalapeño
cumin
chili powder
salt
1 tbsp olive oil

Chop pineapple slices - mine was a fine consistency. Mix with apple and let drain in a strainer while you prepare other ingredients. I liked using green apple because it's crisp and firm - you can use other cooking apples as well, such as Fuji.

Mince shallot and jalapeño. Add as much or as little jalapeño as you care for - the pineapple has an overwhelming sweetness so I prefer more pepper. I use pickled peppers because the raw pepper is not appealing to me in salsa. Clean cilantro and chop.

Add onion, pepper and cilantro in a bowl. Mix in 1/2 tsp cumin and chili powder each. Also add 1 tsp coarse ground salt. Add pineapple and apple to mixing bowl. Stir in olive oil and juice from one lime. Taste to determine if more spice or salt is needed.

This salsa is great for just chips but also pairs well with meats such as pork and chicken. For a vegetarian option, make fish tacos on corn tortillas and add pineapple salsa. This is also a great pot luck item for a tropical party theme.

Martha Stewart has a version in her March Everyday Food magazine that includes black beans.

Monday, January 10, 2011

The Cottage Cheese

As most of you know, I love cheese. A friend of mine once said "a meal without cheese is not complete" and I agree with her, mostly. Cheese is one vice I will also suffer from. However, not all cheeses are created equal. There are some rules of thumb for choosing the right cheese: white cheeses over orange cheeses e.g. mozzarella over cheddar; hard cheese over soft cheese e.g. Parmesan over Brie. But the ultimate test is fermented v. artificially processed.

Cheese is so bad for you because (1) high content of milk fat and (2) highly processed. But there are a number of cheeses that are naturally fermented, including feta, blue cheese, Gorgonzola, goat cheese and cottage cheese. Milk undergoes a natural fermentation process to produce cheese and thus have an easier path through your digestive system. Hence why you see so many of my dishes using goat and feta cheeses.

I love, Love, LOVE cottage cheese. I love small curd and large curd; low fat or full fat (because what is fat free cheese?); I love it savory and sweet. Although it is not the most aesthetically pleasing food to consume, it is packed with calcium and protein that makes for a healthy snack and awesome breakfast ingredient.

I have two typical cottage cheese breakfast staples that are healthy and filling. Pill on one half chopped apple over shredded wheat and cottage cheese for a filling and nutritious breakfast. I started off using sweetened shredded wheat but it's not necessary. The apples provide enough natural sweetness and the large shredded wheat is easier to break up. It's a simple and easy enough breakfast even to make at the office.

Cottage cheese pancakes were the rave during the Southbeach Diet and Atkins craze. This style of pancakes calls for less flour and sugar than traditional pancakes. I've also found that these pancakes are tender and moist and have no need for syrup. I took the original recipe from Martha Stewart, but I replaced ricotta cheese and cottage cheese and it made a great difference in taste.


Orange Cottage Cheese Pancakes

16 oz. small curd cottage cheese, low-fat or full fat
1/3 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
zest from one orange
2/3 cup self-rising flour

Mix cottage cheese, sugar and eggs. Use a submersion blender to blend mixture until curds are no longer noticeable. Mix in zest and flour.

Heat pan on medium-low and spray with PAM or use a nonstick pan. Pour about 1/4 cup of batter on pan and cook until bubbles start to form and flip. Cottage cheese pancakes are very moist and delicate - it is not as easy to see when cake is ready to flip or even to flip it. Don't get frustrated - the effort is worth the reward. Serve pancakes with fruit, if desired. No additional sugar or syrup required!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Banana Bread Pudding

This is a wonderful "leftovers" recipe for your stale bread or ripe bananas. This is not quite a holiday recipe, but it is absolutely delicious.

Another Martha Stewart creation. I used more bananas and not-quite whole milk to cut back on calories. This dessert is served great with whip cream, ice cream or with coffee. It also makes a beautiful table dish for company. This dish rivals the bread pudding at Harry Bissett's in Athens (all my UGA readers know what I'm talking about) but with the convenience of eating at home.

Banana Bread Pudding

8-12 oz. bread loaf, depending on the size of your casserole dish
4 bananas, cut into 1 inch slices
1/2 cup raisins (optional)
2.5 cups reduced fat 2% milk
1/2 cup raw sugar plus more for coating
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 eggs

Preheat oven 350 degrees. Whisk together milk, 1/2 cup sugar, vanilla extract and eggs.

Cut up bread into 1.5 inch cubes. I use a 2 quart lasagna dish for this recipe and I can only hold about 8 oz. of bread. I buy the French loaves at the grocery store for "day old" discounts. When slicing your bananas, try to cut at an angle for a longer surface cut. Toss together bread, bananas and raisins. The first time I made this I did not use raisins and it was just as good. I use raisins when I have them though.

Pour milk mixture over bread mixture and turn. Let sit for a few minutes until milk is absorbed. If you are using more bread, add more milk. Turn bread pudding into a greased, 2 quart shallow dish. Sprinkle raw sugar on top and bake for 50 minutes. Let cool 10 minutes.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Fancy Endive Salad



















If you are anywhere near Valle Crucis, NC and want to spoil yourself to a night of divine, gourmet food and a relaxing atmosphere, you must visit The Inn at Little Pond. Gay and Frank host a beautiful bed and breakfast as well as sponsor cooking classes for their guests and send you away with your own glorious recipes to make the same dinner at home.

The last time I went there, I learned I liked endive. Endive looks like a tasteless heart of iceburg lettuce, but in fact it is quite nutritious and tender. On the ultimate vegetable list, it scores a 307, above green leaf lettuce. The most appealing part of the salad was the vinegar and walnut oil salad dressing.

I like using the word "fancy" because it makes me feel like I can show up overpriced restaurants and still make a presentation worthy of my husband and important guests. This salad is a great, light appetizer for a fancy meal or even as a large side dish to a simple main course. This is also a great recipe to getting rid of the last of your lettuce, specialty cheese or apple sitting in your fruit basket.

Fancy Endive Salad

Salad:
1/4 cup hazelnuts, raw and unsalted
2 heads endive, chopped
1 apple, cored and sliced
2 oz. gorgonzola cheese, crumbled

Dressing:
2 tbsp white wine vinegar
1 tsp dijon mustard
coarse salt and pepper
7 tbsp walnut oil

Roast hazelnuts at 400 degrees for 7-10 minutes. As soon as you smell them, take them out of the oven. Again, Trader Joes has the best selection of raw, unroasted nuts in bulk amounts at a discounted rate compared to other grocery stores. Once cool, chop nuts with a large knife.

Fill a bowl with water. Add sea salt. Sink chopped endive into bowl and let leaves rise to the top. This lets the dirt sink to the bottom. Pull leaves out of water, don't squeeze, and completely dry.

Whisk together salad dressing ingredients.

Combine endive and chopped apple. Slowly stir in dressing until produce is modestly coated. Serve salad topped with hazelnuts and cheese. You can use alternatives such as pear, romaine lettuce, baby spinach, blue cheese, walnuts, etc.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Side Salads

Alright, fess up, how many vegetables do you actually eat a day? You are supposed to get from 6-9 servings of fruit and vegetables a day. A serving is roughly the size of your fist. I will absolutely admit it. As much as I feel I try to add multiple vegetables to every meal, even breakfast, I still need vitamins to supplement my lack.

One easy solution is side salads and appetizers to help fill you up before you overeat a rich meal. I love salads, LOVE them, and they are primarily made up of mostly fruits and vegetables. The problem? Everyone else's salad tastes better. I love to eat salads when I go out to eat, but making them at home is not the same. Maybe it's the dressing?

Here are a few side salad recipes I have found to be quite rewarding and easy to make. I mostly enjoy salads with baby spinach and romaine, but I have recently found that I like endive and a wide variety of romaine lettuces. Use what you like. Iceberg lettuce is useful for some recipes, but it does not score very high in nutrition for a vegetable. Stick to greens that are, well, green!

Tomato and "Mozzarella" salad

fresh basil leaves, Julianne cut
2 large heirloom tomatoes, thinly sliced
sliced cheese e.g. white American, provolone or other low-fat white cheese
hearts of romaine, finely chopped (optional)
balsamic vinaigrette, low-fat (not fat free)

Half the cheese slices into triangles. I have also seen a version using goat cheese slices but my favorite is white American. Trader Joes actually sells mozzarella slices made with goat's milk. It's actually delicious. Do not use fresh mozzarella if you want to avoid expensive and fatty cheeses.

Heirloom tomatoes make this dish because of their beautiful color and few seeds. Layer tomato slices and cheese triangles, alternately, over a bed of finely chopped hearts of romaine. I normally just serve the tomato and cheese slices, but I tried a version over lettuce, and it was very satisfying. Top layers with basil and vinaigrette. Fat free dressings are made with water and very dissatisfying. Low fat varieties still offers some heart-healthy olive oil and filling fats while still cutting calories.

Mediterranean salad

romaine lettuce, chopped
cherry tomatoes, halved
1 pita picket, torn into tiny pieces
feta cheese crumbles, flavored or plain
chickapeas (optional)
Mediterranean dressing e.g. balsamic vinaigrette or black olive with feta

On a medium cooking sheet, layer pieces of pita. Spray with oil and bake on 400 for 5 minutes or until crisp. These light "crutons" give this side salad a little crunch. I like to use the mini pita pockets sold at TJs because the pita is thinner. The black olive with feta dressing is offered by Kraft, and it is one of my absolute favorites. Be sparing, but a little goes a long way on taste.



Baked goat cheese salad

12 oz. goat cheese e.g. plain, lemon citrus, or herbed
1 egg, beaten
1/2 cup bread crumbs or Panko
dried fruit e.g. cranberries, currants or raisins
spring greens or baby spinach (stemmed)
sliced almonds
sweet vinaigrette e.g. pomegranate, poppyseed, raspberry (full fat)

The first time I tried this recipe I accidentally bought a citrus-flavored goat cheese log, but it is by far my favorite version. I would not use a peppercorn variety on this dish though. Make sure cheese is cold and cut log into half-inch rounds. Drench rounds in egg and bread crumbs and layer on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Spray rounds with oil and bake at 400 for 10-15 minutes or until cheese starts to brown.

Layer greens with dried fruit (I prefer cran-raisins) and almonds. Top each salad with two or three cheese rounds and serve with a side of dressing. I do not recommend low-fat sweet dressings because of the artificial sugars and colors. Buy organic to avoid artificial ingredients. Or dress your salad with simple olive oil and vinegar.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Patriotic (and low-fat) Cheesecake

Happy 4th of July! Holidays are a great time for families and showing off your culinary skills. I am a huge meal planner around holidays, and it also gives me an extra "cheat day" on my farm food diet.

Cheesecake is one of the most dreaded desserts to avoid when trying to cut weight. Regular cheesecake can pack as much as 18g of fat and 40% of your daily saturated fat. BUT IT'S SO GOOD! I was able to find and combine two cheesecake recipes that use ricotta cheese and low-fat cream cheese to cut a lot of the cheese fat out of this irresistible dessert. So you can double your guilty day for a holiday dessert that is low-fat, festive and very tasty.

I combined Martha Stewart's Red, White and Blueberry Cheesecake with Cooking Light's Ricotta Cheesecake. Either recipe is excellent on it's own, but my version tries to keep more of the texture of cheesecake without including all the cream cheese calories.

I first made this dessert for my husband for being sweet and going out of his way to help me. I am not a huge cheesecake fan, but this combination is excellent. It was one of the few times we finished a dessert before throwing it out. There is a little bit of room to play with the proportions, so be sure and check the links to the recipes if you want more or less firmness, fat or ricotta.

Patriotic Cheesecake:

Crust:
6-8 graham crackers (one pack)
1/3 cup raw almonds (optional)
1/4 cup sugar (optional)
4 tbsp butter, melted

Filling:
1/2 cup organic sugar
12 oz (1.5 bars) reduced-fat cream cheese
1/2 pint (8 oz) low-fat ricotta cheese
2 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla extract
salt, pinch
1 tsp fresh lemon zest

Topping:
1/2 cup organic sugar
1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
4 plums, pitted and cubed
1 pint blueberries

Do not use store-bought graham crust - the cheesecake will fall apart. Graham cracker crust is incredibly simple to make if you have a food processor. If you have heart-healthy raw almonds, only use 6 grahams and crush together in processor. If you don't have almonds, use the whole pack of grahams. All graham crust calls for 1/4 cup sugar. I have always forgotten to add it and the crust is still divine. So don't add the sugar unless you think it needs it. I know 4 tbsp butter is a bit much for a low-fat recipe, but you really need the moisture to hold the crust together. Pour the butter into the processor while it is crushing the grahams. Pack the buttery crumbs into a 9 inch pie dish. Use a greased spatula to spread the crumbs evenly. Bake the crust for 8 minutes in a 350 degree oven.

A few tips here: This is obviously a lower-fat dessert and not exactly screaming healthy, but I try where I can to make this less bad-for-me. I have become hung up on organic sugar lately. I do like Sugar in the Raw, but it doesn't always do best in baking. It is GREAT in cookies, but not other baked goods, so stick with fine, organic sugar. The price is not much different esp since it takes me a while to go through a 5lb bag of sugar. Also, when zesting your lemon, be sure to save a tablespoon of the juice for the topping. It's best to roll the lemon on the counter and press your palm into the lemon to break up the juices before cutting it.

Be sure to clean and dry your food processor completely before moving onto the filling. Make sure your cream cheese and ricotta are at room temperature, which will help with blending. Blend together cheeses and sugar. Add eggs, one at a time. Add vanilla, zest and salt. You might have a fancy food processor, but I do not (got it from Visa reward points), so be sure and scrape the bottom of the bowl with a spatula to make sure all the cream cheese isn't caked on the bottom. Once mixture is well blended, pour the batter into the cooled pie dish. Place pie on a cookie sheet and bake for 30-35 minutes. Cool completely.

As cake cools, combine plums, 1/2 cup sugar and lemon juice in a saucepan. Heat on medium until at a rapid simmer. Reduce heat to simmer and stir until fruit starts to turn to jam. Remove from heat and stir in blueberries. Once cake is cool, spread fruit mixture over cake and refrigerate at least two hours.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Light Carrot Cake

Because of a grocery store mishap I found myself with a ton of carrots and no planned meals for them. Carrots are a rock star on the vegetable list, although I don't care for them much, so I needed to find a way to use them. Racheal Ray has a reader recipe section and recently came out with a great carrot cake recipe.

Carrot cake is not the worst cake for you, but it does have a lot of sugar and oil. This recipe substitutes the texture and juice with pineapple for a lot of the oil. The sour cream also helps to enrich this cake without having to depend on fats as much. I was able to substitute Greek yogurt for sour cream inside the cake, but the icing definitely requires real sour cream. Daisy makes a good lite sour cream.

Light Carrot Cake

2 big carrots, cleaned and shredded
1/2 cup pineapple (4oz can, drained)
1/2 cup walnuts (toasted are better but you can use raw)
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 egg
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup sour cream ( or 1/4 cup yogurt and 1/4 cup sour cream)
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
ground cloves
ground cinnamon
ground ginger
3 tbsp butter, room temperature
1 cup powdered sugar

If you are toasting your nuts, preheat oven at 400 degrees and toast nuts for 7-10 minutes. As soon as you smell them, take them out of the oven or they will burn. I skin my carrots before shredding them to get as much of the moist carrot as I can plus you get the cleaner carrot. Mix nuts with pineapple and carrot.

Mix flour, baking ingredients and spices. Recipes always underwhelm me with spices, so I don't use measurements for spices in my recipe. Average about 1/2 tsp, but I sprinkle until I get a good color in the flour mix. I don't believe you can over-spice carrot cake, but my sister has a great story about confusing 1/4 tsp of cloves for 1/4 cup of ground cloves. Those were some black cookies.

In a large mixing bowl cream sugar with 1/4 c sour cream, oil, vanilla and egg. Stir in carrot mix and then flour mixture. I made this cake in my new bunt pan for a prettier presentation, but you can also use a regular cake pan. Bake on 350 for 55 minutes. Be sure the cake is cooled before trying to get it out of the pan.

When mixing the icing, be sure that the butter is soft. The butter and sour cream (1/4 c.) will dissolve the sugar so be patient when trying to get a cream consistency. Let cake cool before pouring the icing on the cake. I kept the icing in a separate container to use later. The cake will stay moist for most of a week.

Monday, May 3, 2010

Mother's Day Brunch

It's the North Carolina primary. Don't forget to vote today!

I actually made this on Easter Sunday, but it was so amazing I had to share for those wonderful adult children who want to make their mothers a fabulous, meatless breakfast.


I have not yet picked up my deep dish pie plate, so I normally have to reduce the contents of my quiche. I used only 1/2 red onion - you can probably still use three shallots, but I already had a red onion. I used one bag of spinach - I am not sure what a bunch is unless I'm at the Farmer's market. I only bought 4 oz of cheese instead of 8 oz, but since I reduced so much of my ingredients it worked out better. I only used six (6) eggs and 1.5 cup of half-n-half (organic, of course).

I do not make pie crust. Some people have this fabulous way of making the most desirable pie crust. I am not that person. I buy Pillsbury refrigerated pie crust and it tastes the same as all others I could make. I have also been known to buy the frozen deep dish pie crusts if I do need more. It's all the same to me. You will not be able to buy low fat pie crusts, so don't even try. You can reduce your calories by what you put in it instead.

A few tips here:
When wilting your spinach, do about 1/2 the bag at a time. When the spinach is wilted, lift the pan and tilt away from you so that the liquid falls to the other side. Take a spoon and pull the spinach towards the edge of the pan closest to you, draining the liquid. Then just spill the spinach onto a cutting board. It doesn't waste paper towels. Pour out the liquid before moving to the second half of the bag. Chop spinach after wilted.

You want to saute all your vegetables and let them cool in the bowl before adding the eggs. I hate when I add eggs to hot foods and it cooks the egg. Not pretty presentation. Add the half-n-half first to cool the vegies before whisking in your eggs. I like my whole eggs, but for those of us (myself included) who need to be more conscious of cholesterol, substitute egg whites for a few of the eggs. You will not get as firm a quiche using egg whites, so I suggest only substituting two eggs.


Fruit Skewers

This is not much of a recipe, but its a beautiful presentation. Take your favorite colorful fruits; I used strawberries, green grapes, pineapple and kiwi. Buy a few days before to make sure that all fruit is ripe. Prep fruits e.g. wash and haul strawberries, skin kiwi, etc.

Take wood or metal skewers (ask your grilling partner to borrow some or buy the wooden ones for cheap at your grocery). Just be careful that you do not buy "seasoned" skewers. Most likely they are not flavored with seasonings that complement fruit. Layer different color fruits together to create a rainbow pattern. I alternated green fruits with red strawberries and yellow pineapple.





















Other Sides

I made Martha's Angel Biscuits with black strap molasses. Beware, the biscuits take 2 hours to chill so make them in advance. I would also suggest a yummy chicken sausage for our meat eaters. Trader Joes has an awesome selection. Martha also suggests a nice bibb lettuce salad for my super-healthy readers. I couldn't get my food audience to go along with that, but maybe mama will. I hope your mother feels special today!

Friday, April 16, 2010

Homemade Granola Breakfast

I got this recipe from Martha Stewart's Everyday magazine for Maple-Nut Granola. This is one of her easier granola recipes because it uses cabinet staples and you don't have to dig around some healthfood store for barley flakes and wheat bran.

A few things to note: I used more nuts than was recommended, about 1/2 cup each. I prefer more protein in the morning to keep me awake and full before lunchtime. I do use pecans and almonds, but you can also use walnuts. Be sure to use the raw, unsalted, unroasted kind. Otherwise they will taste overdone when baked with the granola. I also add a few sprinkles of cinnamon pieces or grated cinnamon stick. If you have it in stock, pour 1/4 cup of ground flax seeds in the mix. The good fat is great for your heart and helps you stay full in the morning.

And DO NOT cook granola for 30 minutes as recommended. I bake for about 15 minutes, stirring once when the granola smells very fragrant. Seriously, stay close to the oven when you bake this because it will burn easily. As your granola cools, it will get crisp.

I use about 1/3 - 1/2 cup of fat free Greek yogurt - Fage is my favorite but kind of expensive; Oikos is also good. Honestly, I would never recommend fat free anything, but this yogurt is so rich and the granola so flavorful, you really don't need the extra calories. If you try the fat free and don't like it, go with the 2% instead. Beware there are Greek yogurt brands that are VERY fatty; always check the label.

Stir in one packet of splenda or 1 tsp of honey (nature's sugar) in the yogurt. Top with a handful of granola and 1/2 - 1 whole banana, sliced. I am not one to eat the same things often, but this has been my daily breakfast for weeks at a time. It has the protein from the yogurt and nuts; whole grains from the oats and a whole serving of fruit. And it is very easy to transfer this breakfast to work or assemble at work if needed.

If you do tire of the same yogurt and granola breakfast, use the same ingredients to make Crunch Berry Pancakes. I know it sounds like a kid's cereal, but they are fantastic and not bad for you. Instead of blueberries and raspberries, I used fresh strawberries. I think this recipe will go with any kind of berry you have in stock. Just make sure you do chop the fruit to avoid lumpy pancakes. I did not use the butter or powdered sugar and they were sweet enough to eat without syrup. A perfect Sunday morning breakfast.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Pear and Arugula Pizza

Modified from "Cooking Light" Pear and Prosciutto Pizza

I was actually more inspired by the photo than the actual recipe. I made this pizza and I couldn't stop thinking about it. It's a great vegetarian choice and a promo for Trader Joes.

1 bag prepared Trader Joes pizza dough for $1! (or homemade, do not use Pillsbury)
1 7-8 oz ricotta cheese (I have a new obsession with TJ's ricotta but reduced fat Sorrento is also good. Don't use fat free)
dried or fresh thyme leaves
minced garlic (from jar or crushed fresh)
1/2 red onion, chopped
1-2 Bartlett pears, cored and thinly sliced
4-5 oz arugula or baby spinach (about half a bag), lightly chopped
balsamic vinegar or vinegarette
finely shredded mozzarella, preferably TJ's goat mozz

Preheat oven to 450 and heat pizza stone, if using. If using store-bought dough let it sit out for 20 minutes or until room temperature. Saute' onion in oil and garlic until caramelized. Remove from pan and add tbsp more oil and pears. Saute' until slightly brown and softened. Flour counter surface with cornmeal and roll out pizza dough into thin crust. Move dough to pizza stone or cookie sheet and bake 5-8 minutes until mostly done. Let cool slightly; otherwise your ricotta will run.

Spread ricotta cheese onto dough and top with thyme leaves. Evenly spread sauted onions and pears. Top with greens, and sprinkle dressing and cheese. Bake for another 5-8 minutes or until cheese is browned to liking. If crust starts to burn but cheese is not melted lower temp to 400 or broil for a few minutes (do not leave kitchen if you choose to broil!). Serve with a white wine. It is ab fab!

Tips: Chopping greens keeps the pizza from being a tower when you put it in the oven. I simply pile my greens (I always prefer spinach for the iron and nutrients) and quickly chop with a butcher's knife. The greens will wilt when cooked so they are manageable to eat. Do no, do not use fat free cheese for this recipe. Trader Joes also has a great low-fat mozzarella you can use, but reduced fat and fat-free cheese do not melt well. It is better for you to use a higher-fat cheese and use more sparingly. This recipe was the first time I used to goat mozzarella and loved it. The flavor went perfect with the pear and spinach.

Win choices: I am one of those strange people who love dry, red wines but do not like the meals that standardly go with them i.e. red meat. However, I love chicken and fish dishes but do not prefer the lighter, sweet, white wines that are recommended. I say go with what you like! I did recommend a white for this dish because the greens and pear and white cheeses paired very well with the Chardonnay I had in stock.

Variations: for a non-vegetarian dish, add pancetta to pizza before baking. I have also seen versions with feta or blue cheese. The goat mozzarella is enough kick for me :)