Saturday, July 31, 2010

Fresh Tomato & White Bean Salsa

I really like fresh salsa. It's delightfully tasty, sharp and bright on the tongue. Normal salsa is okay, but it can be so bland and packaged-tasting. I think canned salsa is the 'instant coffee' of the salsa world, whereas a good fresh salsa is the 'espresso'.

This one I kind of just made up on my own. I was looking for black beans to make black bean and mango salsa, but I found white beans instead. This is what I came up with.

Fresh Tomato & White Bean Salsa

Ingredients
1 cup white kidney beans, rinsed
1 big tomato, diced
2 green onions, diced
1/3 red pepper, diced
1 tbsp parsley, chopped
1/5 habanero pepper, minced
1 clove garlic, minced
1/2 lime, juiced
salt & pepper

I'm not even going to type out the directions. Mix everything in a bowl and let it sit for an hour. I used it to top a chicken fajita, along with some cheese. Since I'm feeling kind of mopey today, I washed the meal down with a blended watermelon-raspberry-grapefruit vodka drink. I made my own tortilla (no sense in having a package since I'm the only one eats them, and rarely) with corn flour, water, salt and lime juice. Turned out a bit dry, but it still tasted good. This time I tried flavouring it with a bit of chili powder. I think it would have turned out better if I had a tortilla press.

Anyways, the salsa was really good. Give it a try!





Cheddar, Avocado & Tomato on Toast

This combination is probably one of our favourite things to eat. The creamy avocado blends so well with the bright taste of tomato and the sharp flavour of the cheese. Delightful, every time.

I ate my breakfast with a hardboiled egg or two. This meal makes for a nice, light morning snack. 

Cheddar, Avocado & Tomato on Toast

Ingredients
1/2 avocado
2 slices of tomato
2 slices of cheddar cheese
1 piece of toast


Directions
1. Toast bread

2. Spread avocado on the toasted bread, top with slices of tomato and cheddar


3. Eat!


 


 


 


Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Tropical Salad with Pork

Last week I had lunch at Veneto with my friend Eric. I had their "Tropical Salad" which was absolutely delicious. Mixed greens with pineapple, red peppers, cashews and some sort of light dressing. It was topped with grilled Jamaican jerk chicken. I demolished the salad and definitely recommend it. 

I took some pork out of the freezer last night and asked Paul to grill it with some jerk seasoning (we use the epicure brand) so I could try to recreate it. It was pretty good! I made a honey-mustard-lime dressing to go with it. 


Tropical Salad with Pork

Ingredients
1 pork steak, grilled and seasoned with jerk seasoning
1/2 red pepper, sliced
3/4 mango, cubed
2 cups lettuce, ripped into bite size pieces
1/4 cup cashews
1 tbsp honey
1 tbsp dijon mustard
1/2 lime, juiced
1/8 tsp lime zest


Directions
1. Toss lettuce, red pepper, mango and cashews

2. In a separate bowl, mix honey, dijon and lime juice and zest. Stir until well combined.


3. Toss salad, grilled pork and dressing. Serve and enjoy!







Monday, July 26, 2010

Roasted Beets and Sauteed Balsamic Beet Greens

Beets beets beets. I really can't get enough beets right now. Bunches of BC beets bought for a buck. Like that alliteration? No seriously, two bunches of BC beet for $2 at the grocery store the other day. I bought the bunches because I wanted to eat the greens, too! Paul and I have been eating a lot of dark green leafy vegetables lately. It started when we discovered Swiss chard, which was delivered in Paul's organic veggie box a few months ago. Sauteed with some olive oil and doused with a little balsamic near the end of the cooking process and BAM you have something REALLY good to eat. 

We had our beets and beet greens with a roasted lamb shank, roasted potatoes (for me) and roasted yams (for him). I made some gravy with the drippings, and of course we had mint sauce. Delicious, delicious meal.

Roasted Beets with Sauteed Balsamic Beet Greens

Ingredients
1 bunch of BC beets, greens included
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
1 tsp balsamic vinegar


Directions
1. Chop beet greens off at the base of the vegetable. Rinse, pat dry and slice up the leaves and stems into bite size pieces. 

2. Heat 1 tbsp of EVOO in a pan. Throw in leaves and stems and sautee until nice and tender, 10-15 minutes


3. About a minute before the leaves and stems are cooked, drizzle on balsamic vinegar and toss to coat. 


4. Serve immediately. 




Sunday, July 25, 2010

Sailing Trip - Dinner of the Week

Sailing trip! My Dad, brother, Paul and I took off Friday after work to head to D'Arcy Island, historical home of a leper colony off the coast of Victoria, BC. D'Arcy Island is somewhere between Cadboro Bay and Sidney Spit. A lovely island, a lovely weekend, delicious food and I only broke one of my toes hiking. It's a delightful shade of purple and blue now. I'm hoping its only a bad sprain, because I would really like to finish playing out my softball season. Cross your fingers for me :)

My family has a tradition of the "Dinner of the Week" - when I was a kid, the award went to the child that produced the best dinner during the work week. My brothers and I would compete for the $1 that came with the honour, although I don't seem to recall ever seeing the prize handed out. In retrospect, I think this competition was a way for my Mom and Dad to get out of having to ever cook dinner. It definitely worked. I'm going to have to remember this trick for when I'm a parent. Anyways, for this sailing trip we all took turns preparing meals. My brother made dinner Friday night, Paul and I made breakfast Saturday morning, and my Dad made lunch on Saturday. We tried to decide who won the "Dinner of the Week" award of weekend, but couldn't decide. I think Paul and I were serious contenders, but I'll let my readers decide. Post your nominee for the winner in the comments. 

Friday Night - John
BBQ Salmon, Salad, Roasted Yams


 Saturday Breakfast - Kim & Paul
Bacon, Scrambled Eggs, Blueberried & Yogurt, Coffee & Baileys


Saturday Lunch - Dad
Sandwiches, chips, olives, dolmades, leftover Salmon

I don't have a picture for Dad's lunch because I was too busy icing my freshly broken toe to operate my camera. The lunch was good, but Dad forgot his ham and was highly dependent on John's snack food to provide his lunch. In the end, it was probably a good thing because we still have way too much food even without Dad's sandwich ingredients, but still - it might call for disqualification. Keep in mind, though, my Dad supplied the salmon for John's BBQ dinner... perhaps that makes it fair? I'll let you decide! 

Dad, if you're reading this, I am a fair and equitable competitor and fully welcome a do-over on a future sailing trip.

Various plates and random deliciousness....

Again, I'm guilt of neglecting you! My sincerest apologies. Life seems to go faster and faster as time goes on. I heard an interesting theory on this... I can't remember what it's called, but it could accurately be described as the Theory of Relative Aging. The older you are, the shorter time feels because its relative to your age. For example, when I was 20, 10 years felt like a long time because its half of my life. At 30, it won't feel as long because its only a third of my life. Same time period, different relative feel. Anyway, enough with the philososcience and on to the food.


I'm not going to post recipes, just some food porn, mostly because I can't really remember what I did. It's been too long since I made these dishes! If you see something you like, send me a message/leave a comment and I'll try to rationalize the recipe out for you. I am going to make better effort to update more regularly from now on.


Blueberry Salad and Hamburger topped with Goat Feta and Pesto


 This salad had spinach, cucumber, tomato, green onion and blueberries in it. I think I made a balsamic dressing for it. I love blueberries in salad! Definitely give it a try, it makes for a delicious, light summery salad. The hamburger was topped with some goat feta and a homemade pesto. Since Paul and I don't eat bread, we try to add some excitement and zest to plain old hamburger. You can't eat steak everyday.


Grilled Sweet Red Pepper stuffed with Chicken, Spinach, Camembert & Boursin Cheese


Paul made this for dinner last week. What a delicious meal to come home to! He sauteed up some spinach and mixed with grilled chicken breast, camembert and herb and garlic boursin cheese. We stuffed it into big red sweet peppers, wrapped the ends in tin foil to hold it all in and grilled them lightly on the BBQ. The peppers were tender and smoky, and the filling was cheesy and delicious. Really melted in my mouth! I can't wait to try this recipe again and experiment with different fillings.




Steak with Chimichurri and Boursin, Sauteed Kale and Beets with Roasted Yams




Steak is delicious. There are a lot of things you can put on steak, none of which compares to a good chimichurri sauce. Chimichurri is an Argentian sauce (I think) composed of cilantro, parsley, garlic, cumin, red pepper flakes and extra virgin olive oil. You blend it all up and let it sit for an hour or so... It's fresh and bright tasting, and adds a whole new level of savoury to your steak. The boursin melts a bit from the heat coming out of your steak, and mixes in with the chimichurri and... bang. It's a party in your mouth and everyone is invited.


Sauteed kale and roasted beets is a new veggie favourite around my house. I never knew a dark green leafy vegetable and a run of the mill red beet could taste so good. I absolutely hated beets growing up, but I only ever tried them pickled. Roasting them makes them into a whole new vegetable. 












Thursday, July 15, 2010

Pie Iron

A wonderful lady that I work with, Jo-Anne, was kind enough to lend me her Pie Irons for my camping trip. Basically, a pie iron is a cast iron sandwich press that you stick in the camp fire. 


I had LOTS of great ideas about stuff I wanted to cook in there, but they didn't work out very well. I tried a sausage and green pepper dish...

 
It worked out pretty well, but when I tried one with yams...

 

It didn't work out as well. I decided to move into desserts. Jen, another great lady I work with, suggested I melt marshmallows and a chocolate bar between two waffles in the pie iron. I took her advice and it's pretty much the best decision I ever made.


I used M&Ms and toffee chocolate covered peanuts with my marshmallows. I do not regret this decision. 




 


 


Camping Food!

I got a tip that blogging using Mozilla Firefox might fix that weird spacing problem that I've been having. Let's see if this works!


I just got back from a camping trip! Well, I got back about a week ago but I've been a terrible blogger and I haven't updated anything. Sorry guys! Paul and I had a wonderful trip. It was great. We spent about 10 days exploring the coast of Oregon. I have never seen a more beautiful beach! 

Kalaloch, Washington State

 Wreck of the Peter Iredale - Fort Stevens National Park
Astoria, Oregon

The camping trip was great. We ate a lot of really good, simple food. I love cooking, but I also love relaxing so I didn't really try to knock anything out of the plate on this trip. I took some photos of our food and will give you guys some descriptions, but I definitely didn't keep a record of any recipes. What I WILL give you is a list of the spices I took with me. I have a GIGANTIC spice collection. There aren't many spices I don't have. So, when it comes to picking out what to take I have a lot to choose from, but I still only take a few. 

Here it is, my list of ESSENTIAL spices for camping trips:
-salt and pepper
-extra virgin olive oil
-balsamic vinegar
-Italian seasoning
-garlic powder
-onion powder

I also brought taco spice and jerk seasoning, just in case, but I didn't really use any of it. I'm telling you, this combination of spices can season just about anything you want to make while camping. 

Hamburgers? Use the onion, garlic, Italian and salt and pepper to season your patties
Grilled veggies? Garlic, Italian, salt, pepper and EVOO
Salad dressing? EVOO, Balsamic, Italian, salt and pepper OR buy a lemon and subsitute lemon juice in for the balsamic
Greek chicken? EVOO, lemon juice, garlic powder and Italian seasoning

Use Italian seasoning wherever you would normally use basil, oregano, rosemary, thyme or parsley

Now, without further ado - the food porn.

Spinach Salad - spinach, cucumber, green pepper and strawberry

 Steak Fajita with Guacamole

 Crawfish - Jack's Crawfish
Portland, Oregon
Grilled Vegetables and Cheeseburger


Camping Fondue! 
This was great. We cut up some steak and marinated it in some BBQ sauce and marinated veggies in EVOO, garlic powder, Italian seasoning, salt and pepper. Then we skewered it onto our hot dog roasting sticks and cooked it over the fire. So much fun and so so so tasty!




...and our last meal...

 Steak, Bacon AND eggs...because we're like that.