Showing posts with label outdoor living. Show all posts
Showing posts with label outdoor living. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Roasted Fennel, Chickpea, and Tomato Soup


Fennel is such an interesting vegetable, and one I don't cook with very often. I think this is the second time I've ever bought fennel in the store. The first time I bought fennel had to have been over 5 years ago, and was in Portland. Even the cashier in Portland didn't know what fennel was, and had the hardest time tracking down the code to ring up the silly thing. She finally found the code under "anise". Ever since that day, I often think of fennel and anise interchangeably. So when I went to buy fennel for this soup, I knew I would help the cashier if the vegetable code was listed under anise. Because I knew, without a shadow of a doubt, that the cashier would ask me what the fennel was. Folks around here aren't very familiar with vegetables, and they'll ask what I'm buying if it's outside the standard lettuce, tomato, and onion box. In my experience, they aren't familiar with bok choy, kale, fennel, leeks, radicchio,  kiwi, any kind of hot pepper, and one time, someone asked me what an eggplant was. Sure enough, when I arrived in front of the cashier, she looked down her glasses at me and asked what the heck the fennel was. I told her it was fennel, or maybe it might be under anise. She looked at me like I was crazy, and went off to look for fennel in her books. After a minute or two, she looked up at me and asked what the other name was again. She finally found the code under anise, and I was on my way home to make this soup!


Pick up some fennel today! What an amazingly fragrant veggie. Fennel has fronds at the top of it, and after cutting the fronts off,  I couldn't believe the strong licorice smell it had. This soup has you roast the fennel in the oven before adding it to the soup, and the house smelled amazing while the veggies were roasting. My only piece of advice when roasting the fennel is to make sure you cut it into fairly large chunks. Smaller pieces of fennel will brown far too much, and end up with a slightly bitter taste. Uniformity in your knife cuts is essential to this dish.

And garden fresh parsley? Yes, please!


As far as soup goes, this one is fairly easy. Most of the work is done in the oven, and the second half of the work is done in simmering the soup. Mostly hands off! I thoroughly enjoyed this meatless soup, and served it alongside toasted pita wedges. 

So, y'all know how much I've been raving about the hubby and I's semi-meatless existence. About it easy it's been. Sometimes, you hit a wall. I hit the wall this week. I was making the menu plan for this week. My typical process is to use the grocery store ad and Pinterest to come up with a menu of the week. I don't know what it was but every recipe I wanted to make was meat of some kind. Of course, then I started to get irritated and cranky that I'm not making what I want. I started thinking, "Oh, I should just pick up some turkey. Or some hamburger. Or those chicken legs!". I resisted the swan song, but man. I was feeling tapped out of meatless meal ideas, utterly uncreative.  Regarding meat, our freezer is down to chicken breast, some bacon, and a couple of steaks. I've used all the pork chops, all the ribs, all the shrimp, and all the other chicken parts (wings, legs, thighs, etc). It's going to be a challenge coming up with creative meals with such a limited assorted of ingredients.


Changing the subject, I get to hit up one of my favorite places today, the library! I have not been reading as much as I would have liked according to my New Years resolution. I told the hubby that I've been spending inordinate amounts of time outside amongst my plants, there just hasn't been time to be inside reading. I feel funny telling him I don't have enough time, especially when I don't hold a public job. But that's the truth. When the daily chores are done and it's late in the evening, I collapse in a ball on the couch and reading is the furthest thing from my mind. That needs to change! Maybe if I check out books so interesting today I'll be compelled to pick up them up everyday. Wishful thinking or overly optimistic? That remains to be seen :)


Ingredients (serves 5-6):

1 fennel bulb, thickly chopped
1 large onion, thickly chopped
2 tsp olive oil
1 tsp kosher salt
1 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 (14.5 oz) can chickpeas, rinsed and drained
1 tbsp butter
1 tbsp garlic, minced
4 cups chicken broth
2 (14.5 oz) cans diced tomatoes
1 1/2 tsp kosher salt
3/4 tsp black pepper
1/4 cup flat leaf parsley, chopped

Directions:

1. Preheat oven to 400º. Coat a cookie sheet with cooking spray.
2. In a large bowl, combine fennel through 1/2 tsp black pepper. Toss to combine. Spread mixture in an even layer on cookie sheet. Roast in preheated oven for 15 minutes, stir. Roast for another 10 minutes. 
3. Add chickpeas to cookie sheet. Bake for an additional 10-15 minutes, or until fennel, onion, and chickpeas are starting to brown. Remove from oven, set aside.
4. In a large stockpot, melt butter. Add garlic. Saute 30 seconds, or until garlic starts to brown. Add chicken broth, tomatoes, vegetable mixture, salt, and pepper to pot. Bring to a boil. Lower heat to a simmer, and simmer for 15 minutes. Season to taste.
5. Remove from heat. Add parsley to pot, stir to combine. Serve soup immediately with bread or toasted pita wedges.


Recipe adapted from Cooking Light.

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Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Minted Cantaloupe Popsicles


Argh, how is it Tuesday afternoon already??

This week has started. Swiftly. I feel like I've hardly had time to sit. Can I tell you that I meant to post yesterday and this morning? Really, truly, I did. The time has just literally been flying! A lot of my readers may wonder what a housewife does all day. You know, besides chilling on the couch in my jammies, eating bon bon's, and watching Days of Our Lives. Let me tell you about yesterday-

6:30 am- Woke up. Enjoyed 3 cups of coffee while making a grocery list.

8:00 am- Let the dogs out, fill up my bird feeders, water the garden. Get the dogs back inside, give them a treat.

8:15 am- Getting ready to leave the house when I receive a phone call from the hubby. Turns out the guys at his work are hankering for my Double Chocolate Chip Cookies. Since the dough needs to chill for 4 hours, I knew I needed to make it before I went to the store. Finish my hair, and plod into the kitchen to make cookie dough.

10:00 am- Cookie dough is finished and in the fridge. The kitchen however...ugh, time to clean.

10:30 am- Kitchen is clean. Gather all laundry in the house- as in, clothes, whites, and towels. Start a load of clothes. 



11:00 am- Out the door. Time to make my loop of dropping off the recycling, heading to the dreaded Walmart, and then produce shopping at Kroger.

1:00 pm- Done with my loop, head to my friends house to check on her dog.

1:30 pm- Make it back to my house. Start pre-heating the oven and take the cookie dough out of the fridge. Scarf down lunch while oven is preheating. Change over the laundry, put the whites in. Bake 6 dozen cookies when the oven is done preheating.

3:30 pm- Cookies are finally done! Change over the laundry. Now the lawn be calling my name. Quick change of my clothes, and off to start the lawnmower.

5:00 pm- One half of the yard is mowed. Head inside to change over the laundry, and change the sheets on our bed now that the whites are done. Pull chicken breast from fridge to let it come to temperature, season it. Pull zucchini's from fridge, prep and season those. Feed the dogs. Race back outside to finish the yard.

6:10 pm- Yard is done. Hubby will be home in about 30 minutes. Start preheating the barbecue to grill the chicken and zucchini. Run back inside to snap a few pictures of recent recipes. Change over the last load of laundry (which I folded the next day!).

6:20 pm- Start boil-in-a-bag brown rice for dinner. Put chicken and veggies on the grill.

6:35 pm- Dinner is ready! The hubby just arrived home, but the one thing I didn't have time for was a shower! Hit the shower super fast-like before dinner.

6:50pm- It's finally time to relax. The only thing left to do this day is clean up the kitchen after dinner. Exhausted!!


And people ask me how I'm not bored all the time. Ppppsssh.

Now, about these popsicles! I've been buying a lot of cantaloupe lately, it's the hubby's favorite fruit. I picked up a couple of really nice melons last week, with the intention of turning part of one melon into popsicles. I have mint coming out of my ears, so no problem there. I'm definitely going to have to find some creative ways to use all this mint, sheesh. I told the hubby that even inexperienced gardeners could grow mint or zucchini. How are they not weeds?? They sure grow like weeds! Anyhoo, the recipe for these pops couldn't get any easier. Throw some melon, a few mint leaves, and a little sugar water into the food processor, and voila! Easy peasy. 



I hope everyone is ready for some serious popsicle recipes this summer! Popsicles are one of my favorite summertime snacks, and I couldn't get enough of them last year. Something tells me this year is going to be the same :)

Viva la popsicles!

I'm in a silly mood today, can you tell? Happy Tuesday everyone!


Ingredients (makes 6 popsicles):

1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cantaloupe, cut into chunks
3-4 mint leaves


Directions:

1. Combine sugar with a couple of tablespoons of warm-hot water. Stir until the sugar is dissolved.
2. Combine sugar water, melon, and mint in food processor. Pulse until mixture is completely smooth.
3. Divide mixture evenly among a popsicle mold. Place sticks in melon mixture. Freeze until pops are solid (4-6 hours). To remove from mold, run mold under warm water until you can jiggle the popsicle out. Keep frozen.


Recipe adapted from Tutti Dolci.
Linked to: Weekend Potluck, Foodie Friday

Thursday, June 5, 2014

Saucy Asian Grilled Wings



I just love cooking on the grill. There's just something so summery about heating up that grill and roasting food to that perfect, crispy texture. The smells that waft through the backyard, the sun beating down on the ice cold brew that's inevitably been set within arms reach, the flames reaching up to lick the grub of choice...  Life doesn't get much better!

The hubby and I look forward to summer grilling every year. We pretty much grill year round, but it's infinitely more enjoyable in the warm summer months. During the summer we can drag lawn chairs and Corona's outside, and gather round the barbecue whilst it does its thang'. One of our favorite items to throw on the grill is marinated meat. Marinated meat really holds its moisture during the cooking process. It's as if the marinade invades all those little tiny crevices that make up a piece of meat, and it stays there. The result is a super moist and flavorful piece of meat. So yummy!


When it comes to marinating, there is a time limit on how long you are supposed to leave the item marinating. I've read with chicken you can marinate it for as little as 2 hours to as long as 24 hours. There is a point where the meat texture gets weird if you leave it marinating for too long. It can also result in unwanted toughness, which is the completely opposite effect of why we marinate in the first place. Why am I bringing all this up? Well, I threw these wings in this marinade and then forgot about them for 2 days. Definitely way longer than anticipated. Or recommended.

Luckily, the meat didn't turn out tough! Whew.


I reserved the additional marinade, and ended up boiling it on the stove for 5 minutes before adding a pinch of cornstarch to it to thicken it up. We then used it to baste the wings, keeping them moist while grilling.


Holy moly, did these turn out amazing! The marinade was spot-on perfect. Perfectly savory, a touch spicy, and totally lip-smackin' good! I ended up searing some baby bok choy on the stove to serve with the wings, and those deliciously exotic vegetables were the perfect pairing. The cashiers at the grocery store always (seriously, every time!) ask me what the heck baby bok choy are when I buy them, but people- don't let this scare you at the store! I highly recommend bagging some up and taking them home. They are deliciously crunchy, and full of antioxidants and vitamins. Bok choy is also an excellent source of calcium. It's the perfect side dish for an Asian themed meal.


So, funny story. Those of you who follow the blog know I usually like to wrap up my posts with some anecdote about what's going in my life outside the kitchen before I share my recipes. So here's today's- the story of how Jessica got her car stuck in a ditch out in the country. We've got a family friend that lives not far from us. Far enough we drive, but seriously the friend is almost within seeing distance of our house. I've been checking on her dog at lunchtime this week, as my friend usually comes home at lunch to let the dog out, but can't this week. It's a long story. Anyhoo, the road she lives on is uber narrow. I was almost to the end of it when the UPS guy turns on to it. I inched my car over, trying to make room. Before I knew it, my tire slid off the road and must have sunk about a foot. I tried reverse. No luck. I tried drive. No luck. I was officially stuck. Unbelievably, I was about a  quarter of a mile from a body shop. The UPS guy felt so bad he gave me a ride up there. The body shop guys felt so bad they pulled my poor wedged-in car out for free. No damage to the car.  All turned out well. However, I've definitely learned not to get too close to the side of that road!

Happy Thursday friends! One more day till the weekend! :)


Ingredients (serves 3-4):

1 cup Coca Cola
1/4 cup soy sauce
2 tbsp sesame oil
1 tsp chili garlic sauce
1 tbsp minced garlic
1 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp black pepper
2 1/2 lbs chicken wings
3 tsp cornstarch

Directions:

1. Combine Coca Cola through black pepper in a large Ziploc bag. Shake to combine. Add chicken wings. Seal and place in the fridge for 24 hours, turning occasionally. 
2. Remove wings from fridge. Remove from marinade, reserving marinade. Pat wings dry, set aside.
3. Place marinade in large skillet. Bring to a boil over high heat, allow to boil for 3-5 minutes. Mix cornstarch in a small bowl with 3 tsp of water. Whisk cornstarch mix into marinade. Continue whisking over medium heat until sauce begins to thicken. Remove from heat.
3. Preheat (gas) grill to high heat.
4. When grill is hot, put wings on grill. Grill for 2 minutes, then turn wings. Grill for another 2 minutes. 
5. Turn top and bottom burners off. Turn middle burner to low.  Continue to grill wings over indirect heat for another 20 minutes, basting with prepared sauce and turning occasionally. 
6. Remove from heat. Allow wings to rest for 5-8 minutes before serving.


Recipe adapted from The Cozy Apron.
Helpful links:

Saturday, May 31, 2014

First Time Gardener: End of May Update


Happy Saturday friends!

My little container garden is chugging right along. While I do sometimes look at my little corner of the patio and wish I had a huge garden out in the yard, I have to remind myself that this is Year 1.  This is my first time trying to grow, well, basically anything so it's wise to start small while I'm learning. Almost everything I've planted has sprouted, which I'm extremely proud of. Nothing has died, save for my oregano at the beginning of the season. I've got little, tiny green tomatoes growing, and true leaves starting on my zucchini. Let's take a look!

Tiny green tomatoes!


Beefsteak tomato plant.

Roma tomato plant.

Bell pepper sprouting. This pot (today) has at least 12 sprouts now. I only took this picture 2 days ago!

Chard sprouts.

Chard.

Cucumber sprouts.

Zucchini sprouts.

Here's my little container garden. Year 1. I can't wait to compare this to what I'm doing in 10 years.

And my herb garden? Doing fab! I went through and pretty much harvested ALL the basil, but it's starting to come back as you can see.

The parsley is growing like there's no tomorrow. I've already cleanly harvested it 3 times, and it still looks like this. More parsley pesto for us!

Mom was right. The mint is out of control. It's humungous!

The mint spreads itself like this. This particular vine is try to escape the box.

The thyme is also spreading out.
So, Year 1 is off to a great start. Now, all I've got to do is invest in a canning system so I'm prepared when the veggies start rolling in. I've been doing research, trying to figure out if I go with a water bath canner or a pressure canner. There's a lot of information out there, but as of now, I'm leaning toward a pressure canner. Just so I have more options. We'll see. It'll be Year 1 for canning foods as well. If anything, I'll be able to say I learned a ton this year!

Have a great weekend everyone!

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Parsley Pesto Pasta


The second recipe with items from my herb garden! An unconventional variation of pesto, using fresh parsley and walnuts, tossed with curly pasta. Heavenly. Can you tell I'm enjoying my herb garden?

Garden fresh parsley...


I had an abundance of parsley with my first harvest. I use a lot of parsley, I usually buy a bundle a week. It brightens up so many dishes, smells wonderful, and bonus- freshens your breath. But I had ALOT of parsley. What's a girl to do? 

Google, of course. Which is where I found a wonderful idea for parsley pesto on Simply Recipes. I roughed up the original recipe by throwing some basil in for good measure, but for the most part, stuck to it. I really, really liked it. Obviously, using parsley instead of basil gave the pesto a drastically different flavor. I loved the results! Parsley pesto has such a different, almost earthy taste to it. Plus, this recipe utilizes walnuts instead of pine nuts. Believe it or not, you can taste the difference.

Do I need to extoll the virtues of walnuts to everyone? I don't think that's even necessary. 


Doesn't it look almost identical to its basil counterpart?

Pair this pesto with pasta, then serve with a side salad and a glass of white. A perfectly light summer meal. Not to mention that if you prepare your pesto ahead of time, it will only take you about 15 minutes at dinner time to get it on the table. Which means more time to go outside and enjoy the sunshine :)

Today was grocery shopping day for me. I was completely and utterly out of bird seed, which means my shopping trip needed to include Walmart. Ugh. I hate the Mart. I trekked there anyway though, and of course, got lost in the garden section. And emerged with cucumber, 2 types of lettuce, chard, and green pepper seeds. Naturally, I was most excited to get my arse home and plant those seeds. All this made the chore of going to Walmart somewhat better. Even after I waited in line for 15 minutes behind the lady who had 50-$1 items in her cart, and I swear, half of them didn't have labels. But I digress. I've been bit hard by the gardening bug this year! The hubby and I decided not to put the garden in this summer (sad face), but I've got quite the container garden occurring on the "patio". I'm so glad the hubby had the forethought to put some concrete out back :)

One last note- I recommend using flat-leaf parsley for this pesto. I've always read that curly parsley is for garnish, flat-leaf parsley is for eating. I've never wavered, I just abide by this foodie rule.

Happy Tuesday!


Ingredients (serves 4):

8 oz dried fusili pasta, cooked to package directions
2 cups fresh flat-leaf parsley
1 cup walnuts
1/2 cup fresh basil leaves
1/2 cup parmesan cheese, shredded
1 tbsp garlic, minced
1/2- 3/4 tsp salt
1/2 cup olive oil

Directions:

1. Combine parsley through salt in food processor. Pulse a couple of times. With food processor running, pour olive oil through the shoot. Continue to pulse until olive oil is emulsified.
2. Start by adding 1/2 cup of pesto to the pasta. Toss to combine. Add more pesto to taste. Serve immediately. Store any remaining pesto in fridge, up to 2 weeks. 


Pesto recipe adapted from Simply Recipes.
Linked to: Tickle My Tastebuds Tuesdays, Weekend Potluck, Foodie Friday

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Springtime in Kentucky



Another weekend has come and gone. Where does the time go? We had a pretty productive weekend, even with the hubby working the nightshift. I planted 2 tomato plants and a zucchini plant, harvested plenty of herbs, baked muffins and a frittata, took plenty of pictures, snuck off to the gym a couple of times, and even braved the warehouse club that is Sam's. The hubby (on top of working, hello!) ran the weed-eater over the whole property and replaced the brakes on our old car. Whew! 

BTW, that's our house in the distance in the above picture. It's taking all my self-control to not harvest this bounty of wildflowers by our house. They would make an amazing flower arrangement on our kitchen counter, but I've been restraining myself. So that everyone can enjoy them :)


Gizmo, mid-air. I was surprised, #1 that the picture turned out, and #2 that it turned out well. He's a warm-weather loving dog.


One of my tomato plants, a starter I got at Lowe's. In true Jessica fashion, I killed all the seeds I planted in early April. Well, I take that back. The hubby bought the wrong kind of soil to plant them in, so couldn't we say he killed all the plants? I think so! Anyhoo, I bought a couple of starters for my beefsteak tomatoes. I've got some lovely blossoms on the plant, the hubby says I should have tomatoes in 5 weeks. Not soon enough!


Say what you want about daisies but I happen to love them. Takes me back to first-grade soccer, totally uninterested in the game, building daisy chains. Now that I think about it, I'm pretty sure daisy chains were a staple of middle school softball, too. I was older yes, but I played right-field. There weren't any balls getting hit there in middle school girl's softball. Trust me. The daisies kept me from the clutches of right-field boredom. And yes, there's a reason I played right-field ----->world's worst soft ball player.


Still sitting here, obsessed with the purple flowers :)


Birds have once again reclaimed the birdhouse. I haven't seen the birds that are nesting here, this box is in the hubby's aunt and uncle's yard. Last year I caught a glimpse of these birds in late June, so I probably won't catch a peep (hehe, peep) of these birds till later in the season.


These birds showed up about 2 weeks ago and only stayed for a couple of days. I'm left scratching my head as to where they went. I believe these are Rose-Breasted Grosbeaks, which do winter waaay south. My best current guess is these particular birds summer a lot further north. 

*Side note- I just had to google this one. Where I'm located (NE Kentucky), I'm zoned migration-only for the Rose-Breasted Grosbeak. Therefore, I'm feeling pretty lucky that I witnessed them at all since they were literally just passing through.


A particularly sassy bluejay.


This squirrel cracked me up! This is the top of a tall, dead tree on the side of our house. One morning, I watched this critter scurry up there and just sit. This seemed like peculiar behavior to me, as he is just perched out there in the open for any predator to see, but hey, I'm not a squirrel. I enjoyed him nonetheless. 


One critter I did NOT want to see. Snakes give me the creeps! Bleh.


A cute picture I got of the hubby tilling the backyard. He actually drove around the yard singing, "She Thinks My Tractor's Sexy". I'm so serious. If anything else, he always makes me laugh :)


Annnnnd, this is what I do while the hubby works. Work on my tan!

I hope everyone had a great weekend. I've got some delicious recipes on store for this week, so stay tuned!

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