Pilot Light

Dear Reader Friends,

Almost as soon as I started my writing website, I started writing for New Hampshire Magazine, and took on a bunch of interesting articles that I couldn’t say no to (be sure to check them out in the next few issues). But they all had deadlines in like, the next week. So I am sorry that I already took a hiatus from my new blog, but I can balance my ongoing assignments a little bit better now that I have deadlines a little farther out.

We are actually on vacation this week, skiing again, just our family after a slew of visitors. I’m Catholic and since it is Lent I am also trying to slow down, so it feels good to be up in the beauty of the mountains while trying to simplify and reflect on our relationship with God.  Every time I look up, the snow covered White Mountains feel like God’s shoulders around me.

I took a window to go skiing for a few hours alone on Sunday while my very generous husband stayed home with the kids during Andrew’s nap time, and I can’t believe how that brief window of  time centered me. The cold fresh air, the brush of falling snow on my face, and the quiet on the chair lift, where I was alone with my thoughts. Like most busy moms, it had been a long time since I have been surrounded by quiet. In that quiet I got to be still. I had just read a meditation about Lent that Jesus went into the desert to remove all the distractions and strengthen his relationship with God.  The snowy hill and slow chairlift felt like my own frozen desert.

I am usually pretty private about my faith, but since I am always curious about things that help center someone spiritually in today’s hectic age, I will share with you that I entered into that quiet like someone who forgot how to do it. It had been so long. If faith is a flame, mine felt pretty much like a pilot light on the stove. It is always there, a slow low burn, that gives flame to everything else I do in life. But it was pretty small since I wasn’t feeding it much and I was taking it for granted.

I am inspired by people who turn that flame into something more.  To have that flame of trust, even when I am doubting everything, that flame of hope and possibility, even when I am really tired and worn down, grow larger. To burn out all of the wasted thoughts of fear and discouragement until they turn into ashes.

I recently learned the story of Paul Coakley, who just died of cancer leaving three children and his pregnant wife alone. And they had peace and joy that was so strong, even during the end of his life. It was evident in the video from his hospital bed. Of course they had fear and grief and I lie awake at night thinking about how alone his wife must feel, how much she must miss holding his hand or hearing his voice. But I also think she is ok. Because she built her faith into a hearth. And I think it is keeping her and her family warm.

The thing about Lent is that we get reminded of death. We will die, just like Paul. But when we confront that reality, we realize we have the time, the chance, the opportunity, to do so much with our life, in spite of death. By being reminded of ashes, we are also reminded of what is spirit. With what truly matters.  The Coakley Family turns my faith from a pilot light into a fireplace.  While I warm my hands and heart, I will be thinking of them and everyone else who is struggling with the heartbreak of this life. And I will offer them a seat by the fire, among the ashes.

 

 

 

Tuscan Swordfish with Capers, Tomatoes and Onions

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Hi Friends! Happy Lent, Happy Whole30, Happy Wednesday, or whatever you may be celebrating today.

I know I meal planned on my last post that I would start eating Whole30 after my wine party, but I honestly got so excited about all the Whole30 foods that I just went ahead and started it today even if a few events will mean I am drinking wine this weekend (it will be 30 days by the end of Lent!). I can’t wait to try all the recipes I am discovering with you that are healthy and delicious.

This dish is hopefully something for everyone, since it can be made Whole30 friendly if you cook it with ghee (which sounds weird but is just clarified butter). We eat a lot more meatless meals during Lent too and I am always looking for great fish recipes because we tend to cook fish at home for our dates night.

I just adore rustic food, and this Tuscan dish is just that. Hearty, chunky, easy and full of flavor. It is healthy comfort food that still sticks to your ribs. The brine capers, tomatoes, and onions are the perfect base for the tangy swordfish.

Processed with VSCOcam with m3 presetI learned this butter basting technique from Rick Moonen’d cookbook, Fish. He was a Top Chef Master and owner of seafood restaurants in Vegas. I also just reviewed the cookbook Extra Virgin  by Debi Mazar and her husband Gabriele Corcos who grew up in Tuscany, for Coastal Home magazine, so I’ve been thinking a lot about the origins of Tuscan food.

The simple Tuscan flavors of tomato, capers, wine and lemon reflect a clean style of cooking that I love. Tuscan cooking leans more heavily on olive oil then butter, but the end result of butter basting fish is so flavorful I think they would make an exception. You can substitute any white fish for the swordfish and cook it the same way, adjusting the time for thickness of the filet.

Processed with VSCOcam with m3 presetEven though it looks like a lot of butter you are really just basting it, or poaching it almost in the butter – most of it stays in the pan.

Processed with VSCOcam with m3 presetThe result, as you can imagine, is such a tender, butter piece of fish. You can’t believe it is as soft and flavorful as it is, even though it is deliciously browned.

I hope you like this as much as we did. I am dreaming about making this soon with Whole30 compliant ingredients. Lent is supposed to be hard, and it will be! But with food that is so delicious, this is the type of eating I know we’ll keep doing long after it is over.

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Cheers friends – Happy cooking! xoxo Katie

 

Tuscan Butter Basted Swordfish with Onions, Tomatoes and Capers (printer version here):

Ingredients:

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 medium onion, thinly sliced

2 garlic cloves, minced

2 ripe tomatoes, diced

Salt & pepper

½ cup white wine

Juice from 1 lemon

2 tablespoons of capers

2 swordfish steaks

8 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided (this is for the butter basting; don’t worry, you leave most of it in pan)

Directions:

To make the Onion, Tomato & Caper Sauce: Heat olive oil in pan on medium heat. Add sliced onions and a small pinch of salt and cook until soft, about 5 minutes. Add garlic and cook for 1 minute. Add tomatoes and another 1 teaspoon salt and ½ teaspoon pepper. Cook for 5 minutes, then add wine and lemon juice. Cook for 10 minutes, then add capers and stir.  Keep warm in pan to until ready to serve under fish.

To make Butter Basted Swordfish: Have a large spoon, spatula, and paper towels next to pan. Melt 4 tablespoons of the butter in a pan on medium-high heat (watch closely so butter doesn’t burn, but you are looking for a nutty browned butter flavor so browning is good).  Pat dry swordfish and season with salt and pepper. When the butter has melted, place in the far side of the pan and, using a spatula, press down on fish for the first 30 seconds, which helps the fish start to brown. Cut the other 4 tablespoons of butter into pieces and add to the pan. Tip pan toward you and using large spoon, continuously spoon butter on top of fish. Continuously tip, baste and set down pan again over heat, so that butter becomes nutty brown and top of fish is cooked, for 6 minutes. Then turn fish over, turn off heat, and let it sit in butter for 1 minute. Set on paper towels and use another to blot the top. Serve on a bed of the onion-tomato sauce, and sprinkle lemon and salt, if desired, on top of fish.

Week Eats with Whole Parenting

Hi all – I am linking up with the lovely Nell at Whole Parenting. She hosts a weekly meal plan called Week Eats which is super smart and always yummy. Nell is basically the Renaissance Women because she was an attorney but now she makes the cutest baby clothes, plays with her kids in their old Victorian house, makes really healthy yummy food, and she is the cheerleader of the Internet, so encouraging to everyone and always leaves a “so presh!” comment underneath pictures of babies.

Feel free to belly laugh at this meal plan. This coming week involves a ski trip, Mardi Gras, Ash Wednesday, a Wine Party, and the start of my Whole30 cleanse with Kelly Mantoan of This Ain’t the Lyceum blog. Basically every possible extreme when it comes to food.  I thought it would be funny/insane to give a real representation of what we will be eating and hopefully the links will lead you to some yummy food ideas no matter what you are doing this Lent. There are some vegetarian, vegan and meat friendly recipes, so something for everyone!

Monday – 

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Breakfast:  Breakfast Burritos. I love making these and they are great for assembling with a big crowd. We will be skiing with friends and these will fill up our belly before we all travel home. Plus these make great lunches and dinners for lent too.

Lunch: Sandwiches on our way home.

Dinner: I am making this Beef Bourguignon Crock Pot recipe for our ski weekend and I am hoping to have a lot left over for Monday’s dinner when we roll home. If you don’t want to use a lot of wine for your kids you can also make this Crock Pot Pot Roast. So yummy if you make it on a lazy Sunday – the flavors only get better.

Tuesday –

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Breakfast: It is Mardi Gras! They don’t call it Fat Tuesday for nothing and so for breakfast I am having chocolate. And bread. Plus whatever leftover Valentine’s Day candy that is laying around. Seriously, I am going to make a bunch of this banana bread with chocolate chips for the ski weekend and will leave some for Tuesday morning before I have to say goodbye to bread and sugar.

Lunch: These Caramelized Onion and Avocado Quesadillas look amazing and could be a great Lenten meatless dinner too. Going to get my intake of cheese while I can.

Dinner: In honor of this holiday, I am making Chicken and Smoked Sausage Gumbo which is a popular New Orleans dish. I will likely use Smoked Kielbasa since my kids like it and it isn’t too spicy.

Wednesday – 

Breakfast: Ash Wednesday means fasting, and I will roam between coffee, smoothies, water and Kefir probably. The kids will have their usuals, yogurt, berries, waffles.

Lunch: Cheese, crackers, carrots and humus for the kids.

Dinner: We will be hungry for our (meatless) dinner. I am making Giada’s Cheesy Baked Tortellini  because I can make it ahead of time and we will likely have to run to church to get ashes. I am going to do the Whole30 cleanse during lent but I have a wine tasting party on Thursday so I am starting it on Friday. (Feel free interject a heavy eye roll. I am actually hosting it and I didn’t realize I put it during lent. Ha ha.)

Thursday –  

Breakfast: A smoothie. I use this vegan protein powder in Vanilla and Chocolate, and I usually add organic berries and spinach.  Going to start to get into the routine today.

Lunch: This Greek Salad without the chicken. I just can’t get enough of this salad dressing. And you better believe I will have Naan/Bread/Pita with it.

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Dinner: My last meal with cheese and bread. So, I am going to make this  Chicken and Gnocchi Soup which my kids love and is just amazing with Crusty Bread.  The meatballs are so good with garlic and parmesean in them and it is really easy and quick to make. I will fill up on this before the wine party, my last hurrah for 30 days.

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Friday –

 

Breakfast: The cleanse begins! It starts with a vegan smoothie with organic berries.

Lunch: This Warm Kale Salad is so delicious, and so easy to make. For anyone doing a Whole30 during lent, this salad (sans cheese) is your friend.

Dinner: We usually do cheese pizza for the kids! But I will be making this buddha bowl which does not look AT ALL to me like fasting or sacrificing, rather it looks like heaven in a bowl.

Thanks Nell for allowing me to guest post! I hope you all have a great week, and a great start to your Lent!

 

Banana Chocolate Chip Bread

Hi Foodie Friends – Happy Almost Valentine’s Day! In case you were wondering if all this snow here in New Hampshire is making us carb load, here’s your answer:

IMG_3938Chocolate Chip Banana Bread! So so good. My kids love helping me make this recipe, since they can really help mash the bananas and stir in the chocolate chips.

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The batter is really flexible so you can put it in whatever shaped pan you want, and play with the chocolate chips! I love mixing white and chocolate chips together. And I usually make little mini-muffins but how cute are these loaves?

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I am going on a ski weekend with my BC college roommates and all of our families and I cannot wait! The perfect way to celebrate Valentine’s Day – all of the people you love in one place. When I think about all that we went through together – dreaming, comforting, growing, laughing – it is crazy to fast forward to right now and think that we are all beautiful mommas and professionals and doctors!  It seriously makes me teary thinking about being together with these girls. We are going to bring all our kids skiing and to the pool, frost heart shaped cookies, drink champagne and eat lots of good food. Then we are going to sneak away and get massages while the dads take over for an afternoon.

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I thought I would make everyone little loaves they can bring into their families condo as a treat for coming out my way this trip. At least the snow is cooperating, so that the ski trails are full of snow.

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The recipe is so easy and delicious, moist from the bananas and I love the brown sugar in there. (Feel free to leave out some of the sugar but we like them sweet!) This recipe is great for using up old bananas too.  A great one for the recipe box.

 

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Happy Valentine’s Day! Hope you love this one as much as we do!

Banana Chocolate Chip Loaves (printer version here);

Ingredients:

1 stick of butter, softened

¾ c. sugar

½ c. brown sugar

2 eggs

1 ½ c. flour

1 t. baking powder

½ t. salt

2-3 ripe bananas, mashed

1 t. vanilla

1 c. chocolate chips (white chocolate or butterscotch are also yummy, sometimes I combine them. If you like nuts feel free to add them too).

 

Directions:

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Cream together butter and sugar with an electric mixer. Add eggs, 1 at a time. Sift together in a seperate bowl the flour, salt and baking powder. Slowly add flour mixture to butter mix. Mash bananas with a fork (a GREAT kid job), then stir in 1 t. vanilla to the bananas. Add to the batter mixture. Add 1 c. chocolate chips, stirring gently.

Spray pan with cooking spray. See below to adjust times and temps according to what pan you are using.

For Mini-Loaf Pan: Cook at 350 for 40-42 minutes, checking for doneness.

For Mini-Muffins: Cook at 375 for 12-14 minutes, checking for doneness.

For Muffins: Cook at 375 for 20-22 minutes, checking for doneness.

Yummy Crock Pot Pot Roast

Anyone else have a white flag of surrender waving re: cabin fever? I feel like I just got done with Motherhood Olympics, a contest where your only goal is survival, and your hurdles include a husband on a weeklong business trip across the country, a snow storm with 2 snow days from school and a stomach flu shared by one and all including the momma.  Translation: you will not be leaving your house for 8 days. Seriously I am not proud of how much you can beg/yell at your kids to please stop talking to you for a minute.

BUT….now that we are all feeling better I am trying to find the sweet spot in the heart of Winter with cozy easy meals. So let’s start with a classic…pot roast. But let’s make it SUPER easy…with a crock pot.

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I know a lot of you ladies and gents love a good Lipton Onion Soup + Roast treatment for pot roast, and I have done it. But something about this flour coating on the roast + homemade red wine gravy on the top does it for me.  Plus nothing beats all the fresh herbs cooked low and slow with meat.

You start by putting flour, salt and pepper on your roast, then browning it in a pan.

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Then you layer it with yummy veggies….

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And let it cook on low for 8 hours (4-6 on high if you are in a pinch but low & slow makes it fall apart tender).

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These vegetables are just so amazingly flavorful and tender, my mouth is drooling looking at this picture. IMG_5622

And adding flour and wine to browned meat pan drippings = delicious. Every time. If you don’t want to use wine you can just use more beef broth in its place. IMG_5616

If you have a chance to make mashed potatoes they soak up this yummy gravy really well. If not, just grab some from the store pre-made (along with a bottle of red wine) and add some chives. No one will know the difference and you will feel like you outsmarted the world.
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I also love that there are usually leftovers to make beef stroganoff or beef and barley soup with. Or a yummy sandwich the next day.

Carry on you warriors of winter. Spring will come, but until it does, I hope this warms your bellies.

Crock Pot Pot Roast (printer version here)

Ingredients

One 4-pound beef chuck roast

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

1/3 cup all-purpose flour, plus more for coating

3 tablespoons olive oil

4 medium carrots, cut into 2-inch pieces

3 stalks celery, peeled and cut into 2-inch pieces

1 medium onion, cut into 1/2-inch wedges

3 cloves garlic, mashed

3 tablespoons tomato paste

1 cup red wine

3 cups low-sodium beef broth

3 bay leaves

2 sprigs fresh thyme

1/2 teaspoon ground allspice

1/2 cup loosely packed parsley leaves, chopped

 

 

Directions

Sprinkle the roast all over with 2 1/2 teaspoons salt and 1 1/2 teaspoons pepper. Coat in flour and shake off any excess. Heat 2 tablespoons of the oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat. Add the roast to the skillet and cook until golden brown on all sides, about 8 minutes, turning as needed. Transfer the roast to the insert of a 6-quart slow cooker, along with the carrots, celery, onions and garlic.

 

Add the remaining 1 tablespoon oil to the skillet over medium heat. Add the tomato paste and stir until the oil begins to turn brick-red, about 1 minute. Add the flour and wine and whisk until thick (it’s OK if there are some lumps). Add the beef broth, bay leaves, thyme, allspice, 1/2 teaspoon salt and a few grinds of pepper and bring to a simmer, whisking, until the gravy is smooth and thickens slightly, about 4 minutes.

 

Pour the gravy into the slow cooker. Cover and cook on low for 8 hours. The roast and vegetables should be tender.

 

Remove the roast and let rest for a few minutes. Discard the thyme stems and strain the vegetables, reserving the gravy. Toss the vegetables with half the parsley and season with salt and pepper. Stir the remaining parsley into the gravy and season with salt and pepper. Slice the roast against the grain. Serve the meat and vegetables on a platter, moistening them with some of the gravy; serve the remaining gravy on the side.

 

Source: The Food Network

 

Healthy Peanut Butter Rice Crispy Treats

Ok, I guess ‘healthy’ is relative.

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I just mean something that isn’t filled with preservatives and processed things and white sugars. Since my kids get enough of that everywhere.

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I wanted to have something for them after school that they would eat but wouldn’t be filled with sugar. It was a bonus that I liked them too. Seriously, they taste like peanut butter and jelly with the cranberries, but with healthy ingredients. I am so happy I found these and I am sure we’ll be tweaking them. I am thinking that peanut butter pairs really well with chocolate, so I see that in our future.

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Since these have the health benefits of honey and peanut butter and (soon to be) brown rice, we have more room for pizza in our processed food schedules. Carry on.

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Healthy Rice Crispy Treats (printer version here):

Ingredients:

6 cups brown rice krispies (Rice Krispies work in a pinch, see photos above)

1/2 cup honey

1/2 cup peanut butter (almond butter or non nut butter)

½ cup dried cranberries, cherries or semi-sweet or non-dairy chocolate chips

Directions:

Pour the rice cereal in a large bowl. Heat the honey and peanut butter and stir well until combined. Pour over the rice cereal. Mix well. Add the cranberries or cherries and stir to combine. If adding chocolate chips, wait until mixture is cool to the touch and stir them in.

A Tale Of Two Women

I was in between the bath and bedtime shuffle tonight when the kids were occupied for a nanosecond or two, so I checked my Instagram account.

I noticed a woman who just started to follow me, because the scarf around her head stood out. Her profile said she was a momma from Boston, and that she enjoyed cooking, sewing, and Physics. Many of the comments were in Arabic even though her posts were in fluent but sweetly botched English. As I clicked around the squares that represent this woman’s life, I saw the meals she made, her trips out grocery shopping, the funny things her kids did, the comments in Arabic about the funny things her kids did but filled with emoticons that explained it all and made me laugh out loud. My favorite captions were “the best part of having a baby is that you are surrounded by lots of cute heart-melting stuffs” under a tiny pair of boots, and under a little frog potty “only God knows how many hours a day I spend sitting in front of this cute little frog singing and entertaining Mahta!”

Could there be a more relatable moment for all the mothers on Earth?

Each 612 x 612 pixel window pane into her life was so similar to my own Instagram account. I saw the way that you could super-impose her life on mine. The one standout was her ability to sew impossibly cute clothing for herself and her daughter, which amazed me because I can barely sew a button. If she gets a Pintrest account, she could definitely make us all feel inferior about our sewing skills, but she seems too nice to do that. This woman’s life was so lovely, filled with affection for her meals, her baked goods, the things she made with her hands, and most of all her husband and children. There were no selfies.

The very next thing I viewed on Instagram was the account of a celebrity. I am not sure how I even got to it but I follow a lot of food sites and I think she made something they shared. I won’t name her but I will say that she is a model married to John Legend and has been on the cover of Sports Illustrated. And as I viewed the window panes into her life, I cringed. In every other picture she was half-naked, especially when she was hanging out with her model friends. There were boobs and butts and slits everywhere. Her captions included a lot of swear words, which would have actually worked for me on a post or two but by the fifth I was just like, wow, you reallllly like the F word. Her captions read things like “I have a manager because I am famous!!!”, “Thank you for making me look so beautiful!!” and “I can’t think of anything to type in this box” under what was obviously her trying to show off being around a lot of famous people (if you guessed the Kardashian-Wests were in the picture, you might be right). Was she being sarcastic? Maybe. Did she sound annoying? Definitely. This woman’s life was filled with affection for…herself. And other famous people. And her mom. And there sure were a lot of selfies.

There is probably a lot of bias on my part since I am in fact a mom and not a super model. And it is easy to knock celebrities. In her comments I read people making fun of her forehead. Her forehead. She is a super model. It seems like making negative comments about her appearance is really misguided energy. And I probably would’ve kept scrolling, letting the images in one eye and out the other any other time. But seeing the two women back to back made me think. About our lives and how we spend them. How we represent what we love. And it made me realize that social media, while a definite time waster, is not the devil. It can be a beautiful window pane letting us intimitely peer into worlds we would never be able too. But it can also be the pool that our friend Narcissis stared into. And this woman that the world considers beautiful and has millions of followers seemed very ugly to me. While this other woman that the world doesn’t know at all had 59 followers touched me at my core with her love and sweetness.

Thank you, Mahshid. For teaching me that beauty is more then 612 pixels deep.

 

 

 

How I Meal Plan

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Lately, so many people in real life and on social media have been throwing out the meal planning angst – I should do it, why don’t I do it? It is so hard! I have been meaning to post some of the tricks I have learned 8 years into this feeding kids business, as well as growing up in a large family where I got some of my skillz. (Ok, really, all my siblings used to tease me for having a snack on hand for a trip to the mailbox. Needless to say they are not surprised I have a food blog now.)

I think meal planning is totally related to our personalities. So think about what type of planner you are in general and try to relate that to food. If you are a detailed Type-A person, you are gonna want a really detailed meal plan. If you are a spontaneous personality like I am (ENFP here), you are going to detest that sort of planning. (How am I going to plan what to eat next Wednesday? I won’t even know what I am in the mood for!) If you don’t care about food at all, like some friends I know, but still want to effectively manage that necessary part of raising small humans, that you are going to be somewhere in between.

I by nature rebel agains meal plans because I don’t like knowing what I am going to have every night. I like spontaneity! Surprise! Rolling with what I feel like! But I also like to only make one grocery shop a week, if possible (often not possible but ’tis the goal). So I tend to loosely plan my meals, like grabbing the makings for Greek Tacos that may turn into a pita lunch with hummus and tzaziki and a pork loin dinner.

But here are the principles I gravitate towards that really help me not have the meal planning angst:

1) Figure out 3 dinners a week and shop for them. If I am really on the ball, I try to buy 6 dinners and only have to do a big shop every two weeks. This was reinforced on the popular site, The Kitchn, who in their meal plan only planned three dinners. They said “you’ll have leftovers one night and you’ll order out the other.” You know what? That is exactly how it happens at our house, week in and week out. On the weekends we are either traveling, getting together with other families or my husband and I have a home date night and one of us will run to the store for fresh fish or steak. Check out their great meals for the week at the Kitchn here. And if you are looking for ideas on where your budget should be look here. For our family I try to stick to 0/week.

2) Let the grocery store be your sous chef. That butternut squash I used in a recent recipe I posted? Cubed and bagged at the store. Broccoli in a steam bag? Yes please. Chicken tenders instead of breasts so I don’t have a knife and cutting board to wash, game on. Jacques Pepin (the French chef who used to make PBS cooking shows with Julia Child and now has his own) first taught me this lesson, to let the store do some of the prep work. And if you have access to any media source at all, you are probably aware that in-season produce is always choice pickings. So I stick to getting three dinners a week usually around what is in season and easy, often cooking one protein and stretching it over a few meals. I do make a list of what we need and what 3 dinners might entail, but I often decide what they’ll be at the store. I might see lovely artisan bread and decide to make this. Or organic local kale is on sale and I’ll stock up and make this.

3) Stock your freezer. I buy my beef and pork from farmers once a year and store it in a chest freezer in the garage. So many of my friends want to order from my farmer but they don’t want to spend between 0-0 on a freezer. But you save so much money in your grocery bill every week, it truly pays for itself, you support local farmers, and you know where your healthy food is coming from. BUT the real reason I do this?  Laziness. Having a full freezer of ground grass fed beef is the #1 reason why I don’t stress about meal planning. That very frequent panic that ‘it is 4 o’clock and I have no idea what we are going to have for dinner’ isn’t there. I can defrost a 1 lb. bag of grass fed beef in 10 minutes, and have burgers, meatballs, meat sauce with spaghetti, mini meatloaves, zucchini boats, stuffed squash with rice, and…you get the idea. Ditto for pork chops and ground pork.

I also stock my freezer with frozen veggies, preferably ones that steam in the bag. Less pots & pans for when my husband is traveling and I am doing kitchen clean up and putting kids down. And did you know that frozen veggies can often be less expensive and more nutritious, since they freeze them at the peak of their growing season when they are plentiful and full of nutrients? The struggle to get dinner on is real. Treat yourself with easy veggies. And I always make sure I have giant bags of potatoes, and carrots, celery, onions and herbs, since  mire poix is the basis for so many meals.

4) Stock your pantry. Almost every good cookbook I have read has a ‘what to stock in your pantry’ section. There is a reason. Good food requires staples like tomato paste, herbs, grains and beans, stocks, pastas, flavor boosters like sun dried tomatoes and artichokes and olives. It also means when you shop for your meal planning you are only buying a few ingredients for them since you have a stocked pantry.

Here is a great comprehensive list from the Pioneer Woman for both your pantry, freezer and fridge. Use it, and your meal planning will be so much easier.

5) Have Fun. Enthusiasm goes a long way in the kitchen, as in life. I get such a kick from trying out a new recipe and learning what a new combination of ingredients can taste like. So find recipes that you are really excited to try, and share it with the people you love. I have seen meal plans that serve the same thing for a whole month on the same nights of the week, and maybe that works for you and that is your idea of fun (less hassle!) But that makes me want to just sit on the couch and order pizza, so I have to keep it creative.

6) Own your power. Mommas have a really big power – we are creating culture in our own families. Food is a really big part of culture. Your kids will have such a gift as they grow up and have business dinners and cultural connections and maybe even become great cooks themselves. At the very least, they will have food memories they can associate with their moms. If you don’t love to cook and rely on spaghetti and cereal like a lot of fabulous moms I know, then the likelyhood is you show them this in another way. (My friend Traci takes each of her 4 kids on a trip every year and lets them do all of the details like reading maps and checking in at train stations. She travels a lot for work and wants to show them how to be a safe traveler. So that is her power and I love how she owns it.)

I am so passionate about this I started to show the mommas at our local pregnancy shelter how to cook meals that stretch one protein like chicken or beef into three meals. You know what I started with? Chicken Broth and Chicken Pot Pie and Chicken Soup. Because every momma who knows how to make Chicken Soup has a power that is impossible to calculate.

Off soap box now.  I hope this helps, and if you struggle with a certain area of meal planning that you feel like bouncing off of someone, I’m your girl.

Cheers to your full freezers and pantries, friends.

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^^The makings for chili are usually in my pantry and freezer, because I can get pretty lazy on weekends.

 

Chicken Curry In A Hurry

Well aren’t you just a big bowl of sunshine.

Seriously, it is.

I love curry so much, and it is ridiculously easy.

This one uses Rotisserie chicken + coconut milk + curry powder but you can easily use cubed chicken and stir fry veggies. The first time I made it I added the carrots and tomatoes and loved them. The second time I made this I added thawed broccoli florets and I loved them even more. So play around with the veggies and add your favorite. If they are raw like the carrots add them early on so they can cook. Or keep it Curry In A Hurry and toss in thawed frozen.

I first saw this recipe on RealSimple, and I loved how fast you could make it. I usually use curry paste + coconut mile, but the powder was heavenly. I love everything about this dish.

^^See the little specks of firework flavor?^^

The bed of fluffy Jasmine Rice, Naan Bread, Mango Chutney and Sriracha sauce, though, took it to another new level.  It is just the most comforting dish, it sticks to the ribs, has SO much flavor from the curry and chutney, and when you eat it warm it just does something to my insides that I need on cold days.  Something really good.

So make this for yourself and give the kids nuggets if they don’t like the spice. I would make it for you and bring it over but I would probably eat it on the way.

Chicken Curry In A Hurry (printer version here)

Serves 6, prep time 15 minutes, total time 35

Ingredients

1 cup white rice (Jasmine is so yummy)

1 1/2 tablespoons olive oil

1  small yellow onion, thinly sliced

1 large or 2 small sliced carrots

3  teaspoons curry powder

1/2 cup plain yogurt

1 can coconut milk

1 teaspoon  kosher salt

1/2  teaspoon  black pepper

1  14.5-ounce can diced tomatoes, drained (optional)

2 cups of frozen broccoli or or peas (optional)

meat from 1 rotisserie chicken, sliced or shredded

1/4  cup  fresh cilantro leaves, roughly chopped

Directions

  1. Cook the rice according to the package directions.
  2. Heat the oil in a skillet over medium-low heat. Add the onion and cook, stirring occasionally, for 5 minutes
  3. Add the thinly sliced carrots, cook for 5 minutes
  4. Sprinkle with the curry powder and cook, stirring, for 1 minute
  5. Add the yogurt and cream and simmer gently for 3 minutes. Stir in the salt, pepper, and frozen veggies, and tomatoes (if desired). Stir to coat veggies evenly and cook for 3 more minutes.
  6. Divide the rice and chicken among individual bowls, spoon the sauce over the top, and sprinkle with the cilantro.

Serve with Naan Bread, Mango Chutney, Greek Yogurt, and Sriracha Sauce.


Adapted from Chicken Curry in a Hurry recipe found on realsimple.com

 

 

On Resistance

I’ve been reading The War of Art by Steven Pressfield.  It’s a good thing, too, because lately everything has felt like a battle.

My almost two year old. Writing. Getting out the door on time. Cluttered corners.

Pressfield, who also wrote The Legend of Bagger Vance and The Authentic Swing, is such a great encourager of artists and writers and human beings. War of Art feels like the universe delivered up the exact book I should be reading, giving me precisely what I need to know right now. I love it when that happens. So on the off chance that you need a nudge too, I am sharing it with you.

In it he describes the universal force of resistance, which is defined as self-sabotage, and it is like gravity, a constant pull or oppositional force towards achieving something. Anytime you want to grow, physically, spiritually, mentally, resistance will be there to meet you and try to stop you. It is impersonal, indefatigable, and the closer you get to your goal, the more resistance you will feel. It is a battle inside ourselves whenever we try to grow or create.

It symptoms are procrastination, bad habits like too much TV, food, drugs, alcohol, porn/sex, and I am going to add internet. These sound a lot like Bene Brown’s list on how we numb ourselves from vulnerability – oh wait, because they are the same list. Resistance loves to make us feel vulnerable.

But you know what? I’ve felt super vulnerable this week, with agents and school boards and relationships, and I am starting to breath through these moments, when fear and resistance want to take hold. And it’s working. What used to send me under the covers with heart palpitations is now a feeling that I notice as anxiety, resistance, fear, and then I invite peace to come in and fix it. And it usually does sooner or later.

The really familiar sound track of my inner critic still plays in my head (I love Kristen Armstrong’s latest post on Runner’s World, where she calls it her roommate, and how she is trying to evict her if she is not kind this year). But now I recognize it for exactly what it is – resistance. And I can conquer my fear over it when I recognize it.

Today I sat through my daughter Sophie’s belt test in Karate. And watching this sweet, easy-going girl shout out imperatives, move her arms and legs with discipline and authority, all with a surprisingly steely look in her eye let’s me know exactly what it looks like when resistance loses. When you want a new belt, you fight it hard.

So maybe the best cure against resistance is desire. That hunger that hits you when your feet hit the floor in the morning and your head hits the pillow at night, the one that says you want everything in between to really matter? That’s your biggest weapon against resistance.

But that doesn’t seem to be enough either, because that hunger alone drives me crazy. Just bonkers. And it hit me as my daughter bowed down to her Sensei. We need discipline too. We need to surrender to rules and order and principles that are time tested. Set our clocks to work out or write. Go to church or whatever meeting we need to attend. Find a teacher or mentor.

Discipline and hunger invite a different force in. One that wants us to succeed.

I know I have to do battle again with resistance on my next writing day. And we are still at a stalemate on somethings, like the piles of clutter my house seems to collect in the corners, but I guess if you’re reading this, you know who won, in the end, at least for today.

Just ask Sophie.