Day to Day Life: Week Forty-Four

The last week looked a little bit like this:

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On a walk home from the grocery store. Soon all these trees will be bald, so I like to enjoy the vibrancy while I can…

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A dinner I’d gladly eat weekly. Homemade cranberry apple grape sauce (I LOVE cranberry season!), mashed ‘taters with crimini mushroom gravy, buttermilk fried tofu, garlic herb focaccia, and raw spinach because something green sounded good.

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That garlic herb focaccia I just mentioned, pre-baking. Holy yum. I adapted this recipe from Tracy Benjamin (Shutterbean). While I don’t have a recipe to share with you, you can absolutely go and make her raisin focaccia, which I guarantee will be deee-licious.

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This is how we enjoy meals around here when there aren’t any kids around. She pretends she’s not looking at every single bite I eat, checking to make sure nothing falls on the floor needing to be cleaned up.

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As I have said many times, homemade pizza night is still my favorite. I experimented with a focaccia crust, as it’s reminiscent of one of our favorite places for pizza in San Francisco – Golden Boy Pizza in North Beach.

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The wonderful women who own Sammich here in Ashland wrote me an email asking if I wanted to come in and try some of their menu after I wrote this post. Of course when one half of these ladies is a chef you absolutely admire, you say hell yes I’ll come in and taste some things off your menu! I even got to drag my husband along. We had the day’s two soup offerings, a greens and beet salad, a poached albacore sammich, roasted eggplant sammich, house cured pastrami sammich AND cotija cheese flan to top things off… More about this visit this coming week…

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We drove up to Portland for the Ashland High School Water Polo district tournament games, where both Vincent and Silas’s sister were playing. Vincent kicked some serious butt as the team’s goalie and as his coach said, he “had another breakout game and saved his team’s ass!”

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Kenya was also a great asset to her team. Both the boys and girls teams won their games and move on to the state tournament this coming weekend.

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I should mention the district tournament overlapped with Halloween. My husband and I went for the Dia de los Muertos sugar skull look.

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This is what happens when you’re a short lady and try to take a selfie photo with your tall husband. Haha

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We found a supposedly haunted bar / pizza place in downtown Portland, where we ventured to scope out the craziness in the city. My date, pictured here, and I wound up with free pizza and happened up on the one bar that didn’t require a cover charge to come in and drink some bourbon.

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No trip of ours would be complete without finding good Mexican food. Duh. We discovered Taqueria La Fuente by my handy dandy Yelp iPhone app. We were incredibly happy with our meal. I ordered a veggie burrito and asked if I could have it smothered in their verde and roja sauces, like the enchilada burrito they had listed. No problem! My husband ordered the chavideca, which we had never heard of. This was two large corn tortillas stuffed with beans and cheese, then topped with avocado, jalapenos, tomatoes, cotija cheese, sour cream, and shredded cabbage. I will be making a version of this! It was SO GOOD!

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We found La Provence Boulangerie and Patisserie also using Yelp. There was a lot of sharing of buttery deliciousness.

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It started dumping rain as we headed back home. I like to watch the raindrops race on the windows as the car’s moving.

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What it looks like from the passenger seat, returning to Ashland from Portland.

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Ancho Chili and Pepita Mole

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I believe in the beauty of small things. Don’t gag – I’m completely serious. The little things that make me laugh or smile throughout the day. Gorgeous fall leaves littered across just barely frozen duck ponds. Little kids laughing at anything I wouldn’t pay much attention to, were it not for their attention to those details I fail to notice. Dog snuggles that come by the not-so-graceful shove of German Shepherd noses against my legs as I’m trying to wash the dishes, as if to suggest that I need the break from working in the kitchen for 5 minutes of snuggle time. Watching the raindrops collect against the living room windows, then opening them just wide enough to let those droplets dance into the house (shh, don’t tell my husband or kids – I urgently push for non-mess-making more often than necessary). Getting my cup of coffee then crawling back into bed with it so I can slow down the start of an otherwise over-busy day.

This sauce, it’s just sauce. That is a small thing when one really thinks about a meal… right? But if a person can garner happiness from a single condiment, perhaps that small thing is really not so little. If you’ve lingered around this blog for any amount of time, you know where huge fans of Mexican food. When my husband’s aunt was in town visiting this month, she mentioned that she had never eaten fish tacos before. Obviously the solution was for me to make them… When Taco Tuesday rolled around, I decided I wanted to experiment with a homemade sauce to go along with the tacos. As I approach many things, “winging it” seemed ideal. So I experimented.

When I say this is mole, we aren’t talking chemistry. Because chemistry is NOT a friend of mine (I learned this both in high school, then college when I had an overly enthusiastic desire to pursue a double major in psychology and biology – a half semester of chemistry being the turning point of that decision). We also aren’t talking about the weird club-footed animal I occasionally find in my garden that makes me yell obscenities. No, no. This mole (moh-lay) is a sauce based with chili peppers. You can use it as a salsa for your chips. You can top your taco off with as much of it as your little heart desires. You can eat it by the spoonful (although this is probably the least productive usage – just sayin’). You can use it to make chilaquiles. This sauce is a mouth party and you’re totally invited.

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Ancho Chili and Pepita Mole Sauce

Yields about one extra-full pint.

Ingredients:

4 – 5 large dried ancho chili peppers
4 cloves garlic, peeled
1/3 cup raw pepitas (pumpkin seeds)
10 ounces roma tomatoes (about 3 medium tomatoes)
2 tablespoons fresh cilantro, chopped
the juice from one small lime (about 2 tablespoons)
1 1/4 teaspoons kosher salt
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon honey or agave syrup
1/2 teaspoon red wine vinegar
4 to 8 tablespoons of reserved chili pepper water (read directions that follow)

Directions:

Place the chili peppers in a small bowl. Pour enough boiling water over the peppers to fully submerge them (you can weigh them town with a glass if they want to rise. Allow the peppers to soak for 20-30 minutes, until fully soft.

Reserve the soaking water. Remove the stems from the softened peppers. For a milder sauce, you can remove the seeds and ribs from inside the peppers as well. (Ancho chilis actually are more smoky than hot in flavor, with or without the seeds.)

Combine all of the ingredients in a blender or food processor and blend until completely smooth. Strain the sauce through a wire or mesh sieve. Add more of the reserved pepper water if you want a thinner sauce. Use immediately or refrigerate until needed.

Tightly covered, the sauce can be refrigerated for up to a week.

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Posted in Gluten-Free, Sauces, Sides, Vegan, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Day to Day Life: Week Forty-Three


The last week, in photos, looked something like this:

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Fall colors in Oregon are the best.

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This sauce. I’ll share it next week, it’s a win-win situation.

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My husband’s aunt was still here visiting in the earlier part of the week. She informed me that she had never had fish tacos, so I fixed that. Spicy seared cod, homemade tortillas, roasted ancho chili sauce, cumin and sweet pepper rice, honey cumin lime slaw, creamy guacamole… Flavor explosions of the happiest kind.

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Nana and Phyllis.

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Magic.

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When I posted a #throwbackthursday photo on Instagram, it was this. Silas at almost 2 years old not long after I’d met him. Curly blonde hair and all. I was 22 and just finishing college.

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Homemade pizza night! (My favorite, always.) Whole wheat sourdough. Jalapeno + poblano + fresh pineapple. Vegetarian sausage + peppers + red onion. Spinach + goat cheese + fresh tomatoes.

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Sassy dog.

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Burrito bowl with sprouts because I can.

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Lazy girl saimin for lunch one day.

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Many many cookies and cream whoopie pies for Silas’s football team.

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My husband and a band made up of other Dads played a fundraiser show for the Ashland High Water Polo team. It was a costume party and at the last minute, we went this route. I may incorporate this makeup styling in my daily life from here on out.

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Gluten free french toast experiment for lunch another day. Recipe next week (or soon).

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I spotted this guy yesterday morning hiding in the longer blades of grass, then popping up whenever any birds landed near him.

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These colors never cease to amaze me.

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Nor will the flight patterns of these guys.

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The Best Damn Banana Cream Pie

 

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It’s totally normal to recipe-stalk, just so you know. Sites like Pinterest, Foodgawker and Tastespotting make recipe stalking even easier. One recipe I stalked for months before attempting it was Momofuku Milk Bar’s banana cream pie. I admire recipe developer, Christina Tosi’s elaborate dessert recipes. The steps are plentiful and the flavors aren’t compromised because of it. And the creativity that goes into each recipe? Phenomenal, to say the least.

So I stalked many blogs, all of which were home to various bakers who had attempted this gorgeous banana cream pie. I made my own crust to cut out some time from the original recipe, but kept the filling true to the original recipe. I hate to say it, but I was terribly disappointed in the final product. While the banana flavor in the filling was stunningly present, I didn’t care for the texture at all. It wasn’t the fluffy creamy filling I think of when banana cream pie crosses my mind. It was jiggly, slightly odd, and not what I had imagined. The inclusion of both yellow food coloring and gelatin in the filling also had me second guessing this particular pie.

A few weeks later, I decided my quest for a damn good banana cream pie wasn’t over. So, the stalking began again. I read hundreds of variations and decided to try again, taking one key tip from the Momofuku pie failure – I decided to use very, very ripe (almost  rotten looking on the outside) bananas in the cream filling, because the sugars in these bananas are plentiful and the flavor of the bananas has much more depth that way. I wanted a filling that was light in texture, but would more or less hold its shape for a sliced pie. I made a custard that isn’t exactly traditional. For color, I added just the slightest bit of turmeric instead of an artificial food coloring that would leave the pie neon and alien-like in color. The crust is my go-to recipe. It’s light and flaky, which works well with the light, fluffy banana cream in this pie.

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Banana Cream Pie

Yields one 9-inch pie.

Ingredients:

For the crust:
1 1/2 cups all purpose flour
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
pinch of freshly ground nutmeg
1 stick unsalted butter, COLD, cubed
6-10 tablespoons ice cold water

For the filling:
3 egg yolks
2 cups whole milk
2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
3 super ripe bananas (black, spotty skins are GOOD in this case) + 1 just ripe banana
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
2 cups heavy whipping cream
3 tablespoons confectioner’s (powdered) sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
optional extremely scant 1/8 teaspoon turmeric (for color – and a little goes a LONG way!)

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Directions:

Prepare your pie crust dough: In a medium sized bowl, stir together the flour, granulated sugar, cinnamon, salt, and nutmeg until well combined. Add in the cold, cubed butter, using your fingertips to work it into the flour mixture, working quickly so the butter stays cold. The butter should create small flakes, some about the size of oats and others just slightly larger. Add in the ice cold water, about a tablespoon at a time, using a fork to bring the dough together. Continue adding the ice water, one tablespoon at a time, until the dough just comes together.

Turn the dough out to a lightly floured surface (it’s okay for it to be crumbly – we’re about to take care of that right now). Knead the dough gently into a round, semi-flat disc shape. Wrap nice and snugly in plastic wrap, then refrigerate for at least one full hour. This resting time lets the butter solidify a bit, allowing it to break down slower in the oven, creating a flakier crust.

Once the hour or so has passed, preheat your oven to 400 degrees F. Lightly dust a flat surface with flour. Roll the dough out on your floured surface to a circle about 1/8-inch thick and about 12-inches in diameter. Transfer it to a pie pan. Trim the edge until it has about one inch of overhang. Use your thumb and forefinger of one hand to push the thumb of your other hand, crimping the overhanging crust. Continue this around the crust to create a crimped edge. (Like this!)

Line the pie crust with foil or parchment paper, then top with enough pie weights or dried beans to cover the bottom. Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, until the edges are nicely golden brown. Remove the weights and foil/parchment paper, then return the crust to your oven for another 5 to 10 minutes until the bottom is nicely golden brown, too. Allow the pie crust to cool completely before adding the filling.

Prepare your pie filling: In a food processor or blender, combine the egg yolks, one cup of the milk, the melted butter, and the three super ripe bananas. Blend until completely smooth. Set aside until needed.

In a medium pot, whisk together the sugar, cornstarch, and salt, paying attention to break up any clumps of all of the above ingredients. Turn the heat on to medium and whisk in the remaining milk and the banana mixture. Continue whisking, over medium heat, until the mixture begins to thicken up (7 to 10 minutes). Once the mixture is very, very thick, pour it into a bowl and cover with plastic wrap, pressing the plastic all the way onto the top of the pudding (this keeps a skin from forming). Refrigerate until completely cooled (1 to 1 1/2 hours).

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Make your pie: Pour the whipping cream into the bowl of a stand mixer. Use the whisk attachment to beat the cream over low speed (2 – 4) until it’s frothy. Add the confectioners sugar and continue whisking over medium speed until the mixture begins to thicken. Add the vanilla and whisk the cream until stiff peaks form.

Remove half of the whipped cream, transferring it to a bowl until needed. Add the completely cooled banana mixture to the stand mixer, which should still contain half of the whipped cream. Whisk the mixtures together at low speed until just combined (you can also do this step by hand, using a spatula).

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Spoon half of the banana cream mixture into your cooled pie crust, smoothing it out on top. Slice the remaining banana – the one that wasn’t overly ripe – into rounds about 1/8-inch thick. Arrange the bananas over the smoothed cream. Top the bananas with the remaining banana cream filling, again smoothing it out as best as you can.

Use a piping bag or simply a frosting spatula to top the pie with the reserved whipped cream. Refrigerate the pie until you’re ready to serve it.

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Peanut Butter Bourbon Brown Butter Brownie Cookie Cups

photo 1Some days require chocolate. Other days require chocolate and peanut butter. Sometimes a girl is simply in need of cookies. Bourbon? Hell yes, there are those days, too. Then there are those times when a person requires all of the above. This is no laughing matter. Serious business here! One must not take those times lightly, mind you. So here you’ll find the perfect solution to days that call for chocolate, peanut butter, chocolate cookies, brownie batter, and bourbon.

When I was in middle school, I had a mini cheesecake that came in a cupcake liner, whose crust was made from a Nilla wafer, which was topped with cheesecake filling, baked then topped with canned pie filling. This blew my mind at 11 or 12 years old. I quickly became a master at baking these mini cheesecakes. I decided to try other cookies. Oreo cookies were often present in our house, so those seemed like the next obvious “crust” choice. Topped with cheesecake? Oh yes. Topped with brownie batter? Oh yeah.

In the oven, the cookies soften under whatever batter you’re using, just enough to add a curiously delicious layer of flavor in whatever you’re baking. Back in those days I relied on boxed brownie mixes. Now that I am nearing 30, I rarely rely on boxed mixes because I think they’re overpriced for what you’re getting. Plus they’re often filled with things that don’t need to exist in most recipes. For the following brownie cups, I used chocolate cream Newman O’s, which are the healthier alternative to Oreo cookies. They add a cream filled crust to the bottom of these brownies, which also house a peanut butter center. The brownie batter itself contains brown butter, bourbon, and hopefully good quality cocoa. This adds a decadently rich element to the final product. I suggest eating these while they’re still warm out of the oven, but they’ll last for 2-3 days in an airtight container.

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Peanut Butter Bourbon Brown Butter Brownie Cookie Cups

Yields approximately one dozen standard sized “cupcakes”.

Ingredients:

1 stick unsalted butter
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup light brown sugar, packed
2 eggs
5 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 cup all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
2 ounces good quality bourbon
12 chocolate cream filled Newman O’s (Oreos if you prefer)
6 teaspoons creamy peanut butter (I used Justin’s… so good!)

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Directions:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. Line 12 muffin cups with liners.

Melt the butter over medium heat, in a small saucepan. Stir occasionally, until the butter begins to turn golden brown. The butter will get really frothy on top. Continue stirring constantly, paying close attention. (Golden butter goes to burnt butter very quickly!) The golden butter should start to smell semi nutty. Keep stirring until the butter reaches a dark golden hue. Remove from the heat and immediately whisk in the sugars. Once the sugar is fully incorporated, whisk in the eggs, one at a time (continuous whisking is important here – nobody likes scrambled eggs in their brownies!).

In a small bowl, sift together the cocoa powder, flour, baking powder and salt. Stir the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients until just combined. Carefully stir in the vanilla and bourbon until well incorporated.

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Place one Newman-O in the bottom of each lined muffin cup. Place a half teaspoon of peanut butter on top of each cookie, right in the center of it. Fill each muffin cup with brownie batter, spooning it over the peanut butter and cookie, until the cups are about three quarters of the way full.

Bake for 25-30 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center of each brownie comes out clean. Remove from the oven and allow the brownies to cool in the pan for 10 minutes, before transferring to a wire rack to continue cooling.

Store in an air-tight container. If you have any leftovers, of course!

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Posted in Baking, Booze, Dessert, Kids, Snacks | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Day to Day Life: Week Forty-Two

The last week looked a little bit like this:

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I was sitting at Silas’s football practice and looked up with my camera just in time to catch this red-tailed hawk mid-flight.

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On a whim I made some homemade whipped pumpkin cream cheese for my bagel. It might’ve been the best decision I had all week.

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A book old, old book consisting of eye candy for a font type nerd.

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Serious game face.

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Not so serious.

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This was a happy experiment that consisted of chocolate creme Newman O’s, homemade brownie batter, honey peanut butter, and bourbon. WIN.

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This gorgeous moon has popped up a few times this week.

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Dinner one night: baked barbecue tofu, goat cheese mashed potatoes, and roasted carrots, beets, and sweet potatoes. YUM.

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Still my favorite trees.

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Vincent and Kenya had a water polo tournament in Salem this weekend. We drove up with Silas, my mother in law, and her sister who is visiting from Louisiana. I think this dog Silas met was his favorite part of the trip.

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On the drive back to Ashland, we saw signs for a historical pioneer museum in Brownsville and decided to check it out. I was very pleasantly surprised at the museum, which is housed in Brownsville’s original train depot and six train cars. I liked the above display and decided Bu-Ku-Jin and Compound may be ingredients I need to get my hands on :)

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I made my favorite banana cream pie yet! The filling is so light and fluffy… my husband and I absolutely scooped the leftovers out of the pie shell and ate it as banana pudding.

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Polenta for dinner one night meant leftovers. in the morning – savory breakfast polenta!

 

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Pumpkin Protein Muffins

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We are not strangers to the bottomless pit-stomachs of growing kids around here. My 15 year old stepson is now 6’4″, while 8 year old Silas measures in at a few inches shy of 5 feet. Both boys are involved in sports – Vincent’s the starting goalie for his high school water polo team and Silas is the quarterback (along with numerous other high-energy positions) on his tackle football team.

We try to keep the snacks around our house as healthy as possible. Our kitchen is often stocked with kid-friendly protein bars, whole grain crackers, dried fruits, fresh fruits, low fat chocolate milk, yogurt, all-fruit fruit snacks… 75% of the time Silas’s preferred go-to after school snack is none of the above, but rather an egg sandwich, sometimes cheesy and sometimes not.

But on game days where the kids are active for extended periods of time and depleting energy quicker than I can try and keep up, we like to keep the carbs high and the proteins high. I created these muffins as an in-between-game snack for the high school water polo team. Each individual muffin backs about 170 calories, 5 grams of fat, 30 grams of carbs, and 6.5 grams of protein. They seemed to go over well with the kids and pack a great flavor for this time of year.

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Pumpkin Protein Muffins

Yields approximately 4 dozen standard-sized muffins

Ingredients:

For the muffins:
1¼ cups all-purpose flour
1¾ cups whole wheat flour
1 cup almond meal
½ cup brazil nut protein powder
2 cups light brown sugar, packed
2 teaspoons baking soda
1½ teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 teaspoon ground allspice
½ teaspoon ground cloves
1- 15 ounce can pumpkin puree (not pumpkin pie mix)
½ cup plain Greek yogurt
1 cup unsweetened applesauce
¼ cup pure maple syrup
1 egg, lightly beaten
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup Thompson raisins
1 cup chopped walnuts (unsalted)
½ cup mini chocolate chips (optional)

For the topping:
1/3 cup unsweetened coconut flakes
1/3 cup chopped walnuts (unsalted)
1/2 cup rolled oats
1 tablespoon light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon

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Directions:

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. Line a couple muffin tins with liners, or lightly grease each muffin cup.

In a large mixing bowl, mix together the flours, almond meal, protein powder, sugar, baking soda and powder, salt, nutmeg, cinnamon, allspice, and cloves.

In another large mixing bowl, stir together the pumpkin puree, Greek yogurt, applesauce, maple syrup, egg, and vanilla.

Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients, mixing until everything is well combined. Stir in the raisins, walnuts, and chocolate chips.

Combine the coconut flakes, remaining walnuts, rolled oats, sugar, and cinnamon in a small bowl, mixing well.

Fill each muffin cup about 3/4-full, then sprinkle a small pinch of the coconut mixture on the top of the batter. Bake for 22 to 25 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center of each muffin comes out clean. Cool on a wire rack. Store the muffins in an airtight container for 3-5 days.

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Posted in Baking, Breakfast, Kids, Life, Sides, Snacks, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Vegan Chicken and Herb Dumplings

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When people ask me what genre of food I cook best, honestly, I don’t know what to tell them. I’d like to say that when it gets down to it, I enjoy cooking without hesitancy about flavor. I would love to say I don’t have a specific genre I’m tying to box myself into. I just cook with what is fresh and available, with a bold knack for simply jumping into a recipe without over-thinking it, winging things as I go along. I would say that I enjoy a good challenge – perhaps that’s where my love of cooking stems from in the first place.

But if I really had to narrow something down, some kind of description, I’d say I cook vegetarian-ized comfort food that doesn’t compromise quality, taste, or health (most of the time). The following recipe is some genuine comfort eating – chicken and dumplings is a bowl full of warmth, a blanket of flavor and full-belly richness. The thing is, this isn’t your grandmother’s traditional chicken and dumplings (although like with most comfort food recipes, every recipe offers numerous variations of the same-named dish). For one thing, these chicken and dumplings are completely vegan. The stew is packed with more vegetables than you’d probably find in a traditional chicken and dumpling recipe. Also, I used Field Roast’s Apple Sage Sausage rather than a white-meat-style meat alternative. Field Roast is packed with flavor and works nicely within this dish.

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Vegan Chicken and Herb Dumplings

Serves 6.

Ingredients:

For the stew:
4 tablespoons sunflower oil
1 medium onion, diced
4 large cloves garlic, minced (about 3 tablespoons)
4 Field Roast Apple Sage Sausages, cut into rounds chopped into bite size pieces
1 pound russet potatoes, peeled and diced into bite size pieces
1 cup diced zucchini
2 large carrots, peeled and diced (about 1 cup)
2 large stalks celery, diced (about 3/4-cup)
6 ounces fresh green beans, cut into one-inch pieces (about one cup cut beans)
1 cup diced crimini mushrooms (about 8-10 small mushrooms)
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon poultry seasoning
1/2 teaspoon celery seed
1/4 cup freshly minced parsley
6 cups mushroom broth (or vegetable if you prefer)
3/4 cup unsweetened plain cashew milk

For the dumplings:
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon granulated garlic
2 tablespoons Earth Balance
, melted
2 tablespoons freshly minced parsley
2 tablespoons freshly minced chives
1 tablespoon freshly minced oregano
1 tablespoon freshly minced thyme
1 cup unsweetened, plain cashew milk

* Yields approximately 1 1/2 dozen dumplings

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Directions:

In a large stock pot, heat the oil over medium heat. Add the diced onion and garlic, sauteing until the onion is translucent. Add in the Field Roast sausage, stirring to coat with the oil. Continue cooking over medium heat until the sausage begins to brown and crisp on the outside (4 to 5 minutes).

Add the diced potatoes, zucchini, carrots, celery, green beans, and mushrooms to the pot once the sausage has browned. Stir everything well to combine the ingredients. Sprinkle in the flour, salt and pepper, poultry seasoning, celery seed and fresh parsley, stirring to make sure the veggies are coated with the flour mixture. Cook for a minute or two. Stir in the broth and milk, stirring everything to incorporate all the ingredients. Cook, covered, over medium heat until the mixture slightly thickens and the tougher vegetables (potatoes and carrots) are fork-tender (15-20 minutes).

Meanwhile prepare the dumplings. In a medium sized bowl, combine all of the ingredients for the dumplings. Use a wooden spoon to stir everything together until a soft, sticky ball of dough is formed.

Once the potatoes and carrots are tender in the stew, uncover the pot. Scoop the dumpling batter one tablespoon at a time, gently forming the sticky dough into balls. Place the balls of dough directly into the stew, carefully. Continue to scoop the dough, forming dumplings and adding them to the stew. Once all the dumplings have been formed, cover the pot again and cook for 15 minutes over medium-low heat. Do not peek at the dumplings for these 15 minutes! The closed lid lets them steam cook, keeping them nice and tender. A toothpick gently poked into the center of the dumplings should come out clean, ensuring they’re cooked all the way through.

Serve while hot and enjoy!

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Posted in Dinner, Lunch, Meatless Meat, Vegan, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Day to Day Life: Weeks Forty + Forty-One

Last week was a little crazy. Then Sunday came and I was not feeling well, so this type of post didn’t happen. I was going to forego a Day to Day post for last week (week 40) all together, but I’ve decided to combine the last two weeks. To find more info, go through the article:

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After working out one afternoon, stepping out of the gym revealed this gorgeous sky.

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Two little puppy dogs who like the cold weather we’ve been having because they get to be in the house whenever they want.

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Last week I made you (and us) these muffins. They are so damn good.

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Two weeks ago we were in Eugene for a water polo tournament. VooDoo Doughnuts‘ third shop is in Eugene… A dozen VooDoo-Pick was necessary.

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The old dirty bastard is one of my favorites. A yeast doughnut with chocolate frosting, oreo cookies, and peanut butter.

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The pool Vincent had some of his first polo games for the weekend was ghastly looking in the latter part of the evening – you couldn’t see anything. The 40-degree weather wasn’t helpful either. As the goalie for his team, I don’t know how V does it. Treading water constantly with balls flying at your face when you can barely see two feet in front of you? I’d die out there.

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We found a new taqueria/restaurant in Roseburg when heading home to Ashland. Burrito Vaquero is located close to the freeway, making getting there then back on the road super easy. We called in our order for three wet vegetarian burritos to-go when 10 miles away from the exit. This burrito was huge and delicious – don’t go by my blurry iphone-in-the-car-oh-hey-its-dark-out photo.

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I pulled the last of our dragon carrots from the garden.

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Our amount of traveling and junk food eating left me feeling like making this soup was necessary.

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My mother-in-law, smiling in some cold, cold, football weather…

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Because she comes to watch her grandson’s football games whenever possible.

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This girl likes to get as close as she can, whenever she can.

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I call this a fine example of my preferred meal genre to cook: CaucasianAsiaCan . May I introduce the waffleada – a tostada on a homemade chile and cheese waffle? Superb!

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Blue and sunshine – a quickly fading thing around this little valley.

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Vincent‘s the starting goalie for the Ashland High School water polo team. As a sophomore, he is absolutely kicking ass! We happily watched many games over the last two weeks.

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Silas’s sister, Kenya, is also playing water polo this year. She’s kicking some ass, too! This is her, making the last goal for her team in this particular game.

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Silas didn’t have school this Thursday or Friday. Playdates galore (oh, you call it “hanging out,” not “playdates” once you reach 8). This little girl is a basketful of ridiculousness. Pair that with a rambunctious Silas Henry and my sanity was gone within 2 minutes. But… they are hilarious and fun to hang out with.

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Found this guy sitting behind me at a winery my husband played a gig at tonight…

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At the same gig there was a food truck I had seen before but never tried, Blue Toba. First things first – the owners were super approachable and sweet. As I looked through the menu (three separate times) I couldn’t decide what to order because everything sounded delicious and my knowledge of Indonesian cuisine is basically non-existent. I ended up ordering the special – an Indonesian fried chicken served on a bed of turmeric, coconut, and lime leaf rice. The chicken had been marinated overnight in coconut milk, ginger, and some other spices (I think that’s what I remember…) and let me tell you – while I don’t eat it often, this was the best chicken I’ve had in quite some time. The flavor was incredible. Served with a side of Indonesian red chili sauce that was a perfect balance of sweet and spicy, I could have easily ordered a second plate. I did order a second – the Gulai with tofu and vegetables – for my husband. This mildly spicy curry was also incredible, packed with flavor, and certainly delicious. Should you find yourself anywhere Blue Toba happens to be (check their website and Facebook for locations) I couldn’t recommend them more highly than I already do.

Posted in Day to Day, Kids, Life, Photography, Restaurants, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Creamy Vegan Roasted Butternut Squash Soup with Leeks

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Few things note the change in seasons like soup. Since I have weird-girl-brain sometimes, I need to convince myself that soup is a good meal plan. I don’t have any good reasons for my apprehensions, I will tell you right now. I like the idea of soup – especially vegetarian soups where the whole dang thing is made by combining loads of veggies more than anything else. When I make soup, I know it’s going to be healthy (more or less, depending on whether I opt for butter, cream, and cheese in this said soup…). I’d like to hope it’s not that knowledge that leads me astray.

Sometimes the thing that encourages me to make soup is knowing that I will get to make some kind of homemade bread, carb-y biscuit type of soup-mopper-upper. We’ll call it soup incentive.

Anyway, yesterday I decided we had been eating a lot of crap recently. Doughnuts from VooDoo in Eugene (sorry, I didn’t post a Day to Day post last week, but we were out of town for a bit…). Greasy cheese pizza because it’s a cure-all for any stomach ailments. Questionable, but delicious Mexican meals. Too much tequila. Soup packed with vegetables, and vegan – so no butter, cream or cheese this time – sounded necessary if nothing else.

When it comes to soups, especially at dinner time, I like them to be on the thicker end of the soup spectrum. With a depth of flavor, perhaps multiple tastes going on at once. For this particular soup, roasting the vegetables heightens their natural sweetness and flavor. The russet potatoes add a creaminess without needing to add any dairy. The slightly caramelized leeks add another layer of flavor, while the fresh herbs round everything out. For an even richer flavor, I’d suggest using a homemade vegetable stock. If you don’t have any on hand, however, store bought varieties will suffice.

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Creamy Vegan Roasted Butternut Squash Soup with Leeks

Yields enough soup for 6-8 folks. 

Ingredients:

3 pounds butternut squash (one large-ish squash)
1 pound russet potatoes (about 3 large potatoes, 5 smaller potatoes)
1/4 cup sunflower (or other light flavored) oil
salt and pepper
3 tablespoons freshly chopped rosemary
3 tablespoons freshly chopped thyme
2 tablespoons sunflower oil
3 cloves garlic, minced
2 medium leeks, tough greens removed, stalks cut into 1/4-inch thick half-moons
8-10 cups of vegetable broth
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar

 

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Directions:

Preheat your oven to 375 degrees F. Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper.

Peel the butternut squash, remove the seeds and stringy insides, then cut into one inch cubes. Arrange the cubed squash on one of the baking sheets. Peel the russet potatoes, then cut into one inch cubes. Arrange the potatoes on the other baking sheet. Drizzle the cubed vegetables with the 1/4-cup of oil, then sprinkle a couple pinches of salt and pepper, plus the chopped rosemary and thyme, over the squash and potatoes. Bake until the potatoes and squash are fork-tender (30 to 40 minutes).

While the vegetables are roasting, heat the additional two tablespoons of oil in a large stock pot, over medium heat. Add the minced garlic and sliced leeks. Stir to coat everything with the oil. Occasionally stir the leeks around until they turn a nice golden brown (20 to 25 minutes). Once the leeks have slightly caramelized, combine them, your roasted squash and potatoes, and about half of the vegetable broth, as well as the vinegar, in a high-speed blender or food processor. Blend until smooth. If your food processor or blender cannot hold all of the vegetables at once, work in batches until everything has been pureed.

Return the pureed soup to your stock pot. Bring back up to temperature, also adding enough broth to reach your preferred soup consistency. Taste and add more salt and pepper to your liking.

Serve topped with a drizzle of good olive oil, fresh ground pepper, and chopped thyme.

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Posted in Dinner, Gluten-Free, Kids, Lunch, Soup, Vegan, Vegetarian | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments