Saturday, January 29, 2011

Three Bears (Purple) Porridge


As with many other parents who work outside the home, our weekends at home with the LittleOne are sacred. At least once per weekend we try to sit down together and enjoy a long, lingering dining experience as a family. One meal together really shouldn't be ridiculously challenging to coordinate, but sadly it tends to be. We've been 'busy,' remember?

So rather than aim for dinnertime, where timing can be hit-or-miss with the LittleOne, this weekend we enjoyed a wonderful breakfast together of Purple Porridge. As we ate, we recited to the LittleOne the infamous story about Goldilocks and the Three Bears, adding our own touches. (i.e. she made sure to knock politely before entering, and of course she was sure to take her shoes off at the door..) Anyway, the recipe was a huge hit and The Husband can't wait to revisit the leftovers early next week!

Note: We do quite a bit of cooking on the weekends to ensure that everyone is adequately nourished throughout the week. This recipe was doubled with no changes to cooking time, and is easily reheated on the stovetop or microwave for repeat enjoyment. 

Purple Porridge

Extra blueberries for the Little One
Ingredients
1 1/4 cups water
dash of salt
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons agave nectar (or honey)
2/3 cup old-fashioned rolled oats (not quick-cooking)
1/2 cup fresh or frozen blueberries
1/2 teaspoon finely chopped or grated orange zest
1/2 cup milk (we had vanilla soy milk)

Bring water to a boil in a medium-size saucepan.
Add salt, cinnamon, agave and oatmeal.
Stir well.
With extra cinnamon, for The Husband
Reduce heat, and simmer uncovered for five minutes or until most of the water has been absorbed before adding blueberries, orange zest and milk. Bring to a simmer, and cook five additional minutes or until oatmeal is thick and creamy and the blueberries have begun to burst.
Remove from heat, cover, and let stand five minutes, then serve.

*Note, mom added bananas, which everyone thought was a grand idea and soon all three of us had them in our bowls. Highly recommended addition to an already-stellar oatmeal experience. 

Bananas for mom, highly recommended!

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Roasted Root Vegetables with Rosemary




Today's recipe is brought to you by the letter "R" .. 

Everyone has a favorite food, and although she can't communicate much beyond pointing, clapping, signing for "more," babbling "that," "this," and rooooaring like a lion, we are quite sure that the recipe that follows is her favorite. The Husband is also a fan, so much actually that we had to start doubling this recipe to use as an adult side dish as well.



Roasted Root Vegetables with Rosemary
Ingredients:
1 parsnip, washed and trimmed, wax removed
2 carrots, washed and trimmed
1 sweet potato, washed
Olive Oil
1-2 tablespoons Rosemary, crushed

Procedure:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees
Chop all vegetables to a uniform size (if feeding to a young child, we tend to choose something between 'finger food' size or a bit smaller).
Toss vegetables in 1/8-1/4 cup olive oil, sprinkle with rosemary.
Spread in 8x8 or 8x13 glass pan and cook, uncovered, 30-45 minutes, or until vegetables are fork-tender.
Allow to cool.
For adults, may add salt and pepper to taste

We hope you enjoy as much as our LittleOne!




Thursday, January 20, 2011

So touched.

Those of you who know me personally know that I work in oncology. Sometimes those days are rough, some days are joyous. Sometimes you rush home and hug your family, and sometimes you are so touched by something that you can't help but share it. I hope you don't mind the digression from normally scheduled programming, but this was one of those stories.

Life is so much shorter than it should be for some people. Do me a favor and think of the thing that has been aggravating you the most today.. and then watch this video and put it into perspective. I know it made me feel pretty grateful to have a healthy family and friends. I wish the same for you, I really do.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Slow Cooked Red Curry


In the 'words' of LittleOne, "Mmmmmm"
(okay, so she has like five words/sounds, I picked the one that worked..)
 
We had been craving the savory flavors from our favorite local thai restaurant for what felt like weeks before we realized that life is just too 'busy' right now. If either of us would be lucky enough to get home from work early enough to make it to Cy's, the other would inevitably be stuck in the traffic, snow, office or hospital fuming with jealousy and imagining the other's Fusion Curry. What's a curry-craving lady to do?

We had tried our hand at homemade curries in the past with several semi-successes, but the latest from a gem of a new library release (see "adapted from" below) was a wonderful new addition to the permanent recipe file. The added bonus? Sweet Potatoes!!

An aside (similar to the lentil tangent..) - Sweet Potatoes are another one of those wonder-foods that we try to use frequently, feed to the LittleOne often, and hopefully this summer harvest our own. Why? Well first off, they're delicious.. but equally important: their beta-carotene content is unmatched! You'll notice this recipe has FULL FAT coconut milk; this is important to not substitute. First for the texture, but second because research has shown that 3-5 grams of fat in a meal is required to reap substantial update of beta-carotene from sweet potatoes. The same is true for carrots, which is how I justify dipping mine in gobs of guacamole. Also, we tend to leave the skins on our potatoes when we cook with them (fiber, people!!). In this particular recipe you won't even realize the skins are still intact, but if you have extremely picky eaters in your house, feel free to peel them.

Ingredients:
2 pounds small red potatoes, cubed into 1 inch pieces
1 yellow onion, sliced
1 can (14 oz) coconut milk (regular style, not 'light')
2-3 tablespoons red curry paste (the more curry, the more spice)
2 tablespoons agave nectar (or brown sugar)
1 tablespoon soy sauce
1 large sweet potato, cubed into 1 inch pieces
2 cups fresh or frozen green peas
salt to taste

Preparation:
Scrub potatoes, cube, and place them in the slow cooker with sliced onion. 

In a small bowl, mix coconut milk, red curry paste, agave and soy sauce together and pour over the potatoes. Cover and cook on low for about 3 hours, or until the potatoes are slightly tender when pierced with a fork.

Add the sweet potato, cover, and continue to cook on low for another 2-3 hours, until all of the vegetables are tender.

Add peas and salt to taste.
Continue to cook, uncovered, for 15 minutes longer.

Serve over rice. And if you're fancy, you can garnish with cashews and/or fresh cilantro. As you can see, we're either not fancy or we were out of garnishes (turns out, the answer is 'all of the above'). 

Adapted From: The Gourmet Vegetarian Slow Cooker

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Email for Babies

Like many well-meaning new parents, we had every intention of documenting the milestones of our LittleOne's first year in a beautiful homemade scrapbook -- each page personalized to her story, artfully laid out and filled with photographer-caliber images of those first twelve months. I even omitted registering for the traditional "Baby Book" because I was so confident that I would create my own.

And perhaps I will.............................someday (oh, that infamous word..)

In addition to the standard new-parent haze, concurrent to our LittleOne's first year was a seven month work assignment across the country for The Husband.. a new time-consuming job for yours truly.. and a myriad of other things that kept my scrapbooking ambitions stifled like wine glasses at a baby shower.

If you are reading this and think, "Oh.. how sad.. I finished my baby book concurrent to each milestone in my child's life!" I have two things to say to you: #1. Shush. and #2. My child enjoys sitting on anything she knows I am intent to work on. Like, sitting right on top of it.  Reading a magazine? PLOP. Not anymore, says LittleOne. Folding Laundry? PLOP. Organizing something? Oooh.. My favorite!! PLOP, tear paper, PLOP.

I first attempted to keep shorthand in a spiral bound notebook -- Easy, I thought! --once I got around to that baby book, I could just reference important dates and such from this wonderful little time capsule. Alas, we traveled quite a bit those first seven months, back and forth to visit The Husband.. back and forth to visit my parents.. back and forth to visit anywhere that kept us out of the house that desperately needed dusting (but I digress..). So we were traveling, and that trusty little notebook never seemed to be in the place I needed it when a story, new tooth, or milestone needed to be recorded. Hmm...

Then, it hit me one day -- she must have an email address! Why, my husband queried, must a four month old possess such a thing? Well, I explained - anyone can contribute. From anywhere. Grandma, Grandpa, Other Grandma, Other Grandpa, Aunts, Uncle, Friends.. they can send photos and stories and we can email her when things happen in her life.

Currently, she receives emails regularly from her mom and dad - occasionally just a short "New tooth today!" message, and about once a month a quick chronicle about what is going on in all of our lives. Also, LittleOne's grandparents send messages every month or so, and some playmates we met while traveling like to keep in touch as well .



Additional ways we have found this useful: 
  • Sending 'Hello' and 'Thank You' messages from LittleOne to cherished babysitters and little friends.
  • Photos: Whenever emailing photos to others, I cc:LittleOne as a virtual photo album
  • Forward birth announcements and virtual holiday greetings from friends with children of similar ages
  • News: Cut and pasted articles from local and national newspapers when big events happen (links likely will no longer be active when their little fingers learn qwerty) 

Added bonus: if gmail still exists when she is old enough to type, she has rights to her very own name and won't need to be highschoolnickname-plus-year-of-graduation at hotmail dot com. 


Oh, and if "someday" ever comes and I decide to create that baby book, we will have a quick dated reference with a plethora of information and photos.. and if that someday never comes (gasp!) as the very least she'll have a chronological record of her early days, as well as a couple of emails to catch up on! May as well start her off like the rest of us -- with a full email box and people we haven't replied to in ages!

What have you done in lieu of a traditional baby book? 

Saturday, January 15, 2011

Ten Minute Decadent Popcorn

Things have been 'busy' in the Red Door house this week. Too 'busy' to explain, yet not interesting enough to bore you all (or you three??) with the details. That said, 'busy' has never kept me out of the kitchen, and the intensity of said kitchen's productions may have been far less time consuming as of late, but were still quickly consumed by occupants, babysitters, and visitors alike.

I actually feel guilty calling this a "recipe,"as it is more of a "conglomeration." It was also an absolute favorite at the appetizer table. Salty & Sweet -- can you really go wrong with such a combination? Easily doubled, Easily altered -- my suggestions? Improvise! The butterscotch chips were a last minute decision (by The Husband) and took this from 'good' to 'great!'

Ten Minute Decadent Popcorn

10 cups air popped popcorn, cooled and buttered (or microwave buttered popcorn, popped and cooled)
three handfuls mini marshmallows
1 bag butterscotch chips
1 bag dark chocolate melting chips
Olive oil, as needed
1 cup pecans, halved

Spread waxed paper on two cookie sheets or jelly roll pans. 
Sprinkle popcorn on waxed paper, followed by marshmallows, pecans (& anything else you can think of)
Melt butterscotch chips in double boiler or slowly in microwave. Add olive oil as needed for 'drizzleability'
Drizzle melted butterscotch over popcorn.
Repeat with dark chocolate, attempting to drizzle chocolate in places the butterscotch missed.
Cool 1-2 hours or until chocolate has hardened.
Break into pieces and store in airtight container until ready to serve.

 Easy, right? 


Saturday, January 8, 2011

Lentil Tacos


Four years ago, I could not have picked a lentil out of a lineup, muchless provide any guidance on cooking one. Not that I would now consider myself any type of legume expert, but let's just say that more often than not there is a lentil leftover of some sort in our over-crowded, stainless-steel (translation: fingerprinted) refrigerator.

What are they? Technically, lentils are a legume - rather than a bean, they actually grow similiar to a pea. Most grocery stores stock standard brown lentils and red lentils; however I was lucky(?) enough to drop a pretty penny on some beautiful french green lentils while visiting Whole Foods in a substantially-sized city earlier this week. I like to buy them in bulk because they are generally cheaper and there is less packaging waste, however one pound bags are also often found in the supermarket aisle near the beans.

So, why lentils? They are a quick fix for many of the nutrients my nearly-vegetarian diet is missing. Lentils are high in protein, iron, B vitamins and folate. All important, many tough to acquire from a heavy vegetable diet like ours. But more importantly to me personally, they are very high in cholesterol-lowering dietary fiber and prevent blood sugar peaks after a meal. As someone with uncharacteristically high cholesterol and some other fun genetic maladies for another day, I need to be diligent about such things. Crafting health benefits into things that also taste wonderful is an added bonus.  

The other nice thing about this recipe is that it's a conversation starter and a crowd pleaser. The Husband loves it. The Little One uses her little fingers to pick them up one by one. A few of our more carnivorous friends claim that they do not even miss the meat; however in the nature of full disclosure, they could have just been being kind! If you're interested in additional favorite lentil recipes or unsolicited nutritional advice, be in touch! And without further ado..

Ingredients:
1 cup onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 cup dried brown lentils, rinsed
1 tablespoon chili powder
2 teaspoons dried cumin
1 teaspoon dried oregano
2 1/2 cups vegetable or chicken broth
1 cup fresh salsa

For assembly:
(our creations usually depend on what is in the pantry, but a few ideas) 
-Tortilla shells
-Fresh guacamole
-Taco sauce
-Lettuce
-Shredded cheese

Preparation:
In a large nonstick skillet, saute the onion and garlic in oil until tender.
Add lentils, chili powder, cumin, and oregano; cook for an additional minute.
Add broth; Bring to a boil.
Reduce heat to low, cover, and simmer for 25-30 minutes, until lentils are tender.
Uncover, cook for 6-8 additional minutes or until slightly thickened.
Fold in your salsa. 
Assemble tacos and enjoy!


Source: Unknown. Passed along by a wonderful friend.

Lentils on FoodistaLentils

Saturday Reflection


Highlight: I have been wishing for a full length wall mirror for our back entry hall for what seems like years. Er.. it actually has been years. In my defense, it is a tough space to fill -- the diagonal wall is nearly 5 feet wide, so many beautiful mirrors fell out of contention due to not being substantial enough to fill the space.  Initially, I did find a beautiful bronze mirror at Hobby Lobby that I had placed on my Christmas list for the past two or three years. Christmases came and went.. Aerogardens, Microwave Bacon Crispers, and American Flag Sweaters.. but no mirror. Santa was missing my heavy hinting.

One frustrated Tuesday morning last November, I found myself standing in the bathroom, teetering in my high heels on the edge of the bathtub, attempting to determine if these shoes did indeed match my outfit (not something you want to notice on the walk from the car to your office..). I declared aloud to whoever could hear me (hello, neighbors..) that "THIS IS THE LAST STRAW! Santa is bringing me that mirror!" I cleaned the stroller and carseat out of the back of my car and drove to Hobby Lobby to bring home said mirror, only to discover that the very product I had had my eye on for the past 24 months was now no longer carried in the store. Really?!

One month and 25 questionably-coordinated outfits later, I was out for a wonderful lunch with a friend at Carmella's Italian Bistro (yumstown, I wish they could cater my life..but I digress..). In a post-prandial haze, the Little One and I stumbled into the new Appleton location of Kirkland's. We meandered through the front of the store aimlessly, then spotted a beautiful domino of full length wall mirrors leaning against the back wall. And as they say when important things happen.. "the rest is history.."

So this Christmas, with the help of the Husband, Santa answered my pleas for bringing more natural light into our back hallway. Today the mirror officially moved to her new home, and we're all very happy. The Little One spent twenty minutes getting to know the new baby in the house; The Husband enjoys not having to 'waste electricity' and turn lights on to walk through the back hall, and I can see that my red flats absolutely do not match the red cardigan I was trying to pull off today. Knowledge is power.

Saturday, January 1, 2011

January.

I'm a firm believer in that old adage:

"shoot for the moon.. blah blah blah .. land among the stars." 

I'm also a firm believer in boiling things down to simple terms that often sound so easy that your eye glosses over the text and you nod in agreement without really letting the information sink in. So I repeat, and emphasize .. read this next bit aloud if you must.. setting goals for oneself yields ridiculously higher outcomes than not doing so
Easy. 
Oh, and incentives help, too!

The word 'goal' often sets people off straightaway.. goals don't have to be huge.. studies would show that it's actually better when they're not! Have you ever written yourself a list of things to do for the day and then added things in there like "drink coffee" and "get the mail" just so that you had an obvious daily task to put that glorifying strike through? If so, you know what I mean. If not, try it! Psychological dark chocolate for the over-achiever...

One more thing before I get off my motivational soapbox. Goals need to be measurable, specific, and achievable. I have typed that phrase so many times to my graduate students that I can do it with my eyes closed, but what does it mean? 

Examples 
Poorly worded goal: "Understand how to bake bread with yeast." 
'Understand' is tough to measure
Better: "Bake loaf of yeast bread."

Poorly worded goal: "Spend more time with family."
What is 'more'? Once per week? Once per month?
Better: "Visit at least one family member each month."

We've never really been into "New Year's Resolutions" per say at the RedDoor house, but we are into small, measurable, achievable lists. My such list for January:

-Take vitamins and fish oil daily.
-Cook, Sit, and Enjoy five family dinners (1/5)
-Cook with fish at least once. 
-Email to my daughter once per week (more on this later, stay tuned..) (2/4)
-Orchestrate Interactive Dinner Party 
-Make and Attend an Eye Appointment


(Red: Not Started/ Yellow: In Progress/ Green: Complete)

Short. To the point. Keeps you easily accountable. Avoids overwhelming weight of huge New Year's Resolutions.

Easy. Now you try! What is your January list?

Day 1.

Today, it's 2011. Day 1. Day 1/1/11, to be exact. I only have eleven minutes (no one-related pun intended, It's seriously 11:49pm, CST) left in this day to get this off and running, so here goes nothing.

It's been nearly two years since I have ventured into the virtual vulnerability of the blogging world. I've imported some recipes from a former life, but today is Day 1: I'm giving myself a break. I cannot crank out the work of 4 people in one day. I cannot cook three square meals and work full time and categorize my recipes by both season, vegetable, and flavor palate. (Lesson 1: I'm a perfectionist. Like, a textbook organize-my-life-I-love-lists-98%-is-not-good-enough perfectionist. I'm working on that). I cannot function on 4 hours of sleep and 5 cups of coffee. I will not read each magazine that comes through my mailbox and try each recipe that I have collected for the past 10 years.  But what I can and will do is enjoy the time that I do have to cook, to work, to craft, and to spend with my sweet little family.

I've been hemming and hawing about blogging for what seems like years. Sometimes I think it sounds like just another thing to add to my to-do list.. sometimes I read other's blogs and think that I have something to share.. and somewhere in my head a nagging voice has been telling me to hurry up already and give it a try - quite honestly, my crutch has been that I was never really quite sure what kind of a blog I wanted this to be..


.. a food blog? nah.. my photography really isn't up to par ..
.. a family blog? eh.. there's Facebook for photos and we really haven't been doing anything remotely bloggable lately..
.. a crafting blog? .. fun, but at the rate I've been going, there would be approximately 4 posts per year.
.. a professional blog? .. risky, with disclaimers and whatnot..


I started to consider what my favorite blogs were, and the answer is the ones whose authors seem real.. those blogs that give me creative ideas to institute in my own life.. those that are beautiful (sorry reader, I'm no graphic designer..) and the ones where a motivated author thereby motivates me.

So what kind of blog is this? It's mine.