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Cilantro Hummus Salsa

May 3, 2012 By Laura

I have ants in my pants.

 There is so much to look forward to over the next month-ish!  Tomorrow I leave for the Blend Retreat (I cannot wait  to meet so many of my favorites!!!), next weekend is the Food & Wine Festival in Atlanta, then I’m getting may hair cut/colored at Lava (it’s a big event in my life), then a massage and facial… and THEN I’m headed to Argentina.  Whew!

This weekend is also amateur weekend Cinco de Mayo.  In honor of that shenanigans, I bring you a hummus and a salsa in one.

Don’t be alarmed my it’s green-ish hue.  I didn’t put spinach in it!  This salsa-hummus is packed with cilantro (my apologies to cilantro-sensitive readers), garlic, and a serrano pepper.  A few tablespoons of salsa sets off the Mexican flavors.

How did it take me this long to combine my favorite condiments?

This would be good in just about anything: with chips, used in a layered dip, on tacos, as a schmer on a bagel with avocado slices… in a train, on a plane… 🙂

For WIAW yesterday I used it in a collard green wrap.

_______________________________________________________________________________________

Cilantro Hummus Salsa

  • 1 can chickpeas
  • 1 T tahini
  • Juice of 1 lime
  • 1 giant handful cilantro
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 serrano (or jalapeno) pepper
  • 2 T salsa (I used a hot salsa verde)
  • 3/4 tsp cumin
  • S+P, to taste

Open the chickpeas and drain about half of the liquid out of the can.  Pour the peas and the remaining juice into a high-speed blender or food processor.  

Add remaining ingredients and blend until smooth, adjusting spices as necessary.

Yield: 1 cup

***

I could eat Mexican-ish food every day for the rest of my life.

Do you have vacation plans this summer?  Where are you traveling?

What is your favorite condiment?

Filed Under: Dip, Recipes, Travel Tagged With: hummus, snacks, vegan, vegetarian

Raw Sweet Potato Hummus + WIAW

February 29, 2012 By Laura

Can eating too much orange food really tint your skin?

I think I may be in danger.  

Between the carrots and sweet potatoes I’ve been eating today, I’m going to look like a Jersey Girl.  GTL!

For real – it’s called Carotenosis.


 

Luckily Jenn’s What I Ate Wednesday doesn’t go green until March.  Orange fits perfectly with the February vegetable theme.


 

Breakfast:

This morning I met my boss for breakfast a “famous” local breakfast spot, The Flying Biscuit.  While boss-man is used to my picture-taking, my stomach wasn’t used to waiting so late to eat.  Totally forgot to take a picture.

No matter.  My tofu scramble wasn’t that great.  I would have rather had my homemade Indian-Inspired Tofu Scramble:

Lunch:

My Foodie Penpal, Laura, has created a monster.  I made another round of Bibimbap using the ingredients she sent me in this month’s package.

It’s an addiction.  That crunchy rice and  spicy sauce ain’t whack.

Click here to check out the recipe I posted yesterday.  The only change today was that I served it with cucumber rather than carrots.

Snacks:

First us was my first juice creation in the Vitamix.  It was all veggie and all delish!  This was a post workout snack, so I added my Sun Warrior protein powder.  I was worried that would make it a weird consistency, but it was quite pleasant!

In my juice:

  • 1 scoop vanilla protein powder
  • 1 tsp maca
  • 1 C spinach
  • Handful of wheat grass
  • 1/4 C parsley
  • 1 carrot
  • 1 celery stalk
  • 1 in piece of ginger
  • 3-4 drops stevia
  • 2 in piece of cinnamon (I tossed a real stick in and it WORKED!)
  • 1/2 C water

Snack #2 was a recipe I’ve had marked from Rande @ The Vegetable Centric Kitchen.  Can you guess what this deliciousness is?

RAW Sweet Potato Hummus.  It was insanely good, and an embarrassing amount was consumed… much of it straight from the blender.  I made a few modifications (recipe at the end of this post).

The only difference in using a raw sweet potato is that it isn’t quite as sweet as it would be if it had cooked and caramelized a bit.  To me, this makes it a perfect hummus candidate.

The liquid smoke added a neat dimension with the nutty-sweet tahini, and the spices were just enough to give it a kick on the end.  Even cooler was the addition of Meyer lemon and miso.  These added some sweetness, along with a little tang and saltiness!

Of course, I also had my daily Kombucha!  Served from my growler of Buchi Fire from Whole Foods.

Dinner:

The orange didn’t stop at snack time.  Even post-cleanse I have been craving an increasing amount of raw food.  For dinner I ate the rainbow in the form of this giant salad.

In my salad:

  • Spinach
  • Broccoli and radish sprouts
  • Shredded red cabbage
  • Cucumber
  • Carrot
  • Celery
  • Tomato
  • Onions
  • Sweet Potato Hummus Dressing (1 T hummus + 1 T apple cider vinegar + 2 drops stevia)
  • Angela @ Oh She Glows’ Endurance Crackers

Angela’s Endurance Crackers have been on my list to try for a long time as well.  I needed something to go with all that hummus, so today seemed the perfect day to try them out!  My only modification was to use 2 tsp of the Ras al Hanout spice blend made for my Babaganoush Soup rather than her onion-salt-herb blend.

If you haven’t tried this recipe, I highly recommend it.  I’d love to try a sweet-cinnamon version in the future!

Dessert:

Cinnamon-Vanilla Ice Cream.  The Vitamix was me on a wintertime ice cream bender.  I was working late and felt yet another treat bowl was in order.  Thank god it can be made healthy!  This purple bowl inefficiently hides a “secret” ingredient.

The ice cream blend is really easy – unsweetened vanilla almond milk, vanilla, stevia, cinnamon, and ice… and the secret ingredient.  Purple Cabbage.

I know you think I’ve lost it, but I swear on my shoe collection that not a trace of cabbage taste could be detected.


 

Sweet Potato Hummus

Modified from this recipe from Rande @ The Vegetable Centric Kitchen

  • 1 medium sweet potato (raw and unpeeled)
  • 2 T tahini
  • 4-5 drops liquid smoke
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • 1/2 Meyer lemon
  • 1 T water
  • 1 tsp yellow miso
  • 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 tsp paprika
  • 1/2 tsp cumin
  • 2 T fresh thyme

Toss everything in food processor or blender and until smooth.

Note: If using Vitamix, toss the whole lemon in; otherwise, only use the juice of the lemon.

Make 1.5 cups.

***

Spicie Foodie’s “Your Best Recipe” for the month of Feburary is up today!  Hop over to her site to check out my Vegan Goat Cheese Stuffed Tomatoes and everyone else’s awesome contributions!

Do you ever intentionally try to eat more raw food?

Do you watch Jersey Shore?  I’m amazed at how passionate people are about it!

Filed Under: Breakfast, Dip, Juice, Recipes, Vitamix Tagged With: breakfast, brunch, dessert, dinner, gluten-free, hummus, ice cream, lunch, protein, raw food, salad, sweet potato, tofu, vegan, vegetarian, WIAW

Roasted Eggplant Bruschetta

February 24, 2012 By Laura

This has been the LONGEST week.

Maybe because I know I’m 3 days from NUT BUTTER?!  That’s really been the biggest hole in my life.  That and oatmeal, but going without oats has been a little easier since Atlanta has turned into San Diego with 65-70 degree temps.

Spiced Almond Butter

As I think about what foods will and will not enter back into my life after Sunday, I am thinking more and more about what it means to eat clean on a daily basis.  Should I cut out meat completely?  Dairy products?  Eggs?

After the first Standard Process Cleanse I did in November of 2010, I drastically reduced my intake of red meat and sugar.  It has made a HUGE difference in the way that I feel.  Red meat and I don’t process well together.  Does that mean I won’t help myself to a bite of the tasty burger you ordered?  Nooooo… I quite like Sarah‘s concept of being “vegan with benefits.” Maybe we can start a movement, Miss. Smart?

Sugar will remain an item I try to avoid.  There are so many great alternatives out there, you don’t really need it!

Candy @ Healthy in Candyland just wrote a great post on sugar and my favorite alternative – Xylitol.  Apparently it could have anti-aging properties!

Check out my Chewy Granola Cookies for a great start to using xylitol in baking!

How will I eat on post-cleanse on Monday?  I don’t yet know what the right answer is for me.  I do know that I will enter into the non-cleanse world by reintroducing one “new” food at a time, and pay close attention to what my body says about it.


Cleanse or no cleanse, I WILL be making many of this week’s French vegan dishes again!

I ran into my friend and his partner in Whole Foods last night, and they shared with me that my Vegan Goat Cheese Stuffed Oven-Roasted Tomatoes were on their menu!  Keith (the “chef”) posted this pic later:

The two meat-eaters served vegan stuffed tomatoes with homemade organic Shepherd’s Pie with grass-fed Georgia beef and sweet potatoes, paired with a Vintage 2008 South Australian Shiraz.

Keith’s quote: “Props on the Vegan Goat Cheese girl! To die for!!!”

 

The next party dish I want to share is this Eggplant Bruschetta – installment #3 in the Vegan French Book Club Dinner Series (don’t you love how I made it so official-sounding?).

It was created a traditional bruschetta in mind, only the eggplant replaces the baguette to create a light, flavorful finger food.

Healthy and full of flavor, it was also the easiest dish.

Remember this Provençal Tomato Spread?  I saved some and blended it with extra basil and olive oil to make a creamy sun-dried tomato-olive topping that was reminiscent of SDT pesto.  It took less than 5 minutes.  Wham, bam, thank you ma’am.

Topped with a little basil for color!


Roasted Eggplant Bruschetta

  • Olive oil
  • 2 medium eggplants, cut in 1/2 inch slices
  • Salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • Garlic powder
  • Provençal Tomato Spread
  • 1/2 C fresh basil

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

Line a large baking sheet with foil.  Spray liberally with olive oil.  Place eggplant rounds in a single layer on sheet. Sprinkle with salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Roast for 15 to 20 mins. Flip each piece, checking to be sure the undersides have browned and become and a bit puffy.  If they’re not, cook a bit longer.

Once flipped, sprinkle them with more pepper and some garlic powder.  Place pan back in the oven for ~15 mins, until the undersides brown to match the tops.

Meanwhile, blend 1/2 C of the Provençal Tomato Spread with basil.  Taste and adjust seasoning as needed. Add more olive oil (I added 2 tsp), if desired.

When the eggplant is cooked, arrange on a platter.  Top each disk with 1-2 tsp of the purred provencal spread and a small bail leaf.  Eat immediately.

Serves 8-10 as appetizers.

Note: Some people swear you don’t have to do this, but I always lay my sliced eggplant out, sprinkle generously with salt, and allow to sit for 10-15 mins.  This helps remove some of the bitterness and excess moisture.  If you do this, wipe off the excess moisture with a paper towel and proceed to bake as instructed.

***

3 days to go on the Standard Process Cleanse – I can’t believe it’s almost over!  Like I said above, the idea is to add back one food at a time to see what you may be sensitive to…. I’m thinking nuts are coming back first!  That’s what she said.

What would you add back first post-cleanse?

Have you ever considered a vegan or vegetarian diet?  What pushed you to do it or held you back?

Filed Under: Baking, Dip, Recipes Tagged With: book club, dinner, entertaining, gluten-free, Standard Process Cleanse, vegan, vegetarian

Provençal Tomato Spread + WIAW

February 22, 2012 By Laura

Is it just me…

or are more people are going plant-based?

I started reading restaurant menus (because that’s what I do for fun) to see who has veg-friendly offerings and it has really impressed me that most restaurants offer some sort of vegetarian/vegan dish that is more than pasta drowning in oily stir-fried vegetables.

It warms my plant-based, cleansing heart.

Jenn has also warmed my heart by hosting this month’s What I Ate Wednesday (WIAW) in the theme of  vegetable.


Breakfast:

I post a lot of smoothies… most of them are really good despite their color.  In case you ever questioned my honesty/sanity/taste-buds, I must admit to you that this smoothie was not great.

Blueberries do not go with avocado.  The.  End.

On happier note, I did get confirmation that my Valentine’s Roasted Beet and Orange Smoothie was indeed good.  Check out this pic from reader Ashley, who tweeted: “The verdict is in… yummy!”

Thanks to Ashley for the feedback a lovely pic!

Lunch:

Monday night’s french-themed book club left me with some leftovers (thank god because I woke up LATE).

See that pretty stuffed tomato?  I promise to share the recipe with you tomorrow.  It was really friggin’ good… and deserving of it’s very own post. 🙂

I ate that atop a leftover eggplant-seitan stir-fry and some lentils.

Snacks:

Kombucha!  Whole Foods was out of my favorite Buchi Fire, but they were having a sale on GT’s.  I was sad to see this bottom of this bottle.

Snack time was a bag full of veggies with a simple, herb-y Provençal dip left over from the par-tay.  I loved the colors in this dish, and the briny saltiness from the capers and sun-dried tomatoes were perfect paired with crisp veggies for dipping.  (Recipe at the bottom of this post)

How cute is the reusable baggie?  My mom got it for me… it’s from Snack Taxi, but I think she got it at The Container Store.  I’m going green left and right!

Dinner:

I felt like I needed more raw food in my life after a heavier lunch, so dinner was a colorful salad.  A massive, colorful salad.  This was not served on a tiny salad plate:

In my ensalada:

  • Arugula
  • Broccoli and radish sprouts
  • Shredded brussels (raw)
  • Grapefruit
  • Beets
  • French green beans
  • Cucumber
  • Red onion
  • Tempeh croutons 
  • Lemon-thyme vinaigrette
  • Sprinkle of cardamom, salt, and pepper

If you haven’t eaten beets with grapefruit before, you should do so immediately.  I’m not talking those sour grapefruits – get the vibrant pink sweet ‘fruits that are in season right now.  #Nom 

Dessert:

This Sweet Potato Pie Chia Pudding I posted earlier this month made an appearance.  I added a pinch of cardamom to the mix last night, which was fabulous.  However…

I didn’t take a picture because I was too pissed at myself for doing this:

Another one bites the dust…

At least I’d just had a relaxing Hour of Happiness after work so the string of words that came outta my mouth weren’t as bad as they could have been. 😉


Diffusion de Tomate Provençal (Provençal Tomato Spread)

Modified from this recipe by Kathleen Flynn

  • 1 tsp olive oil
  • 1 medium red bell pepper, finely chopped
  • 1 medium yellow onion, finely chopped
  • 5 cloves of garlic, pressed or finely chopped
  • 2 tomatoes, seeded and chopped
  • 1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, rehydrated and chopped
  • 15 Nicoise olives (or Kalamata), chopped
  • 2 tsp capers, chopped
  • 2 T rosemary
  • 1/2 -1 tsp red pepper flakes
  • 1/2 tsp white wine vinegar
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 C fresh basil, chiffonade (cut into thin strips)

Warm olive oil over medium heat in a small pan.  Add bell pepper and onions, and sauté until soft.  Add garlic and cook a minute more until fragrant.  Add chopped tomatoes, sun-dried tomatoes, olives, capers, rosemary, red pepper flakes, and vinegar and cook over low heat for another 7-8 mins.  Remove from heat.

When cool, add basil.  Add pepper to taste.

Note: This can be made up to 2 days in advance.  If making in advance, do not add basil until just before serving.  Taste again and adjust spices as they settle.

This is delicious with crackers, veggie sticks, or even atop grilled tofu or chicken.

Serves 8-10 as an appetizer/dip.

***

The floor is still sticky from that spill.  I swear I’ll clean it up before the next dinner at my house tonight.

Can anyone relate.. any recent mishaps?

Do you find that the world is becoming more vegetarian and/or vegan-friendly?

Filed Under: Dip, Recipes, Smoothies Tagged With: breakfast, dessert, dinner, French food, lunch, raw food, salad, smoothies, snacks, Standard Process Cleanse, sweet potato, vegan, vegetarian, WIAW

No Beans About It: Butternut Thyme Hummus

February 17, 2012 By Laura

Trivia question.

Winner gets a $25 bar tab.  Kidding…

What is the most expensive drink at Starbucks?  A $9 Grande Latte with a few fancy add-ins?  $15 with some extra espresso shots?

According to this article from Eater, the most expensive drink you can order is $23.60!  Lucky for him, the customer had a free drink coupon.

Source: eater.com

This monstrosity was a Trenta (I didn’t even know that was a size) Java Chip Frappuccino with 16 shots of espresso, a shot of soy milk, caramel flavoring, banana puree, strawberry puree, vanilla beans, Matcha powder, protein powder, and a drizzle of caramel and mocha.

It reportedly didn’t even taste good.


One of the hardest parts of being on this cleanse is not having hummus.  Like any good blogger, hummus is a staple food for me.  It has its own level on my personal food pyramid.

Remember this pic from Wednesday?

As I was roasting squash this weekend, I remembered a hummus I made last summer using butternut squash rather than chickpeas.

This is a new version of that, with thyme being the herb addition rather than rosemary.  I don’t know which I like better!

My butternut was one of the sweetest I’ve ever had.  Some of that is probably the squash itself, but I also roasted it longer than I usually do.  Truth: I kind of forgot it was in the oven.

The longer bake time resulted in a sweet glaze on the squash.  When I lifted it off to the foil I baked it on, I noticed a caramel had formed on the bottom where the juices spilled over.  I promptly ate that up.

Squash caramel aside, you should try this hummus.  It’s wonderful with veggies and crackers.  Thin it out with some apple cider vinegar and water for a salad dressing.  Spread it on a sandwich.

Serve it as an appetizer with crudités and a yeasty sparkling wine (*drool*).

You really can’t go wrong.


Butternut Thyme Hummus

Butternut Thyme Hummus

  • 2 C butternut squash, roasted
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 2 T fresh thyme
  • 1 T tahini
  • 1/4 tsp cayenne
  • Juice of 1/2 a lemon
  • S+P, to taste

Place all ingredients in food processor and blend until smooth.  

Adjust spices, salt, and pepper to your preference.

Makes 1.5 cups.

***

Tonight is another cleanse dinner.  We lost one cleanse buddy, but my BFF and I are still going strong!  I’m making root veggie fries to go with her homemade tomato soup… it’s our version of french fries and ketchup.

What are you doing this weekend?  Any fun adventures planned?

What is your favorite hummus flavor?

Filed Under: Dip, Recipes Tagged With: 21, gluten-free, hummus, snacks, Starbucks, vegan, vegetarian

Christmas Pesto

December 22, 2011 By Laura

Christmas shopping should be an olympic sport.

 

Really.  You must prepare in the following ways:

  • Condition – I spend all year training 😉
  • Psychological – I stockpiled all my patience that day
  • Endurance – I’d already been to kickboxing (though I decided to leave the gloves in the car)

 

I walked into the mall on a mission.  I left victorious.  Sorry mom – not revealing any secrets!

What I can share is the stuff I bought myself.  Anthropologie was having a sale… I couldn’t help it!

 

A duvet cover for just $50 (it was $228!)

 

A bowl for $1 (was $6)

 

Bad-ass necklace (not on sale... but did I mention it's bad ass?!)

Guilt of self-shopping must have taken over because I have already wrapped the presents.  This is usually a Christmas Eve activity, as I hate wrapping and procrastinate.

That's a wrap

____________________________________________________________________________________

The next party-food chapter is: A Tale of Two Pestos

 

One bit different, one more traditional.  A little country  and a little rock and roll , if you will.

 

The second meat dish I served was a chicken pinwheel.  One filled with green pesto and one filled with red.  Festive, right?

I never cook meat at home.  Truth be told, it grosses me out to touching it.  So you can imagine the sight of me trimming and tenderizing $50 worth of raw chicken was comical.  I had chicken spread out on every available surface (on paper, of course).

Needless to say, I sanitized every inch of my kitchen after this. 

 

After pounding them all, I spread each breast with one of the pestos and shredded mozzarella.

You’ve actually seen the green pesto before – it’s this Basil-Walnut Pesto I posted about last week.

 

 

Sneaky me made these in advance and then froze them.  Pesto is convenient like that – you can put it in a container and freeze it forever.  It’s a great way to use up excess herbs.

Tip: If you freeze it in ice cube trays, you’ll have individual servings you can easily pop out and heat.  If you freeze it in a baggie, you can thaw a batch quickly by placing the bag in hot water.

 

The red pesto was my favorite with the chicken.  It’s base is sun-dried tomatoes, resulting in a stronger flavor that I loved in the two-bite sized pinwheels.

 

 

It was also a thicker pesto, which I love.  This is one you can make a spread on a sandwich like hummus.  The sun-dried tang with the nuttiness of the parm and walnuts, combined with the richness from the balsamic was a great blend.  Don’t be shy with that balsamic if you’re using the good stuff!

Now that I think of it, this would be amazing blended into hummus!

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Sun-Dried Tomato Pesto

  • 2 cups chopped sun-dried tomatoes (I used dried, soaked in warm water for 20 minutes.  Be sure to reserve the “flavored” post-soak water)
  • Zest of 1 lemon
  • 1 T lemon juice
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1/4 C yellow onion
  • 1/4 C grated parmesan
  • 1/4 C walnuts, toasted
  • 1 T Balsamic vinegar
  • 1/2 C fresh basil leaves, packed
  • 1/2 C olive oil
  • S+P, to taste

 

Combine all the ingredients except the olive oil in a food processor begin to blend adding oil slowly.  Stop to scrape down the sides as needed.  Consistency will be paste-like (you may need to add water or more olive oil).  

Store refrigerated for up to one week or much longer in the freezer.

Makes ~2 cups.

 

 

Pesto Pinwheels

Pre-heat oven to 325 degrees.

Pound out chicken breasts until about 1/2 in thick.  Spread pesto evenly over one side of breast.  Sprinkle with shredded mozzarella cheese.

Roll into logs and wrap tightly in aluminum foil.  Place on a baking sheet and cook for 25-30 mins.

Allow to cool a bit before unwrapping.  Remove foil and slice into rounds to make pinwheels (don’t worry – the foil wrap will have caused them keep their shape).

Sprinkle with salt and pepper and enjoy!

***

It’s hard to believe Christmas is this weekend… tomorrow look forward to the best cookies of the season (as if we all need more cookies).

Are you done with your holiday shopping?

Is anyone else craving matzoh ball soup?!  Happy Hanukkah!

 

Filed Under: Dip, Recipes Tagged With: Anthropologie, chicken, Christmas, entertaining, pesto

Pumpkin-Pom Endive Boats + Rosemary Bean Dip

December 20, 2011 By Laura

Moral support is key to any new adventure.

Me, Mallory, and Mom

Lucky me – I had my mom and my best friend with me for my venture into the land of food service.

Mom actually walked in 5 mins before the party began with a dish to bake the Jacked Up Brie.  The problem with starting out in catering (and being a minimalist when it comes to server-ware) is a lack of resources.

The second set of “appetizer-like” munchies was a white bean dip and endive boats.

No party is complete without a veggie tray and dips!  The dip I made was a rosemary-laced chickpea dip that used rosemary-infused olive oil and Greek yogurt.

The best part about white bean dip is its simplicity – throw everything in the food processor and hit “start.”  Lemon and garlic are must-haves in virtually any bean dip I make.  They keep the Mediterranean spirit of the hummus and were perfect with the rosemary.  You could use any olive oil here, but I liked the added punch of flavor achieved by using the rosemary-infused.

Next up were the endive boats.  Theses were voted the second favorite food item of the night!  It’s funny how the simplest things can be so good!  Endive is a sturdy leaf perfect for creating bite-sized salads.  (This dish was originally going to be a giant salad with arugula, but the hostess didn’t like the idea of a non-finger food.)

Into the boats went pumpkin bits (from a Sugar Pie Pumpkin I’d roasted and diced a few days in advance),  pomegranate arils (I found whole pomegranates on sale for $2 each!), and goat cheese.  After plating the boats, I drizzled them with a champagne-pomegranate vinaigrette.  It was amazing how much of a difference the dressing made – it was just the right amount of tang to bring the flavors together.

I’ll be making these boats again for get-togethers at my house.  With the lettuce base, the possibilities for filling are endless.  These would make a great vessel for chickpea salads, tabbouleh, or even a deconstructed guacamole!


Rosemary Bean Dip

  • 2 15 oz cans of garbanzo beans, drained
  • 1/3 C plain Greek yogurt
  • 3 T olive oil (I used rosemary-infused)
  • 3-4 T rosemary
  • 1 tsp lemon juice
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • S & P, to taste

Place all ingredients into a food processor and blend until smooth, scraping down sides and adding more liquid as necessary.  Don’t be afraid to let the processor run for several minutes – it will only make the dip more smooth and delicious!

Makes 2.5 cups.


Pumpkin-Pomegranate Endive Boats

  • Endive leaves
  • Crumbled goat cheese
  • Pumpkin, roasted and diced into even squares
  • Pomegranate arils
  • Champagne-Pomegranate Vinaigrette (see below)

Trim endives, separating leaves.  Fill with goat cheese, pumpkin, and pomegranate arils.  Drizzle with vinaigrette.

Notes:

– I didn’t include amounts since there wasn’t any real measuring going on, but 6-7 good-sized whole endives will make boats for at least 15.

– You could use any vinaigrette here, but I would recommend using one that is light in color if the boats will be on display for a while.  A deeper color will stain the endive and make it less visually appealing.

Champagne-Pomegranate Vinaigrette

  • 1/2 C champagne pomegranate vinegar (found at Whole Foods)
  • 1/4 C extra virgin olive oil
  • Juice of 1/2 medium lemon
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 1 T sugar
  • S & P, to taste

Combine all ingredients in a small bowl and whisk to combine.

***

Tomorrow is going to be the “greatest hit” food item.  I’m a little in love with them.

What would your ideal endive boat be filled with?

Do you have the rest of the year off of work?  I’m counting down the days ’til Friday.

Filed Under: Bites, Dip, Recipes Tagged With: entertaining, hummus, pumpkin, salad, snacks, yogurt

Catering Survival + 2 Holiday Cheese Dishes

December 19, 2011 By Laura

Recipe Googling isn’t necessarily sophisticated inspired.

Google’s Zeitgeist (a yearly report of the most searched items), inspired Bon Appetit to research the most-Googled recipes in the US for 2011.  According to their article, Americans are pretty dull in the kitchen.

  1. Chicken
  2. Meatloaf
  3. Banana Bread
  4. Chili
  5. Pancake
  6. Lasagna
  7. Pork Chop
  8. Guacamole
  9. Cupcakes
  10. Cream Cheese Frosting

I’ll give you the cupcakes because they are awesome, but meatloaf?!  Gross.

How is pizza not on the list?  It appears people prefer to have theirs made for them.  In the most searched restaurants category the top 3 restaurant searches were: Pizza Hut, Dominos, and Papa John’s.  In that order.

Maybe the next party I cater will be a pizza theme… People need to know there are better options than Pizza Hut!


Thank you, thank you, thank you for all of the well-wishes for my first catering job.  I am proud to announce that I survived the party!

There will be more to come on the whole experience.  Today I’m still recovering and swamped at work, so this is a short one to report that everything went swimmingly despite me waking up at 5am multiple days in a row having mild panic attacks.

What I didn’t expect was how gratifying it would be to watch people enjoy food I made.  Listening to their comments/conversations about each dish was so much fun!  Thank god they were positive comments.

Over the next week or so I’ll be sharing recipes from the event.  Today I’ll start at the beginning – the cheeses!

Often the most-eaten items at a party, I planned 2 different cheese dishes.

The first was inspired by my friend Jenn @ Peas & Crayons.  She made this Pumpkin Basil Cheesecake Spread a couple of months ago and I’ve made it 3 times since she posted the recipe!  For this party, I made a Pumpkin Rosemary-Basil version of this spread.

My modifications:

  • Add 1T of fresh rosemary 
  • Increased the basil to 10 huge leaves
  • Used 1/2 tsp of palm sugar
  • Didn’t make the Ritz crust

Like every other time I’ve made it, this spread was a hit.  It’s a great, savory cheesecake–like spread that is wonderful with some salty crackers.  The addition of rosemary was a good one – I may try it again with just rosemary and sage!

The second was a simple sugar-nut-whiskey baked brie.  Yes, its old school.  Be honest though – who doesn’t love warm, gooey, decadent brie?

What I love about the whiskey is the melted caramel-like texture (think ice cream topping caramel) is takes on when heated with the brown sugar.  No need to use fancier spirits here (not that there’s anything wrong with Jack) – the sugar takes the edge of the alcohol taste and leaves you with the underlying sweet-smokiness.

Recipe after the Monday fitness re-cap.  Much-needed fitness after that brie. 😉


Google’s Zeitgeist also looked at how people worked on their fitness.  The most popular workout search was the Thor Workout and the top diet was the Dukan Diet.  I must be out of touch – I don’t know what either of those are!

My hectic week forced me to take 2 “rest” days… but I have absolutely no regrets about it!  Here’s what my week looked like:

Workout Recap (12/12 – 12/18)

  • Monday – This BodyRock, Ab Ripper X, 100 push-ups
  • Tuesday – This BodyRock (again), Kickboxing, Legs
  • Wednesday – 100 push-ups
  • Thursday – Bis/Back with 1.5 miles in intervals, 100 push-ups
  • Friday – Kickboxing, 100 push-ups
  • Saturday – 100 push-ups
  • Sunday – Elliptical intervals (60 mins), Shoulders, 6 min planks


Jacked Up Brie

  • 1 round (14 oz) brie
  • 1/4 C brown sugar
  • 1/4 C pecans, chopped
  • 1 T (heaping) Jack Daniels (or other whiskey)

Combine sugar, nuts, and whiskey in a small bowl.  Cover and place in fridge, allowing flavors to combine overnight.

Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees.

Place brie in an oven-proof dish and bake 7-8 mins, until softened.  Remove from oven and pour topping over the brie.  Return to oven for 3-4 mins.

Serve with bread, crackers, and apples.

***

After being so focused on this party, it felt weird to be sitting on the couch without any food prepping to do last night!

What is your favorite cheese or cheese dish?

What has been the best food/dish you’ve had at a holiday party this season?

Filed Under: Core, Dip, Fitness, Recap, Recipes, Running, Weights Tagged With: brie, Christmas, entertaining, Jack Daniels, whiskey

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