Sorry to be a day late, but I’ve been a bit busy :-)  You’re only getting a partial week since we’re receiving our CSA share early next week, so I only planned until then.

Wednesday:  leftover mac ‘n cheese CSA corn bake, leftover CSA cabbage Asian slaw, CSA cucumber salad, and yummy mushroom-rice-CSA cabbage-cannelini bean soup!

Thursday:  Cumin rice with CSA eggplant and peas

Friday: CSA potato and CSA leek soup with CSA greens for a salad

Saturday: we’re headed to a wedding reception, so I’m sure there will be some yummy goodness there!

Sunday:  Smoked pork on the Big Green Egg, roasted CSA potatoes

Here’s a picture of the mushroom cabbage bean soup from the website – I used brown rice instead of barley, and it was absolutely DELISH.  We’ll definitely make this again!
soup

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I found this via one of my favorite blogs that often posts links to great freebies. You can print out cute recipe cards!

How cute is that?  Perhaps I’ll print out a few simple online recipes, which are way more portable and kitchen friendly than toting my laptop up and down the stairs :-)

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I’ve always struggled with planning ahead, so the last few weeks I’ve been making an extra effort to plan meals ahead of time and use a list for my grocery shopping.  I decided to create a document that would help me both plan AND shop, plus it’s pretty and cute when I hang it on the side of my fridge to remind me what’s for dinner each night.  Gotta love something that makes me smile when I look at it every night while cooking dinner!

At the top, it includes the dates for the week.   Below that is a section for breakfast, lunch and dinner for each day, and then below that is a section to jot down items needed (in this case, ones I need to purchase) for meals for each day.  At the very bottom is a section for extra items I might need on a daily basis, like bread or milk.

And guess what, I’m going to share this with you!  Let me know if it’s helpful.  I’ve printed a few copies and LOVE using it to help keep myself organized.

Here it is, just click on the link and the PDF will download.  Grocerymenulist

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I’m bringing back Menu Mondays! This is for two of my friends who said they don’t have good lentil recipes – to which I say, how can that be?!? I used to hate lentils, but that was before I found out how much I loved Indian cooking. The great thing about lentils is that they’re cheap but filling! You can find brown, green, or yellow lentils at most super markets, and if you want to get fancy you can find special daal (that’s lentils) at Asian or international markets in most major cities.

I’ve made this recipe several times. It’s very easy and the ingredients are easy to find, even though it’s Indian. The flavors are subtle, but delicious.  You can easily substitute other vegetables and just adjust the cooking time.  Serve this with hot basmati rice.

Ingredients

1 cup yellow split mung beans (you can substitute yellow lentils, but I prefer the flavor of the mung/moong)

2/3 cup finely chopped onions

1 tablespoon peeled and minced fresh ginger root

2 teaspoons minced garlic

1/3 teaspoon turmeric

3 medium-sized potatoes (3/4 pound), peeled and quartered

1/2 small cauliflower cut into 1 1/2 inch flowerets (about 2-3 cups)

1 table spoon of salt

For the tadka (which is a fancy glaze at the end):

12 tablespoons of ghee (clarified butter – use light vegetable oil as substitute.  We use about half of the amount)

1 teaspoon cumin seeds (NOT powder)

2-4 green chilies, seeded and minced, or 1/4 -1/2 teaspoon of cayenne pepper

2 teaspoons of lemon juice

2-3 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro

Directions:

  1. Pick over, clean and wash beans or lentils.  Use a wire strainer if needed.
  2. Put the mung beans in a deep pot, along with chopped onions, ginger, garlic, and 3 cups of water.  Add turmeric, and bring to a boil.  Watch the pot carefully, because the water will foam FAST once it boils.  Reduce heat and simmer, partially covered, for 15 minutes or until beans/lentils are cooked.  Add extra water if needed.  (I’ve found that it takes closer to 30 mins to get the beans/lentils well cooked)
  3. Add potatoes, cauliflower, salt, and 2 more cups of water, and cook for an additional 15 minutes or until the vegetables are tender and the beans are thoroughly cooked.
  4. To make the tadka:  Heat the ghee over high heat in a small frying pan.  When it is hot, add the cumin seeds and fry until they turn brown, being careful not to burn the seeds (15 seconds!)  Add green chilies or pepper, and stir.  Immediately pour the contents into the stew.  Add lemon juice and chopped coriander to the stew.  Stir well to mix.  Check for salt, and serve the stew with a bowl of hot basmati rice.

Serves 6 people.

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Yesterday was an exciting day for us on the prairie – we used on of my most favorite wedding gifts!  So I thought I’d just share about it real quick as part of our little wedding week.

We received some really amazing gifts from our guests, we were so blessed.  One of my favorite gifts was a hammock swing that someone got is.  Unfortunately, there was no card, and so we still have no clue who gave us that, and I feel terrible for not being able to thank them!

But probably the gift I was (and continue to be) most excited about was one we found out about after our wedding.  We found out at Christmas that DH’s dad was going to give us a gift for our wedding/Christmas/DH’s PhD graduation/and many other reasons all in one – a grill!

And not just any old grill, a really awesome super fantastic grill!  He did a little research for us, and FIL thought the best bet would be a Big Green Egg.  I had no idea what he was talking about and proceeded to do my own research and was COMPLETELY convinced that this thing was going to be awesome.

You’re probably wondering why it took 7 months for us to use the thing (you can use it in winter!) – well, part of it is because DH wanted to build a table for the Egg.  And that just plain took a loooooooooong time.  There were some acquiring-of-wood issues that had to be dealt with.  But FIL came to the rescue and brought wood all the way from DH’s hometown when he came out for a visit last week, and so there was a little bit of father-son bonding over a building project.

We finally grilled for the first time last night on the Egg – burgers!  :-)  Here’s our lovely new grill, and the beautiful redwood table/island for cooking and serving.

We’re going to grill-host (that reminds me of the friar’s roast…) our first guest tonight!

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I don’t make dessert too often, but when I do, oh man, my stomach is in for trouble. I add pounds just looking at the finished product!

Tonight I made this:
It’s from the pioneer woman, and it was awesome. My own pictures are coming soon!

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I’ve always enjoyed Asain soups – miso being one of my favorites.  I still remember the first Vietnamese soup I tasted – so fresh and light, full of delicate flavors.  Then I tried Thai soups, and loved them even more.  I was at the grocery store a while back and happened upon Lemongrass in the fresh herb section – not something easy to find in the midwest, so I bought some on the fly, and then determined to find a tasty recipe to use it in.  This is what came of it!

This is an adaptation of two recipes found here and here, and pure imitation of my favorite salad from a little place called Fresh Side in Amherst, MA, and the peanut sauce taken from here.  Both of these recipe’s are easy to make and go well together – we happen to have most of these ingredients on hand regularly, but even so, it’s fairly cheap for all the yummy vegetables you get!

Here’s what you need for the soup and salad:

  • One 2-inch piece of fresh ginger
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1 stalk lemongrass (ours was chopped into 4-inch long pieces – I think there were 4 total)
  • One large can of chicken broth/stock
  • 2 cups water
  • 1 t lime juice
  • 2 T soy sauce
  • 2-3 T fish sauce
  • 5 carrots
  • one bunch cilantro
  • 2 heads of bok choy
  • handful of shitake mushrooms or asian style canned mushrooms (we used dried shittake)
  • 2 large ripe roma tomatoes
  • 1 1/2 c frozen pre-cooked shrimp, rinsed, tails pulled off
  • fresh basil leaves
  • 1 lime
  • 1 bunch green onions/scallions

For peanut sauce:

  • 1/4 c creamy peanut butter
  • 3 T soy sauce
  • 2 1/2 T vinegar (we use rice wine vinegar since this is “the asian way” – you can use red wine vinegar or white wine vinegar and be fine)
  • 2 T sugar
  • 3 T water
  • 1/2-3/4 T dry mustard powder (add more for a spicier version)

Here’s what you do:

First, peel the skin off the ginger with a  vegetable peeler and then slice the ginger into round disks (this is important because of how fibrous the ginger is – you have to do disks first).  Peel the skin off the garlic, and slice into disks.

Next, mince the garlic and ginger as small as you can get it.

Next you have two options with the lemongrass – it depends on how picky you are.  You can either chop it into 1-inch size peices, which makes it easier to fish out of your soup (you don’t usually eat lemongrass) or you can put it in a food processer and have it chop it into tiny little pieces.  Lemongrass is pretty hard to cut – so you won’t be able to mince it with even the best of knives.  Your choice on what you do – I just sliced mine into smaller peices because it was quicker, and less dishes to do later :-)

Here’s where the magic starts happening. :-)   Throw the ginger, garlic and lemongrass into a big pot.

Here’s this lovely heavy pot that was a wedding present to Jerod’s parents – it’s way old school, but the thing is AWESOME.  Just thought I’d share.  It’s perfect for this soup.

Now, pour in the huge can of chicken stock…

Pour in the 2 C water, and throw in the lime juice as well.  Turn the heat on to medium high.

Peel the carrots, and slice into disks.


Throw the carrots in the pot, and turn the heat up a little higher – eventually, it should be at a low boil.  Once it get’s there, turn the heat back down to medium low.

Next, grab the fish sauce and soy sauce.  The Thai Kitchen brand has a version of fish sauce sold in most major grocery stores.  Ours is from an international food store and was a bit more bang for the buck (we cook a lot of asian foods…)  Add 2 T of each, feel free to up the fish sauce later if it needs a little extra salt.

Grab the cilantro, and chop that stuff up too.  Throw it in the pot.  (On a side note: For some reason, the folks at the grocery store here in Grinnell have a serious herb-confusion and can’t tell cilantro and parsley apart.  Come on people, it’s not that hard.)


Next comes the fun part!  This is bok choy, the most important part of the whole meal!  Look for one that has nice big leaves – this will be for the salad, and good white parts – that’s for the soup.


Pull the leaves off, and rinse off any dirt.

Chop the white part into smaller chunks, and the leafy part into long strips (5 inches long or so).  Thow the white parts into the soup pot, and the leafy parts into a salad bowl.  Feel free to mix it up a bit – we put some leafy stuff in the soup and white stuff in the salad for variety.  Whatever floats your boat.

Next, add the mushrooms – cover the pot, and let the soup simmer while you get to work on the salad.  (Mine are in a bowl because we had to soak them first to reconstitute the dried shitake mushrooms)

Let’s get going on the salad – this is seriously scrumptious, and very easy.  Grab the scallions/green onions – wash them and peel off any wet filmy layers.  Chop on a diagonal – white parts should be smaller, green parts can be larger.

Warning – I like green onions.  So I put lots in.  DH doesn’t like them quite as much as I do – luckily, they are easy to pick around :-)

Throw the onions in the salad bowl that contains the cabbage leaves (bok choy is a cabbage…I didn’t know that until recently!

PS – I have no idea why this photo looks fuzzy and weird…

Oh, and chop up the rest of the cilantro too, and add that to the salad.  I like lots of cilantro!

Take the remaining carrots (I think I used two), peel ‘em and matchstick them.  Or, you could use a mandoline if you’re fancy like that.  OR you could buy the ones at the grocery store that are already matchsticked into tiny slices for salads.  Your call.

Doesn’t that look so delicious?  I want to eat it again.  Wait, I already had some for lunch today…

Next, we’re going to make the peanut sauce/salad dressing.  This is super easy and simple, plus if you have some left over, you can use it for a stir fry, it’s very tasty!

First, measure a 1/4 c creamy peanut butter and put it in a regular ‘ol cereal bowl.  Just a tip – if you spray your measuring cup with cooking spray, you’ll have any easier time getting the PB out.  This also works with honey.  I give DH full credit for introducing me to this handy trick.

Next, measure out the remaining ingredients for the peanut sauce and add it all to the bowl (3 T soy sauce,2 1/2 T vinegar,2 T sugar,3 T water,1/2-3/4 T dry mustard powder)

Whisk it all together – mmm, yummy!  (Yes, that’s a mini-whisk.  I have no idea where DH got it, but we use it a ton)

Now, turn back to the soup for just a second – you’ve got three more things you need to do.  First, if you haven’t de-tailed and rinsed the shrimp, do that now.  (I was a dummy and bought un-cooked shrimp. Yeah, don’t do that.  Not worth it).

PS – If you want to go vegetarian, use firm tofu – add it at the very end.  Though personally, I think shrimp is better.   But I’m biased – I love shrimp!

Next, grab your tomato and cut out the little core at the top (sorta like when you carve a pumpkin and cut a whole around the stem).  Then, slice the tomato in half and squeeze out the juice and seeds, scoop out anything left over.  Then, slice the tomato into 1/2 inch chunks.

Now – add the shrimp and the tomato to the soup last, cover and make sure the heat is on low – cook until the shrimp is cooked through and the tomatoes are a little soft.  Make sure you don’t over-cook the shrimp.  Taste the soup – if it’s too salty, add a bit of lime juice.  If it’s too sweet, add a dash of fish sauce.

You’re ready to eat!!!  Ladle soup into large bowls, serve with fresh torn basil (don’t skip this step – it’s completely worth it!)  For extra fun, float a slice of lime in it.  For a little extra spicy kick, we put some good ‘ol Cock Sauce in the soup.  You can also put fresh chile’s into the soup to add a little pizazz.

Drizzle the peanut sauce over the salad, add some chopped peanuts if you want, and enjoy!


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