Showing posts with label cauliflower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cauliflower. Show all posts

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Of sweating and slow cookers...

Since my last post I have been too sore to type. I have visited my personal trainer twice now. I hate him exponentially more every time so that by the time this 3 month session is up, I should be looking in the Yellow Pages for contract killers. I jest! Sort of.

Anyway, my new exercise regimen poses an unforseen problem. I work out twice a week and it has to be in the late afternoon. Twice a week, I take my daughter to Taekwondo class. So, there are a few days in there when I get home too late to fix a proper dinner. Enter the slow cooker.

I have always been a slow cooker fan. I make pork with salsa verde, chili and short ribs in mine. I do corned beef and cabbage. Delicious! However, since I will be using my slow cooker a lot more often I need to branch out. Me and my friend, the internet, have been searching for interesting and innovative recipes that I can tweak for my low carb life. One of my favorite sites is this:

A Year of Slow Cooking

Stephanie O'Dea essentially made something in her slow cooker every day for a year (and then some). Her recipes are almost tailor made for the low carb lifestyle as she is gluten intolerant. She has to be very careful about wheat or other gluten containing ingredients. The only problem is that she is not sugar intolerant so some of her recipes have to be tweaked a little.

Today's recipe is Chinese Lemon Chicken. Her original recipe is here:
Chinese Lemon Chicken

Her recipe is slightly problematic for me as one of the main ingredients is a half can of thawed lemonade frozen concentrate. Unfortunately, just that half can is 103 carbs. The recipe also calls for sugar. The recipe I came up with after fiddling around with it is pretty tasty. It is more sour than sweet but I like it that way... my husband likes it better that way, too. By making my substitutions I took it from approximately 48 carbs per serving to 12.75 carbs per serving. Of course, to beef it up (enhance it), add vitamins and more flavor I chopped up some vegetables which will add a few carbs but all in all, I am very pleased with the results. You can serve it over cauliflower rice.

Slow Cooker Citrus Chicken
Serves 4-6

6 chicken thighs; boneless/skinless/trimmed of excess fat
1/4 cup flour
2 tsp kosher or sea salt
1/2 cup orange juice, no extra sugar added
Juice of 2 lemons
1 TB balsamic vinegar
3 TB ketchup (or low-sugar ketchup)
1 onion, cut in half lengthwise and sliced into strips
3 celery stalks, sliced into half moons
3 carrots, peeled and cut into 1/2" coins
Olive oil for browning chicken

Cut the chicken thighs into large-ish bite sized chunks. Put the flour and the salt into a large zip-top bag. Dump the chicken into the bag and shake until the chicken bits are coated. (This step is optional. I use it because maybe only an 1/8 of a cup ends up on the actual chicken and it thickens the sauce). Heat a large, non-stick saute pan over medium high heat. When the pan is hot, add 2 tsp of olive oil and swirl, coating the bottom. Using a large, slotted spoon, lift the chicken from the bag, shaking off the excess and drop the chicken chunks into the hot oil. Don't necessarily cook the chicken all the way, just give it a little color and get the flour to stick to it. Dump the browned chicken into the bowl of your slow cooker. Add the cut vegetables and stir to incorporate.

Mix the rest of the ingredients in a separate bowl. Whisk to combine thoroughly. Pour it over the chicken in the slow cooker. Don't worry if it doesn't seem like a lot of liquid. There will be plenty of liquid by the time you are done.

Cover and cook on high for 3-4 hours or on low for 6-7 hours.

It tasted very much like the lemon chicken you'd get in a Chinese-American restaurant... without hardly any of the fat or MSG or CARBS!

Friday, October 7, 2011

Fall has fell...

Yay!  I don't need to pretend any more!  Fall is here!  Living where I do (Tacoma/Seattle area) many years we need to pretend it is summer.  We gamely wear our shorts and shortsleeved shirts while secretly freezing and wishing we could put on a purple and gold Husky Sweatshirt (University of Washington, for the uninitiated).  We bear the rain and use the grill while someone holds up a golf unbrella.  But it is September now so I don't need to tell myself it is warm enough to wear my capri pants.  I can hide my flabby arms under long sleeves.  Yay!

And with fall comes my favorite time of year to cook.  The fall vegetables are in, like squashes of every kind and the end of the corn season.  Eggplants and tomatoes and zucchini and garlic... oh yes.  I can make soups and stews and cook them a long time in my slow cooker.  My idea of fall food is spicy and warm, filling and satisfying.

My first instinct is to serve a lot of these stews and fricasees and whatnot over rice.  I always like to have something to soak up all the good juices.  Bread is important, too, excellent for dipping and sopping up extra sauce.  So I am in a quandry.  I eat neither rice nor bread.  I took a bunch of different ideas and devised my own recipe for short ribs which develops an amazing sauce.  Do I serve it in a bowl or just let the juice spread out all over the plate?  Do I lift the plate and slurp it that way?  No, it would end up all down the front of me, not to mention, it would be a terrible example for my daughter.  What to do?

I was saved by my sister.  We were talking about that very thing last weekend.  She has gone on a Paleo type eating regimen that disallows most carbs and dairy so she is in the same boat.  She found a recipe for "cauliflower rice."  Basically, you chop up cauliflower really fine then saute it in a pan with a little olive oil.  It is a blank canvas.  You could add all kinds of flavors: sesame oil for Asian, curry powder, parmesan cheese.  It could be a foil for all your stew or braise type recipes.  My daughter sucked it up without any prompting (amazing) but my husband was freaked out by the texture.  That's okay though... more for us!

Short Ribs
Serves 4

2.5 lbs short ribs (not flanken cut)
Olive oil
Olive oil spray
1 large onion, chopped into 1" chunks
3 carrots, peeled and cut into 1" chunks
3 cloves garlic, smashed and minced
1 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp dried rosemary, crumbled
3 TB red wine vinegar
1 cup dry, red wine
1 14oz can diced fire-roasted tomatoes
Cauliflower "Rice"

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

Heat a tsp or two of olive oil in a oven-proof dutch oven over medium high heat.  Sear all 3 meat sides of the short ribs until they are crusty and brown.  Remove the ribs to a plate.  Pour off all the fat from the dutch oven, leaving nothing but some brown bits in the bottom.  Spray some olive oil spray onto the bottom to grease it up just a little bit before dumping in the chopped onion.  Toss those around until they turn translucent.  Dump in the carrots, garlic and herbs.  Continue to toss them around until the carrots are just barely starting to soften and the brown bits have come up off the bottom of the pan.

Pour in the vinegar.  Toss around until all the vegetables are covered and the vinegar is almost evaporated.  Pour in the red wine.  Simmer for 5 minutes until the wine reduces a little  Pour in the tomatoes, incorporating all the ingredients.  Put the short ribs and accumulated juices back into the dutch oven.  Cover and place in the oven.  Check it after 2 hours.  The meat should be meltingly tender and falling off the bones.

This part is optional.  I made the short ribs early in the day.  After it was done in the oven I left it to cool.  After it got to almost room temperature, I lifted the meat and vegetables into a bowl, covered and refrigerated it.  I poured the sauce into a separate bowl and refrigerated that, too.  Before reheating, I was able to lift the fat from the top of the sauce, as short ribs are pretty fatty.  I find it hard to lift the fat off when it is still hot.  If you are worried about extra fat, you might consider this method.

Serve over cauliflower "rice."

Caufiflower Rice
Recipe from Paleo Plan
Serves 4 (I also used half the oil than in the original recipe)

1 head cauliflower
1 Tbs coconut or olive oil
Sea salt, garlic, ginger, coconut aminos, curry, garlic or freshly ground black pepper(optional seasonings)

Place the cauliflower into a food processor and pulse until it has a grainy rice-like consistency. Season with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Saute the cauliflower in a medium hot saute pan with oil and any additional seasonings desired (sea salt, garlic, ginger, coconut aminos, curry, or just freshly ground black pepper).

Couldn't be easier, more delicious or make a better base for my fall food!

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Slightly pickled...

Yes, I know, it has been a whole month since I posted last.  I've been busy!  I've been working mostly from my sister's house trying to watch her kids and mine and do my work at the same time.  Money saving, to be sure, but nerve wracking as well.

Anyway, I've been doing really well.  I bought jeans yesterday a size smaller!  Yay!  They are a tad tight but at the rate I am going they should feel great before long.

I am into my fourth month of eating essentially carb free.  I thought I would get tired of it by now so therefore, commencing to eat a loaf of bread or a pie or something but not so!  I am treating it like I would alcoholism or an extreme food allergy.  I can't just have a little, I can't have any at all.  That strategy seems to be working for me so I am going with it.

One of the most difficult issues for me is still snacking.  Sure, I can have cheeses and salami, etc. but they are high in fat.  Chips are right out.  Vegetables and dips are good but you have to be careful about the dips, that they are not too high in fat.  I have spoken before about pickles.  Pickles are good.  Pickles are tasty and spicy and satisfying. Pickles have no fat.  Although some pickles contain sugar!  Yes!  Demon sugar.  Not good.

I love bread and butter pickles, you know, the sweet cucumber slices that taste so awesome on sandwiches.  Unfortunately those kind of pickles are loaded with sugar so I set out to find a way to make some at home that were just as tasty but not so carb heavy.  I tweaked the recipe some to add some additional vegetables and the Splenda.  I don't remember where I found the original recipe so I will send some "I'm sorry" vibes out to the internet.  If I could remember, I would credit you, oh writer of easy and delicious pickle recipes.

Bread and Butter Mixed Vegetable Pickles

3 kirby cucumbers (about 1 lb.), trimmed and thickly sliced
1 small yellow or red onion, thinly sliced
1 small head cauliflower, broken into florets
4 small carrots, quartered then cut into 3" lengths
1/4 cup kosher salt
2 1/4 cups white wine vinegar
1 1/4 cups Splenda
3 tsp. mustard seeds
3 tsp. celery seeds
1 tsp. ground turmeric

1. Put cucumbers, onions, carrots, cauliflower and salt into a large bowl and toss well. Add 3 cups ice cubes, cover bowl with plastic wrap, stir occasionally and refrigerate overnight.

2. Drain cucumbers and onions well, discarding the salty water; set aside.
Put vinegar, Splenda, mustard seeds, celery seeds, and turmeric into a very large
pot, stir well, and bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Add the cucumber–
vegetable mixture and stir well. Allow liquid to return just to a boil.  Stir several times
about 5 minutes then remove pot from heat. Transfer pickles and their liquid to a
large, clean plastic container. Set aside to let cool to room temperature, then cover
and refrigerate overnight. Serve pickles the next day or store for up to 1 week.

Delicious!  You can eat these as much as you want and not feel guilty one bit.  I chop them up and put them into salads, put a heaping chopped pile onto a bowl of chili with my fat free Greek yogurt.  Of just eat them out of hand as a part of a deli tray.

Low carb does not mean snack-free.

Thank God.  Amen.