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Posts Tagged ‘Salad’

© Dina Avila

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I may be alone, but after drifting from my usually grains and greens packed fare and, I dare confess, a week of eating more than my usual fair share of my Mother-in-Law’s unreasonably addicting oatmeal cookies, I’m ready for a bit of veggies and pulses on my plate. I have a feeling you may be as well. When those moments crop up, as many of you are aware, I often turn to Heidi Swanson’s Super Natural Every Day as it is chock-a-block full of healthy and inspiring recipes.  I swear, I should own stock in that book as it makes an appearance on leek soup more often then not.

This is a bit of a riff on Heidi’s recipe. I swapped in blanched kale for the mixed greens and stirred in cooked farro to make the dish heartier and more filling. I suspect you could easily trade out the split peas for any lentil (or bean, for that matter) and the farro for wild rice. I say use this recipe as inspiration to start off the New Year on a healthy foot.

I do hope you all have been having a lovely holiday season. The New Year is a heartbeat away and I must admit, I am looking forward to an even better year. I tend to reflect, journal, and work on goals and intentions throughout the year, but the New Year is a beautiful way to solidify ideas and set intentions. After finally shaking the the ball and chain of retail more than a year ago, where there is little difference between December and January (it’s just one big hellish blur), I finally understand how the New Year is perfect time to rest and reflect. Especially if you’ve been fortunate enough to be given a bit of a break in December. My dear friend, B, suggested that in lieu of resolutions she decided to have a personal theme for 2013. Her theme is gumption, mine, and of course the list is growing because it’s, well me, will be fueling my passion and creativity, taking my life and career to the next level, pushing my boundaries, personal (photo) projects and yoga.

What’s your theme for 2013?

Cheers!

Spoon2

Yellow Split Pea Salad with Farro and Cilantro Pesto

Adapted from Super Natural Every Day by Heidi Swanson

This is a great vegetarian dish but feel free to add some extra protein, if you like. 
I’ve got a whole chicken roasting in the oven to serve with this dish tonight.

Ingredients:

1 1/2 cups dried yellow split peas

Sea Salt

1 cup roasted pumpkin seeds

1 cup lightly packed cilantro leaves and stems

1/3 cup pecorino Romano, freshly grated

3 cloves garlic, peeled

1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lemon juice

1 Serrano pepper, mostly seeded

2/3 cup olive oil

2 cups cooked farro

One bunch kale, leaves torn and blanched

~

Bring 5 cups of water to a boil.

Add split peas and let cook for about 30 minutes.

Drain and set aside.

To make the cilantro pesto, add cilantro, 1/3 of the toasted pumpkin seeds, pecorino, garlic, lemon juice, a pinch or two of salt and a splash of olive oil in a food processor.

Process adding olive oil slowly until the pesto is smooth.

In a large bowl, toss the cooked split peas, farro, kale a handful of the roasted pumpkin seeds and about two-thirds of the pesto until everything is coated.

Serve warm or at room temperature.

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I’ve been meaning to make this salad for about a week now. I had all of the ingredients gathered (sort of), and then life took over, I got busy and the week passed. Thank goodness kale is a hearty beast of a vegetable. She held together quite nicely with hardly a wilt while wrapped in plastic and shoved in the vegetable crisper.

Once again, I give Heidi Swanson credit for inspiring yet another recipe. This is how it works: I contemplate making a simple dish for dinner, and my blog, I pick up Super Natural Every Day, let the pages flutter by until something jumps out at me. This week it was her Whole Grain Rice Salad that popped off the page and said hello. Well, I didn’t have about most of the ingredients, so I used Heidi’s recipe as a guide. I poked around my kitchen and grabbed a jar of black quinoa to mix with regular quinoa, kale and cilantro make an appearance, (a combination that I feared may be fateful), dried cherries and ricotta salata. Oh, and pistachio’s for a bit of a crunch.

This was almost another case of too many ingredients in the pot (I was really worried about the kale/cilantro combo) but this salad turned out to be earthy and bright and perfect for this grey and humid summer’s day.

Cheers!

Thanks to Bon Appetit for featuring this post on bonappetit.com!

Black and White Quinoa Salad with a Champagne Vinaigrette Dressing

Inspired by Super Natural Every Day, Heidi Swanson

What you’ll need~

2 cups black and regular quinoa, cooked

1 bunch kale, roughly chopped and steamed

Handful of dried cherries

Handful of shelled pistachios

Handful of cilantro leaves to sprinkle on the finished dish

Handful of crumbled ricotta salata

Pinch or two coarse sea salt

For the dressing~

1/2 cup olive oil

1/4 Champagne vinegar

7-10 cilantro leaves

8-10 dried cherries

Pinch of sea salt

Combine all of the dressing ingredients in a jar and shake until blended.

Fold all of the salad ingredients together, save the cheese and cilantro, in a large bowl. Transfer to a serving dish, drizzle with salad dressing, sprinkle with cilantro leaves and a few pinches of coarse sea salt. Serve warm.

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I really am not trying to jump on the New Year’s detox bandwagon. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for folks eating a cleaner, healthier and more natural diet, but I wish it didn’t come once a year. My dream is that folks will not only see the merit in eating vegetables and fruits, whole grains and natural meats, but that they’ll notice how good they feel after eating the way nature intended.  And maybe, just maybe, it won’t be a once a year diet. It’ll become a lifetime of eating in a way that benefits not just them, but our planet too. Here’s an idea, how about instead of giving each other gifts next year for Christmas, we all eat naturally and healthfully for the year (and beyond, hopefully), and that will be our gift, not only to ourselves and each other, but to our planet as well.

Is that wacky?

Sadly the politics of food make it difficult for folks to have affordable access to natural foods. When a “meal” at a fast food joint is cheaper than a head of lettuce, the problem is much bigger than personal choice. How do we fix this problem? I try to vote with my pocketbook. If I can contribute by shopping at farmers’ markets and at places like Whole Foods, (and never, ever, ever, ever at fast food) I can help create a higher demand for quality natural foods, then, in theory, that will eventually lower the cost of food making it more accessible to America’s poor.

At least I hope so.

It’s a start.

My gift to get your healthy lifestyle started is a very simple and nutritious winter salad. Blood oranges are now in season, and oh my goodness they are delicious this year. The perfect balance of sweet and tart. I tossed some dulse seaweed in this salad to boost the cleansing element, but that can easily be omitted. If you do choose to include dulse, then be sure each bite has both blood orange and dulse. The marriage of sweet, tart and salty is indescribably wonderful.

Cheers!

Blood Orange and Watercress Winter Salad

Feel free to use this recipe as a template to inspire salad ideas of your own. Really, the possibilities are endless.

One bunch watercress, leaves snipped off

One to two blood oranges, peeled, sliced and quartered

One to two beets, roasted and thinly sliced

One quarter to one half of a fennel bulb, shaved

1-tablespoon dulse thinly cut with kitchen shears

Ginger Shallot Vinaigrette

1/4-1/2 cup olive oil

2 tablespoons champagne vinegar

1-2 tablespoons finely mined shallot

Zest from one lemon

Juice from half a lemon

1 tablespoon ginger zest

Splash of sesame oil

Pinch of sea salt

Pinch of freshly ground black pepper

Combine all vinaigrette ingredients in a jar with a tight-fitting lid and shake till well combined.

To roast beets, cut the top and bottoms off and wrap trimmed beets in foil. Roast for 45 minutes in a 400 degree oven. When the beets are finished roasting, remove from oven, open foil and let cool. Once the beets are cool to the touch, rub them with paper towels to remove the skin.

Toss dressing with all of the salad fixings and serve with a mug of hot green tea.

 

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