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Category Archives: Lighter Fare

Orange Couscous with Chicken

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Although couscous looks like a tiny grain, it’s actually a form of pasta.

Couscous is a primary staple throughout the Maghreb, in much of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Libya.  It is also popular in the West African Sahel, in France, Spain, Madeira, in western Sicily’s Province of Trapani, as well as in Greece, Cyprus and other parts of the Middle East. It is particularly popular among Jews of North African descent such as the Berber Jews, and is eaten in many other parts of the world as well.

My first couscous experience was in the traditional Moroccan style.  Well, nearly traditional.  My friend, Margo, is an American married to a man from Morocco and his sister taught her to make the couscous dish she prepared that night.  So as far as I know, the recipe was traditional–but it wasn’t served in quite the traditional way.

In Morocco, the entire meal is put onto a giant platter and plunked down in the middle of the table (table optional, actually!).  Then everyone digs in with their fingers.  It is quite a sight to behold.  These people literally scoop their bare fingers into the food, lick them clean and then put their fingers back in for more.  Excuse my squeamish American standards of etiquette & cleanliness, but I can barely tolerate watching this spectacle and I’m not about to participate.  Lucky for me, she provided our group with spoons.  Have you ever tried eating a chicken leg with a spoon?

But I digress.  The experience was unique and I thoroughly enjoyed it so I decided to venture out and buy couscous to incorporate into my own meals.

This one is mostly savory with a little sweet from the oranges.  You can save the liquid from the oranges to pour over the top of your dish in case you find you prefer more sweetness (like I do).  It may be just my particular taste, but I really enjoy the brightness that the parsley imparts.

Orange Couscous with Chicken
6 Servings

3/4 cup orange juice
1/2 cup water
3 tsp. chicken bouillon granules (or 3 cubes)
6 oz. uncooked whole-wheat couscous
12 oz. shredded cooked chicken breast
1 3/4 cups drained canned mandarin orange sections (about 2 small cans)
1/2 cup chopped fresh parsley

In a large Dutch oven, combine orange juice, water & bouillon; bring to a boil and make sure the bouillon completely dissolves.  Remove from heat; stir in the couscous.  Cover, let stand 10 minutes.

Add chicken, 1 1/2 cups of the orange sections and the parsley to Dutch oven; stir to combine.  Cook over low heat, stirring frequently, about 5 minutes, until heated through.

To serve, arrange couscous mixture in large serving bowl; garnish with the remaining 1/4 cup orange sections & a bit of parsley.  Plonk it on the table and tell everyone to dig in.  Or, if you prefer, divide it among six plates that are lined with an optional lettuce leaf and provide forks.  I prefer the latter.

Per Serving
243 Calories
2.3 g Fat
.6 g Saturated Fat
48 mg. Cholesterol
66 mg Sodium
32.5 g Carbohydrates
2.2 g Dietary Fiber
9.1 g Sugars
22 g Protein
22% Vitamin A
78% Vitamin C
3% Calcium
8% Iron

If you don’t have access to local chicken that has been raised humanely, you could always make this vegetarian by using  Quorn’s Chik’n Tenders or Morningstar Farms Meal Starters Chik’n Strips (both found in the freezer section).  To go completely vegetarian, sub veggie bouillon granules as well.  KitchenBitch tells me there’s an awesome low-sodium vegetable bouillon called Organic Gourmet.

Green Rice

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I do not really like Spanish rice, but I do love Mexican food, so I’m always looking for alternative side dishes to complement my Mexican meals (let me know if you have some!). I started making this green rice about four years ago and every one that has tried it raves about it and immediately tries to figure out what’s in it b/c they’re always expecting broccoli when they look at it and are surprised by the slightly spicy, garlicky & cilantro taste. It is a very nice complement to any Mexican dinner, but I really like to serve it with my creamy chicken enchiladas along with a salad. It does take a while to make, so I usually save it for special occasions or days when I have an extra hour to prepare dinner.


Green Rice pictured with Fish Tacos

GREEN RICE

3 cups fat-free chicken broth or water
2 poblano peppers, stems & seeds removed
1 jalapeno pepper, stem & seeds removed (use latex gloves so your skin doesn’t get burned during handling)
1 bunch (at least 1 cup) chopped fresh cilantro leaves, divided in half
2 tsp. vegetable oil
1 onion, finely diced
4 large garlic cloves, minced
1 cup brown rice
½ tsp. salt

Combine the broth and peppers in a medium saucepan, bring to a boil, and then partially cover and simmer gently over medium to medium-low heat for about 10 minutes. Pour the mixture into a food processor or blender*, add 1/2 of the cilantro and process to a smooth puree. Set aside.

Wipe the pan clean, add the oil, and heat over medium-high heat. Add the onions and cook until soft. Add the garlic and cook for 1 minute. Stir in the rice and cook for 1 minute.

Stir in the warm broth mixture & the salt. Bring to a boil, cover, reduce heat to medium-low and cook for 45 minutes to 1 hour.

Start checking on it about 30 minutes to make sure there is still enough liquid. There should be enough, but add more broth as needed. Also, the rice will start sticking to the bottom toward the end of cooking so when most of the liquid is absorbed, you’ll have to stir it every few minutes to keep the bottom from scorching. This makes the rice creamy–almost like a risotto in texture. Once the rice is tender, remove from the heat and let sit for 5 minutes, covered. Stir in remaining cilantro and serve.

*Remove the center part of your blender lid before turning it on so that the steam has somewhere to escape once the internal pressure increases. If you don’t do this, your blender lid will blow off & you could be badly burned (as I have on two separate occasions). It works best to start the blender on low and slowly increase the speed, that way nothing sloshes out through the open hole at the top.

Emu Stew

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After I posted about the benefits of bison, my friend Erin recommended I try ostrich because, like bison, it is similar in taste to beef but much lower in fat.  So I was thrilled to find emu for sale at the farmer’s market last Saturday.  Not ostrich, but close enough!  Since I already have 3 lbs. of ground bison in the freezer, I opted for the stew meat, which was $6.50 for a pound. I also bought a nice leg bone for Jessie.  As you can see, they were also selling the egg shells and they also had the feathers & beauty products made from the rendered fat.  I loved that they weren’t wasting any part of the animal.

  

Since I bought stew meat, I decided to make STEW of all things.

After thawing it out in the fridge, I put the meat into my crockpot from 1980 (seriously, it’s probably older than that) and dumped in all the broth I’d stockpiled in the freezer for the last six months–there was beef, turkey and chicken.  I didn’t care–it all went in the same pot.  I don’t cook meat a lot and I don’t cook a lot of it at once, so I didn’t have a ton of broth–it all added up to maybe four cups.  I chopped up garlic, tarragon and sage from my Dad’s garden and added some fresh rosemary from the farmer’s market, set it on low and let it cook for 24 hours.  In a normal crockpot, it would have been done in probably 8 but this is a crazy retro crockpot that cooks on super low and takes forever.  Which is a good thing when it comes to low-fat meats like bison and emu–you want to cook them low and slow or they will get tough.

Today, after the meat had cooked 24 hours, I drained the broth off and put it in a stock pot.  I turned it on high and dumped in chopped potatoes, carrots, onion & half of my package of baby portabellos with a teaspoon of salt.  Oh, and some more fresh herbs–including oregano now that I have it, along with some dried thyme and basil.  I forgot I had fresh basil. :(

After that cooked for ten minutes (turning it down to medium once it started to boil), I added in chopped red, green & yellow peppers, the rest of the shrooms, and chopped asparagus.  After that cooked five minutes I stirred in some frozen peas, corn & green beans and a can of drained tomatoes.  After stirring in the meat, it was time to eat!

I realize most people would have put the veggies in the crockpot along with the meat, but I never do this.  I hate it when soup is all one color and looks dreary.  I like my vegetables to be colorful and still have some life in them so I never leave the crockpot in charge when it comes to vegetables.  With soups/stews, I usually put the slower cooking veggies in first, like potatoes and carrots, and quicker cooking veggies like peppers & tomatoes in at the end.  I do cook the onions longer b/c I don’t care if they’re mush–they’re just there for flavor b/c you can’t see them anyway and cooking them longer renders the most flavor.  And I divided the mushrooms b/c I wanted the flavor to really infuse the stew so I cooked half longer and half later so that they weren’t as “well done.”  I like to add frozen veggies at the end so that they’re cooked with the residual heat of the stew while they’re cooling it down to a more acceptable temperature.  The meat goes in last after the burner is off so that the amount of cooking time added to the meat is negligible.

I served the soup with the terrible dinner rolls I made last night.  They’re really dense (I added too much flour) so they were perfect for sopping up the broth.  It was the best stew I have ever had and I seriously couldn’t tell I wasn’t eating beef.  Neither could Dennis. Slow-cooking made it perfectly tender, and we loved all the flavor-packed vegetables and the herbalicious aroma.

With all the vegetables I added, this made enough stew for six big servings, which is really stretching that pound of meat and making it worth every cent!  Plus, preparing it the way I described, will give you a huge bowl for 271 calories!  Now that’s the kind of meal I SHOULD be eating on a regular basis.

Rosemary Peasant Bread

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My friend Krista shared her recipe for Rosemary Peasant Bread with me and I couldn’t resist making it immediately.  Both loaves were gone the following day, and after making another two loaves today, only half of the second loaf remains (exactly two hours after removing them from the oven).  This is becoming a problem, albeit a delicious one.

Feel free to blame Krista if you find yourself in a similar predicament.  I do.

Rosemary Peasant Bread

• 2 1/2 tsp dry yeast
• 2 c. warm water
• 1 T. sugar
• 2 tsp salt
• 4 c. flour
• 2 tsp. dried rosemary, plus more for topping
• olive oil, corn meal, & coarse salt

Dissolve yeast and sugar in the warm water.  Add flour, salt, and rosemary & stir until blended.  Do not knead!! Cover and let rise for 1 hour or until doubled in size (no need to grease the bowl, just leave it be).

Dump half of dough each into a greased round 8 or 9″ cake pans that have been lightly sprinkled with corn meal. Cover loosely with greased plastic wrap. Then let it rise another hour.

Lightly sprinkle with more rosemary and coarse salt.

Bake @ 425 for 10 minutes, then reduce temp to 375 for 15 minutes more.

As Krista says, “Cool on wire racks if you can stand it. We eat it almost right away.”

Consider yourself forewarned.

Makes 16 wedges.
Per wedge:
116 calories
293 mg sodium
21 g carbs
1 g fiber
3.3 g protein

Veronica’s Notes: I used 1 packet of quick-rise (also called instant, highly active, etc) yeast and did 30 minutes on the first rise and another 30 on the second–saves some time.  I let the dough rise in a 200 degree oven and turned it off as soon as the (metal) bowl was in there. And I used foil to cover the bowl and the pans (sprayed with oil) just to prevent any plastic melt-age.  I had problems with my bread sticking to the pans when I used olive oil so I greased them generously with shortening the second time.  They still stuck a little, but not nearly as bad.  Krista never has a problem with this so hopefully it’s just me.  And if you’re wondering why my salt looks so weird, I didn’t have any coarse salt so I used some leftover pretzel salt which is white instead of clearish.  Shut up and leave me alone.

Secret Recipe Club

Shrimp Tacos

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This is a wonderfully light summer meal that has the feel of gourmet without the fuss.

Shrimp Tacos with Spicy Corn on the Cob
Printable recipe

Salsa
1 1/2 cups seeded, chopped tomato
1 cups seeded, chopped cucumber
1/3 cup thinly sliced scallions
1/4 cup chopped cilantro
3 tbsp fresh lime juice
1/4 tsp salt

Filling
8 oz green beans, trimmed
1 tsp fajita seasoning, divided
1 lb medium to large shrimp, peeled & deveined
1 tbsp olive oil

8 6-inch corn tortillas

Corn
4 corn on the cob in the husk
few spritzes of fat-free butter spray
few dashes ancho chile pepper

Directions
1. Combine salsa ingredients & set aside.
2. Heat oil in a large skillet on medium-high.  Toss rinsed green beans with 1/2 tsp of the fajita seasoning in a bowl and add to the skillet.  Cook, stirring occasionally, for five minutes.
3.  Meanwhile, toss the shrimp with the remaining 1/2 tsp seasoning  and put the corn on the cob in the microwave with the husks still.  Cook them on high for eight minutes.
4. Add to the shrimp to the skillet after the green beans have cooked for 5 minutes and cook another five minutes or until the shrimp are no longer opaque.
5. Shuck the corn, leaving the husk on the end to use as a handle.  Spray with butter & sprinkle with a light dusting of ancho chile pepper (adjust to suit your heat preference).
6. Heat the tortillas: Wrap the stack in a fairly damp paper towel and microwave on high for 80 seconds (a good rule of thumb when heating tortillas in the microwave is 10 seconds per tortilla).
7.  Assemble the tacos: Divide shrimp-and-bean-mixture between warm tortillas and serve with salsa & an ear of corn on the side.

Serves 4


For those of you without a kitchen scale, this is what 8 ounces of green beans (and me with a hormonal lip zit) looks like.

Raw Swimps


Happy Swimps

I hate cucumbers so I didn’t expect to like this salsa, but it blew me away!  I couldn’t believe something so simple could be so good.  I plan to use it in many a dish to come!

Recipe source: Adapted from Ladies’ Home Journal May 09

Linked with Life in the Slow Lane for BSI: Salsa.

Blueberry Lemon Trifle

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We have several diabetics in our church group, with whom we joined last Saturday for a barbecue in the countryside.  To accommodate their sugar abstinence, I brought two sugar-free desserts: rugelach & blueberry lemon trifle.  Both desserts were enjoyed by diabetics & non-diabetics alike, but this is the one I will continue making for myself (Den can fend for himself–the trifle is mine!) because it’s low in calories and it tastes FABULOUS!

If you prefer to make this with full-fat and full-sugar (oooooh, I bet that would be even better!), follow the suggestions in parentheses.


Blueberry Lemon Trifle

1 sugar-free angel food cake (or 1 pound cake)
1 lemon, juiced
1 1/2 cups skim milk (or whole milk)
1 (8-oz) tub fat-free sour cream (or regular sour cream)
1 (8-oz) tub sugar-free cool-whip, divided (or regular Cool Whip/real whipped cream)
2 packages fat-free/sugar-free instant lemon pudding (or regular instant lemon pudding)
3 pints blueberries, rinsed & dried

Cut the cake into cubes and lay them out on a cookie sheet, then sprinkle the lemon juice evenly over them (I actually dipped my clean fingers into the juice & dabbed the juice on–you could use a pastry brush too) & carefully toss.  Don’t mash the cake–keep it as pretty as possible. This won’t be as difficult with pound cake b/c it’s not as delicate so you don’t have to be as careful.  Set aside.

In a medium bowl, whisk the milk, sour cream & half of the cool whip until smooth, then beat in the pudding mixes until it starts to thicken.

Set a few blueberries aside for garnish.  Put 1/3 of the cake cubes in the bottom of a trifle bowl, sprinkle on 1/3 of the blueberries (1 pint), then spread 1/3 of the pudding mixture over it.  Repeat two more times, then spread the remaining Cool Whip over the top & garnish with the reserved blueberries.  Chill until ready to serve–can be made up to two days in advance–or just sit it down on the table and dig in.

Impossibly Easy Vegetable Pie

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Maybe I’m not the best judge of the quality of meals since I’m on an endless diet and I tend to think anything edible is good, but I really do favor this quiche-type dish and I end up making it a lot b/c it’s satisfying and low in calories (about 200 calories per 1/6th of the whole recipe).  Den likes it too and as far as I can remember, he enjoyed it when he wasn’t on a diet (he ate it w/o complaining, anyway), so it’s probably safe for dieters and non-dieters alike.

This is my original version (based on a Betty Crocker recipe off their website), but I came up with this one for our dinner tonight b/c I found some sad looking leeks in the fridge that needed to be used in a jiffy and we didn’t have any milk.  Using chicken broth made the meal even more low-cal and worked great!

Broccoli-Leek Vegetable Pie

3 leeks, sliced (white part only)
2 cups brocolli florets
1 cup cauliflower florets
1/4 of a red pepper, chopped (I’d use more for color but this is all I had left)
1-2 cups 2% shredded cheddar cheese
4 whole eggs
2 cups chicken broth
1 cup self-rising flour
1 tsp salt
1/2 tsp pepper

Preheat oven to 400 degrees F.  Spray a 9×13 pan with cooking spray. Mix the vegetables with the cheese and spread in baking dish in an even layer.  Whisk the remaining ingredients together in a bowl until smooth and pour over the vegetables.  Bake 45-55 minutes, or until egg mixture is set in the middle and a knife comes out clean when inserted near the center.

Marissa’s Good Peas

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At our Weight Watchers meeting this week, we talked about how we were going to make it through Easter and still lose weight…or just manage not to gain.

I’m planning on having the ham and indulging in a small slice of my carrot cake (recipe to come), but I’m also bringing “Marissa’s Good Peas” since they’re filling and low-cal (it has a lot of butter, but I give tips on lightening it up in the directions).  Make it with the butter if you don’t care, but either way, they’re a good addition to your Easter spread.

Marissa’s Good Peas
(so named after she gave the recipe to her mother-in-law, who gave it to me)

1 bag frozen peas
1 can water chestnuts
1 can sliced mushrooms
1 stick melted butter
1 small envelope Italian dressing mix

Combine the veggies in a microwave-safe bowl.  Mix the dressing mix with the butter and pour over the veggies; stir to incorporated.  Microwave until heated through.

*I have made this using only peas, with all three veggies, and as in the photo above–with peas & water chestnuts.  They are all good but I actually like it best with just the peas alone.  To lighten it up, use Brummel & Brown’s Natural Yogurt spread or something else that has half the calories as butter.  You really don’t need an equivalent amount–a whole stick seems like overkill to me.  I generally use a tablespoon of the spread for every cup of peas.  I don’t use a lot of the dressing mix either–just use it to your tastes.
_____
On a completely different subject, I have now lost 10 pounds with Weight Watchers.  I have been on the program (this is my second time) for 6 weeks now.  :)

Lighter Taco Salad

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Have you ever had that wonderful white trash taco salad made with Doritos, taco meat, tons of cheese and an entire bottle of Catalina/French dressing?  Oh yeah, I believe there may be some lettuce in there also.  I personally love the stuff but DON’T love the calorie count.  I prefer to splurge on dessert and tend to choose healthier options for my meals.

Well, I don’t see why I can’t have my cake and eat it too, so I took that atrocity of a “salad” and turned it into something I could feel good about eating on what is now almost a weekly basis.  It has become one of my favorite go-to meals b/c it’s easy and so tasty.  Plus, I like big portion sizes and the bulk of the lettuce allows you to get quite a big plateful for a fraction of the fat and calories in a teeny serving of the real stuff.  That’s what I’m talkin’ bout.

Taco Salad

Serves 4

1 lb. ground bison
1 can dark red kidney beans, rinsed and drained
1 taco seasoning spice packet (or 3 tablespoons homemade seasoning)
1-2 bags of salad
4 oz. Guiltless Gourmet Mucho Nacho Chips or baked Doritos, crushed
1 cup 2% shredded Mexican cheese blend
1 cup light French or Catalina dressing
2 tomatoes, chopped (or 1 pint cherry/grape tomatoes)
salsa & sour cream for garnish, if desired

Brown the bison over medium heat, drain the broth and fat.  Add the beans and taco seasoning, plus 3/4 cup water.  Simmer on medium until the water has evaporated, about 5 minutes.

In a large bowl, combine the meat with everything but the tomatoes and mix well.  Divide between large plates and top with the tomato and serve with salsa and sour cream if you wish.

If you’re only cooking for one or two, just use a portion of the meat and halve/quarter the recipe for everything else.  Save the meat mixture in the fridge for your next meal.  If you make the whole thing and save it, you’ll have soggy chips the next time you dig in so I wouldn’t recommend that method unless you don’t mind soggy chips.  Personally, I must have the crunch!

Butternut Squash Ravioli

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I can spend an entire day decorating a cake but I have no patience when it comes to preparing food.  So despite my affection for anything Italian, I have thus far prepared ravioli solely by buying it frozen and pouring sauce over it.  Who has the time to make the dough from scratch, roll it out, blah blah blah?  Just thinking about it gives me a headache.

Enter last month’s issue of Good Housekeeping.  Near the back was their featured “Easy” recipe of the month–Butternut Squash Ravioli.  You use wonton wrappers so that you don’t have to make the dough yourself.  It wasn’t exactly easy, but it wasn’t too bad….until I made a serious error in judgement.

These suckers are supposed to dry for 30 minutes before boiling.  I figured I’d prepare them the night before and let them dry all day in the fridge.  Well, the edges got so dry that most of them cracked all the way to the filling and the middles got so soggy on the bottom that they were nearly impossible to pry off the cookie sheet.  They fell apart in the boiling water and I had a spaz attack.  I was starving and I get CRANKY when I’m hungry.  All I could think about was how long it took to fill each one of those ravioli and then seal the edges and all for nothing!

I started banging the hell out of the edge of the pot and things started falling off the back of the oven…picture frames, vitamins, fake ivy….

Then when I started draining them one by one and laying them on paper towels as the recipe (I thought at the time) directed, the mangled mess began sticking to the paper towels.  I lost it completely.   I started banging cabinets until the apple clock fell off the wall.  It didn’t break so I picked it up and threw it one the floor.  That did the trick.

After stirring them into the sage butter sauce and watching them further disintegrate, I slid a few remaining whole ones onto a plate and dug in.  My sizzling nerves gasped and then settled into complete bliss.  At least it was all worth it.  So worth it.

Butternut Squash Ravioli
Printable recipe

1 teaspoon olive oil
1 small onion, finely chopped (4-6oz)
12 ounces frozen winter squash
1/4 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese
2 tablespoons plain dried breadcrumbs
1 large egg, lightly beaten
1 pinch nutmeg
salt
fresh ground black pepper
1 large egg white
1 teaspoon water
12 ounces wonton wrappers (50 wrappers)
3 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon thinly sliced fresh sage leaf

In a small nonstick skillet, heat oil on medium 1 minute.  Add onion and cook about 12 minutes or until tender and lightly browned, stirring occasionally.  Cook squash in microwave as label directs; cool slightly.

In medium bowl, combine onion, squash, parmesan, bread crumbs, whole egg, nutmeg, and 1/4 teaspoon each salt and freshly ground black pepper. In small bowl, whisk together egg white and water.

Place 1 wonton wrapper on work surface. With pastry brush, brush egg white along edges; place 1 rounded tablespoon squash filling in center of wrapper, keeping filling away from edges. Top with second wrapper; press down firmly around filling to seal ravioli, pushing out any trapped air. Place ravioli on cookie sheet. Repeat with remaining filling and wrappers, using a second cookie sheet so that ravioli do not overlap. Let ravioli dry 30 minutes, turning over halfway through to evenly dry both sides.

Ten minutes before cooking ravioli, heat large pot of salted water to boiling on high.

Add ravioli to pot; cook 3-5 minutes or until tender, stirring gently to separate ravioli.

Meanwhile, in 4-quart saucepan, cook butter on medium 3-4 minutes or until golden brown, stirring. Remove from heat; stir in sage and 1/8 teaspoon each salt and freshly ground black pepper.

With large slotted spoon, lift out ravioli, 1 at a time; drain, on paper towels. Transfer ravioli to saucepan with butter; gently stir to coat.