Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Zucchini!

This weekend, we visited the farmer's market on a mission to get broccoli and cabbage.  We got that but then saw the box of zucchini.  For $4, we got a ridiculous amount of one of my favorite vegetables.  When we got home, we went a little crazy with our purchase. 




While cooking, we talked about where the zucchini came from.  I had assumed it was local, since it looked like the last of the crop in farmer's garden.  However, Gregory said it could have come from anywhere, since most of the "farmers" at the market are wholesale sellers.  I wish it was easier to tell exactly where everything came from.  We are going back to the market next Saturday, and when we go I want to see if we can find out where what we are buying is being grown.


Recipes for some (the cupcake is Gregory's creation) of the above zucchini creations:

P.S. After making all of the above in large quantities, we still had enough left over to freeze a large bag for later and have five currently waiting to be turned into bread.  Best four dollars I can remember spending.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Insane!

Life has been insanely busy and stressful later.  I am waiting to hear back from dental schools at the end of this month and its so stressful.  I can't take my mind off it.


I am though "celebrating" National Vegetarian Month this October and so far have been having a great time making squash pot pies and vegan po'boy sandwiches.  :) 


Christmas is approaching as well which is really hard for me since 1. I love clothes so very much and 2. love buying other people presents.  Its been almost 4 months since I've purchased a piece of clothing and I am starting to miss J. Crew a lot.  I'm proud of myself though for keeping up with the goals I set, like buying nothing new (unless its is essential like toothpaste), not eating a fast food establishments, and staying aware of trying to waste as little as possible.


Little reminders that make me proud of the things I've kept up with since I started this blog are my growing set of dishes I keep at work, my silly pink cow-print reusable napkins from the thrift store and my removal of diet coke cans from my life (and office desk).


So, I am stressed but also proud!  I hope I can come back to blog more often soon and get to work on more dyi projects.  It will be so nice to know what my life is going to be like next year!

Monday, September 19, 2011

Mission Missouri Menu

Here is what I am planning to eat this week.  Yes, it involves the controversial chicken.  But it also incorporates a lot of vegetables and what I buy might deviate from the list depending on what is local and what is not when I go shopping tonight.  I am setting a budget and starting at Local Harvest.  Out of everything I buy today for my week, I want at least 25% (that's about 6 out of the 19 ingredients of it to be from Missouri.


Monday Dinner: Vegetable and Bean Soup
Tuesday Lunch: Leftover Soup
Tuesday Dinner: Brined Chicken, Stuffed Zucchini Boat, with a simple lettuce salad 
Wednesday Lunch: More leftover soup
Wednesday Dinner:  My new obsession, chicken salad (e-mail if you're interested in the recipe)
Thursday Lunch: Leftover something (I still have some of that delicious Lentil Soup from last week lurking in the freezer)
Thursday Dinner: More delicious brined chicken, roasted carrots, and another simple salad
Friday Lunch: Something leftover


Shopping List:

Produce:
  • 1 red onion
  • 2 yellow onions
  • 1 bag of celery
  • 10 tomatoes
  • 1 lb of kale or collard greens
  • 1 bag of carrots
  • 12 oz. of baking potatoes
  • 2 zucchini
  • 1 yellow summer squash
  • Head of lettuce
  • 2 cloves of garlic
  • Parsley
Meat:
  • 4 chicken breasts
Dry/Canned Goods:
  • 19 oz red kidney beans
  • Breadcrumbs
  • 6 cups vegetable broth
  • Dried thyme
  • Balsamic Vinegar
  • Miracle Whip Lite

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Chicken Salad is Causing Me Grief

The menu worked out great for the week.   I am making next weeks' and shopping tomorrow.  However, the chicken that I have become slightly obsessed with (we've eaten chicken in almost every meal that I brine prior to cooking) is from Foodland.  I do not know anything about Foodland or where their chicken comes from and am hesitant to look it up because I love it so much at the moment.


I went there today to pick up my second my bag and I looked  through all the produce to see if anything was local.  I had this secret wish that everything was local and it was like a hidden treasure for locavorires that only I had discovered.  However, as another complete sane and not trying to justify buying frozen chicken individual would not be surprised to find out, the only local thing was tomatoes (which in Missouri are local just about anywhere you go).  They also had Olathe sweet corn which, from being from NY, I thought might be a town nearby but it is actually a town in Colorado.


Why is buying local food becoming so difficult!?!  I mean, I could just go to Wholefoods or Local Harvest and buy what meets my local demands there but that is very expensive.  And I think it is expensive because people are capitalizing on the "being green" tag-line, but that is a different issue.


It is funny because I thought not buying any new clothes or household items would be difficult but I started that in June and its unbelievably easy.  Food is much, much harder.


Anyways, I'll leave with my dilemmas and use what we have left from our last Sunday shopping trip to make more delicious and unethical chicken salad while pondering how to become the consumer that I want to be.


Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The Menu is Here


My version of the Walletless Weekdays that I did last week- shop once, spend hopefully less than 30 dollars then eat good for the whole week.  I did not include breakfast since I just drink coffee in the a.m.
Shopping List:
Produce:
  • 3 onions 
  • 13 carrots
  • 11 sprigs of thyme
  • Small bunch of parsley (need 4 stalks)
  • 1 head of Romain Lettuce
  • 1 yellow pepper
  • Small bag of celery
  • 2 heads of garlic
  • 1 of potatoes
Canned Goods/Dry:
  • 14 oz. can of roasted tomatoes
  • 1 cup of lentils
  • 1 cup of white long grain rice
  • Lite Miracle Whip
  • Pistachios (optional, enough for chicken salad)
  • 12 cups of chicken broth
  • Bottle of balsamic vinegar
  • Bottle of white wine
  • 1 Bay leaf
Meat:
  • 6 chicken breasts



(Already have the olive oil, salt, and pepper needed)
Menu:
Sunday Dinner: Lentil Soup
Monday Lunch: Leftover Lentil Soup
Monday Dinner: Lettuce Salad with onion, yellow pepper, and balasmic dressing, brined chicken breast and roasted potatoes.
Tuesday Lunch: Leftover Lentil Soup
Tuesday Dinner: Garlic Roasted Chicken
 Wednesday Lunch: Leftover Lentil Soup
Wednesday Dinner: Chicken Salad in Lettuce Wrap (Grilled chicken, lite miracle whip dressing, pistachios, onion and celery, all wrapped in a lettuce leaf).  
Thursday Lunch: Chicken Salad Wrap
Thursday Dinner: Chicken and Rice Soup
Friday Lunch: Left over soup
Friday Dinner: Whatever is leftover!
What I am Eating this Week

Monday, August 29, 2011

The Walletless Workweek

Over the past two months, not one week has been remotely the same.  This has caused a slight bit of stress but has been exciting and well worth it.  The main cause?  Meeting and falling in love with a pretty amazing boy.  However, we've both noticed that over the past couple of weeks, our old respective routines have pretty much been abolished.

So, during a long drive back from a weekend getaway, we talked about routine and why we want to get back into it.  The main to reasons are our wallets and waistlines.  We've been eating out (and drinking out) far too often and though it has been fun, we both agree we can still be happy and in love and all that cute stuff without spending lots of money on delicious chicken livers, not so good German pork dishes, and on pints and pints of micro-brewed beer.  
Then, naturally, what followed next in the conversation was "what's for dinner?". We both agreed “something healthy, we're getting fat”.  I happened to find an old magazine article hidden in my what-to-read folder. The article, from Women's Health, is about buying and roasting one chicken and eating it in a different way every night, from Sunday to Thursday.
Since we were both tired from eating, drinking, and driving (obviously not at the same time) for roughly fourty-eight hours straight, having a menu for the next fives days AND very orderly shopping list in front of us was very appealing.  We decided to go for it.  I decided however that I wanted to take it a little farther- buy just what I think I might need for the rest of the week, which shouldn't be much more than dinner and maybe a bottle of wine or two, and not swiping my credit card again until Friday.

This is another experiment in my going-green adventure.  I have a feeling it is going to be difficult for me.  I am pretty good about bring lunch to work but at least once a week, I am tired and forget to pack lunch or my very persuasive co-worker coerces me into buying something delicious with him (it has not been fast food though since I stopped eating it, which by the way has been unbelievably easy and basically a mindless practice).   I see the lunch hour being a potential problem.  Running out of wine might also be another pitfall.
In addition to saving trips to the store and cutting on unnecessary consumption, I hope to save money this week.  In the article that sparked this blog entry, it claims all ingredients to make the 5 meals cost $28.00.  We are on way to the store now and after we get home, I will update the actual cost for what is needed and also what I bought that I determined necessary to be happy and content until Friday.  Here we go!