Food

Summer Dish: Delicious, Easy Quinoa Salad

This is more methodology than recipe because I don't have very many exact measurements. But I like this dish so much and it's gone over so well at a few gatherings recently that I wanted to share. It's perfect for summer. Light enough to be a side, substantial enough to be a main. Refreshing, with a variety of textures. Chewy, crunchy, zingy, tangy, cool, salty. It's flexible. I've made it a few different ways, and it's never come out badly. It's great over greens as a meal, or alongside your favorite grilled protein and vegetables. I bet it would be delicious with mint, parsley, and/or avocado. And best of all, it comes together quickly.

Quinoa or a quinoa blend is tossed with olive oil and lemon, then mixed with cucumber, feta, pistachios, dried cranberries, and roasted chickpeas.

I've used a mix of red and white quinoa, and also this blend with amaranth, which I found at Costco. I think this blend is my favorite as a base, but I'd bet any sturdy grain will do.

Photo from sonomavalleyfarms.com

Photo from sonomavalleyfarms.com

Preheat your oven to 425.

Cook a full serving of your grain (usually one cup dry) according to the instructions. If there is a suggestion for getting it to come out drier, do that. You want your quinoa light and fluffy, and for it to not stick together. I do mine in the rice cooker and it comes out perfectly every time. 

Once it's done cooking, immediately take it out of the pot and spread it out on a sheet pan or up around the sides of a large bowl so that it cools quickly.

While your quinoa is cooking, you can tend to the other stuff. 

Drain and rinse a can of garbanzo beans, or take this opportunity to smugly fetch the beans you cooked yourself, you big show-off. Scatter rinsed beans on a large baking sheet, drizzle with olive oil. You need enough to very lightly coat your beans. If you're unsure how much that is, start with a little and add more as needed. See, this is why I can't call this a recipe. I'm guessing you need half a tablespoon or so. Sprinkle with salt, pepper, and a few dashes of paprika. Use your hand to mix the beans together until evenly coated with oil and seasonings. Shake the pan so they spread out as evenly as possible. Ideally you want a little space in between each one so they can get a little crispy. Pop them in the oven for 15-20 minutes, shaking and flipping them once or twice as they cook. I think they take closer to 20 minutes to get a little browned. 

While your quinoa & beans are going, peel, seed, and dice an English cucumber, or roughly 4-5 of those small Persian cucumbers. Zest a lemon and cut it in half. Or save that to do directly over the mix later, if you want fewer dirty dishes. (Also prep any other ingredients you might want to add. Olives, mint, parsley, tomatoes, nuts, seeds, dried fruit, etc. For what it's worth, my general rule is to follow a recipe right once the first time, then freestyle it as desired if I make it again.)

To the cooled quinoa add a few glugs of olive oil, the zest of one lemon, the juice of half a lemon, and generous sprinklings of salt and pepper. You may need more later, but I do all this to taste, and again, I'm sorry I don't have measurements. Stir up your quinoa, give it a taste. Add more olive oil, salt, pepper, and lemon juice as needed. If it seems dry, sprinkle a little water on it. We're talking a tablespoon at a time. It makes a world of difference adding a little water here to drier, fluffy quinoa, rather than adding it during the cooking process. Taste again, adjust again.

Once you've got your grains heartily seasoned, stir in all of the cucumber, a handful of dried cranberries, a handful of pistachios, about a third of a regular container of crumbled feta, and half the roasted chickpeas. Mix it all up, taste it. If it needs more of any element, toss it in. When it's good, put it in a serving dish and pile on another handful each of cranberries & pistachios, another third of a container of feta, and the rest of the chickpeas. That's it. You've got yourself a delicious summer side dish. I like it best served at room temp, but it's great cold, too.

Let me know if you try it!

Things I'm Enjoying Lately

OPI's Cajun Shrimp

The perfect color for warmer weather. It's on the coral side of watermelon: in some lights it looks orange, in some it looks pink, and in others it looks red. Because of that, no pictures I've seen can really do it justice, but this one from Amazon might sell you on how pretty it is.

Photo from amazon.com.

Photo from amazon.com.

Nordstrom's Zella Brand 'Live In' Leggings

I have a bunch of these, including two pairs of the crops (these and these), which I wear and wash at least once a week each. I used to do yoga in them regularly, and now I row in them regularly. I'm climbing in and out of a boat, which means more chance for catching and tearing and salt and sand and grime. I sweat in them, trudge through salt water in them, and despite all that (and being over a year old) they are, quite literally, no worse for the wear. Every time I pull them out of the dryer (are they supposed to go in the dryer?) I'm amazed that they look exactly the same. I am tough on clothes I don't work out in, so I'm impressed that these have held up so well.

Don't tell anyone, but I've also worn the black leggings under dresses. They act like super comfortable Spanx, and no one is the wiser.

Photo from Nordstrom.com.

Photo from Nordstrom.com.

Speaking of Nordstrom (and ModCloth), I'm in a vintage-slash-Anthropologie-style wedding in a few months, and we're wearing hairpieces of various sorts. I've bought three and I can't decide. If you need a sweet retro headband, giant hair flower, or fascinator (the one I bought is no longer available, but imagine something similar in cream) look no further. (Help me come up with an argument for keeping all three.)

Photo from Nordstrom.com.

Photo from Nordstrom.com.

Photo from Modcloth.com.

Photo from Modcloth.com.

We're wearing different shades of green and gold. This is my dress. Isn't it darling?

Photo from ModCloth.com.

Photo from ModCloth.com.

This Eat Smart Sweet Kale Salad kit from Costco. I went through two all by myself last week. It comes with a tasty poppyseed dressing that I understand is very similar to Brianna's. I am not generally a fan of creamy dressings, but this does go well with the kit and it's a nice change for me. However, I thin it out by dumping it in a mason jar and adding apple cider vinegar at a ratio of almost 50/50. Then I add more poppy seeds, a bunch of pepper, and a pinch of salt and give it a hearty shaking. This suits my preference and cuts the calories and sugar as well. Doing the dressing from just one kit this way gets me through almost two bags of the salad. 

For staying power I need a bit more fat and protein (with the thinned out dressing on this, the calories are pretty low for a meal), and I've added all kinds of stuff to that end: bacon, avocado, Aidells chicken & apple sausage,  salmon burgers. It's excellent with any of the above, plus the addition of a chopped Honeycrisp apple.

Photo from EatSmart.net.

Photo from EatSmart.net.

Speaking of those salmon burgers, I can't recommend them enough. My friend Sarah recommended them a while back, and as I think I've said before, I will always take her food advice. They are so convenient to have on hand to throw on a lunch salad, or to help make a quick dinner. They aren't simply straight salmon, but they're super convenient and the ingredients aren't many or terrible, so I'm calling it a win.

Photo from Costco.com. The packaging may look a bit different from this, so just keep your eyes peeled. Costco's website says they aren't available any longer, but I'm guessing that's just online as I saw them in my store last week.

Photo from Costco.com. The packaging may look a bit different from this, so just keep your eyes peeled. Costco's website says they aren't available any longer, but I'm guessing that's just online as I saw them in my store last week.

Aussie bites. Another Costco find. A sort of hybrid of granola-cookie-breakfast biscuit with wholesome, simple ingredients that you can pronounce, and lots of staying power. On mornings when I row, I need something in my stomach, but due to the early hour and hard workouts it needs to be small, healthy, energy-sustaining, quick, and easy. Sort of a tall order. I was having a granola bar, with mixed results, until I discovered these. I eat two with my one cup of coffee at 4am, and they hold me so much better than granola bars! I no longer suddenly feel in the middle of practice like my stomach is going to collapse on itself. There's no crash. When I come home, I'm hungry but not hangry. I can get a shower and a second cup of coffee before I start to feel in dire need of my second breakfast of oatmeal. My husband Zach has had the same experience when he eats two before running. 

One note, I don't really like the taste of honey, and I cannot taste any honey in these.

Terrible Food Photography by yours truly.

Terrible Food Photography by yours truly.

What are you eating, wearing, liking lately?

Friday Find: Holiday Music: It's full of food

This is kind of a cop-out on a Friday Find, but I am just SO EXCITED that this season is officially upon us! This is a post I wrote and originally posted on FoodLush a few years ago. I've edited and modified it.

***

Thanksgiving is over! It's time to be unapologetically full of THE OTHER HOLIDAYS. 

I have an obsession with Christmas, and Christmas music, and Christmas food, and also regular food. And maybe you've noticed, but they overlap. In the obvious ways, sure, but have you noticed how often food is sung about in holiday songs? Because I have and I want to talk about it.

Let's examine some favorites shall we?

1. Sleigh Ride

Obviously the only good version is sung by Johnny Mathis. Give it a listen and just try not to feel jaunty and festive. Personally, it makes me want to dance like Kristen Wiig, which is high praise in my book.

If you've never heard Johnny Mathis's Christmas albums, get thee to iTunes and get thee some of that retro crooning. It's perfect.

My favorite part of the song is where they talk about passing around the coffee and the pumpkin pie.

a) Pumpkin pie is delicious (so is coffee) and b) It seems kind of rebellious as pumpkin pie is clearly a fall food, not a Christmas food. When I hear that lyric, I always wonder if people do eat pumpkin pie at their winter celebrations post-Thanksgiving. Do you? It certainly would seem that Johnny is in good company, given that pumpkin pie is also mentioned in Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree.

2. My Favorite Things.

I am partial to the Barbra Streisand version on her Christmas album, which is aptly titled "A Christmas Album". I didn't know this was a Christmas song, but it must be if it's on that album. Here we have crisp apple struedel, and schnitzel with noodle. 

Again I am confused. Apple struedel? Really? Admittedly I do not know how the Von Trapps and Fruelein Maria did things in Austria, but aren't apples more of a fall food? How DID this become a holiday song anyway? The lyrics also mention rain. As we all know, the only festive precipitation is snow, so I continute to be confused all around by this song. 

3. The Christmas Song.

Bold and daring, this song puts it all out there right in the title. This is THE Christmas song. Therefore I'm willing to accept at face-value anything it claims. The chesnuts are roasting on an open fire. "Everybody knows, a turkey and some mistletoe..." Bam. Suddenly turkey isn't just for Thanksgiving. 

4. The 12 Days of Christmas.

Pear trees, partridges, maids-a-milking, geese-a-laying. So many foodstuffs I can hardly count....count. Eh? Ehh?

5. We Wish You a Merry Christmas

Figgy Pudding! A fictitious Christmas food only available in classic Charles Dickens stories.

6. Baby It's Cold Outside. 

A problematic song featuring drinks, and a woman wondering what a man has put in her drink as he doesn't accept no for an answer. I hate this song. Every time I hear it I think, oh, it can't be THAT bad, then, nope, it just keeps getting worse. 

7. Let It Snow.

He or she brought some corn for popping! Festive!

8. Frosty the Snowman

He has a corncob pipe, so.

9. The Hannukah Song

There aren't many Hannukah songs, but this one is really in it to win it, with it's love for gin and tonics. There's also mention of the Carnegie Deli, and I think we can agree a pound of pastrami with a piece of bread perched precariously on top makes a damn good sandwich. 

10. Marshmallow World

The entire song revolves around corny food jokes. It's a marshmallow world, a whipped cream day. I get excited every time the Target commercial featuring this song is played.

11. Here We Come A-wassailing

According to Wikipedia, which quotes Readers Digest: "the Christmas spirit often made the rich a little more generous than usual, and bands of beggars and orphans used to dance their way through the snowy streets of England, offering to sing good cheer and to tell good fortune if the householder would give them a drink from his wassail bowl or a penny or a pork pie or, let them stand for a few minutes beside the warmth of his hearth. The wassail bowl itself was a hearty combination of hot ale or beer, apples, spices and mead, just alcoholic enough to warm tingling toes and fingers of the singers"

It doesn't get more festive than pork pies, warm spiced alcohol, and begging British street urchins. 

God bless us, every one.