It’s Easy Being Green

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As some of you know, I am a bit of a foodie.  I am fortunate that my love also has an adventurous spirit, as well as, a voracious appetite for delectable nourishment.  Our little ones, who are not so little anymore, have grown up sampling all of the various concoctions I create in my kitchen and have developed a culinary palette that makes me very proud.  Our food journey has taken us in many different directions.  There are times when we started off on a particular path and discovered or decided that it wasn’t the best direction for us.  If I were writing a book instead of a blog, the chapter we are currently enjoying is, what we like to refer to, as the Qualitarian Localvore Chapter.

Over the past couple of years we have participated in a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture).  We purchase a share from a local farm and we enjoy fresh, local, organic produce for the season.  It has been fun, exciting, and challenging!  It has required a bit of imagination and a lot of flexibility.

My most recent trick is googling the ingredients we receive and seeing what links and recipes pop up.  Mark Bittman recently wrote an article in New York Times Magazine called: Spinach is a Dish Best Served Cooked.  Originally, when I saw the title, I assumed that the article had to do with food safety.  Instead, it contained a variety of ways to prepare spinach cooked.  Typically I just mix the raw spinach we receive in with the salad greens, make a homemade dressing and we are all set.  This week, having read Bittman’s article and not receiving any salad greens, the wheels started turning.  I also decided it was too cold for raw spinach.

Then I found this recipe for Emeril’s Spinach Cheddar Baked Potato With Avocado Puree.  It seemed a bit daunting initially, due to the minute size of the potatoes we received from the farm and I was missing a couple of ingredients but I decided to proceed anyway.

Spinach

We didn’t have any bacon and I wouldn’t have used it anyway.  I also omitted the lime zest due to the fact that I just can’t bring myself to shave pesticide laden citrus into my fabulous food.  I substituted veggie stock and I used fresh cilantro from our CSA Share in place of the scallions and sprinkled the finished product with some organic black beans.

The finished product!

Next time I will definitely use regular sized potatoes and save my farm potatoes for something else.  I will also entertain the idea of turning the black beans into a puree.

They were a huge hit and they were devoured with smiles!

The Bear & His Potato

5 responses »

  1. amy girl, i love your blogs and photos. what a joy it has been over the past 11 years to know you and wish I had been a better mom when it came to cooking. Teaching phys ed outside all day long in the heat and humidity of Alabama and Louisiana left me ‘done’ by the time I would pick up Jared and head home. And, then night time classes once a week to obtain my doctor’s degree at LSU was exhausting. But, I could have done this. I could have spent all Sunday afternoons cooking the weekly meals. I should have done this, and been healthier with food intake.

    We didn’t have purified water or even water bottles. It is wonderful that bottled water beat beer as most sold product in the USA. Not sure that’s true in the redneck southern boys, I’m sure it is not.

    You are my hero. Your boys and husband are my heroes. The choices you have made as a tight-knit family are amazing and desirable living choices. You’ve changed my life in so many ways, and I adore you for it. Keep on the green journey and ‘peace out'(-<) from an old hippie girl who is happily surfing today in the Kainoa (great ocean – Xavier's middle name!).
    Me ke aloha pumehana, me

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