Monday, April 4, 2011

Recipe of the Week Blog Hop - Zesty Skillet Ravioli


It's time for my weekly recipe blog hop! The blog hop will be open from Tuesday to Friday night. Share your recipes in the link up below and be sure to include a link back to the blog hop! Thanks to everyone who linked up last week! Please get the word out so that more people will link up! You can tweet about it using the tweet button at the bottom of the post too! 

This week I am sharing a recipe that I tried this past Friday in my menu planning. It is from The Pampered Chef and since I am a Pampered Chef consultant, I am a little partial! :) They have a vegetarian cookbook called Quick Vegetarian Main Dishes. This dish was so easy to make and was very very good! Enjoy! 

Zesty Ravioli Skillet 
4 cups loosely packed fresh baby spinach (I left this out since hubby does not like spinach)
6 oz. provolone cheese, grated 
1 TBS olive oil 
1 small jalapeno pepper, seeded (I just used half of one, since again hubby does not like spicy foods)
3 garlic cloves, pressed 
2 cans of diced tomatoes with onions, undrained 
1/2 tsp. salt 
1/2 tsp. coarsely ground black pepper 
1 pkg. small frozen cheese ravioli 
1/3 cup heavy whipping cream (you can also use half and half)

Directions
1. Wash spinach and drain. Grate cheese and set aside. 
2. Add oil to skillet and heat over medium-high heat, 1-3 minutes or until shimmering. Finely chop jalapeno (I used my food chopper). Add jalapeno to skillet; cook and stir 1 minute or until crisp-tender. Press garlic into skillet with a garlic press. Cook and stir 15-20 seconds or until fragrant. 
3. Add tomatoes, salt, and black pepper to skillet. Cook and stir 1-2 minutes or until simmering. Add ravioli; stir to coat. Cook, uncovered 4-5 minutes or until tender. Stir cream into skillet. Cook, uncovered 1-2 minutes or until simmering. Sprinkle spinach over ravioli; cook covered 1 minute or until spinach starts to wilt. 
4. Remove skillet from heat. Top with cheese; cover skillet and let stand 1-2 minutes or until cheese is melted. 

I also added some fresh basil to the top since I didn't have spinach in mine. 

Photo Credit: The Pampered Chef


MORE AWARDS - 14



















Sonali Pradhan of Only Fish Recipes has shared with me another award galore.
It is indeed a pleasure to have made such good friends in the blogging world.
Your blog on only fish recipes is really unique and I am sure all my friends are visiting and enjoying the special sea food recipes equally.
Thank you once again for these lovely awards.

I am sharing these awards with some more friends.
Dear friends please collect the awards and share them with other blogger friends after posting them on your blog. Leave a message on their respective blogs to collect and share them. This will make our blogging circle bigger with the introduction of new blogs and friends.
Happy Blogging !

1. Nayna - Simply.Food

2. Premlatha - Prema's Thaligai

3. Viju - Let's Cook Something

4. Sonia - My Creative Flavours

5. Kaveri - Palakkad Chamayal

6. Smita - Little Food Junction

7. Raksha - Raksha's Kitchen

8. Neha - Home Made Food

9. Arthi - Spicy Tasty

10. Uma - Trendy Relish

11. Suman Singh - Incidental Indian Cooking

12. Girliechef - Girliechef

13. Krithika - Krithi's Kitchen

14. Priya Mahadevan - Now Serving

15. Sneha Benny - Art of Cooking

Zucchini Wrapped Fish with Homemade Rosemary Oil

When we moved to Houston last year, my husband knew his new position was going to be a challenge.  The new system that his company is implementing will "go live" this month.  We are all grounded here for Easter and won't be traveling home for the holiday.  He and his team will be working hard once they turn on the new system preparing for any snaffoos that may arise.



We're going to create our own Easter holidays at home.  I brought out all of my Easter decorations and had fun introducing them to a new house.  I saw these little chocolate bunnies and couldn't resist treating everyone to a little pre-holiday taste.



I am continuing to soak up as many episodes of "Take Home Chef" as I can squeeze in our homeschooling schedule.  Did I mention in my previous articles that it is hosted by this adorable Australian Chef Curtis Stone?

I did mention that?  Several times you say??  Oh, (blush)

He chose the cutest woman on this one episode to create a dinner for her and her husband.  Her name was Elena and she was from Russia.  She was sweet and soft spoken and a tad shy.  She had an amazing garden in her yard and Curtis used so many fresh ingredients from it to create his meal.

I decided to try it out:  Fish wrapped in fresh zucchini with home made rosemary oil



The dish calls for a home made rosemary oil.  This was so much fun to make.  Do you remember that Texas Olive Oil that I bought a few weeks ago at the farmer's market?  Well, I decided to use that bottle.



The rosemary is pounded to release the flavor.  Then, it is soaked in a pot of olive oil at a light simmer.


Once the mixture sits for several hours the rosemary is removed and the oil is again bottled.  This certainly made the house come alive with an enticing aroma.  My curious family wandered through the kitchen  wondering about this new endeavor.


I wish I could go outside and snip stalks of rosemary growing wild like they did in L.A.  I do have my own rosemary but it wasn't enough to make this oil.  I don't know if there is anything that smells so wonderfully aromatic as rosemary and olive oil.  Hooray for the person who decided to squeeze olives and smash rosemary way back in the stone age.


Again, a shameless plug for Williams-Sonoma.  Honestly, I really should ask if I could have one of those W&S Ad badges for my blog.  I love that store!  In my last cooking class, they used a mandoline  several times.  The other people in the class seem more experienced than me and they all swore by the mandoline in the store.  Put it on my tab!  I'm milking that 10% discount for all its worth.


I decided to try it on the zucchini in this recipe.  The zucchini has to be wrapped around the fish.  So it must be sliced uniformly and be "wrappable".  I had to call the hubby to see the magic.  Where have I been?  In food gadget isolation!  Thats where!  Looky here...


I had a wee bit too much fun and could have sliced away with my new toy.  Last week I used it on my potatoes au gratin.  This week zucchini!!  I also did some garlic mashed potatoes (using this mandoline) to go with this fish dish but I'll write about that in tomorrow's article.

Once I had my individual cod fish portions wrapped and seasoned with salt and pepper, I brushed some of that sensuous rosemary oil over them.

Here is where I ran into a bit of a stumble.  The recipe calls for lightly searing the zucchini wrapped fish in a pan before putting them in the oven.  My zucchini started to fall apart.  I couldn't seem to get the temperature just right.  Then,  I tried to flip them.  At this point,  a bit of steam started shooting out of my ears.  Hmmm...not working like Curtis demonstrated in front of Elena.  Darn professionals!

I ended up putting the pan directly in the oven to cook the fish.  Then, right at the end, I moved my pan under the broiler so they would get that golden color.  This worked splendidly.  I felt a twinge of pride in my impromptu skills but still would have liked to flip them like a pro.


This was a delicious and healthy dinner choice for this weekend.  We don't really eat enough seafood because I don't feel confident cooking it so this was another attempt to improve my culinary skills and eat a healthier diet.



Sunday is our one day a week to completely unwind.  Between my husband's project demands, M's college prep studies, R.'s increasingly growing schedule, we never schedule anything on Sunday.  I either have a glass of red wine in hand or a hot cup of coffee (still enjoying my Cafe du Monde brew) and in the kitchen is where you will find me.

We are still getting used to the incredible Spring weather so early in the year.  April for goodness sake!  We have been in colder climates for so long, its amazing to see lush grass, flickering ladybugs, and bulging magnolia buds readying to bloom.

'Til next Sunday!  Let the craziness of the week resume.  We're ready for it.

Easter will be quiet one this year but I'll enjoy planning special treats.  What I do love about being a mother is that even though you have teens, the fun of holidays doesn't end because they aren't little anymore.  They absolutely look forward to all of the yearly traditions that sometimes, I didn't even know were traditions.  That's the beauty of it.  Traditions you don't anticipate as parents become new ones through the eyes of your children.

Like these chocolate bunnies...


"Take Home Chef":  Episode 50:  Elena's Menu

INGREDIENTS
FOR THE ROSEMARY OIL:
10 sprigs (each about 4 inch/10 cm long) fresh rosemary
One 17-oz./500-ml bottle extra virgin olive oil
FOR THE FISH:
Four 5- to 6-ounce/160-g skinless black cod filets (Sarah's note:  I just used regular cod)
3 zucchini (each at least 7 inches/18 cm long), cut lengthwise on a Japanese mandolin into 1/16-inch/.2-cm slices  (Sarah's note:  I used 1/8 inch instead and that worked better for me)
4 sprigs (each about 4 inch/10 cm long) fresh rosemary
PREPARATION:
TO MAKE THE ROSEMARY OIL:
Using the back of a large chef knife, bruise the rosemary as much as possible. Place the bruised rosemary in a small saucepan with the extra virgin olive oil and gently warm the oil over medium-low heat for about 5 minutes or just until it is lukewarm.  Reserve the olive oil bottle.
Remove the saucepan from the heat and set aside to allow the rosemary to infuse the olive oil with as much flavor as possible (4 to 6 hours is ideal, however a smaller amount of time will still give you a nice rosemary infused flavor). (Sarah's note:  have fresh bread handy for taste testing!!)
TO PREPARE THE FISH:
Preheat the oven to 400°F/205°C.  Sprinkle the fish with salt and pepper.(Sarah's note:  Cod is VERY mild so season it really well to bring out some flavor) Lay about 6 zucchini slices horizontally on the work surface to overlap each other slightly and create a 5x7-inch/13x18-cm rectangle. Place 1 black cod filet on top of the zucchini slices and wrap the zucchini around the fish to cover completely. 
Repeat with the remaining zucchini slices and black cod filets. Heat 1 tablespoon/15 ml of the rosemary olive oil in a large nonstick frying pan over medium-high heat. Place the fish, zucchini-seam side down, in the pan and cook for about 2 minutes or until the zucchini is lightly colored. Using a metal spatula, carefully turn the fish over, folding the ends of the zucchini slices over the fish if necessary. Don't worry if some of the zucchini slices unfold a bit. Once the fish is cooked the zucchini will soften and can be folded around the fish again before it is served. (Sarah's note:  this just didn't work for me.  Broiling the zucchini afterwards was the only way I could keep it all together)
Add 4 sprigs of rosemary to the pan  (Sarah's note:  soak these before hand or they will burn in the oven) (these will be used for garnish). Transfer the pan to the oven and bake the fish for about 8 minutes (the time will depend on the thickness of the filet), or until the fish is just cooked through.
TO SERVE:
Drizzle 1 tablespoon/15 ml of the rosemary oil around the plates. Garnish with the roasted rosemary sprigs and serve. Pour the remaining rosemary oil into the reserved olive oil bottle, discarding the rosemary sprigs, and reserve the oil for another use.

Try It Challenge - Week 1


It is time start week 1 of the Try It Challenge by Clare over at Peak 313. The item we are suppose to include in our diet at least 4 of the 7 days this week is greek yogurt. I just recently tried greek yogurt and have fallen in love with it! It is so rich and creamy and I love the all natural fruit ingredients included with it. I recently tried the Chobani brand and really like it! I think I am going to try this yummy looking smoothie recipe this week as a snack while I try to shed some pounds with Jillian Michael's 30 day shred video.  

Head over to Clare's site to join in the fun! 




Hampir saja...

31 Maret 2011, kamis

Kejadiannya lagi nyetir sesudah nganterin temen pulang ke rumahnya, trus mampir ke supermarket, beli lauk buat makan malam, coz ga sempet masak2. Pulangnya pas mo nyebrang jalan, tiba2 ada mobil police n motor police tuh lagi patroli di jalan. Tiba2 yang police bermotor pake mic ngomong apalah n sambil nunjuk2 mobil gw. HUaaaa, da deg2an deh, bakalan ditilang nih?

Mei bilang, Ma, mundurin mobilnya, soalnya ngelewat jalur putihnya, ya udah gw mundur nih, eh tuh police muter balik tuh motornya n langsung nyamperin gw. Walah salah apa nih gw? bakalan kena tilang deh. Trus dia ngedeketin kaca mobil gw masih sambil bermotor ria, n cuma bilang ' Lighto..lighto' yang artinya lampu ..lampu..
HUaaa, ternyata gw lupa nyalain lampu spion mobilnya...linglung deh. Untung ga pake acara suruh keluarin SIm n tilang segala...selamat deh gw. Abis biasanya gw juga jarang2 bawa mobil malem gitu, jadi bener2 deh kelupaan buat nyalain lampunya. Serem juga kalo kena tilang, soalnya selain tilang, hilang juga point sim tuh. Point hilang semua, Sim bisa direscue ga bs bermobil mpe jangka waktu tertentu. Trus kemarin dulu suami kena tilang coz speednya lewatin batas, mpe kena sepuluh ribu yen. Gila, tilang aja mpe segitu mahal, n bayarnya ga bs lewat policenya tuh, harus lewat bank dalam jangka waktu tertentu. Bener2 buang duit.

Mei mpe kuatir banget, apa tuh police mo nangkep gw? mpe nanya ntar kalo ditangkep, Mei n Aya pulangnya gimana?? wkwkw, gw mpe ketawa, ga ditangkep donk, lah policenya aja uda kabur ma motor gedenyaa..

How To Eat An Elephant

... it's one bite at a time, don't you know.

Yesterday, my daughter had her first soccer game since we started our campaign of deliberate practice. We had been working on the accuracy and power of her kicks, particularly for balls coming from her left side and ones in front of her. In the past, she shanked about half of them. Yesterday, all such kicks were straight and true. Victory!

While watching the game, I found four more skills that need work. We'll pick them off one at a time. As I watched her play and tried not to have an aneurysm, it dawned on me that one of the benefits of deliberate practice is that it makes the impossible possible.

My daughter is trying to get into a very good high school wants to play soccer there. If they held tryouts today, there is no way on Earth she would make the team. My job is to spend the next 6 months getting her ready. If we worked on everything at once, or if we took on the skills that are actually collections of smaller skills, we'd never get anywhere. Like eating an elephant, this is going to be an unbelievably difficult task, but by breaking it into single, bite-sized bits, you can at least see the mechanism by which we might succeed.

Our deliberate practice scoreboard: two skills down, a whole bunch to go.

Springing Into Spring Blog Series

My dear friend Sarah over at Sarah's Heart's Home started her blog series called Springing Into Spring today! It goes all through April. Today she is featuring a guest post by yours truly called "Organization... next to Godliness?" I hope you will stop over there and give it a read. Be sure to follow Sarah's blog to keep up with her blog series!





Une Soirée Parisienne



How does this sound? Tantalizing? This is an invitation to an event not-to-be-missed in Istanbul. Believe me, it will be a memorable night in a magical setting.

Let me explain.

I belong to an organization here in Istanbul called International Women of Istanbul - IWI- and in fact have been a member for a long long time.  They have asked me to promote their Spring Ball on my blog which I am only too happy to do as the proceeds are going to a cause very close to my heart.

IWI has always promoted Bomonti Home for the Elderly here in this city and we who know about it have always helped in any way that we can to raise funds for this old people's home.

IWI always does things in style and the French Gardens in Tarabya is an inspired choice of venue. You are guaranteed to have a fantastic time.

SATURDAY, MAY 7 2011 IWI CHARITY BALL
FOR BOMONTI FRANSIZ FAKIRHANESI: "UNE SOIREE PARISIENNE".


TICKETS PRE-SALE STARTED MARCH 14th. SEATING LIMITED. VISIT http://www.iwi-tr.org/



Take note of the date, reserve your tickets and go!

A New Chapter begins with Spring part 2

Life is Good !  The sun is shining !!  The birds are chirping away ! I have a new job/career :) My garden is thawed out , and starting to show signs of life !! The seeds planted a week ago in my kitchen & the big greenhouse at the Svetec's Farm has all sprouted !!

If you didnt catch part 1 ,  you can check it out here :  http://richfletchersgoodfoodrevolution.blogspot.com/2011/04/new-chapter-begins-with-spring-p1.html

Cold Frame #1 , for the taller plants.. all made for recycled pieces.  This one is old kitchen cabinet doors , and a window.  Adds at least 10C during the day , more when the sun is bright :) It took about 4 days for that snow to melt.  

The chickens were happy for a warm spring day, dirt baths all round !!  lol 

The Svetec's Main Barn.  I just love old barns :) 

We even found a few carrots that survived the winter. We kept a small row to see if we can collect the seed this year .  

Once the roof and end walls were on , it was rather steamy in the 80x20 Green house.  We planted a few rows or lettuce, radish and spinach seeds.. then tried some transplants   just a test row , which was a good thing as 90% didnt survive .  

MUCH smaller scale at home.  I planted about a third of each package, this will be the earliest Ive ever started a garden, those cold frames better work :)) 

The base and the floor of the walk in cooler.  Had to call it a day to let the foam set.  This is going to be one rock solid cool box. 

Things That Make Me Smile

Rock Roses.

Is Chris Van Hollen On His Own?

... because someone is going to be. Here's Representative Van Hollen's take on Paul Ryan's proposed 2012 budget which will reduce our 10-year deficit from $12B to $8B:
"All this does is shift the risk and burden of rising health-care costs to seniors on Medicare," said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D., Md.), the top Democrat on the House Budget Committee. "You're on your own with the insurance industry."
Eventually someone will have to be on their own. All the government does with programs like Medicare is to collect a group of people, tell them they don't have to worry about paying their bills and then grab one more person and tell them, "You've got to pay for yourself and all of them. You're on your own!"

Well, either that, or the Fed can just print more money and Chris can hand it out.

Buntil (Cassava wrap in coconut sauce)

Buntil (Cassava wrap in coconut sauce)

Buntil Stuffing Ingredients :
Grated coconut
Red pepper
chili
onion
garlic
anchovy
pete cina
salt
sugar
flavoring

Buntil Wrapping Ingredient :
Cassava leaves or papaya leaves

Buntil Sauce Ingredient :
coconut milk
red pepper
chili
onion
garlic
turmeric
alpina galanga
lemon leaves
lemon grass
salt and sugar to taste

Buntil Stuffing :
Mills finely red pepper, chili, onion, garlic, salt, sugar and flavoring
Pouring grated coconut, anchovy, pete cina to the dough 1.a.

Buntil Wrapping :
Heap up 7 plies cassava leaves, put dough
wrapped around as a ball
Steamed within 7 hours

Buntil Sauce :
Mills finely red pepper, chili, onion, garlic, turmeric and alpina galanga.
Prepare frying pan and cook doug 1.c until good smelt ±5 minutes
Pouring coconut milk, wait till its boiled

To serve, prepare a bowl, place the buntil and then pour the sauce.

Buntil (Cassava wrap in coconut sauce)

Buntil (Cassava wrap in coconut sauce)

Buntil Stuffing Ingredients :
Grated coconut
Red pepper
chili
onion
garlic
anchovy
pete cina
salt
sugar
flavoring

Buntil Wrapping Ingredient :
Cassava leaves or papaya leaves

Buntil Sauce Ingredient :
coconut milk
red pepper
chili
onion
garlic
turmeric
alpina galanga
lemon leaves
lemon grass
salt and sugar to taste

Buntil Stuffing :
Mills finely red pepper, chili, onion, garlic, salt, sugar and flavoring
Pouring grated coconut, anchovy, pete cina to the dough 1.a.

Buntil Wrapping :
Heap up 7 plies cassava leaves, put dough
wrapped around as a ball
Steamed within 7 hours

Buntil Sauce :
Mills finely red pepper, chili, onion, garlic, turmeric and alpina galanga.
Prepare frying pan and cook doug 1.c until good smelt ±5 minutes
Pouring coconut milk, wait till its boiled

To serve, prepare a bowl, place the buntil and then pour the sauce.

Menu Plan Monday 4/4/2011

A couple of items coming over from last week that I wasn't able to get to. Overall, a very yummy week ahead at our house! :)

Monday
L - Fresh veggie salad (Avocado, onion, peppers, tomatoes with oil/lemon dressing) and crackers
S - Brown rice with lentils and tomato sauce (carry over from last week)

Tuesday
L - Left over veggie salad and crackers
S - Burritos

Wednesday
L - Spinach salad with veggie griller sandwich
S - Risotto with tomato and basil

Thursday
L -Almond butter bread with yogurt and fresh fruit
S - Spaghetti, salad and garlic bread

Friday
L - Spinach salad with crackers
S - Dinner with in-laws

Sabbath
- Church potluck: Italian potatoes

Sunday
Breakfast Brunch
Left over buffet



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