Spinach Pancakes

These pancakes from weelicious are yummy and fun. Move over green eggs and ham! I always love an opportunity to punch up the nutrition in breakfast and this is a perfect example. I also love tempting kids to eat something they might not otherwise want to. So without hinting at the reason for the green, I simply made them for brunch on a St. Patrick weekend and everyone, even the littlest guest, all of 18 months, ate their fill.

Because I usually don’t have buttermilk, I mix 1 cup milk with 1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar (or white wine vinegar) and let it sit 10 – 15 minutes before making the recipe.

 

Spinach Pancakes
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Spinach Pancakes
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Ingredients
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Instructions
  1. In a blender, combine the spinach, buttermilk, egg, and oil and blend
  2. until smooth.
  3. In a separate bowl, whisk together the remaining ingredients.
  4. Mix the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients until just combined.
  5. Heat a large pan or griddle over medium heat and grease with butter or expeller-pressed canola oil.
  6. Pour about 1 tablespoon of the pancake mixture onto the griddle, cook about two minutes.
  7. Flip the pancakes and cook for one minute longer and serve.
Recipe Notes
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Sweet Potato Shepherd Pie

Because it’s tasty, hearty and nutritious, this is a regular fall dinner at our house. It can be made a day or two early for those busy weeknights.

Variations:

  • Use only with sweet potatoes or only with butternut squash.
  • Use ground turkey, beef or bison instead of turkey sausage
  • Make it spicy, adding a chopped jalapeño or two
  • Give it a Southwest twist When preparing the sausage filling, add 1 teaspoon chili 1 teaspoon paprika 1 1/2 cup corn kernels (I used defrosted frozen corn) Instead of bell pepper, use a poblano pepper
  • Make it vegan by using cooked lentils instead of turkey sausage.

It’s a great way to use leftover Butternut Squash and Sweet Potato Puree after Thanksgiving. Layer it over the leftover Wild Rice, Turkey Sausage and Leek Stuffing.  If no stuffing is left, make the filling with leftover turkey instead of turkey sausage.

Serve it with Kale, Apple and Cranberry Salad with Pumpkin Seeds

Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie
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Servings
4 - 6 servings
Servings
4 - 6 servings
Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie
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Servings
4 - 6 servings
Servings
4 - 6 servings
Ingredients
Adjust servings: servings
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Instructions
  1. Steam sweet potatoes and butternut squash until tender. Drain. Return to saucepan and mash with a potato masher. Add broth, mix until smooth and season with salt and pepper to taste.
  2. Preheat oven to 350°F. Butter 8 x 8 x 2-inch glass baking dish.
  3. Heat expeller-pressed canola oil in skillet over medium-high heat and cook sausage, breaking up with spoon and occasionally stirring, until it is brown (about 10 minutes). Transfer sausage to a bowl.
  4. Add onions to the same skillet and sauté, stirring occasionally, over medium-high heat until onions are translucent, about 8 minutes. Add celery, garlic, cumin, coriander and red pepper flakes (if using red pepper flakes). Season to taste with salt and pepper. Mix sausage back into skillet. Season with salt and pepper.
  5. Place sausage mixture into prepared baking dish. Spoon sweet potato mixture over; smooth top.
  6. Bake until it begins to brown around edges, about 45 minutes (or about 1 hour if it was refrigerated).
  7. Let stand 5 minutes before serving.
Recipe Notes

[su_original_recipe]

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Spicy Kale and Garbanzo Stew

This hearty chili-like stew is loaded with flavor. It’s delicious the first night, even tastier the next day and is one of my favorites to freeze for weeknights when I won’t have time to cook dinner. The trick is to remember to take it out of the freezer and defrost for dinner!

It can easily be a one-dish meal as is, but sometimes I serve it over couscous or mix in leftover grains (barley, rice, quinoa).

Serve it with dollop of plain Greek yogurt and some chopped parsley or cilantro on top.

Spicy Kale and Garbanzo Stew
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Servings
8 servings
Servings
8 servings
Spicy Kale and Garbanzo Stew
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Servings
8 servings
Servings
8 servings
Ingredients
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Instructions
  1. In a medium saucepan heat oil and cook the onions over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until they become translucent. Add garlic and bell peppers and cook, stirring, for 5 minutes
  2. Add all remaining ingredients and bring the liquid to a boil. Turn down heat simmer the stew, stirring ocassionally, for 45 minutes.
  3. Add the kale and cook another 5 – 10 minutes just until the kale wilts.
  4. Season with salt and pepper.
  5. Serve the stew on the couscous or rice, with a dollop of yogurt if desired.
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Nutrient-Rich Mashed Sweet Potatoes with Red Bell Pepper

Sweet potatoes are far more nutrient rich and have less calories than white potatoes; one medium spud containes 400% of daily requirment for vitamin A, is rich in vitamins B6 and C, potassium, fiber and beta-carotene.

[su_expanding_quote_web source_site=”Medical News Today” source_url=”http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/281438.php” right_quote=”Consuming foods rich in beta-carotene may reduce the risk of developing certain types of cancer, offer protection against asthma and heart disease and delay aging and body degeneration.” short_quote=”Consuming foods rich in beta-carotene may reduce the risk of cancer”]

These mashed potatoes with the additional superfoods red bell pepper and onion, make not only a delicious meal but also boosts our immune system.

Variations:

  • Use 2 leeks, washed well and thinly sliced, instead of onion and bell pepper
  • Instead of red bell pepper, use poblano pepper
Mashed Sweet Potatoes with Red Bell Pepper
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Servings
4
Servings
4
Mashed Sweet Potatoes with Red Bell Pepper
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Servings
4
Servings
4
Ingredients
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Instructions
  1. If the sweet potatoes are not organic, peel them. Cut into bite-size pieces and place in a saucepan. Put in salt, cover and bring to a boil. Turn down heat and simmer until tender, 15 – 20 minutes.
  2. Meanwhile heat canola oil in a skillet. Place onion in skillet and cook, stirring occasionally until it is transparent about 8 – 10 minutes. Add red bell pepper, mix in and cook another 10 minutes until bell pepper is tender.
  3. Drain sweet potatoes. Place back in saucepan and mash. Add 1/2 cup of broth, mash again. If it is too dry, mix in another 1/2 cup of broth or more until it has the consistency you prefer. Mix in onion/red bell pepper mix, season with salt and black pepper and serve.
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Pumpkin Apple Muffins

Every bite of these muffins tastes like fall, evoking cooler weather and a kaleidoscope of orange, gold, rusts and red color in the trees.

The flavor and texture is so lovely and the nutrition of pumpkin, apple, nuts and seeds motivate me to make them at other times of the year as well.

[su_expanding_quote_book source_author=”Steven Pratt, M.D., and Kathy Matthews” source_title=”SuperFoods Rx: Fourteen Foods that Will Change Your Life” affiliate_link=”http://amzn.to/1TGUOyo” full_quote=”Pumpkin packs an abundance of disease-fighting nutrients, including potassium, magnesium and vitamin C and E. The key nutrient that boosts pumpkin to the top of the Superfoods Rx list is the synergistic combination of cartenoids. Pumpkin contains one of the richest supplies of bioavailable cartenoid known to man. Cartenoids are deep orange, yellow or red colored compounds that help protect us from free radicals, modulate our immune response, enhance cell-to-cell communication, and decrease the risk of cataracts and macular degeneration. Cartenoid-rich foods have been shown to reduce the risk of various cancers, lower and rates of heart disease.” short_quote=”Pumpkin packs an abundance of disease-fighting nutrients, including potassium, magnesium and vitamin C and E”]
pumpkin and apples
Pumpkin Apple Muffins
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Servings
18 muffins
Servings
18 muffins
pumpkin and apples
Pumpkin Apple Muffins
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Servings
18 muffins
Servings
18 muffins
Ingredients
Adjust servings: muffins
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Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Grease muffin pan with a pastry brush (or paper towel dipped in) expeller-pressed canola or coconut oil.
  2. Mix first flour, cardamom and baking power into medium bowl.
  3. Stir pumpkin, oil, sugar and eggs in large bowl until well mixed. Mix in dry ingredients. Add apples, raisins and walnuts mixing just until blended.
  4. Place equal amounts of batter into prepared cups, fill almost to rim. Sprinkle pumpkin seeds on top.
  5. Bake 25 – 30 minutes.
Recipe Notes
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Meatless or Not Lentil Chili

Make it vegan by leaving out the beef. It’s also an easy way to make a dinner for both omnivores and non-vegans. Cook the ground beef separately, set aside. Once the chili is cooked split it into two pots and add the cooked beef into one of the pots. I’ve made it vegan, with ground turkey, bison or beef.

It pairs wonderfully with cornbread.

Serve with Mixed Green Salad with Cranberries and Orange and dinner is complete.

My favorite cornbread is the Skillet Cornbread from 100daysofrealfood.com

Lentil Beef Chili
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Servings Prep Time
6 - 8 30 minutes
Cook Time
1 1/2 hour
Servings Prep Time
6 - 8 30 minutes
Cook Time
1 1/2 hour
Lentil Beef Chili
Print Recipe
Servings Prep Time
6 - 8 30 minutes
Cook Time
1 1/2 hour
Servings Prep Time
6 - 8 30 minutes
Cook Time
1 1/2 hour
Ingredients
Adjust servings:
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Instructions
  1. Heat heavy large pot over medium-high heat. Add ground beef and cook until beef is brown, crumbling with fork about 5 minutes. Drain well, and put in separate dish. Cover and set aside.
  2. Heat oil in the pot over medium-high. Add onion, leeks, red bell pepper, green bell pepper and sauté until onion is tender, about 8 minutes. Add garlic, marjoram, oregano and basil and cook 2 -3 more minutes. Add beef, lentils, tomatoes, water, chili salt and pepper and mix in. Cover and simmer until lentils are tender, stirring occasionally, about 1 1/2 hours.
  3. Place cheese, onion, parsley and yogurt in small bowls. Ladle lentil chili into bowls and let everyone top off their chili with cheese, onion, parsley and/or yogurt to their liking.
Recipe Notes
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Carrot Apple Muffins

Loaded with carrots, apples, pecans and raisins these muffins fill the belly and get the day off to a good nutritious start.

They can also convert from breakfast food to a teatime delight with cream cheese icing and coconut sprinkled on top. Simply mix 2–4 tablespoons of cream cheese with half that amount (1–2 tablespoons) of plain Greek yogurt, 1/2 teaspoon of vanilla and just enough sugar to suit your taste.

carrot muffins
Carrot Apple Muffins
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18 muffins
carrot muffins
Carrot Apple Muffins
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18 muffins
Ingredients
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Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Oil eighteen 1/2-cup muffin cups.
  2. Into a large bowl sift together flour, baking soda, cardamom, and salt and whisk in sugar.
  3. Coarsely shred enough carrots to measure 2 cups and chop pecans. Add shredded carrots and pecans to flour mixture with raisins and coconut and toss well.
  4. In a bowl whisk together eggs, brown sugar, oil, applesauce and vanilla. Core apple and coarsely shred. Stir shredded apple into egg mixture. Add to flour mixture, stirring until batter is just combined well.
  5. Divide batter among muffin cups, filling them three-fourths full, and bake in middle of oven until puffed and a tester comes out clean, 15 to 20 minutes.
Recipe Notes

Instead of spelt flour, use 1 cup whole-wheat flour and 1 cup white flour.

I like using spelt flour because it is more nutritious than white (wheat) flour, but is also light whereas whole-wheat flour makes the muffins dense.

 

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A Healthy Twist on a French Classic

I find bison a better alternative to beef, because bison are grass-fed and industry standards don’t allow the use of hormones or routine antibiotics, which are often given as growth promoters to cattle.

Meatballs are usually associated with spaghetti sauce, but this recipe takes them to another level, rich, hearty and satisfying.

My daughter eats just about everything, but she balked at the wine sauce, so here are two options to make it child friendly:

– Omit the brandy and replace 1 cup of wine with another cup of beef broth for a total of 2 cups of broth. It tastes much lighter. Some adults might prefer it this way too.

– Reserve some of the baked meatballs and serve them to children without the sauce.

My favorite way to serve this is with rice, but is also pairs nicely with roasted potatoes, or even noodles with poppy seeds in a goulash-like style.

Bison Meatball Bourguignon
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Servings
4 - 6
Servings
4 - 6
Bison Meatball Bourguignon
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Servings
4 - 6
Servings
4 - 6
Ingredients
Meatballs
  • 3/4 cup oats old-fashioned
  • 1 1/2 pounds bison ground
  • 2 eggs large, beaten
  • 1/4 cup red onion finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons parsley fresh, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons thyme optional, finely chopped
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons salt kosher
  • 1/2 teaspoon black pepper coarsely ground
Bourguignon sauce
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Instructions
  1. To make the meatballs, mix all the meatball ingredients—oats, ground bison, eggs, onion, parsley, salt, and pepper and mix well. Cover and refrigerate for at least 15 minutes or up to 4 hours.
  2. Position a rack in the center of the oven and preheat to 375°F. Lightly oil a metal roasting pan.
  3. Using your wet hands rinsed under cold water, shape the meat mixture into 18 equal meatballs. Arrange in the roasting pan and bake until lightly browned, 20 to 25 minutes.
  4. Transfer the meatballs to a plate.
  5. Meanwhile, start the sauce. Heat canola oil and butter in large saucepan over medium heat and add the mushroom and onion. Stir occasionally, until browned, about 7–8 minutes. Stir in the carrot. Sprinkle with the flour and stir well. Stir in broth, wine, brandy, tomato paste, and thyme and bring to a boil. As soon as it boils, reduce to low heat and simmer until lightly thickened, about 10 minutes, checking periodically to make sure it does not dry. Add a couple of tablespoons of water if needed.
  6. Return the meatballs to saucepan and cook another 10–15 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
  7. Serve hot, sprinkled with parsley.
Recipe Notes
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Mushroom Barley Risotto

[su_expanding_quote alignment=”right” source_author=”Joel Fuhrman, M.D.” source_title=”Super Immunity” affiliate_link=”http://amazon.to/to come” full_quote=”Consuming mushrooms regularly has been associated with decreased risk of breast, stomach and colorectal cancers…mushrooms stimulate the immune system, prevent DNA damage, slow cancer cell growth.” short_quote=”Consuming mushrooms regularly has been associated with decreased risk of cancers”]

Mushrooms evoke an almost-forgotten childhood memory of tromping through a forest in Austria with my grandfather, breathing in the aroma of wet earth. He had an amazing knowledge, honed through severe hunger having lived through World Wars I and II, not only of mushrooms, but all edible forest plants. Taking those mushrooms into the kitchen to sauté with a little bit of butter made for heavenly bites that I can still savor.

Mushroom Barley Risotto
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Servings
4 - 6
Servings
4 - 6
Mushroom Barley Risotto
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Servings
4 - 6
Servings
4 - 6
Ingredients
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Instructions
  1. Heat expeller-pressed canola oil in medium saucepan. Add onion and cook over medium heat until it begins to turn transparent. Add mushrooms and cook until edges of mushrooms are browned.
  2. Add carrots, garlic and barley and cook, mixing for 3 – 5 more minutes.
  3. Add thyme, bay leaves and 2 cups chicken broth. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer until broth is almost absorbed, about 5 minutes. Add remaining broth 1/2 cup at a time; as it gets absorbed, add more until barley is tender, about 45 – 50 minutes.
  4. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
  5. Serve with chopped parsley on top.
Recipe Notes

A Color My Food Original Recipe

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Pumpkin Shrimp Curry

Curry Powder has a number of valuable health benefits, including the prevention of cancer, protection against heart disease, reduces Alzheimer’s disease symptoms, eases pain and inflammation, boosts bone health, and increases the liver’s ability to remove toxins from the body.”

Facts about Curry Powder

Pumpkin Shrimp Curry
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Simply yum. Make it vegan by using red lentils or garbanzo beans instead of shrimp. Or replace shrimp with chicken or even grass-fed beef tips. Onion, garlic, broccoli (or cauliflower) and pumpkin are super foods, loaded with nutrients—making this an immunity boosting dish. Curry and turmeric also have health benefits.
Pumpkin Shrimp Curry
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Simply yum. Make it vegan by using red lentils or garbanzo beans instead of shrimp. Or replace shrimp with chicken or even grass-fed beef tips. Onion, garlic, broccoli (or cauliflower) and pumpkin are super foods, loaded with nutrients—making this an immunity boosting dish. Curry and turmeric also have health benefits.
Ingredients
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Instructions
  1. Heat canola oil in a large saucepan over medium heat. Add onion and ginger; sauté until soft, about 8 minutes. Add garlic; cook for 1 minute. Add curry, coriander, cumin and turmeric; cook, stirring 1 -2 minutes. Stir in plum tomato, pumpkin purée and vegetable broth; and cook about 5 minutes. 3. Add coconut milk, simmer, covered, for 15 minutes. 4. Add shrimp, broccoli, green beans and lime juice and cook over low heat until shrimp, broccoli, and green beans are cooked, about 10 minutes. 5. Add spinach and mix in, cooking an additional 3 – 5 minutes just until it is wilted.
  2. Serve over cooked rice. Top with chopped cilantro, and toasted pumpkin seeds (or chopped nuts) Serve chopped jalapeño or Serrano pepper on the side.
Recipe Notes

Modified from http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/printerfriendly/Pumpkin-Shrimp-Curry-368281" target="_blank">Epicurious: Pumpkin Shrimp Curry

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