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Power Lunch

18 Apr

Hi friends! Wow, it feels like a long time since I’ve posted. A few busy weeks at work and the sudden decision to sell our home and move out made blogging kiiiiind of a low priority. Real life and fatigue just got in the way of my blogging mojo for a while, but things are settling down for us, boxes are unpacked, and dinner is expanding beyond soft boiled eggs, turkey smokies, and cereal (not all together!). It’s only fitting that I bounce back with a post about how I power through the day – with the help of a good lunch!

Mr. ST and I have a lot of food habits in common but lunch is not one of them. He can go almost the entire day without eating – a small nosh midday maybe – and then eat after work just to keep hunger at bay until I come home later and make dinner. I, however, will crash and burn come 3 p.m. if I haven’t had a nutritious and satisfying lunch.

Having watched my co-workers lament the expense of takeout lunch and the challenge of preparing, packing and remembering to bring a brown bag, I thought it time to give you a peek into my lunch box. Plus, whether it’s for health or financial belt-tightening, brown bagging always seems to be an “in” resolution. And if you already gave up on those resolutions, maybe I can help you get back on.

Strawberry Swiss Chard Salad with Honey Mustard Dressing

Before I continue this attempt at inspirational writing, I would just like to give voice to my inner cynic and say I abhor the standard discourse of the Rachel Ray fast and easy meal prep devotees. They always focus on family dining and DINNER as the most important and hardest meal of the day to plan. But the rest of the world—single, coupled, pet-owning, workaholic, fitness freaks, lazybones—we all have busy days, or at least ones when we DO NOT feel like cooking, let alone contemplate what we should eat tomorrow! Whatever your lifestyle, we can all benefit from healthy, convenience fridge-hacking skills. ‘Scuse me while I get off my soapbox now.

Below I’ve compiled a list of my favourite power lunches. Well-rounded meals, easy to pack and go, that keep me full but also give me energy to get through the rest of my day (which usually includes an hour or an hour and a half of working out).

As if bloggers need any more disclaimers, I have one. I love spending an entire afternoon in food prep zen. Something about the grey light of sun-filtered rain clouds coming through the skylight makes all the veggie chopping, granola bar baking, and soup simmering feel positively meditative. Other times, the only thing better after a long run, a hot shower and some stretching in front the fire is a big sandwich, my slipper socks and a marathon of Sons of Anarchy (this is the honest truth and not deliberate precocious alliteration—I swear.) To that end, my five-minute power lunches are sometimes put together on the fly, sometimes prepped in advance, and usually combined with a portable quick snack to make a complete meal.

Power lunches, ST-style:

Granola parfait: Greek yogurt, homemade granola, leftover pantry dried fruit, diced seasonal fruit and sliced banana with sprinkled nuts and/or coconut).

Chickpeak goji berry salad with feta: I usually add more veggies to this, reduce the almonds a bit and use dried cranberries instead of goji berries.

Crisper-cleaner Bean salad: As a variation on the above salad, take whatever beans you’ve got left in your pantry, chop up some of the raw veggies left in your pantry (I usually have knobs of cucumber, parts of bell peppers and a half a red onion hanging out in there). Make it different by switching up your dressings!

Ants on a log: Celery sticks plus peanut butter, dotted with golden raisins or dried cranberries. Some of the snacks from childhood are more genius than I knew at the time!

Turkey Quinoa Burgers

Bulgur Veggie Burgers

Turkey Quinoa Burgers with Ginger and Edamame

Grown Up Granola Bars

Grown Up Granola Bars

Rye crackers with roasted cherry tomatoes, sliced avocados and hummus: Try The Healthy Everythingtarian’s Spicy Buffalo Hummus or Eat Live Run’s Jalapeno Cheddar Hummus.

The Healthy Everythingtarian's Spicy Buffalo Hummus

Carrot Ginger Coconut Soup (currently I am in love with Kashi Pita Crisp crackers alongside my soups. They have the texture of a pita chip and the flavour of a Wheat Thin!).

Ancient Grain and Mushroom Soup

Ancient Grain and Mushroom Soup

Just to state the obvious, I also rely on dinner leftovers some days too! The following recipes always net a few lunch portions and they re-heat well. I usually pack them with a piece of fruit or two and a grown up granola bar.

Almost Cheeseless Pasta Casserole

Stacked Roasted Veggie Enchiladas

Sweet Potato Aloo Gobi

Sweet Potato Aloo Gobi

Nigella Lawson’s Croque Monsieur Bake

For more lunch inspiration, check out the very awesome and hilarious Holly the Everythingtarian who did a clever little post of her favourite 5-minute meal and then hauled in a bunch of awesome reader suggestions in her comments. If nothing there turns your crank, try Ann’s post on packing lunch in five minutes flat.

Happy munching!

Bulgur Veggie Burgers with Lime Mayo

13 Mar

I’m back with more healthy convenience food to replace a processed over-priced counterpart! After the Turkey Quinoa Burgers made such an easy and satisfying week of lunches, I decided to make up some of these great bulgur veggie burgers with lime mayo.

I ate these for lunch with some green onions, cubed avocado, and roasted cherry tomatoes. You could also try breaking one in pieces over some greens and using the lime mayo as a dressing – I make mine fairly thin by upping the lime juice.

This recipe is inspired by this one from Epicurious. PSssst Nickey – yes, these are the ones we first tried making together at your house AGES ago.

Bulgur Veggie Burgers with Lime Mayo

Makes 4 patties

  • 1/2 cup chopped onion
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil plus additional for brushing
  • 1/2 cup bulgur
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 cup canned pinto beans, rinsed and drained (I used a bean medley)
  • 2  tablespoons soy sauce (tamari tastes great too if you have it)
  • 3/4 cup walnuts (2 1/2 ounces)
  • 2 garlic cloves, coarsely chopped
  • 1/2 cup packed cilantro sprigs
  • 3/4 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1/4 teaspoon cayenne
  • 1/4 cup mayonnaise
  • 1/4 teaspoon grated lime zest
  • 2 teaspoon fresh lime juice

Cook the onion in olive oil in a small heavy saucepan over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until golden, 5 to 7 minutes. Add bulgur and water and cook, covered, over low heat until water is absorbed, about 10 minutes. You want it to still be chewy. Transfer to a bowl and stir in the beans and soy sauce.

Pulse the walnuts, garlic, cilantro, cumin, cayenne, and an 1/8- 1/4 teaspoon of salt until roughly chopped. Add the bulgur mixture and pulse until combined and finely chopped. If should look about like this.

Form into four patties – I use a half cup measuring cup to portion it, roll it in my hand and then plate it. Chill for at least 20 minutes. The longer you chill them, the firmer they’ll be when you need to handle and grill them later.

While patties chill, stir together mayonnaise, zest, and juice. Of course use as much juice as you like. I’m not really a fan of mayo’s flavour, so I might try this with plain greek yogurt some day.

Cook over medium-high heat in 1 T oil for 4 minutes per site in a 12 inch grill pan.

Holly did a great post about cooking by taste and feel and letting go of recipes, which is something I try to inspire in others too. It has been far more fulfilling for as a hobby cook than the many years I spent voraciously bookmarking recipes and then near-robotically crossing them off the list one dinner plate at a time! These veggie burgers would make a great base for an un-recipe (as Holly calls them) since you can vary the nuts, beans and herbs to your own tastes. I think I want to try swapping the pinto beans for roasted sweet potato, swap the walnuts for cashews, and add some curry powder to the mix next time.

Leftover Revelations

3 Jan

I abhor food waste and am on a constant pledge to be more resourceful with what’s on hand. But over the holidays there were only so many rows of red velvet brownies I could comfortably part with (I sent both sides of the family home with some!).  There were only so many prosciutto wrapped pears I could reasonably justify on an hourly basis. I finally decided to get creative with the leftover appetizers from our Christmas Day graze and turned them into some great main dishes all their own. I humbly suggest you might even make these dishes the original intention for your ingredients! I strongly believe eating leftovers does NOT have to mean eating the same thing as the day before.

Roasted fennel and squash salad with walnuts, goat’s milk feta, and balsamic drizzle

Butternut squash and goat’s milk feta (from my kick-ass brunch frittata)

Roasted sliced fennel bulbs (from the afternoon antipasti platter)

Walnuts (from a million hours of baking)

Balsamic reduction (My biggest Christmas shortcut—I just bought a bottle for finishing dishes and will probably do so forever more.)

Arugula (from a Christmas Day prosciutto-wrapped pear salad)

I also had a last minute instinct to add pomegranate seeds to this salad, post-photo. They added a punch of bright tang so I suggest you do the same.

 Instead of making a tortiere for Christmas Day—knowing we were eating munchies all day—I opted to turn my tortiere recipe into a meatball. Actually, I turned it into 56 meatballs for a holiday when we were having a maximum of 10-11 people over two days. At least I had flash frozen the raw meatballs days earlier so I only needed to deal with about 25 senselessly cooked meatballs.

Tortiere Slider Meatball Subs

And yes, that IS a meatball garnish on Mr. ST’s plate.

Ingredients:

Parker House, Parisian, whatever dinner rolls are kicking around after dinner

Tortiere Meatballs (recipe below)

Mushroom Thyme Gravy (I used this one and would recommend adding a good dash of Worcestershire sauce and reducing the heavy cream.)

Comte cheese (a medium-firm French cheese like a combination of cheddar and gruyere. Leftover from our awesome Ottavio cheese board).

Arugula

Butter mixed with a few cloves of minced garlic (according to your taste)

To make:

Spread some garlic butter on your rolls and toast until golden.

Sprinkle with some Arugula and finely grated cheese

Top with meatballs and drizzle with mushroom gravy.

Sprinkle some more finely grated cheese on top.

Tourtiere Meatballs

Makes about 50 1.5” meatballs

Ingredients

1-1/2 cups cubed peeled potatoes
1 lb lean ground pork
1 and a half  cups sliced mushrooms
3/4 cup finely chopped celery
1 onions, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1/2 tsp dried thyme
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp cinnamon
1 egg

½ cup breadcrumbs

To make:
In saucepan of boiling salted water, cover and cook potato until tender, about 12 minutes. Drain and mash; set aside.

Meanwhile, in deep skillet, sautee mushrooms, celery, onions, and garlic. Add salt, pepper, thyme, cloves, and cinnamon.Mix with the mashed potato. It should taste a little bit over-seasoned, since you’ve still got to add the pork. Let cool.*

Mix raw pork with cooled, cooked filling and add one egg. Adding half a cup of breadcrumbs if needed. Flash freeze individual meat balls on baking sheets so they can be bagged once froze.

When ready to serve, bake in the oven in a grease roasting pan at 350 degrees for about twenty minutes, depending on the size of your balls. Stir them into some warm gravy and serve.

You could also pan fry them but I would eliminate the mashed potato in that case—these balls are delicate (sorry, couldn’t help it).

*Note: it was my original intention to be absolutely precious and put a small ball of mashed potato in the centre of each meatball but time in the kitchen had already far exceeded time spent doing other cheer-inducing activities so I cut myself some slack and watched National Lampoons Christmas Vacation with some shortbread instead.

Do you have any favourite “leftover” recipes from the holidays?

The Best Bites of 2011

2 Jan

This was not the biggest year of travel for the Savoury Traveller household but it was plenty savoury. And we did have quite a few major milestones too.

I finished by MA in Professional Communications.

And we took an epic three-week trip through the East Coast to celebrate, after I presented my thesis at a major conference.

Sister and Brother-in-law ST added the most wonderful ray of sunshine to our lives with the birth of our first nephew Caleb.

I ran my first half marathon (with my Mum who ran the 8K!)

And we started this here blog. This being a blog about the pleasures of the palate, I thought it apro pos to wrap things up with the best bites from 2011.

Best post-workout breakfast

Nature’s Path flax oven waffles topped with natural peanut butter, sliced bananas and a dollop of Krema lemon passion greek yogurt. I can get downright religious in my love of post-workout breakfast food and unlike most of them it even photographs well! The world of running/healthy living/fitness blogs has already given us more than enough internet photos of oatmeal:-)

This little meal set off my major craving for WannaWaffle.

Most creative and inspiring meal

If you are in Halifax, I have one word for you: Gio.

Forget everything you’ve ever thought about hotel food. Yes, this restaurant is located in the Prince George Hotel in downtown Halifax, but it is also a place you will find things like beet risotto with wild mushrooms and edamame (above).

Pork belly and fois gras steam buns with homemade potato chips.

A rhubarb sorbet palate cleanser!

Every bite of this meal was courteously orchestrated by their staff and passionately planned by the kitchen.

Best meal from my own kitchen

What’s the first food that popped into my head instantly? What I want to make right-this-second? Homemade Bibimbap.

Best holiday meal

Brined turkey with curry spices and cranberry chutney at my Dad’s house for Thanksgiving. Brining is where it’s at! The turkey was well-seasoned and was the most moist I’ve ever had—a true accomplishment given the size of this beast. My tastebuds are a bit biased since I ran that half marathon the day before!

Best local restaurant discovery

Although we were romanced by our recent trip to Prima Strada, it couldn’t rival the decadence of our anniversary dinner at Brasserie L’ecole. I am so ashamed that we live less than ten minutes from this place and it took us five years to visit. Shame on us.

You know it’s good when you still want to take a picture after you’ve half-desecrated the food.

Best food truck/stand experience of 2011

At the November Downtown Winter Market, we sampled El Guapo’s chorizo sandwich with roasted red peppers, arugula and golden-baked-sunshine-in-a-bottle-olive-oil.

A chilly and sunny Saturday morning is a perfect time for chorizo, and what other sandwich of this quality costs just $5 in downtown Victoria? I think you should get one–they’ll be at the market again on January 21st!

I wanted to say La Fogata Lantina, the new Columbian hole-in-the-wall occupying Pig’s former spot over on View Street, however every time I’ve tried to go back to document it for the blog, it’s been closed when it is supposed to be open. So you’ll have to settle for a recommendation that if you see it open, go in. Get a chorizo arepa with extra pineapple sauce. I stumbled home with a goofy grin on my face and that feeling of almost yogic clarity that all is right with the world. If you’re still not convinced, check out Liz and Adrian from the Guilty Kitchen’s post!

Also, JapaDog.

Also, La Taquisa Mexican food in Cook Street Village.

Ok, I failed at this category. I like street food, ok?

Best burger of 2011

Jackalope convinced me of the virtues of the soft bun and that apples have yet another purpose in life. Mr. ST’s vote is for Relish Burger in Saint John.

Best junkfood of 2011

It’s a tie between chocolate covered potato chips and lobster flavoured potato chips—both came from PEI! The former combines salty and sweet and the latter has a shamefully long list of true junk ingredients.

Also, deep fried pickles?

My ass did not need to know about these.

Best Seafood of 2011

If you make it to Cape Breton, do the entire Cabot Trail.

If these views aren’t enough to snag you, then perhaps the fact that the best lobster roll ever and these super light and crispy fries can be found at the only restaurant at the veeeeeery top.

This recommendation comes with the experience of about seven lobster rolls in less than two weeks…..Mr. ST took on the task like it was his life’s calling. He even sampled the McDonald’s lobster roll available in only certain locations within Nova Scotia. I found this to be a bit like how old saggy yogis in India twist and bend their tender bits around sticks and do lunges and such to strengthen the mind and demonstrate commitment. I am not sure which would be more painful—that or a lobster roll made three days ago to McDonald’s standards? The pain Mr. ST will go through to gross others out is truly senseless. But it DOES make me laugh.

Most Bizzare Must-Order Food

Two words: Corn Cheese.

In an empty Korean restaurant in a Halifax strip mall. I tell you this so that if you find yourself at a Korean restaurant with something similar, you please take the chance.

It was delivered to the table sizzling and crunchy and totally confusing. “Embrace weird things on the menu of life” I think I found my tombstone statement. Sorry, it must be all this dang cheese.

What are your favourite food memories of 2011?

A rare species

23 Nov

Jackalope Bistro

(778) 430-5673

760 Yates St Map

Victoria, BC V8W3S2
Jackalope Bistro on Urbanspoon

The second stage of our burger minimoon took us to Jackalope Bistro on Saturday. Tucked away in the Odeon Alley on Yates Street, this little place expresses its reverence for the burger in a way no one else does. There’s something about being humble and straightforward in one’s homage that’s admirable. The depth of one’s commitment isn’t always measurable by fanfare, price, or long, ingredient name-dropping menus. Listen to this–more life lessons from burgers!

I am proud to say that Jackalope had already won my loyalty back in the summer with its cumin-infused, spicy black bean burger. It was crumbly but crispy and tasted as good as any a good home cook could make. I’m not ashamed to be charmed by a burger joint’s veggie options—it only heightened my bliss over the signature beef burger I tried this time around, which comes with a creamy ranch sauce, aged cheddar, a few thin slices of granny smith apple, and lettuce. This burger is all about the meat. Meat I picked off obsessively in tiny bites, pulling it apart with my tongue, desperate to figure out what gives their ground-in-house-daily patties such lasting beefy flavour. Worcestershire sauce? Fresh parsley? Onion powder? I am still guessing and that is the best endorsement I can give any restaurant. Not only was I in a punch-drunk state of post-burger joy for a good hour, but the flavour is still on my mind.

You might recall from my posts about Bin4 Burgers and Relish Burger that we reside firmly in the “toasted/crusty bun” camp, but if there was ever a place to make me question my faith, it’s Jackalope Bistro. Their super soft, mildly sweet buns from Cobs Bakery are slightly over-sized, which actually serves to keep everything relatively intact.

Mr. ST’s Aussie Burger was loaded with gingered beets, a fried egg, bacon, cheese, ketchup, mustard, and the requisite tomato/lettuce/onion garnish and the only thing to fall out the entire meal was one liiiiittle beet.

We didn’t get any sides this time around but if you are so inclined, they make a very special apple and black pepper coleslaw. Rather than julienne slices of apple, they do a big dice, so there’s a more assertive exchange between peppery, sour, sweet, and creamy elements. The lightness of Jackalope’s food is another reason why it’s a special place. The portions aren’t out of control and the burger itself is enough food for most appetites. Their food is satisfying without feeling gluttonous….which means we can eat it more often (win!).

Jackalope charmed us with inventiveness and simplicity. They think about it, but they don’t OVER-think it. So, if you want a place that puts the love of the burger ahead of all else, pay them a visit! It isn’t reeeeeally a bistro, but it is mythically intriguing, just like its namesake.

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