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Eating Seasonally This Winter: A Gift To You and Your Wallet

This is a guest post by Rachael from KitchenCourses.com.

During the coldest months of the year, so many of us flock towards meals that are heavy, meaty, and hearty. We all tend to rely on foods that warm us up and warm us through, but sometimes forget to get enough fruits and vegetables onto our plates.

Eating “in season” is one of the most simple and cost effective ways to get more fruits and vegetables to your plate any time of year. When you eat fruits and vegetables that are in season, the flavors will jump out at you, the nutrients found in them shoots through the roof, and the price you’ll pay is significantly cheaper than buying these same ingredients in their off-season.

Some of the produce picks that will soon be making their way to your local market in the next few weeks are: citrus fruits, dark leafy greens, and root vegetables. Here are three recipes that will have you saving money this winter and keeping your nutritional levels high.

Spinach Salad with Clementines, Feta, and Walnuts

Serves four

  • 1-10 oz. bag fresh baby spinach leaves
  • 2 clementine oranges, peeled and segmented
  • ¼ cup crumbled feta cheese
  • ¼ cup walnuts
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • 2 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • Juice of 1 clementine orange
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp pepper
  1. In a large bowl, create the dressing by adding olive oil, vinegar, juice of one clementine orange, salt, and pepper. Whisk together to combine.
  2. Next, add fresh baby spinach leaves and toss to evenly coat the leaves with the dressing. Sprinkle on feta cheese and walnuts.
  3. Divide evenly among four plates and serve.

Curried Sweet Potato Soup

Serves four

  • 2 lbs sweet potatoes
  • 1 onion
  • 2 tbsp butter
  • 2 tbsp curry powder
  • 3 cups chicken stock (or vegetable stock)
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Peel and cut the sweet potatoes into cubes. Spread into an even layer on a roasting pan or 9 x 13” glass baking dish. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, then place into the oven to roast for 60 minutes.
  2. Within the last few minutes of the sweet potatoes, prepare an onion, by cutting into cubes. Preheat a soup pot over medium high heat and add butter. Sauté onions until translucent, about ten minutes.
  3. Once the sweet potatoes are done being roasted, transfer to the soup pot along with the onions. Add the curry powder and stock and bring to a boil. When the soup has reached a boil, lower the heat to medium low and simmer for 15 minutes. Puree with an immersion blender or work in batches to create a smooth velvety texture. Adjust the seasonings, then divide among four bowls and serve.

Kale and Tomato Pasta

Serves four

  • 1 lb whole wheat pasta
  • 1 bunch fresh kale, rinsed
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 2 Roma tomatoes, chopped
  • 1 ½ cups crushed tomatoes
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp pepper
  1. Heat a large pot of water over medium high heat to prepare for boiling noodles.
  2. Meanwhile, prepare the kale by slicing the leafy parts away from the hearty stalk. Tear the leaves into two-inch pieces. Heat a pan over medium high heat with olive oil. Add minced garlic and kale. Sauté the kale leaves, adding one tablespoon water to help steam them. Once the kale has cooked for a few minutes, it will appear bright green and wilted.
  3. Drop the pasta into the boiling water and add a pinch of salt to the water to season it. Cook according to package directions. Strain.
  4. In the same pan that was used to prepare the kale, add the tomatoes and pasta and heat over medium heat. Add the crushed tomatoes, salt, and pepper. Stir to combine and allow the flavors to mingle about ten minutes.
  5. Adjust the seasonings with salt and pepper. Divide among four plates and serve.

Eating fresh seasonal produce will benefit you any time of year and these winter recipes will be sure to get you through the cold spell with a full stomach and wallet.

How do you make the most of winter produce?

Rachael is the blogger behind KitchenCourses.com and is the author of How to Cook For Yourself: A Complete Beginner’s Guide. She writes about her passion for food, eating well while saving money, and inspires people to get familiar with their kitchens and cook for themselves.

Grandma’s Easy Recipes for the Rookie Cook

This is a guest post by Maggie Voelker (and Grandmother).

I’m not sure which was more traumatic, saying goodbye to my college friends or my meal plan when I graduated from college this past May. That precious swipe card gave me access to every type of cuisine and thus, prevented me from ever really learning how to cook. So when I moved into my apartment and realized I now had to provide my own food, I immediately ran to my Betty Crocker-esque grandmother to ask for simple recipes and directions.

In true grandma form, she sent me a handful of basic snacks and meals – complete with rhymes. So, recent college grads, cooking-newbies, or hurried mothers, listen up for a few simple recipes from my rhyming grandma.

“Really hungry—must be quick! A couple ideas to do the trick.”

Cottage Cheese and Fruit

Top 1 cup low-fat cottage cheese with ½ cup of your favorite fruit. Grandma suggests grapes, pears or peaches.

Microwave Sweet Potato

Microwave a sweet potato, scoop out the potato and mash. Add a slice of butter and sprinkle with cinnamon.

“This is what I’m going to do! Make myself a pot of stew.”

Place a small chuck roast in a heavy pan and cover with water. Add two beef bouillon cubes and simmer on medium heat for two hours. Stir occasionally. In the meantime, cut up potatoes, celery, carrots, green beans and onions to add to the pot. Add salt and pepper and simmer for another hour. Check meat and veggies for tenderness. Add two tablespoons of flour to thicken the stew and enjoy!

If you have a crock pot—just throw everything in at once and forget it!

“Hamburger seems to have a way of saying, eat me anyway!”

Chili

Brown one pound of ground beef and one onion in a saucepan over medium heat. Add one beef bouillon cube, 1 ½ cups of water, 1 can (14.5 oz) of stewed tomatoes, and 1 can (15 oz) of kidney beans. Season with salt and pepper, a pinch of cumin, chili powder and garlic powder. Bring the mixture to a boil then reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes.

Sloppy Jo

Brown one pound of hamburger. Add 1 cup of ketchup, 1 cup of water and a squirt of mustard. Add salt, pepper, and a dash of sugar. Bring to boil than simmer on low heat for 15 minutes.
Enjoy on a bun!

“Chickens really beat the test, be it a leg or a breast!”

Marinate a chicken breast in barbeque sauce or your favorite salad dressing while you’re at work. Grill the chicken breast on the George Forman or sautee in a lightly oiled skillet on high
heat for 5 minutes on each side. Check to see that there is no pink in the center and that the juices run clear.

Cook a few chicken breasts at a time and chop up the left overs for a salad. Add mayo and pickle relish to leftover chicken and have a chicken salad sandwich.

“I hope this helps and is a winner when you ask tonight, ‘What’s for dinner?’”

Enjoy grandma’s simple meals—I know I did!

Maggie Voelker graduated this past May and is now working as a writer in Indianapolis for a discount socks provider. In addition to developing a new found love of thermal socks and learning to cook, Maggie enjoys being active, traveling and spending time with family and friends.

Ten Things You Need to Know About Sweet Potatoes

  1. Umami BurgerThe sweet potato is the 6th main world food crop and 90 percent of the world’s crop is grown in Asia.
  2. The sweet potato is not even remotely related to the yam. The yam is related to grasses. The sweet potato is related to the morning glories.
  3. The raw sweet potatoes  are packed with several nutrients: calcium (30 milligrams), potassium (337 milligrams), vitamins A (709 grams) and C 92.4 milligrams), beta-carotene (8509 grams), magnesium (25 milligrams),
  4. There are 2 types of sweet potatoes: the pale yellow with dry flesh and the dark orange with the plumper in shape and sweeter than the yellow type.
  5. There is an annual three-day festival in Benton, Kentucky that is devoted to sweet potatoes. It is called the “The Tater Day Festival“.  The festival is held on the first Monday in April.
  6. Oprah Winfrey promotes eating more sweet potatoes for its health benefits and their importance in traditional Southern cuisine.
  7. Sweet potatoes make great “fries”.  Just substitute them for your white potatoes when you have a craving for French-fries.
  8. In China, sweet potatoes, usually the yellow variety is baked in a large iron drum and sold by street vendors, during the winter.
  9. Pizza restaurants such as Pizza Hut and Dominoes offer sweet potatoes, as they are a popular topping in Korea.
  10. Companies in the United States and around the world are creating alcohol fuel from sweet potatoes.

For more information on Sweet Potatoes see Sweet Potato website.

Creative Commons License photo credit: jchong

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