Chicken Chickpea Pasta

I’ve been inundating you with desserts lately – not that there’s anything wrong with that, but when I looked in my queue, there are several more desserts to come, so I though I should toss in a quick and healthy dinner.

This dish is a breeze, and it’s kid-friendly (although it’s not very photogenic.) The smaller you chop the veggies, the faster it will cook up, and the more your children will accidentally ingest. Amounts and types of veggies are flexible.

Chicken Chickpea Pasta

olive oil for sauteing
1 small onion, finely dice
5 whole carrots, peeled and finely diced
2 cloves of garlic, pressed or finely minced
2 chicken breasts, large dice
salt and pepper
2 cans chickpeas, drained and rinsed
2 large handfuls of fresh spinach
juice from one lemon
1 lb cooked pasta – reserve a bit of cooking liquid
cherry tomatoes, sliced in half
grated parmigiano reggiano for serving

1) Heat a few tablespoons olive oil in a large skillet. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of salted water to boil and cook your pasta (I like a short pasta in this dish.) Sauté onion and carrots until just beginning to soften. Add in chicken, garlic, salt and pepper. Cook until chicken is done.

2) Stir in chickpeas, spinach, and lemon juice – cook until chickpeas are warmed and spinach is wilted. Remove from heat and stir in warm pasta and cherry tomatoes. Add in some reserved pasta liquid if dish is too dry. Serve with parmigiano reggiano.

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Hibiscus Lemon Balm Ice Pop

As the weather turns sultry, my fetish for ice pops rises once again. The concept is so easy – a seasonal fruit puree (or in this case a sexy herbal tea), a simple syrup, and voila – you have an ice pop worthy of guests, your children, or whomever needs something cold and sweet that day.

My friends and fellow Wisconsinites over at Burp! Where Food Happens are doing a series on seasonal summer herbs, and a recent post on simple syrups inspired me to get out my popsicle sticks. This particular ice pop is very sophisticated, and while appropriate for anyone needing a pick-me-up on a hot summer day, would also be an elegant replacement for a sorbet course at a fancy-schmancy dinner party.

Hibiscus Lemon Balm Ice Pops
makes 5  2.5 oz popsicles (my ice pop molds are rather diminutive)

1/2 cup water
1/2 cup sugar
1 small bunch lemon balm
2 bags hibiscus tea (I used Tazo’s Passion)
1 1/3 cups water

1) Heat 1/2 cup water in small saucepan until almost boiling. Stir in 1/2 cup sugar until dissolved. Toss in lemon balm, and let steep for at least 30 minutes. Strain syrup to remove lemon balm.

2) Boil 1 1/3 cups water. Steep tea bags for at least 30 minutes. Remove tea bags.

3) Combine tea and simple syrup. Pour into ice pop molds and freeze until solid.

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Mama Honey’s Strawberry Bread

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I was able to sneak away the other day. I left ere break of day – which is quite a feat when you have a 2 month old and a two year old. My eldest was still sleeping, I left the baby on my snoozing husband’s chest, and I stole out of the house and drove directly to the nearest berry farm. Strawberry season is fleeting here in the Upper Midwest. You blink, and you miss ’em.

Since I went on a weekday, I was accompanied by strawberry lovin’ seniors – and let me tell you, I was duly impressed by the core strength this group had. My lower back was aching as I crouched over my row, trying to fill my flat within an hour before my cell phone began to ring with pleas from my dear husband to come home and feed the baby. But these old folks, they were pickin’ when I got there, and pickin’ when I left. I need to start doing more crunches.

The dear woman picking the row next to me would spout out a song fragment every few minutes. I think she must have been singing in her head, and the music overflowed from time to time. She seemed to favor Abba – take a chance on me! It made my morning escape all the sweeter.

Now, besides eating a ton of berries fresh, freezing a few bags for smoothies, attempting strawberry freezer jam for the first time, and combining these red lovelies with rhubarb in various concoctions, I was looking for something else that was a little different.

This recipe drew me solely on the name (and the fact that it called for 2 cups of fresh strawberries, which I definitely had.)

First, I thought it would have honey in it, and anything with honey in it is pretty good. It didn’t. The recipe belonged to a woman named Mama Honey. And that’s the second reason – what a great nickname! When I turn 50, I want people to call me Mama Honey.The original lives in Texas, so I don’t think she’ll mind. I am a mama, and I’m a beekeeper, so I’m qualified to carry the moniker, right? But since you can’t nickname yourself, you all will have to remember for the next 17 years, and then start calling me by my new name then. Thank you in advance.

This recipe was utterly delicious, and to be honest, I was a little surprised. I mean, I knew it would be good, but this is one of those recipes whose finished product transcends its ingredients. Based on everything you’re putting in the bowl, you think it will be good. But something happens in the oven –  and WOW. There is a ton of cinnamon in this recipe, which to be honest, I almost omitted or reduced. Strawberries and cinnamon seemed like odd company to me. Cinnamon is all toasty autumn, and strawberries are bright summer. But, I’m glad I didn’t, because I think the cinnamon is the secret. It gives the bread (really, almost a cake) a lovely caramel color, and a depth of flavor that is nuanced and deep – the bread really doesn’t taste ‘cinnamony’ at all.

Go get yourself some berries, and make some today. Drink with lemonade, and if feeling decadent, top with a bit of freshly whipped cream. And feel free to eat it for breakfast (I feel like I say that a little too often around here – although breakfast at our house is fun.)

Mama Honey’s Strawberry Bread, adapted from Cook’s Country America’s Best Lost Recipes (I know, enough already, but I just can’t get enough of this cookbook, and it’s due back to the library this week.)

3 cups flour
1 T cinnamon
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
4 eggs
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
2 cups strawberries, hulled and chopped

1) Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Grease and flour two 9×5 inch loaf pans.

2) Whisk the flour, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt in a large bowl. Whisk the eggs, sugar, and oil in a separate bowl.

3) Make a well in the flour, and add the egg/sugar mixture. Stir until mixed well. Stir in the strawberries, and divide between the two loaf pans.

4) Bake until a toothpick comes out of the center of the loaf clean, 50-60 minutes. Cool in pans about 10 minutes, then remove from loaf pan and cool on rack.

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Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato Pizza (BLT-P)

Happy Father’s Day! We didn’t do anything fancy for dinner – my husband is just not that kind of dad. But I did combine pizza, bacon, and ranch dressing, and he was happy (although he probably would have been just as happy without the greens.)

I also attempted a new pizza dough technique – no kneading. It is supposed to yield a more tender crust, and I think it was successful, not to mention a cinch to put together. My children were in super-needy mode yesterday, so it was nice to have a pizza dough that didn’t need much.

Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato Pizza

1 cup warm water
2 1/2 tsp active dry yeast (or one envelope)
1 tsp sugar
a generous glug of olive oil, plus more for bowl
3 cups bread flour
1 tsp salt
about 3 good handfuls of mozzarella cheese
2 small tomatoes, very thinly sliced (one red and one yellow if you’re going for looks)
8 slices bacon, chopped and cooked
about 2 good handfuls of baby lettuce
1/4 cup ranch dressing

1) Dissolve yeast and sugar in 1 cup warm water, let sit for a few minutes until foamy. Add olive oil (about a 4-5 second pour).

2) Combine flour and salt in bowl. Add yeast mixture, and stir with a wooden spoon until mixed. Finish mixing with your hands until all ingredients are mixed, but don’t do any serious kneading. This should take you no more than a minute or two. Dough should be tacky, but not super-sticky (it’s easier if you put a little olive oil on your hands.)

3) Coat a bowl and your dough ball with olive oil, and let rise, covered, in a warm draft-free place for at least an hour.

4) Preheat your oven to 500 degrees. If using a pizza stone, let this preheat with the oven, ideally for 20-30 minutes. Again, coat your hands in olive oil, and spread a little on a piece of parchment paper. Stretch out dough to desired thinness. Move parchment paper and dough onto pizza peel or inverted cookie sheet.

5) Spread out cheese, add tomatoes, and sprinkle bacon bits on dough. Bake on stone or cookie sheet for 10-12 minutes.

6) Remove from oven and add lettuce, and drizzle with ranch dressing.

Ranch Dressing (if you’re feeling ambitious, and have some fresh herbs laying around)

1 cup greek yogurt
1 shallot, grated
juice from 1/2 lemon
1/2 cup fresh herbs, chopped (I typically use mostly chives, with dill, basil, and a tiny bit of oregano)
buttermilk, amount needed to thin to desired consistency
hot sauce or sriracha, to taste
salt and pepper to taste

Whisk yogurt, shallot, lemon juice, and herbs together. Whisk in buttermilk until you reach a consistency you like for dressing. Add hotsauce and salt and pepper until it tastes good to you. This will keep for about a week in the fridge.

Enjoy pizza with a happy dad and some beer.

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Kid Snacks: Monkey Malt

Before my son tries a new food (and sometimes before every meal) he asks me if a monkey would eat this. If a monkey would, he’s all set. This seems like an odd dietary restriction, but I think if more people followed the ‘monkey diet’, they might be better off. I looked up ‘howler monkey’ on Wikipedia to confirm:

“Howlers eat mainly top canopy leaves, together with fruit, buds, flowers, and nuts. They need to be careful not to eat too much of certain species of mature leaf in one sitting, as some of the leaves they eat contain toxins that can poison the monkey. Howler monkeys are also known to occasionally raid birds nests and chicken coops and consume the eggs.”

Seems like a good enough strategy to me. My son also does a killer monkey call. If I can figure out how to get audio on here, I’ll share. In the meantime, here’s a favorite snack of my son. It is filling, so don’t serve this one too close to dinner. It’s good for mama monkeys too.

Monkey Malt

1/2 cup frozen strawberries
1 frozen banana
2 T chocolate hemp protein powder
1 T peanut or almond butter
1 T nutella
milk to cover ingredients in blender

Whir together until smooth. You can find chocolate hemp protein powder at fancy groceries, health food stores, or Trader Joe’s. It’s a great way to sneak some extra protein into your kiddo.

Here’s a video from you tube that is monkey-related, and cracks my son and me up. It’s musical. If you want more fun, search for ‘school bus races’ on you tube. Hilarious!

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