Yesterday:
B: Frittata, bacon, coffee, cream
35 minute hard workout
S: very small section of more Frittata
L: arm roast with carrots, sweet potato
D: spaghetti squash Pad Thai with roasted chicken
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B: 1 piece wg toast, coffee
L: 3 small chicken enchiladas with green chili sauce (no cheese)
D: 1 chicken thigh, rice pilaf, green beans, 1 glass chardonnay
Yesterday:
B: Frittata, bacon, coffee, cream
35 minute hard workout
S: very small section of more Frittata
L: arm roast with carrots, sweet potato
D: spaghetti squash Pad Thai with roasted chicken
That pad thai recipe is a staple in our house. Love it!
This is the one from "Well Fed", and it is indeed a new comfort food for me! I used almond butter for the sunshine sauce, and so far I've been unable to find the "5-spice" (whatever the name of that asian spice is), but it is quite yummy regardless.
This weekend I am going to try her recipe for Citrus Carnitas if I can find a good pork shoulder that won't break my budget. Have you tried that one yet?
What I really like about her recipes are the spices. Most are common, but I've never really been too brave with the use of them and the Well Fed recipes have been introducing me to a new worldPractical Paleo does the same - they are my "go-to" cookbooks. I've also an electronic paleo cookbook but I really need to break down and print it...
Last edited by Catrin; 01-30-2013 at 08:37 AM.
You should be able to find the Asian Five Spice in any grocery store spice section. It's not that uncommon. Try Trader Joe's if it's not in your regular store.
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THAT'S ITPerhaps I've just not been looking in the right place. I assumed Trader Joe's wouldn't have it since Whole Foods doesn't. Thanks! Now I need to find a better way to store my little batches of bulk spices - those little bitty bags are getting irritating and cluttering my cabinet. Makes using spices much more affordable though!
I did try the citrus carnitas. They would have been delicious, except that I burnt them. When she says, "watch like a hawk!" at the end, she means it! I used a pork loin that I already had and I think I should have used a fattier cut for better, moister results.
I love the Czech meatballs....staple #2!
I sub ground turkey or ground beef for most things. Lamb isn't in the budget.
Oh, while you're trying things, definitely try the shepherd's pie!
Around here, Whole Foods occasionally has sales on their ground lamb that is comparable to the ground beef I get from themThat being said, it will probably be ground beef, though I am looking for a local farmer to hook up for lamb. I recently found a local source for grass-fed bison that is actually pretty affordable - at least the kind of cuts that I am interested in! nothing wrong with braising the so-called "lesser" cuts!
Czech meatballs is a staple in our house, too. I do those with half ground pork and half ground beef. Yum!
I can't eat the pad thai recipe anymore. I made it the day before I got a miserable stomach bug last year and when my husband reheated the the leftovers, the smell made me sick again. I just can't even think about making it anymore!
The citrus carnitas are AWESOME! A couple of things to note: 1) use a very heavy bottomed, high quality pan. Thin ones suck and will not only burn the meat, but will make it stick so bad you want to cry. 2) country style boneless pork 'ribs' are the same thing as pork shoulder but already cut into strips and it's often significantly cheaper than the whole roast - so keep your eyes peeled. 3) don't use a super deep pot or you will be cooking these things for what seems like DAYS. I found I had the best luck doing them in a enameled cast iron dutch oven.
And if you haven't tried it yet, make her sausage seasoning. I make it in double batches and we use it to season grass-fed ground beef for any other recipe that calls for sausage and it ROCKS!
Also, try the bacon apples exactly as written. They are SOOO good!
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Would anybody be willing/able to share the citrus carnita recipe or provide a link for it? It sound yummy.
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Here is a blog that has the recipe
http://www.mmmmpaleo.com/2012/05/rec...-carnitas.html
GLC - thanks for the tips! I will certainly be on the lookout for the "ribs". I've a 7-quart enamel dutch oven and while it is quite deep, it is probably the only thing I have that is appropriate. My other cookware is low-temperature stainless steel - and while it is quite good it might be a bit thin for this purpose.
Thanks the rec. on the sausage seasoning. I've been experimenting with this on my own as it seems that regardless of the quality of the pork itself that I've found in bulk pre-mixed sausage that they always have canola oil or other ingredients that I won't use.
The dutch oven should be fine. The last time I made these, I didn't have my dutch oven (it's still at the old house) so I improvised with a super heavy bottom stainless steel stock pot. The problem is that the stock pot was too narrow across the bottom so the pork was piled too high and therefore I needed too much water. I also kind of forgot about them and had a similar experience to what Melissa describes here:
http://www.theclothesmakethegirl.com...pork-carnitas/
Indy - the above blog is the home space of the woman who wrote 'Well Fed', the book we keep talking about. Her pad thai recipe is on the blog too as that is where I first made it (before the cookbook was released). She also has a variation of the carnitas that makes a 'Greek' version in her 'Deconstructing Gyro Salad" post which are very good too.
Last edited by GLC1968; 01-30-2013 at 02:24 PM.
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