
Friday, March 20, 2009
A Whole Lotta Food

Thursday, March 12, 2009
More About Couscous
So, I know, couscous isn't that exciting and I blogged about it last time. However, this is different. In the past when I've eaten couscous, I've always had it alongside fish. It was usually fish that I seasoned and cooked and often had an Italian-based flavor (basically garlic and olive oil). Tonight I made coconut crusted tilapia (store bought from Safeway, so I can't take credit for it but it was REAL good). However, the thought of the typical garlic, olive oil, and parmesean couscous didn't mesh, so I tried something I've never really tried before. Sweeter, olive oil-less couscous. How to make the couscous sweeter... hm... ?
Inspired by the Food Network show Chopped, I decided to had to make something with what was available to me. So I fished through the cupboards and found these remarkable ingredients... cinnamon, parsley, oranges, pine nuts, mozzarella, and honey. I figured mozzarella would be the sweeter cheese (choosing between mozzarella, edam, cheddar, & parmesean). Then I used a tiny bit of cinnamon and honey to sweeten and flavor the couscous, toasted the pine nuts, zested the orange, and chopped the parsley. Mix together and POOF, slightly sweetened cinnamon couscous. However, it was still savory enough that it was still good with a bit of salt and pepper. Looking back, I might use orange juice instead of orange zest because it was a bit chewy.
Also with my meal I had the last piece of my peachy pecan cornbread I made earlier in the week. This was another Good Housepeeking recipe that I thoroughly enjoyed aside from the fact that I think my pecans were a little dried out because they were rather bitter. But the recipe is exactly what it sounds like, cornbread, a can of peaches, peach juice, and pecans. Very southern. Very sweet-savory. Very moist, and oddly, very buttery in flavor (the entire pan of cornbread had 2 Tbps of canola oil and 2 Tbsp of margerine so I don't really understand where the butter flavor originated from.
Tomorrow night for dinner... roasted vegetable & turkey burgers. They will be bunless because I'm an idiot and didn't get buns at the store tonight. Still haven't made up my mind about the seafood pizza/goat cheese situation.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Little Bennet Regional Park
[Its all fun and games until someone gets hurt and then its hilarious!] I did not take my camera today because it was so overcast but I did take my binoculars so I could get some practice in. I didn't see anything exciting, but enjoyed watching house wrens, turkey vultures, blue jays, white throated sparrows, and cardinals. We also heard a lot of chickadees, woodpeckers, and angry squirrels. Our loop was approximately 3 miles putting me at a total of 6.8 miles for the month of March.

For dinner tonight I made roasted garlic couscous with imitiation crab meat, toasted pine nuts, parsley, & cherry tomatoes. Turned out pretty good. I've made couscous quite a few times in the past but this was the first time I roasted garlic to put in it.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Walnut Crusted Chicken
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Snow Day & New Improved Blogging Status

So, yesterday, was a snow day. (YAY March snow!!) Kandi took a snow day too and apparently she did not get the memo that snow days are lazy-lay-around-the-house days. She made me go to the gym, which was really better than what I had planned for the day. I went 1.5 miles on the treadmill (I'm not going to count eliptical and bike miles) and that begins my March count. (Too bad I can't count the 5 mi. hike around Sugarloaf from Saturday). Anyway, I don't really have a goal, just thought I'd keep track. My only goal is to run, walk, or hike 10 times during the month of March for a minimum of 20 minutes or a mile, whichever comes first.
Now, to the heart of the matter. I had a mad cooking day. The first thing I made was Maryland Crab Soup with my homemade shrimp stock.
- Crab Meat (Special), about 4-6 oz.
- Shrimp Stock
- Water
- 1 can of green beans
- 1 can of corn
- 1 can of fire roasted tomatoes
- Old Bay
- frozen pearl onions
- 1 carrot & approx. 10 baby carrots
- 2 cloves of garlic
As you can see, my ingredient list was a hodgepodge assortment. A few items I threw in the soup simply to get them out of the house (onions & carrots). I used a ratio of about 1:3 with the shrimp stock to the water but the shrimp stock was still WAY too strong and really hid the crabiness of the soup. The soup is okay, not great. The stock turned out too hot and too salty so the soup primarily tastes like hot salt. Oh well, I think maybe homemade shrimp stock is not for me! Although it turned out okay in my jambalaya I made earlier this week. Oh what the heck, I'll throw that in here too...
- 1 lb. shrimp
- Crab Meat, Special, about 2-4 oz.
- 1 red pepper
- 1 can diced tomatoes w/ jalapenos
- rice
- shrimp stock
- Jambalya Seasoning (paprika, cayenne, onion powder, garlic powder, sugar, celery seed, salt & pepper)
Usually I make it with some sort of pork product as well but I didn't have any thing and I wanted to make it healthy. I did this one a little different than in the past, I cooked the rice directly in the pan with all the stuff and it cooked up the shrimp stock a lot. Still salty, still hot (but hey, its jambalaya!), but not as overwhelming shrimp-stocky as the crab soup. I'm having the leftovers today for lunch :)
Okay, back to yesterday, I also made fish that turned out rather heavenly, if I do say so myself. I take credit for this recipe so much so that I even named it
- A's Buttery Parmeasan Crusted Orange Roughy
- orange roughy fillet(s)
- butter (actually I used really cheap margarine)
- lemon juice (I would have prefered a fresh lemon but juice was all I had)
- toasted pine nuts
- parmeasean cheese
- breadcrumbs
- salt, pepper, lemon pepper
Melt the butter on the stove top. Add some lemon. Taste it to make sure the lemon doesn't get out of control. Meanwhile salt & pepper the fish in a small baking dish and set the oven to broil. Pour the lemon butter over the fish and make sure both sides are coated. Broil about 6 minutes. Remove from oven and coat fish (both sides) in a ground up mixture of pine nuts, parmeasan, lemon pepper, and breadcrumbs (go easy on the parm it can easily overwhelm the yumminess of the fish). Last night was the first time I used pine nuts on the fish, previously I only used breadcrumbs and parm. I used to broil the fish another 1-2 minutes after breading it but last night the pine nuts burned. (My new smoke detector works, yay!) So next time I'll probably lower the oven rack and keep a closer eye on the pine nuts. Even with the burnt pine nuts, it was extraordinary!!
Stayed tuned later this week for walnut crusted chicken and granola stuffed peaches. Also, I might do seafood pizza and/or hamburger experimentations. Maybe next time I'll even take pictures :)
Pay if Forward
I got a pay it forward from this great blog - http://treefrogjewelry.blogspot.com/
This means that she will make something and send it to me, and I will do the same for 3 other people. Those people will be the first 3 that post a comment on this post. Here are the rules (which I copied from her blog).
1. Be one of the first THREE bloggers to leave a comment on this post, which then entitles you to a handmade item from me.
2. Winners must post this challenge on their own blog, meaning that you will Pay It Forward, creating a handmade gift -anything!- for the first THREE bloggers who leave a comment on YOUR post about this giveaway!
3. The gift that you send to your 3 Friends can be from any price range and you have 365 days to make/ship your item. This means you should be willing to maintain your blog at least until you receive your gift and have shipped your gifts. And, remember: It’s the Spirit and the Thought That Count!
4. When you receive your gift, please feel free to blog about it, sharing appropriate Linky Love! If you are not one of the Top Three Commenters on this post, you can still play along. Go ahead and start your own Pay It Forward chain, and encourage your blogging friends to do the same!SO, REMEMBER... Pay it forward!
Friday, January 9, 2009
Like A Virgin

Hence, this blog. Sure, I've blogged on Myspace a bit before, back in my Myspace days. But that was totally different. That was more comparable to foreplay. This is different because there is nothing BUT a blog. That puts so much more pressure on the quality of the matieral contained within the blog.
Chilly, my cockatiel, is turning 10 this month. I'm a little scared because while a well-cared for cockatiel's life span can be 25 years, they frequently only live 10-15 due to inadequate diets and high stress environments. I also don't know how to tell when a bird is getting old. They aren't neccesarily like mammals where you can see them slowing down, developing stiff joints, dimished hearing, change in weight, graying around the face... so how will I know, anytime during the next 15 years, if she is getting old??
