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Thursday, December 30, 2021
My New Years Eve Watch List
Monday, November 22, 2021
Pumpkin Roll with Brown Sugar and Cinnamon Cream Cheese Filling
Sunday, November 14, 2021
Ultimate Fall Salad (build your own!)
This version makes me think of my friend/ former coworker, Maddie. She knew my affinity for arugula salads and made a similar salad for lunch one day and shared it with me. She even made sure I had enough of each ingredient on my plate, digging back into the bowl and giving me more of something if needed so I would always have “the perfect bite.” Now that’s a quality friend for ya!
This recipe is actually not much of a recipe. The only measurements I actually give are for the apple cider vinegar dressing. The rest is just the salad components and substitutions you can use. Feel free to mix and match as you want and use a lot or a little of anything. Make it your own!
Apple Cider Vinegar Dressing
3/8 cup light tasting olive oil (or other neutral oil)
1/8 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
¼ tsp. kosher salt
2 tsp. maple syrup (you can add more if you like a sweeter dressing)
A couple grinds of black pepper
Whisk all the ingredients together well to emulsify or add all ingredients to a small jar and shake to combine (my preferred method)
Other Ingredients
Arugula- I really like the peppery bite of arugula. It has so much flavor! You can sub spinach or spring mix if you’d prefer, it just won’t pack as much flavor.
Sweet potato- My salad had fresh sweet potatoes that I cubed and roasted but even crisped up frozen sweet potato fries that you chop up would work great too! You can also use another roasted squash like butternut.
Beets- Red or golden. Fresh or canned/jarred. Plain or pickled. Any kind of beet will work here. Canned beets are a staple in my house. They have great texture and earthiness. A little too earthy for your taste? Try them pickled.
Red Onion- Red onion is my favorite for eating raw. It gives a nice zip without being quite as overwhelming as a white or brown onion. Very thinly sliced or shaved with a peeler is the way to go. Nice and thin so you aren’t chomping down on a giant chunk and dispersed more evenly throughout the salad
Goat Cheese- Goat cheese is the GOAT for this type of salad (see what I did there?) It has a slight bit of tang and it’s SUPER creamy. It’s perfection with the beets and arugula. I opted for the crumbles but you can also buy the logs and chunk it up yourself. You could substitute feta if necessary, but actual goat cheese (often labeled chevre) is optimal.
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds- A lot of my arugula salads contain sunflower seeds, but for Fall it is all about the pumpkin seeds! I buy them preroasted and salted for ease. They add a nice crispy crunch.
Toasted Pecans- Yep...I went double the crunch in this salad. It has both a seed and a nut, but they offer two different things. The pumpkin seeds are a crispy type of crunch and the pecans are a hearty kind of crunch. They hit different. Plus, toasting the pecans brings out the flavor that make you think of Fall.
I hope you enjoy this salad as much as I do. It really gives you all the Fall feels (well, as much as a salad can lol)
one. I have several different combinations of ingredients I use: olives, capers, tomatoes, sunflower seeds..... all kinds of things. But two ingredients are almost always present no matter what: red onion and beets. They pair so beautifully with arugula I can’t eat it without it! Today I wanted to share with you one of my many variations, the Fall Arugula Salad.
This version makes me think of my friend/ former coworker, Maddie. She knew my affinity for arugula salads and made a similar salad for lunch one day and shared it with me. She even made sure I had enough of each ingredient on my plate, digging back into the bowl and giving me more of something if needed so I would always have “the perfect bite.” Now that’s a quality friend for ya!
This recipe is actually not much of a recipe. The only measurements I actually give are for the apple cider vinegar dressing. The rest is just the salad components and substitutions you can use. Feel free to mix and match as you want and use a lot or a little of anything. Make it your own!
Apple Cider Vinegar Dressing
3/8 cup light tasting olive oil (or other neutral oil)
1/8 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
¼ tsp. kosher salt
2 tsp. maple syrup (you can add more if you like a sweeter dressing)
A couple grinds black pepper
Whisk all the ingredients together well to emulsify or add all ingredients to a small jar and shake to combine (my preferred method)
Other Ingredients
Arugula- I really like the peppery bite of arugula. It has so much flavor! You can sub spinach or spring mix if you’d prefer, it just won’t pack as much flavor.
Sweet potato- My salad had fresh sweet potatoes that I cubed and roasted but even crisped up frozen sweet potato fries that you chop up would work great too! You can also use another roasted squash like butternut.
Beets- Red or golden. Fresh or canned/jarred. Plain or pickled. Any kind of beet will work here. Canned beets are a staple in my house. They have great texture and earthiness. A little too earthy for your taste? Try them pickled.
Red Onion- Red onion is my favorite for eating raw. It gives a nice zip without being quite as overwhelming as a white or brown onion. Very thinly sliced or shaved with a peeler is the way to go. Nice and thin so you aren’t chomping down on a giant chunk and dispersed more evenly throughout the salad
Goat Cheese- Goat cheese is the GOAT for this type of salad (see what I did there?) It has a slight bit of tang and it’s SUPER creamy. It’s perfection with the beets and arugula. I opted for the crumbles but you can also buy the logs and chunk it up yourself. You could substitute feta if necessary, but actual goat cheese (often labeled chevre) is optimal.
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds- A lot of my arugula salads contain sunflower seeds, but for Fall it is all about the pumpkin seeds! I buy them preroasted and salted for ease. They add a nice crispy crunch.
Toasted Pecans- Yep...I went double the crunch in this salad. It has both a seed and a nut, but they offer two different things. The pumpkin seeds are a crispy type of crunch and the pecans are a hearty kind of crunch. They hit different. Plus, toasting the pecans brings out the flavor that make you think of Fall.
I hope you enjoy this salad as much as I do. It really gives you all the Fall feels (well, as much as a salad can lol)
I l me look at one. I have several different combinations of ingredients I use: olives, capers, tomatoes, sunflower seeds..... all kinds of things. But two ingredients are almost always present no matter what: red onion and beets. They pair so beautifully with arugula I can’t eat it without it! Today I wanted to share with you one of my many variations, the Fall Arugula Salad.
This version makes me think of my friend/ former coworker, Maddie. She knew my affinity for arugula salads and made a similar salad for lunch one day and shared it with me. She even made sure I had enough of each ingredient on my plate, digging back into the bowl and giving me more of something if needed so I would always have “the perfect bite.” Now that’s a quality friend for ya!
This recipe is actually not much of a recipe. The only measurements I actually give are for the apple cider vinegar dressing. The rest is just the salad components and substitutions you can use. Feel free to mix and match as you want and use a lot or a little of anything. Make it your own!
Apple Cider Vinegar Dressing
3/8 cup light tasting olive oil (or other neutral oil)
1/8 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
¼ tsp. kosher salt
2 tsp. maple syrup (you can add more if you like a sweeter dressing)
A couple grinds black pepper
Whisk all the ingredients together well to emulsify or add all ingredients to a small jar and shake to combine (my preferred method)
Other Ingredients
Arugula- I really like the peppery bite of arugula. It has so much flavor! You can sub spinach or spring mix if you’d prefer, it just won’t pack as much flavor.
Sweet potato- My salad had fresh sweet potatoes that I cubed and roasted but even crisped up frozen sweet potato fries that you chop up would work great too! You can also use another roasted squash like butternut.
Beets- Red or golden. Fresh or canned/jarred. Plain or pickled. Any kind of beet will work here. Canned beets are a staple in my house. They have great texture and earthiness. A little too earthy for your taste? Try them pickled.
Red Onion- Red onion is my favorite for eating raw. It gives a nice zip without being quite as overwhelming as a white or brown onion. Very thinly sliced or shaved with a peeler is the way to go. Nice and thin so you aren’t chomping down on a giant chunk and dispersed more evenly throughout the salad
Goat Cheese- Goat cheese is the GOAT for this type of salad (see what I did there?) It has a slight bit of tang and it’s SUPER creamy. It’s perfection with the beets and arugula. I opted for the crumbles but you can also buy the logs and chunk it up yourself. You could substitute feta if necessary, but actual goat cheese (often labeled chevre) is optimal.
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds- A lot of my arugula salads contain sunflower seeds, but for Fall it is all about the pumpkin seeds! I buy them preroasted and salted for ease. They add a nice crispy crunch.
Toasted Pecans- Yep...I went double the crunch in this salad. It has both a seed and a nut, but they offer two different things. The pumpkin seeds are a crispy type of crunch and the pecans are a hearty kind of crunch. They hit different. Plus, toasting the pecans brings out the flavor that make you think of Fall.
I hope you enjoy this salad as much as I do. It really gives you all the Fall feels (well, as much as a salad can lol) t, if you scroll through my Instagram over the last few years I looooove me a good arugula salad. In fact, if you scroll through my Instagram over the last few years there is no shortage of arugula salad photos in case you’re ever jonesin’ to look at one. I have several different combinations of ingredients I use: olives, capers, tomatoes, sunflower seeds..... all kinds of things. But two ingredients are almost always present no matter what: red onion and beets. They pair so beautifully with arugula I can’t eat it without it! Today I wanted to share with you one of my many variations, the Fall Arugula Salad.
This version makes me think of my friend/ former coworker, Maddie. She knew my affinity for arugula salads and made a similar salad for lunch one day and shared it with me. She even made sure I had enough of each ingredient on my plate, digging back into the bowl and giving me more of something if needed so I would always have “the perfect bite.” Now that’s a quality friend for ya!
This recipe is actually not much of a recipe. The only measurements I actually give are for the apple cider vinegar dressing. The rest is just the salad components and substitutions you can use. Feel free to mix and match as you want and use a lot or a little of anything. Make it your own!
Apple Cider Vinegar Dressing
3/8 cup light tasting olive oil (or other neutral oil)
1/8 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
¼ tsp. kosher salt
2 tsp. maple syrup (you can add more if you like a sweeter dressing)
A couple grinds black pepper
Whisk all the ingredients together well to emulsify or add all ingredients to a small jar and shake to combine (my preferred method)
Other Ingredients
Arugula- I really like the peppery bite of arugula. It has so much flavor! You can sub spinach or spring mix if you’d prefer, it just won’t pack as much flavor.
Sweet potato- My salad had fresh sweet potatoes that I cubed and roasted but even crisped up frozen sweet potato fries that you chop up would work great too! You can also use another roasted squash like butternut.
Beets- Red or golden. Fresh or canned/jarred. Plain or pickled. Any kind of beet will work here. Canned beets are a staple in my house. They have great texture and earthiness. A little too earthy for your taste? Try them pickled.
Red Onion- Red onion is my favorite for eating raw. It gives a nice zip without being quite as overwhelming as a white or brown onion. Very thinly sliced or shaved with a peeler is the way to go. Nice and thin so you aren’t chomping down on a giant chunk and dispersed more evenly throughout the salad
Goat Cheese- Goat cheese is the GOAT for this type of salad (see what I did there?) It has a slight bit of tang and it’s SUPER creamy. It’s perfection with the beets and arugula. I opted for the crumbles but you can also buy the logs and chunk it up yourself. You could substitute feta if necessary, but actual goat cheese (often labeled chevre) is optimal.
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds- A lot of my arugula salads contain sunflower seeds, but for Fall it is all about the pumpkin seeds! I buy them preroasted and salted for ease. They add a nice crispy crunch.
Toasted Pecans- Yep...I went double the crunch in this salad. It has both a seed and a nut, but they offer two different things. The pumpkin seeds are a crispy type of crunch and the pecans are a hearty kind of crunch. They hit different. Plus, toasting the pecans brings out the flavor that make you think of Fall.
I hope you enjoy this salad as much as I do. It really gives you all the Fall feels (well, as much as a salad can lol) there is no shortage of arugula salad photos in case you’re ever jonesin’ to look at one. I have several different combinations of ingredients I use: olives, capers, tomatoes, sunflower seeds..... all kinds of things. But two ingredients are almost always present no matter what: red onion and beets. They pair so beautifully with arugula I can’t eat it without it! Today I wanted to share with you one of my many variations, the Fall Arugula Salad.
This version makes me think of my friend/ former coworker, Maddie. She knew my affinity for arugula salads and made a similar salad for lunch one day and shared it with me. She even made sure I had enough of each ingredient on my plate, digging back into the bowl and giving me more of something if needed so I would always have “the perfect bite.” Now that’s a quality friend for ya!
This recipe is actually not much of a recipe. The only measurements I actually give are for the apple cider vinegar dressing. The rest is just the salad components and substitutions you can use. Feel free to mix and match as you want and use a lot or a little of anything. Make it your own!
Apple Cider Vinegar Dressing
3/8 cup light tasting olive oil (or other neutral oil)
1/8 cup apple cider vinegar
1 tsp. Dijon mustard
¼ tsp. kosher salt
2 tsp. maple syrup (you can add more if you like a sweeter dressing)
A couple grinds black pepper
Whisk all the ingredients together well to emulsify or add all ingredients to a small jar and shake to combine (my preferred method)
Other Ingredients
Arugula- I really like the peppery bite of arugula. It has so much flavor! You can sub spinach or spring mix if you’d prefer, it just won’t pack as much flavor.
Sweet potato- My salad had fresh sweet potatoes that I cubed and roasted but even crisped up frozen sweet potato fries that you chop up would work great too! You can also use another roasted squash like butternut.
Beets- Red or golden. Fresh or canned/jarred. Plain or pickled. Any kind of beet will work here. Canned beets are a staple in my house. They have great texture and earthiness. A little too earthy for your taste? Try them pickled.
Red Onion- Red onion is my favorite for eating raw. It gives a nice zip without being quite as overwhelming as a white or brown onion. Very thinly sliced or shaved with a peeler is the way to go. Nice and thin so you aren’t chomping down on a giant chunk and dispersed more evenly throughout the salad
Goat Cheese- Goat cheese is the GOAT for this type of salad (see what I did there?) It has a slight bit of tang and it’s SUPER creamy. It’s perfection with the beets and arugula. I opted for the crumbles but you can also buy the logs and chunk it up yourself. You could substitute feta if necessary, but actual goat cheese (often labeled chevre) is optimal.
Roasted Pumpkin Seeds- A lot of my arugula salads contain sunflower seeds, but for Fall it is all about the pumpkin seeds! I buy them preroasted and salted for ease. They add a nice crispy crunch.
Toasted Pecans- Yep...I went double the crunch in this salad. It has both a seed and a nut, but they offer two different things. The pumpkin seeds are a crispy type of crunch and the pecans are a hearty kind of crunch. They hit different. Plus, toasting the pecans brings out the flavor that make you think of Fall.
I hope you enjoy this salad as much as I do. It really gives you all the Fall feels (well, as much as a salad can lol)
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
Butternut Squash and Sage Sausage Lasagna
Butternut Puree/Sauce
2lbs butternut squash, peeled, seeded, and cubed into 1-inch pieces
2 tb oil, or oil spray
2 tsp. kosher salt
Pepper to taste
½ tsp. garlic powder
1 3/4 cups chicken broth
Ricotta Filling
15oz container ricotta
1 egg, beaten
½ tsp. kosher salt
1 tsp. garlic powder
¼ cup grated parmesan cheese
¼ tsp. dried thyme
Sausage Layer
½ onion, smallndiced
1 sweet bell pepper, small diced
1lb. sage sausage
Couple handfuls torn or chopped kale leaves
Other
12 lasagna noodles boiled (or you may use oven ready noodles)
2 cups shredded mozzarella cheese
Sauce: Toss butternut squash cubes in oil (or use spray) and spread out evenly on a parchment or foil lined sheet tray. Roast in a 400 preheated oven until soft (about 25 minutes)
Transfer the cooked squash to a food processor. Add your salt, pepper, garlic powder, and broth and blend until smooth. This should yield about 4 cups of sauce.
Ricotta Layer: Mix ricotta cheese, beaten egg, salt, garlic powder, thyme, and parmesan cheese together.
Sausage Layer: Crumble and brown the sage sausage. Add the diced onion and bell pepper and cook until soft. (if the fat from the sausage wasn’t enough to cook the vegetables, add a touch of oil) Once the onion and peppers are soft, remove from the heat and stir in a few handfuls of chopped kale. You don’t need to cook the kale as it will when it is baked.
Assembly: Spray a 9x13 baking dish with nonstick spray. Spread half of your butternut sauce in the dish. (should be about 2 cups). Lay out 4 of your boiled (or oven ready) lasagna noodles in the dish to cover the sauce. Next, spread half the ricotta mixture over the noodles. Spread half the sausage/veggie mixture on the ricttoa. Layer 4 more lasagna noodles over the sausage layer. Spread the remaining half of the ricotta on the noodles, then the remaining sausage over that. Add your third and final layer of noodles. Spread the last of the butternut squash sauce over top. Sprinkle the mozzarella cheese evenly on top
From top to bottom.
Mozzarella cheese
Butternut sauce
Noodle
Sausage
Ricotta
Noodle
Sausage
Ricotta
Noodle
Butternut sauce
Bake: Cover with nonstick sprayed foil and bake at 350 for 45-60 minutes until heated all the way through. Remove the foil the last 10-15 minutes to allow the cheese to brown, or broil. Allow to set up for about 10-15 minutes before cutting.