June 15, 2014

Columbus Circle

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June 14, 2014

Game night.

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Paleo Pork Picadillo

Picadillo is a Cuban dish that can be made a million different ways, but generally includes ground meat (generally beef), some sort of sweet something (raisins or dried apricots or both), tomatoes, and olives. To me, the combination is magical. The brine of the olives gets under my skin, leaving me craving more for days to come. Luckily, the other half of this household is olive-adverse, so more for me.

Paleo, gluten-free and Whole30-compliant

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Paleo Pork Picadillo

2c. chopped butternut squash
2 Tbsp. coconut oil
2 tsp. dried oregano, divided
1 lb. ground pork
1 yellow onion
4 cloves garlic
1 bell pepper (any color)
1 tsp. cumin
2 tsp. chili powder
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1 Tbsp. capers
1 (14 ounce) can diced tomatoes
Hand full of golden raisins (or more, if you’re a raisin lover)
1/2 cup olives (or more, if you’re an olive lover)
2 tsp. apple cider vinegar
2 Tbsp. olive juice
Kosher salt

Preheat your oven to 400. Dice the butternut squash and spread out on a cookie sheet. Toss with 1 Tbsp. coconut oil, 1 tsp. oregano and a few pinches salt. Bake 20-35 minutes, or until tender. You’ll want to turn the squash a few times during cooking to avoid burning.

Heat the other Tbsp. coconut oil in a large pan over medium heat. Add the pork and cook until browned, breaking up as you go along. Hit with a big sprinkle of salt.

While the pork is working, dice the onion, garlic and pepper. Add to the pan and sautee until the onion is translucent.

Add the second tsp. oregano, cumin, chili powder, cinnamon and capers plus another big pinch of salt. Sautee 1-2 minutes to let the spices bloom.

Add the diced tomatoes, raisins, olives, vinegar, and olive juice. Bring to a boil. Taste for salt and add more if needed. Drop the heat to a simmer and let go 5-10 minutes.

Serve the picadillo over the butternut squash.

Serves 2 for dinner + 1 for lunch. 

 

June 13, 2014

Afternoon storms

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June 12, 2014

Truck graffiti.

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June 11, 2014

The old man.

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What To Do With A Box Of Vegetables: Paisley Farm CSA Box 1

I am so happy to be able to bring this feature back to the blog. It’s been forever since I’ve been part of a CSA (not really since living in Miami!) and I’ve really missed the planning and creativity a forced allotment of vegetables brings to the menu planning table.

This year’s CSA is from Paisley Farm, a 25-acre operation located in Tivoli, NY. Paisley Farm grows organically and plants with the chef in mind. The 22-week CSA runs from June – October and I purchased the standard vegetable share. This share includes 8-9 vegetables and herbs per week (8-12 pounds) – enough to provide a family of three with 3-4 dinners’ worth of veg. The price equals out to $25 per week, the cost of which will be calculated in my weekly Adventures In Budget Paleo Cooking posts.

This go round is going to be tricky – pickup is on Wednesday evenings, rather than my accustomed Sunday, and it looks like (at least for this first box) there will be little advanced notice of what the box actually contains. Adventure cooking!

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Paisley Farm 2014 CSA Box 1

2 Arugula bunches
1 Rapini bunch
1 French Breakfast Radish bunch
1 Tokyo Turnip bunch
1 bag of mixed Lettuce
1 Spring Garlic bunch
1 Asparagus bunch

How I Used My Share

I planned poorly for this batch. Despite repeated questioning by my DH, I thought our shares started on the 22nd, so I was woefully unprepared for additional vegetables.

I used the arugula and bag of mixed lettuce in salads for lunch and dinner

I used the rapini as a braised side dish to go with meatballs & marinara

I used the spring garlic everywhere – in salads, in dinner, pretty much everywhere

I’ve been using the radishes and turnips in salads and plan to use the bulk in tonight’s dinner (braised with their greens)

I have yet to use the asparagus, though I plan to shave it thin and serve alongside some steaks

My Favorite Dish From This Box

This week, it’s been the salads. It’s been a long time since I’ve had a “real” salad and I forgot how good they can be. The lettuces from the CSA are fantastic.

June 10, 2014

Public art/seating

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June 9, 2014

In rainbows

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Adventures In Budget Paleo Cooking – Week of June 9-13

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A number of people I know are completely flabbergasted when contemplating sticking to a budget while eating a primarily “paleo” diet. I’m hoping to shed a little light on that issue for those of you on the fence about eating healthfully in this manner – it *can* be done – and done well – without spending all the money. All it takes is a little planning. 

A little background: I live in Brooklyn, NY, and the grocery prices here are definitely not the same as what you will find in other areas of the country. If you live in say, Raleigh NC for example – you may very well be able to cut this grocery bill by a third, depending upon where you shop. For where I live, where I shop and what I buy, $100 a week is a doable budget without having to sacrifice the quality I want too much. My DH thinks $130 is probably more realistic with our morning smoothie supplies, but I want to shoot for $100. I aim to make 4-5 dinners for two and 5 lunches per week, plus two smoothies per day six days of the week with my budgetary allowance and update you all weekly on what’s going on. Let’s see if I can make it. 

My CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) share started this past week and runs through October, so I will be doing things a little differently with the vegetable portion of my meal planning for the next few months. My share averages out to $25 a week, which will come off the top of my budget allotment and will comprise the bulk of my non-smoothie-related vegetable purchases. More on the CSA later.

Last Week (Week of June 2-6)

The Plan vs. Reality

Monday

  • The Plan – “Noodle” salad with caramelized chicken and chili oil
  • Reality – I ended up making this on Friday, and it was pretty good. I served with just-wilted broccoli slaw and crunchy radishes and cucumber.

Tuesday

  • The Plan – Slow cooker Mexican beef with a side
  • Reality – Mexican beef has become one of my staple meals and it’s fantastic. I served with a great cauliflower mash.

Wednesday

  • The Plan – Leftover beef with some sort of side
  • Reality – I served tonight’s leftovers with snow peas stir-fried in sesame oil and a bed of lettuce. Kind of an East-meets-West sort of feel. I thought it worked, the hubbs was confused.

Thursday

  • The Plan – Leftover beef with some sort of side
  • Reality – I served leftover beef with baked artichokes and drawn butter. Decadent and yum.

Friday

  • The Plan – Paleo Pork Picadillo with butternut squash
  • Reality – Y-U-M. Recipe coming soon!

Lunches

  • The Plan – Apple dill chicken salad
  • Reality – Well, that didn’t happen. The dill was on its last leg, and my CSA box came, so I ended up making a lot of salads.

Extras

  • The Plan – Avocado + Dill Egg salad
  • Reality – Sooooooo good.

 

This Week: June 9-13

I have leftover CSA veggies this week and $75 to spend on groceries.

This Week’s Proposed Menu

  • Monday: Meatball “subs” with rapini
  • Tuesday: BBQ chicken with hot/sweet braised turnips & radishes
  • Wednesday: Steaks with shaved asparagus salad
  • Thursday: Meat + CSA veg
  • Friday: Meat + CSA veg
  • Lunch: CSA veg
  • Extras: None planned, though I’ve been craving fruit + nut butter for a week now

Shopping List & Cost Breakout

Grocery Store Key: TJ = Trader Joe’s, WF = Whole Foods, O = Optional if budget allows

Shopping List

Worcestershire sauce – $3 est – did not buy
Lawry’s Seasoning salt – $2 est – bought but forgot to keep the receipt
Chili powder – $2 est – did not buy
tea – $3 est – did not buy
sugar – $2 est – did not buy
Nut butter – $5 est – ($6.99 @ TJs)
Fruit – $5 est – (26 ounces of peaches – $3.49 @ TJs)
Nuts for snacks – $6 est – ($5.99 @ TJs)

1/2 lb. ground pork – $3 est – ($3.53 @ WF)
1/2 lb. ground beef – $3 est – ($5.64 @ WF)
1/2 lb. ground veal – $3 est – did not buy
Pecorino – $3 est – (pecorino/romano cheese blend $2.79 @ TJs)
Romano – $3 est – see above
Onion (2) – $2 est – ($1.58 @ TJs)
Tomato sauce – $1 est – ($1.49 @ TJs)
Basil – $3 est – ($2.69 @ TJs)
Mozzarella – $3 est – ($3.29 @ TJs)
Garlic – $1 est – ($1.29 @ TJs)
Steaks – $8 est – ($14.55 @ WF)
Meat – $8 est – (BBQ chicken breast – $4.75 @ WF)
Meat – $8 est – (pork sausage patties – $3.55 @ WF)

$77 est, minus smoothie supplies

2 bags kale – $5 est – ($4.58 @ TJs)
1 bag spinach – $2 est – ($1.99 @ TJs)
3 apples – $3 est – (I got 4 – $3.16 @ TJs)
3 avocados – $4 est – ($4.47 @ TJs)
5 limes – $5 est – (1 lb. bag – $2.49 @ TJs)
Coconut water – $4 est – ($3.69 @ TJs)
Orange juice – $3 est – ($2.99 @ TJs)
Cilantro – $2 est – ($1.79 @ TJs)

$26 est for smoothies

$103 estimated total

Extras: I forgot to add the chicken thighs for the planned BBQ chicken night – those were $6.26 @ WF. I also bought celery for smoothies ($2.29 @ TJs) and a fruit leather bar for me ($0.99 @ TJs).

Total TJ: $58.04
Total WF: $38.53

Total For The Week: $96.57$21.57 over budget. Oops. I completely dropped the ball this week and forgot that I only had $75 to spend. On the plus side, next week is another vacation week so I won’t be spending my grocery allotment on anything but road snacks.

Pantry/items repurposed from last week: fats, spices, CSA veggies.