Zucchini Mashed Potatoes

Zucchini. Mashed. Potatoes. A simple, delicious vehicle that whisks away some of summer’s over bounty if you’re lucky enough to subscribe to a CSA (or have a backyard plot of veggies). This side dish is zucchini-hating DH-approved (he pretended it was unidentified herbs until confronted with reality).

Gluten-free, paleo, Whole30 if you sub clarified butter, vegetarian

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Zucchini Mashed Potatoes

4 smallish potatoes (about hand sized)
1 large zucchini
2 large cloves garlic
2 Tbsp. unsalted grass fed butter (sub clarified if W30)
Kosher salt & pepper

Wash, peel and chop the potatoes into half inch-ish pieces. Peel the garlic. Add both to a large pot and cover with water (+ about an inch). Set over High heat, add a generous sprinkle salt, and bring to a low boil. Let cook 10 minutes.

While the potatoes are cooking, chop the zucchini. Add to the pot after the 10 minutes are up. Boil 5 minutes.

Drain and add to the bowl of a food processor or blender carafe. Add the butter and process. Taste. Add salt & pepper as needed.

Serves 4 as a side – perfect with simple sautéed chicken breast or broiled steaks

 

August 13, 2015

Finishing projects like its my job – this time, a knitting needle holder.

  

August 12, 2015

Lines

  

August 11, 2015

A new home for birds.

  

August 10, 2015

Birds!

  

August 9, 2015

Grammercy

  

Adventures In Budget Paleo Cooking – Week of August 3 – 9

BudgetPaleo

This Week’s Menu

Monday

Breakfast: Green smoothie

Lunch: Leftover rotisserie chicken with leftover broccoli slaw

Dinner: Instant Pot pulled pork with snap pea/cucumber salad

Tuesday

Breakfast: 2 hard boiled eggs

Lunch: Cucumber & fruit salad with leftover rotisserie chicken

Dinner: Leftover pulled pork with zoodles

Wednesday

Breakfast: Green smoothie

Lunch: Cucumber & fruit salad with the last of the leftover rotisserie chicken

Dinner: Sweet pork sausage, potato, corn & zucchini hash with egg

Thursday

Breakfast: Green smoothie

Lunch: Plum & peach salsa salad with pulled pork

Dinner: Chicken breast with zucchini mashed potatoes

Friday

Breakfast: Green smoothie

Lunch: Plum & peach salsa salad with pulled pork

Dinner: Out

Sunday

Breakfast: Out

Lunch: Out

Dinner: Out

 

This Week’s Grocery List

Boneless pork butt, 4 lbs. ($20.33 @ Whole Foods)
Almond milk ($3.69 @ Whole Foods)
Lemons (3) ($2.67 @ Whole Foods)
Red chilis ($1.05 @ Whole Foods)
Tomatoes ($6.04 @ Whole Foods)

Smoothie Supplies

Ginger ($1.16 @ Whole Foods)
5 Apples ($5.67 @ Whole Foods)
5 limes ($3.75 @ Whole Foods)
Bag of 4 small + 1 extra avocados ($5.99 + $2.79 @ Whole Foods)
Bagged kale (1 lb.) ($2.99 @ Whole Foods)
Bagged spinach ($3.99 @ Whole Foods)
Fresh turmeric ($0.96 @ Whole Foods)

Impulse Buys

Daikon kimchee ($7.99 @ Whole Foods)

Totals

Carryover from last week: +$25.17
CSA veggies: $25.50
CSA meat: $44.29
Whole Foods: $68.97

Budget Breakout

This week, I spent $138.58; $13.41 over budget. Not bad, considering $8 of that was expensive impulse kimchee, and I bought enough pork to last for more than a week.

 

Leftovers From This Week

At the end of the week, I have some CSA veggies and meats – enough for almost a week – left over. I need to incorporate these items into my menu for next week, and shouldn’t need to buy too much in the way of groceries.

Think eating healthfully is too expensive for you? Think again. According to the USDA, to ensure a nutritious diet as of December 2014, a family of two aged 19-59 years should spend between $388.90 and $776.10 on food per month, or $89.80 – $179.30 per week. Source 

For my family of two adults, I spend roughly $400 a month on groceries or $100 a week – and we eat well. Not caviar and lobster well, but I do manage to serve a predominately paleo diet with little to no processed foods, and I get to throw in a few luxuries here and there (like expensive snacks for the hubbs and the occasional ridiculously expensive bag of coffee). We even manage to buy “good” meat (grass fed beef and free-range chicken) most of the time – and I make this budget work even on the weeks we pay for convenience by getting delivery groceries. I make: 10 breakfasts, 5 lunches, and 10 dinners a week – plus enough snacks to satisfy and fuel two active adults.

I’m hoping that this series will help shed a little light on the day-to-day things a “paleo” person really eats — and how that way of eating can work on a budget. I want to nudge anyone sitting on the fence right over the edge by showing that it *can* be done and that you don’t just eat meat, meat, meat and more meat. 

August 8, 2015

So, how was your Saturday? Mine was all about embracing the suck to earn a GoRuck patch.

  
Today’s POD courtesy of an OCR group friend who was gracious enough to show up for moral support, despite having to sit the ruck out due to injury.

Chicken-And-Egg Zoodles

I started this meal thinking a nice simple plate of cacio e pepe sounded delicious. But, I don’t eat pasta – and I didn’t have any parmesan. What I *did* have was some CSA fresh zucchini, some bacon ends, a bit of leftover baked chicken and some farm fresh eggs.

A delicious, dead simple, quick-to-prepare dinner was born. And, without heating my apartment to 900 degrees, or filling it with seared meat smoke. #winning

Paleo, gluten-free, whole30 if you source your bacon right

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Chicken-And-Egg Zoodles

4 ounces bacon
4 ounces leftover cooked chicken
1 large zucchini
2 cloves garlic
2 tsp. FOC (fat of choice)
2 eggs per person
More FOC
Salt & pepper

Heat a pan on medium. Chop your bacon and add. Brown. When the bacon is halfway browned, add the leftover chicken and 2 chopped cloves garlic.

Zoodle your zucchini however you accomplish this (I use a spiralizer that works like sharpening a pencil – there are a ton of ways to make noodles out of zucchini).

When the bacon is browned and the chicken is warm, add the zoodles to the pan and toss. Add 2 tsp. olive oil, a few cracks black pepper and a sprinkle of salt. Set aside while you fry the eggs.

Put your pan back over the fire and add more fat. Fry the eggs and use to top the “pasta”.

Serves 2

August 7, 2015

Solid advice from the sidewalk.