Showing posts with label coconut oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coconut oil. Show all posts

Monday, January 27, 2014

Happy Monday!

It's been a long time!  I shouldn't have left you.  Without a dope blog to click to.  Click to.  Sorry...overtaken by the spirit of Timbaland for a moment there. 

And we're back.  Last week was LOOONG.  Had to drive to Atlanta for a sales meeting then back around to Greenville SC.  Then all over Greenville on Thursday and back up to my house.  Logged some serious miles I did.  OH!  But I found a restaurant in Greenville that has a a Paleo meal plan you can order.  It's called Saskatoon.  Only open for dinner but the menu looks outstanding.  Score!  But I'm not driving two hours each way every time I want delicious game meats. 

By the way, anyone out there who might see this and knows someone in the Charlotte NC metro area, I am interested in buying wild boar and venison if you have some to spare.  PLEASE!  I'd get it myself but the Saint Francis in me won't let me shoot an animal...yet. 

But yea, long week last week.  Had to bring along plenty of Paleo friendly snacks to help curb my cravings.  And yesterday was the last day of my 21DSD.  THANK GOD.  That was probably the longest 21 days of my entire life!  Though I have to say, Tara and I made some chocolate chunk cookies on Sunday with 85% Cocoa and it was plenty sweet to me.  So I'm thinking the detox helped to calm my sweet tooth a bit. 

So the rest of this week will be spent making sure I'm appropriating the right foods to continue my clean eatings.  Plenty of meat in the freezer but I'm starting to get a little sick of the three veggie mix I get from BJs.  I've made it just about every way I can think of by now.  I feel like I need some spinach and mushrooms in my life.  Perhaps some button mushrooms stuffed with a spinach and sausage mixture.  Ooo, I feel another recipe coming on!

Yes, I glossed over the fact that Tara and I made chocolate chip cookies this weekend!  Don't worry, I didn't forget.  :-)  She has been doing wonderfully for the past two weeks!  I'm so proud of her discipline in choosing the right foods and learning the good ingredients versus the bad.  But I was coming off the 21DSD and she hadn't had anything sweet aside from fruit.  We both agreed that cookies needed to find their way into our lives post haste.  We did some research, played around a bit, and made for you the delicious recipe you see below.  Enjoy!

- Chomp Chomp 

T&D Chocolate Chunk Cookies
Makes 10 - 12 Cookies 
 
 
 
Ingredients:
  • 2 cups almond meal (used Bob's Red Mill)
  • 1/4 cup coconut oil, softened
  • 1 large egg
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 2 tbsp grade B maple syrup
  • 1/4 tsp sea salt
  • 1/2 dark chocolate bar, finely chopped (used Green & Black Organics 85% cacao)
    • You can also use a handful of a Paleo friendly chocolate chip like Enjoy Life
  • Mixing bowl and hand mixer, a stand mixer, or a food processor
  • Cookie sheet and parchment paper or silicone baking pad
  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Put the almond meal, egg, coconut oil, baking soda, vanilla, maple syrup, and sea salt into your mixing bowl or food processor.  Begin mixing the ingredients.
  3. Add your chocolate chips a little at a time to make sure they incorporate well.  Mix for about a minute or until the dough starts to clump together in a ball.
  4. Use about 1 tbsp of cookie dough for each cookie.  Roll into a ball and place on the cookie sheet.  Gently press them down with the back of your spoon to flatten.  These don't melt down into cookie form like you may be used to. 
  5. Bake for at least 9 minutes.  Everyone's oven varies so keep an eye on them after this time.  If it looks like they need a little longer, check them every minute.  You shouldn't need any more than about 10 minutes though. 
  6. Here's the hardest step - place the finished cookies on a cooling rack for at least 10 minutes.  The almond meal makes these fragile when they're first out of the oven so they need a moment to bind.  After that you can dig in!
 


Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Asian Inspired Beef Recipe

Another post in one day?  How can it be?!  Chalk it up to my ADD...I made a quick beef dish last night that I just remembered and decided to share.  Aren't you lucky?

Asian Inspired Beef
I'm still working on the name for this one so keep an open mind.  This one is a quick dish you can make any night of the week.  I made it using some chunks of beef I cut from a filet I had.  It uses pretty high heat though so I'd lean towards a slightly more tender cut to make sure you aren't chewing leather. 
 
Ingredients:
  • 1 - 2 lbs beef, chopped into 1" cubes (anything from the short loin/sirloin area should work)
  • 2 - 3 tbsp coconut oil
  • 1/4 cup or less of sliced onion
  • 1/2 tsp grated ginger, or 1/4 tsp ginger powder
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • 2 - 3 tbsp Tamari or Coconut Aminos
  • 1/8 tsp cayenne pepper (if you want heat)
  • sesame seeds or crushed cashew (for garnish)
  • Skillet (or wok) and large spoon
Put your skillet/pan on the burner and crank that heat up to high.  Depending on your stove this could happen quickly or take a couple of minutes.  While you're waiting for the heat to come up, drop the coconut oil into the skillet. 

When the oil is melted, looks shimmery, and you start seeing small puffs of smoke it's time for the fun.  Throw your onions into the pan and start mixing them around.  Keep them moving so they don't burn but start getting a nice Maillard reaction going on (droppin some culinary knowledge on you). 60-90 seconds roughly.

Once the onions are starting to look caramelized, toss in all the beef.  This you can let sit for a few seconds before stirring to get a nice seer.  Maybe 10 - 15 seconds before you give it a stir.  After your initial one or two stirrings, time to add the Tamari or Coconut Aminos and black pepper.  Give it a good stir to coat all the meat.  After this step you can revert back to stirring every 10-15 seconds.  You should start seeing some nice dark marks on the beef.

After about 2-3 minutes of this, you can add the ginger, garlic, and cayenne and give it another couple stirs.  Always add the garlic last because it scorches easily and tastes terrible.  Cook for another 30-40 seconds.  If the meat feels like the palm of your hand when you press it, turn off the heat and move the skillet to a cool burner.  That should be a nice medium-rare to medium.  You could also cut a piece open and check.

Sprinkle your garnish over the beef and serve with some vegetables or cauliflower rice and you have dinner!  The key point to this dish is to stay with it.  The high heat is meant to mimic the stir fry method of cooking and it's easy to burn everything.  But the end result is well worth the 5-10 minutes of stress.  :-)

- Chomp Chomp