Tag: chicken thighs

Zucchini Noodles with Asparagus Tips & Portobello

zucch noodles portAt the end of a long day of school drops offs, pick ups, housework, volunteering, soccer and tennis, I love entering my kitchen for a bit of stress relief.  My reprieve is cooking.  Making a delicious, healthy meal is just as fun as eating it.  Granted, I’ve been doing it a long time and have my flow going.  But, even when I had no clue what braise really meant, I still found the kitchen to be therapeutic.

Kitchen gadgets make cooking even more fun.  I recently acquired a new one.  It was love at first sight.  I first spotted this darling on another food blog.  I admired the curves and lines, and kept going back to fawn over the green beauty again and again.  I told my husband, “If you ever need a gift idea for me, this is it!”.  I showed him where to buy it on Amazon.  Then I waited.  He didn’t take the hint.  The green beauty didn’t arrive on my doorstep.  Then, something better happened.  Amazon local deals had my beautiful green goddess on sale for half price, for one day!  That was it.  Within 5 minutes, it was bought and a few days later I had her in my hands.  I bet you want to know what it is by now.  What I have been gushing over.  You will probably think I am strange for obsessing over this tool, but here it is…519iNCw1aJL

If you are looking for the proper wording for this bad boy, it is a vegetable processing device.   In simpler terms, it makes veggies into noodles.  I have chopped vegetables trying to get them to resemble noodles, only getting an o.k. result.  The results you receive with this bad boy are perfect.  There are two blades, one for angel hair type noodles, and one for wider noodles.  In this recipe I used the angel hair blade, but it really doesn’t matter.  I piled my plate as high as I wanted, because everything in this recipe is good for you.  So go ahead and stuff yourself silly with this dish.

Oh and by the way, the price is even lower than what I bought it for on Amazon now.  For $6, this  —–> beauty can be yours!  (click on pic for a direct link).

Now for the recipe:

1 lb boneless chicken thighs, visible fat trimmed, cut into 1 inch strips

1 Portobello mushroom cap, cut into 1 inch strips

1/4 sliced brown onion

6 asparagus spears, snap woody bottom off and cut into 4 pieces

1/2 cup bruschetta (click for recipe)

2 zucchini, cut into pasta like noodles (you can use a knife, it just won’t be uniform)

salt, pepper & garlic powder for seasoning

olive oil

Pre-heat broiler.  Cover a cookie sheet with foil.  Sprinkle chicken with salt, pepper and garlic powder and put on cookie sheet.  Broil for 7 minutes.

While chicken is broiling, sprinkle mushrooms, asparagus, and onions with salt and pepper and saute in 1 tsp, of olive oil over high heat for 5 minutes.  Remove to a bowl and set aside.

Put another 1 tsp. of oilve oil in saute pan and saute zucchini for 3/4 minutes, moving constantly.  Add in bruschetta, saute for another 2 minutes.  To serve divide the zucchini noodles, veggies, and chicken into to bowls.  Serve hot

Chicken Stew served over Quinoa

IMG_1201I’m kind of obsessed with quinoa lately.  I love that it is an all encompassing food, with the best possible nutrition bio a food can have.  I even got my kids to eat it today, begrudgingly, but they did eat 3 bites each.  It’s a texture thing with them.  At least they tried it.

This recipe is a play on a dish my Assyrian grandmother used to make called kurush.  I have always looked forward to eating this dish. Walking into a home where this was cooking would send my salivary glands into over drive.  In it’s original state, it is a tomato meat stew with green peppers, and canned green beans, served over rice that has been baked all day in butter.  Not exactly the poster child for health.  So I took it to the kitchen and gave it a health makeover.  After serious changes, in all of it’s stewy glory, it walked out of the kitchen smelling delicious, and looking fit.  Instead of the buttery rice, a bed of quinoa now soaks up the luscious red sauce.  The canned green beans have been replaced with fresh, crisp green beans.  I hope you enjoy this play on my grandma’s dish.  I hope she approves of the nutritionally necessary makeover.

1 lb boneless skinless chicken thighs, all visible fat removed, cut into bite sized pieces

1 – 2 tablespoons of olive oil

1 lb. fresh green beans, wash and cut in half lengthwise

2 large bell pepper, ct into chunks

1 onion chopped into wedges

1 lb. sliced mushrooms

1 cup chicken or vegetable broth

1 14 oz can organic diced tomatoes

1 8 oz. can organic tomato sauce

1 6 oz. can organic tomato paste

1 tablespoon paprika

1 teaspoon basil

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

sea salt to taste

For the quinoa

2 cups quinoa

4 cups vegetable or chicken broth

1/2 teaspoon turmeric

Pre-heat oven to 325 degrees.  Season the chicken by sprinkling with salt, pepper, and paprika.  Heat the olive oil in a dutch oven and brown all sides.  Brown in batches so that the pan is not overcrowded, if needed.  Put the browned pieces in a bowl and set aside.  If needed, add a small amount of olive oil and saute the vegetables over medium high heat for 5 minutes.  Pour the chicken broth into the pan to de-glaze (scrape all of the brown bits off the bottom of the pan).  Add the diced tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste, paprika, basil and black pepper to the pot with the vegetables.  Bring to a boil and add the chicken back in. Put the lid on and place in oven.  Set the timer for 30 minutes.

For the quinoa:

Bring the stock to a boil and add in the quinoa and turmeric.  Reduce heat to a simmer and cook for 15 to minutes or until the liquid has evaporated.  make sure to check after 15 minutes that the bottom is not burning.  Stir and put the lid on if there is still liquid present until done. Pull off heat and set aside.

When the stew is done, pull out of the oven. Stir and serve over the quinoa.  Then leave a comment and tell me your experience!