Tag Archives: side dish

Tangy Lemon Spinach

This little spinach side is quick, easy, and very tangy. It only takes about 5 minutes to toss together. It’s the perfect complement to a rich, savory main course because it adds a fresh zing that wakes up your mouth. And can I just say, the sauce is a-ma-zing when spooned over rice or noodles. I served it with Garlicky Stuffed Portobellos, and let me tell you, a bite of mushroom, meat, and spinach together was pure heaven.

Ingredients

(Serves 3)

1 bag baby spinach

zest of 1/2 lemon

juice of 1/2 lemon

3 TBS white wine

1 TBS cream cheese

3 TBS chicken stock

Pinch of salt

Generous amount freshly ground black pepper

Heat all ingredients (except for the spinach) in a skillet over medium heat. It won’t look very pretty at first:

When the cheese has melted, turn the heat down to low. At this point, I tested a couple leaves of spinach to see if it was going to be disgusting and inedible:

But it wasn’t!

Stir in the spinach until just wilted, about 1 minute, and immediately take off the heat.

The sauce is fresh and pungent and lemony–it’s delicious when spooned over rice or noodles. If it’s a little too strong for you, cut the lemon juice in half, but for my taste it was perfect.

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Pan-Fried Cumin Sweet Potatoes

 

Greetings everyone! This morning my husband and I are hopping in my sister Heidi and her husband Mike’s truck and skedaddling off to Stevens Point, where our blond bombshell of a sister Erica is getting married on Saturday! I have high, high hopes of a McDonald’s breakfast sometime during our travels. I think they put some kind of addictive grease-drug in those sausage McMuffins, and I love every bite. And the hash browns . . . don’t get me started on the hash browns. It’s like Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Valentine’s Day all wrapped up into one golden little cakety-akety. I would eat ten of them if that didn’t cause a tornado of pain to ravage my stomach. One will have to do. Or would two be risking it? I’m thinking two.

As we roll on over to Wisconsin, I’d like to say that I’ll be providing realtime reporting via this blog, with live video-feed of all the wedding to-do’s and up-to-the minute journalism detailing every nanosecond of the excitement, family eccentricities, and bridalwear.

Alas, it is not meant to be.

However, I do commit to wielding my camera and shooting like a madwoman so that I can bring forth pictures in the weeks to come. Pax?

In the meantime, I have prepped a few recipes to feed the blogmonster in my absence and get me through Monday morning. See, I’m afraid of what the blogmonster will do to me if he becomes hungry, and it’s best not to find out until I’ve really built up his trust. And though I’m using this recipe for Pan-Fried Cumin Sweet Potatoes to appease him, you’ll have to trust me: it’s not just a fill-in post. It’s actually incredibly delicious. Let’s get started.

I’ve had 2 sweet potatoes languishing in my fridge for the past month. Every time I opened the crisper, they looked at me accusingly–was I going to let them go to waste? Motivated by guilt, I searched out other languishing vegetables in my refrigerator and tossed them all in my cast iron skillet. The results were good enough not only to dispel my guilt, but also to send me into seventh heaven.

Ingredients

(Serves 4)

2 TBS olive oil

2 large sweet potatoes, peeled and diced into small cubes

1/4 c water

1/2 red onion, chopped

1 jalapeño, de-seeded and minced

1/2 tsp salt

1/4 tsp black pepper

1/4 tsp cumin

Chives or cilantro to garnish

First, gather your ingredients into a friendly assembly. Encourage them to talk amongst themselves and ask some basic “getting to know you” questions.

 

Now, chop them up. Take any tension in your life and apply it to these vegetables using a sharp knife. Aaaaaah.

 

 

Heat the oil over medium-high heat. Add your sweet potato cubes and fry 3-4 minutes.

 

Add the water, turn down heat to low and cover. Cook for 3 minutes. When you uncover the skillet, the water should be gone–if not, cook uncovered until the water evaporates. Now add your salt, pepper, cumin, onion, and jalapeño. Add more oil if needed. Cook for 5 minutes over medium heat.

 

By now, your potatoes should be tender but not falling apart, and the jalapeño and onion should be crisp and tender. Put the lovely pile of delights into a serving dish and top with a sprinkling of cilantro or chives.

 

This dish is good as it is, but if you serve it with Spicy Garlic Sauce (recipe coming tomorrow) you will die and go to garlic heaven. And I say–live dangerously!

Flirting with Death via the Spicy Garlic Sauce

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