It’s good ol’ recipe swap time.  For those of you who are new, the basic premise is that Christianna from Burwell General Store picks a recipe from her vintage cookbook/hymnal she found at a recipe swap and everyone involved has to change at least 3 ingredients/quantities in the recipe to make it their own.  They we all post on the same day and see what kind of magic was made in our kitchens.  More on that on her website.  Be sure to check out all the other food bloggers involved!   They are truly inspiring and some have even become good friends (virtual friends, but friends indeed!)

Ready for this months recipe reveal?  If you haven’t already figured it out from the title of this post, here you have it:

That’s right, potato donuts.  Who doesn’t love a donut?  I love donuts because that’s what kept me and brother going to church when we were younger–the promise of a maple bar during Sunday school.  It worked hook, line, and sinker on me.

I have to admit; the thought of making a donut has frightened me a bit in the past.  Deep frying hasn’t ever been my bag, but then again, I’ve never really tried it.  My old roommate Tiffani, whose father is Middle Eastern, bought a deep fryer just to maker her dad’s falafel recipe.  I don’t have a deep fryer, but I do have a pretty red dutch oven that I bought a couple months ago.  (I tell you, you can do just about anything with a dutch oven!  Best kitchen investment I’ve made yet.)  To add to my deterred state, the wheat and sugar content of a donut made me a bit uneasy.  Being a diabetic and a gluten loser and eating doesn’t bode well for my blood sugar or body, so creativity is a must on this one.

I decided to run with the deep fried potato theme.  Of course my mind went straight to sweet potatoes since they’re probably the best vegetable to come out of the ground.  I wanted to be a little more out of the box than a basic donut so I thought, “hmmmm….what else is deep fried and delicious?”  CHURROS!  Remember as a kid, going to Disneyland and getting those 18 inch long churros from the cart on the way to Thunder Mountain Railroad?  That was the best part of Disneyland.  Better than meeting Belle and Minnie Mouse, even.

Of course I took the gluten free route, and stayed away from using plain white granulated sugar.  These puppies might be calorie dense, but at least they have a few more nutrients than your basic maple bar.

Gluten Free Sweet Potato Churros, adapted from James Beard Foundation Recipes

Yields about 2 dozen churros

Ingredients:
1 pound sweet potatoes
1/2 cup milk (either whole, oat, or hazelnut)
1/8 tsp salt
1/8 tsp salt
1/8 tsp cayanne pepper
3/4 cup oat/brown rice flour blend (50/50)
1 medium egg
3 egg yolks
Vegetable oil for frying
Approx. 1 cup cinnamon and sugar mixture for coating (I used organic evaporated cane sugar)

Method:
Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Poke holes in the sweet potatoes and bake in a covered baking dish until very tender, about 45 minutes. Remove from the oven and set aside. Once they are cool enough to handle, peel and roughly chop. Mash with a fork or run through a food mill or ricer to make smooth mixture, free of chunks.  You’ll want this to go through a pastry bag later.

Place the milk in a small pot and season with the salt, nutmeg, and cayenne. Heat the milk to a near boil, then add the flour and reduce the heat to medium. Stir the mixture with a wooden spoon until the flour and milk form a ball. Transfer to a stand mixer   fitted with a paddle attachment (VERY IMPORTANT!  I tried putting some elbow grease in there and use the old wooden spoon method.  Let’s just say it was a good thing my neighbors were home and let me borrow their Kitchen Aid) and beat on medium speed for 10 seconds to release some of the heat. Add the egg and mix on medium speed to incorporate. Add the yolks one at a time, then continue to mix until the dough forms a stiff mass. Mix in the milled sweet potatoes, then transfer the dough to a pastry bag fitted with a star tip (or a Zip-loc bag with the corner snipped off.  That’s all I had, hence the unflattering shape of my churros).

In a shallow dish, make up cinnamon and sugar mixture and put near fry area.

Heat about 6 inches of oil to 350ºF in a large pot. Carefully pipe five to six 3-inch lengths of dough into the pot. Fry until golden brown, flipping churros over half way through so both sides get a nice golden brown color, about 7 minutes. Remove with a slotted spoon and transfer to cinnamon and sugar dish and give them a nice coat.  Continue piping and frying in batches until all of the dough is used, making sure the temperature of the oil returns to 350ºF before frying a new batch.

Behold the goodness of the sweet potato goodness and simple embrace the fact that you’re eating fried food.  It’s home-made so you shouldn’t feel so bad.

Epilogue:
Famous last words: what else can we deep fry?!
My friend Allison and I had a fry day and felt so incredible greasy and bloated afterwards.  We took an onion and sliced it thick, made a gf batter and made hands down the most delicious onion rings we’ve ever had.  Don’t ask for the recipe because there isn’t one.  We just threw some things in a bowl, dredged the onions, and drown them in the oil.  Don’t they look gooooooood??

All fried out and GREEEEAAAZZZZYYYY….

I went to a vegan dinner last week hosted by some of my most lovely friends.  They brought in a traveling vegan chef to make dinner for nearly 30 of us.  I love eating vegan but something about this dinner left something to be desired.  It wasn’t the company, the hosts, the atmosphere, or the drinks.  Those were all spot on and fantastic.

What I didn’t like was the “smoked salmon fillet” on my plate that was not actually smoked salmon.  The “caviar” that wasn’t actually caviar.  Anything that is in quotation marks on a menu makes me uneasy.

There is a lot about veganism that I love.  I love that is leaves a lighter footprint on the earth.  I love that is doesn’t support the U.S Agriculture Meat Industry, I love that it’s full of plants and heart healthy whole foods.  I love that it forces culinary creativity (I mean, just look at the menu at Blossoming Lotus.  SO creative.)

But sometimes I feel like vegans eat more processed foods than carnivores do.  A main staple for vegans is tofu, which is made from soy beans, which are often times genetically  modified. Ever had meatless crumbles; a processed soy product made to look and taste like ground beef?  Seems weird to me.  Perhaps ground beef from pasture raised, grass feed beef would be more environmentally conscious, whole, and healthier for you.

Michael Pollan wrote an easy read called Food Rules.  A couple of his rules come to mind when addressing this topic.  For example:

#2: Don’t eat anything your great-grandmother doesn’t recognize as food. (His example is Go-gurt.  What is that stuff?!)

and my favorite:

#10: Avoid foods that pretend to be something they are not. (Such as “smoked salmon” and meatless meatballs.)

I want to eat REAL food.  WHOLE food.  LOCAL and SEASONAL food.  If vegans can eat that way, power to them!  Obviously, I cook my fair share of vegan food and love it.  But since I’m a meat eater, I’m going to live by this rule:

#27: Eat Animals that have themselves eaten well.

I won’t be eating pork that is eating and living in it’s own fecal matter and pumped full of anti-biotics to keep them from getting sick.  Chickens that are being feed massively produced and genetically modified corn aren’t going on my plate. I’m going to eat the heifer Clare and Brian of Big Table Farm slaughter this summer instead.

I’m glad I experienced something out of my culinary comfort zone with the vegan meal, but honestly, I would have rather had a real fillet of Wild Alaskan Salmon than a faux fillet made of processed soybeans. 

What do you guys think?

(Wish I could take credit for the photos, but I can’t.  Found most of them on We Heart It or The Brides Cafe)

I almost had a Portobello protest on my hands last week.  See, I was having my lovely vegan friends over for dinner again on Friday night and was having a hard time nailing down what I was going to make.  I gave them a list of ingredients and had them pick:

Hazelnuts
Sriracha
Asparagus
Peanuts
Polenta
Portobello Mushrooms
Risotto

Mushrooms were the only one they didn’t pick.  Two of them were fervently against the notion of eating fungi until they realized that I have yet to let them down in the kitchen.  I assured them that I too have lived my life as a mushroom hater, but have started to open up my mind and heart to these little (or big) guys and that Portobellos are a good place to start.   I’m glad they gave me the go-ahead because I had these hearty meat-less patties on the mind.

So I did a little Twitter ask-around for good recipes, and of course Lindsay came up with a GREAT suggestion from a friends blog.   All it needed was some good fungi and I was set.

So here you go.  Eat your little vegan hearts out people:

Vegan Asparagus and Portobello Risotto
Adapted from Wild Javelina

Serves 4-6

1 yellow onion, diced
1 fennel bulb, diced, fonds reserved
3 cloves of garlic, minced
1 cup wild rice
4 cups veggie stock
1 cup dry white wine*, remainder reserved for imbibing
1 cup coconut milk
1/4 cup nutritional yeast
3 portobello mushrooms, cut into thin strips
1 bunch fresh asparagus
a food good drizzles of balsamic vinegar
a few good drizzles of olive oil
2 tbsp Earth Balance or a couple more drizzles of olive oil
S/P to taste

Method:

Preheat oven to 425°

In a medium sauce pan, heat up veggie broth and keep it warm until it’s ready to go into the rice.

In a large dutch oven or large skillet with lid, heat olive oil over medium heat.  Add onions, fennel, and garlic and saute until soft.  Add rice and saute for additional minute.

Lower heat and and start adding in the liquids.  Wine first: stir into rice until it is all absorbed, then start ladling in broth, one cup at a time, stirring occasionally.  Keep covered in between stirring and adding more.  When broth is all absorbed, test rice for texture.  Feel free to add more wine, stock, or water until rice reaches desired consistency.

While waiting for rice to cook, roast the asparagus and saute the mushrooms.  Trim the ends of the asparagus and arrange on cookie sheet.  Drizzle with olive oil, salt & pepper, then bake for 10 minutes.  Let cool, then cut into 1-2 inch pieces.

In a heavy saucepan, melt Earth Balance or heat olive oil (or butter if you’re not going vegan) over medium high heat**.  These bad boys will soak up whatever oil you give them, so if more is needed, bring it.  Saute down a bit, then add a few generous splashes of good balsamic vinegar.  Continue to cook until mushrooms are limp and caramelized.  Salt and pepper to taste and set aside.

Back to the risotto.  When the rice is cooked to the desired consistency, stir in coconut milk and nutritional yeast.  Nutritional yeast might be one of my new favorite ingredients.  Mixed with the coconut milk, it gives a nice, rich, cheesy flavor and texture without the dairy.  Next, add in the asparagus, mushrooms, and fennel fronds.  Give it a good mix and a taste, then add salt and pepper if needed.

Serve immediately, and don’t forget to pour yourself another glass of wine.

*I used a 2009 Anne Amie Oregon Pinot Gris for the risotto.  Delish!

**Last summer, I bought some mushrooms from a stand at the Hollywood Farmers Market and the cute boy working there told me when sauteing mushrooms, start with high heat to lock in the flavor, then lower it as they cook.  Good tip!

I know it’s already April, but it’s never too late for a good thing.  Not sure why I didn’t share this months ago, but I’m excited to share it now.  Winter is finally over which means farmers markets are starting to open up and we can finally eat what grows above ground rather than under ground (locally that is.  No more produce from Mexico and Chile!)

I saw this seasonal produce calendar hanging in Lindsay’s kitchen back in January and fell in love with it.  I printed one off the very next day and it’s been hanging in my kitchen ever since.  It’s so fun to see what’s in season every month and get excited about what I’ll be cooking and eating.

 

Hope this brightens up your kitchen the same way it has brightened up mine.

Cottage Industrialist 2011 Seasonal Produce Calendar

Recipe Swap #3: Completed.  Didn’t think I had it in me for this one, but I’m proud to say I completed another recipe swap and I’m proud of my finished product.

For those of you who are unfamiliar with a recipe swap, you should check out the Burwell General Store blog for details.  Basically, the fabulous Christianna picks a basic recipe out of this vintage cookbook she found at a swap meet and everyone involved takes a couple weeks to recreate the recipe by changing at least 3 ingredients or quantities from the original recipe, then post our new recipes on our blogs on the same day with a link to all the other swappers sites.  It’s so fun and so challenging, not to mention an honor to be in cahoots with such respectable and talented food bloggers.

Ready for the #3 reveal?  Ok, here you go:

“Busy Day” Wacky Cake.  Looks like a science experiment huh?  Soda and vinegar?  In a cake?  Is it going to explode in my tummy and leave me feeling ill and bloated?  Well, I doubt that but it still seems odd.  How can I be creative with such a scientific cake?  Hmmm…soda and vinegar, chemical reactions, fizz, bubbles…BUBBLES!  Champagne cake!  Who doesn’t love cake and who doesn’t love bubbles?  And who doesn’t love champagne cake?!  I, for one, have only had champagne cake once and it was pink and it was homemade by my friend Steve who was making a bunch of wedding cake samples (make sure you check out his site!) and it was delicious.  But wait!  There’s a cherry on top: I’m not going to stop at cake, I’m making cupcakes.

The sun was shining magnificently in my windows the day I baked these.  I was happy as a clam.

So ladies and gentlemen, I present to you…
Gluten Free Champagne Cupcakes with Vegan Coconut Fudge Frosting
Yields approx 35 mini cupcakes or 12 standard size cupcakes

Cake: adapted from Wasabimon

1 1/2 c. Bob’s Red Mill Gluten Free baking mix*
1/4 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp xantham gum
1 c coconut palm sugar
2 large eggs (room temp.)
1/2 c coconut oil
1/2 c Brut Bubbly (at room temp.  make sure to have a glass while you’re baking)
1 tbsp milk (I used hazelnut milk)
1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 350° and position rack in the center.  Line cupcake trays with liners.

In a medium size bowl, mix together dry ingredients and set aside.

In mixer, beat together eggs and sugar on medium speed for about 1 minute.

Reduce to medium-low speed and mix in oil, bubbles, milk, and vanilla until ingredients are incorporated and mixture is creamy.

Increase speed to medium and slowly add in dry mixture, spoonful at a time, until ingredients are blended and you have a cake batter consistency.

Spoon batter into cupcake liners, filling 1/2 full for mini cupcakes, and 2/3 full for standard cupcakes.

Place trays on center rack in oven and bake for 10 minutes for mini cupcakes, and 15-18 minutes for standard cupcakes, or until a toothpick comes out clean. Place on rack and allow to cool completely before icing.

*If Bob’s mix isn’t available near you, use 1 1/4 c of your own mix (2 parts brown rice flour, 2/3 part potato starch, 1/3 part tapioca starch) and 1/4 c almond flour.

 

Frosting: adapted from Grist
Yields approx 1 1/2 cups frosting
1/4 c coconut oil
1 1/4 c organic evaporated cane juice
1/4 c unsweetened cocoa powder
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/2 c coconut milk, well shaken
1 tsp vanilla

In medium sauce pan, melt coconut oil over medium heat.  Stir in cocoa, sugar, and salt.

Add coconut milk and stir well while bringing to a boil.  Gently boil for 5 minutes stirring often.  Remove from heat and stir in vanilla.

Cool in refrigerator for 20-30 minutes.  Remove from fridge, and stir with wooden spoon until mixture thickens and has a fudgy frosting like consistency.

Spread over the top of the cupcakes, and dig in!

*Added bonus, spread remaining frosting on a piece of wax paper, let cool, then cut into squares and enjoy some homemade fudge.

I gave some of these to Nadine to share with her boyfriend Jon, who is gluten free.  Her comment: Jon ate all of them.  Before dinner.

 

Now, do yourself a favor and see what my fellow recipe swappers are up to with this cake.  You won’t be sorry.  Chef Dennis, Toni at Boulder Locavore, my dearest Rosemarried, Jennifer in her Adventuresome Kitchen, Christianna at the Burwell General Store never cease to amaze me, but everyone involved is definitely worth checking out.

Ever since moving down to Oregon wine country, door after door has been opening for me.  I found the greatest apartment with high ceilings and huge south facing windows (which the sun is gloriously shining through right now). I landed a great weekend job at Red Hills Market, which fits me to a t and is a place I whole-heartedly believe in.  I’ve been shown great support and encouragement for all my friends and family.  And I’ve met some kindred spirits and charismatic people.  And that’s a big deal for me, considering I’m one of the most relational people out there.  I haven’t been lonely for a moment since I moved out here.

One of the most exciting doors that has opened lately is an opportunity to really plug into this local community.  When Red Hills Market opened a couple weekends ago,  I made a latte for Nadine, a local gal who runs the Dundee Dirtbox CSA.  See, a CSA is a Community Supported Agriculture with members who get a box of locally grown and seasonal produce every week.  My friend Lindsay and I had talked about joining one and splitting the box every week but we didn’t get past simply talking about it.  When I met Nadine, we got to talking about her CSA and my love for cooking seasonally and locally and this here food blog that I’ve started.  She got really excited, and I got really excited, and we ended up talking about trading veggies for recipes and blogging.  She needed something to help her customers figure out what to do with all the produce and herbs in their box every week, and I wanted to find a way to get more season veggies in my kitchen.  It was serendipity, as Nadine says.

Yesterday, I took a mental health day off of work and ended up seeing Nadine that morning at Red Hills and spending the day with her going around to all her farm plots, moving hay bales into a little barn, and eating lunch on her porch in the sunshine (it was DELICIOUS!).  It was one of the most life-giving days I’ve had in a while.  I’m ecstatic about the potential doors this could open, the people I will and have already met, the delicious food that I’ll get to make, and the big summer dinners that will gather friends from all walks of life.

Be sure to follow the Dundee Dirtbox CSA blog, as Nadine and I both contribute.  She’ll keep you up to date on what’s happening around the farm, and I’ll give you something to make for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

www.dundeedirtbox.wordpress.com

What a week!  The day after I got back from Mexico, I committed to house/dog sitting in Sellwood for 10 days.  Being back in Portland gave me a chance to catch up with some great friends and connect with some new ones.

My new-ish friend Lisa and I decided to meet for Happy Hour at Soluna Grill on NE 44th and Fremont before our Home Community on Wednesday.  We were NOT disappointed.

Of course, we had some cocktails to start.  I can’t exactly remember what was in mine, something pink, maybe raspberry?  The best and obviously most memorable part was the sage (I LOVE herbaceous cocktails) and whipped egg whites on top.  It was like the latte of cocktails.

 

We had an array of items for the happy hour menu but these two stood out the most: chickpea crusted green beans with tomato-ginger ketsup (above)
maple smoke pork belly with a tempura poached egg, sweet onion, frisee, mustard vin. A deep friend poached egg??  Yes PUH-LEASE!  This was amazing.

Our pocketbooks were happy and our bellies were sat-is-fied with Soluna Grill.

The next morning, my old roommates from the Thompson House, or Team Thomp, Tiffani, Crystal, and Rachel met for breakfast at Helser’s on NE Alberta and 16th.  It kinda feels like Miranda, Carrie, Charlotte, and Samantha are getting together at their usual breakfast spot, save for the topic of conversation.  We’re not quite as, cough cough, “city” as those ladies.  Breakfast with these girls is easily one of my favorite times of the month.   Helser’s has a FABULOUS $4.95 early bird menu from 7-9am everyday which is not something to miss out on.  I had the grilled polenta and black bean cakes with 2 poached eggs in creole sauce. The portion size was just right and tied me over well into the lunch hour.

Then came the meal that I had been waiting on for over a month: Gruner.  (Well, we had originally planned on going to Little Bird, but we couldn’t get a reservation for 3 until 8:30 and since we all had to work on Friday and usually spend 3+ hours talking, eating, and drinking together, we decided to reschedule LB for May and try Gruner.  Both are newish to Portland and have chefs who are nominated for the James Beard Award).   One of the only perks of having type 1 diabetes is that the 2 ladies who work locally for the company who makes my insulin pump have a nice expense account and are encouraged to “entertain” their patients.  It’s a major bonus that I happen to click with both of them very well and we have a ball together.  They are the reason I have been to several of Portland’s best restaurants.  Having diabetes is almost worth it.

Take a moment to look at Gruner’s menu.  It’s very German/Swiss inspired which I was a little shy about at first.  But once our first “snacks” came out, I knew we wouldn’t have anything to worry about.

Round one:   Beet-pickled hard boiled eggs. Perfection in a deviled egg.  (Julie and Shannon had the crisp polenta croquettes stuffed with  bleu cheese but I had to pass unfortunately.)

 

 

Round two: Belgian endive, gala apples, fourme d’ambert, toasted hazelnuts, with a hazelnut oil vinaigrette. Too bad I had to 86 the bleu cheese.  Still a mouthful of delight though.

Round 3: Sauteed calves livers, sauteed onions, house cured bacon, cider reduction, “himmel und erde–potato and apple puree. I stepped out of my culinary comfort zone for this, but OH MY it was good.  Good, as in, “God saw what He had made and said it was good.”  Like, godly perfection on a plate.

We asked our Christian Bale look-a-like server, Jeff for a wine recommendation for our meal.  The menu is heavy with Germany and European wines that I am completely unfamiliar with.  There are a few Oregon wines on the menu, which I will lean towards 95% of the time, but even those were unfamiliar to me.  He suggested the ’09 Schöne Schlucht Oregon Pinot Meunier, which is an Alsatian red varietal is that seldom seen in Oregon (Adelsheim makes one).  I wish Oregon produced more of this varietal because it was wonderful!  Bright cherry and black pepper.  Perfect with our meal.

Dessert is always fun for us whenever we go out.  We usually get a chocolate dessert and a non-chocolate dessert and dessert wines to match.  Unfortunately, none of the desserts we ordered impressed us enough to take note of or even take a picture of.  But here’s our array of dessert wines (from the back): An Auslese Riesling from the Mosel region in Germany where I visited this summer, an Italian Vino Santo, and a Tawny Port.

Now, it’s back to home cooked meals and leftovers for lunch.  I had a fun culinary week out, but I’m ready to use my new red dutch oven and start cooking my own food again.

Mi amiga Rachel and I spent a week with my grandmother in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.  To give you an idea of location, it’s about 2 hours north of Mexico City.  Don’t worry, it’s very safe there :)   Here are some photos from the trip.  Mouse over them for a little description or click to see full size.

Here’s what we did all week:
Woke up when the sun was in our faces,
Walked all over town,
Made silver jewelry
Ate our body weight in guacamole
Drank our body weight in Margaritas and Mexican beer
Played Farkle with Grandma
Went to sleep when we were tired
Sat out in the sun for hours a day
Read
Slept
Didn’t worry about anything (except for Japan)
Got a tan (well, I’m a redhead, so I got some red)
Loved life.

I highly suggest everyone take a vacation in March to someplace sunny.  GO NOW!

 

Boy oh boy, how we’ve grown!  The last recipe swap had 7 brilliant culinary minds, but I’ve officially lost count on this one.  Maybe a dozen or so?  We’ve got some locavores, a real chef, some gluten free gals, even one swapper from Down Under!  Be SURE to check them all out (link to recipe swap page below).

We shifted from a sweet recipe and chose a savory, hearty, classic recipe as a final ode to the cold weather.  Our inspiration and jumping-off point for this swap is none other than Grandma’s Chicken Pot Pie with Drop Biscuits.  Can’t go wrong with anything that has “grandma” in the title, right?

At first, I thought about putting a bread component on the bottom instead of on the top and making some sort of chicken pizza, but I didn’t want to stray too far from the original recipe (although, I’ve had pizza on my mind every since).  I knew I wanted to make a stew with shredded chicken, because shredded meat is my absolute favorite.  Chicken Chili Verde crossed my mind but didn’t excite me because I make that all the time.  I could make something ethic…maybe with coconut milk…and peanuts…and an aromatic Oregon wine. Oooooh the juices were flowing.  I always have to have something green with my meal so maybe I’ll add some red chard.  The bread part always stretches my mind in an effort to stay gluten free.  I think I found the perfect “drop biscuits” for this stew I’ve been thinking up.  I tweaked one of my new favorite recipes to give it some Asian/Middle Eastern fushion and voila!  A whole new recipe swap recreation.

Alright readers, get cookin’:

Curried Sweet Potato Falafel (adapted from 101 Cookbooks)
2-3 medium sweet potatoes (about 1.5 lbs)
1 cup cilantro, chopped
2 tsp yellow curry powder
1/2 tsp ground coriander
2 small garlic cloves, minced
juice of 1/2 a lemon
1 cup chickpea flour (add more depending on moisture in potatoes)
splash olive oil
sesame seeds
s/p

Method:
Preheat oven to 425° and roast sweet potatoes on a cookie sheet for 45-60 minutes until they are soft and mushy through and through.  The mushier the better.

When soft, remove skin and mix with all other ingredients except sesame seeds and olive oil.  Chill until firm: 1 hour in fridge, 20-30 minutes in freezer.

Heat over to 375°.  Take cooled sweet potato mixture and roll into balls the size of ping pong balls.  Place on oiled cookie sheet and sprinkle with sesame seeds.  Bake for 18-20 minutes, until bottoms are golden brown.

(These bad boys are killer dipped in the peanutty stew or with some peanut sauce

Stew (adapted from The Recovering Vegetarian):
1.5 tbsp coconut oil
4 chicken thighs
1/2 cup dry, aromatic white wine (such as a riesling or gewurztraminer)*
1 medium yellow onion, diced
3 cloves of garlic, minced
4 cups chicken or veggie broth
1 can coconut milk
1/3 cup natural peanut butter
2-3 tbsp panang or red curry paste
zest and juice of 1 lime
1 tbsp brown sugar
couple slashes of fish sauce
1 can dark kidney beans, rinsed and drained
handful cilantro, chopped (save some for garnish)
1 bunch red chard, washed and cut into strips
s/p
1/3 cup chopped roasted peanuts

Method:
In  a dutch oven or soup pot, head coconut oil over medium-high heat.  Season chicken thighs with salt and pepper and brown on each side and set aside.  Deglaze the pan by splashing a couple tbsp of wine in pan and scrape the bottom.  Add onions and garlic and saute until soft.

Add chicken broth, coconut milk, peanut butter, remaining wine, lime, kidney beans, curry paste, brown sugar, and most of the cilantro.  Reduce heat and gentle simmer for 1 hour (emphasis on gentle, as coconut milk can curdle…I learned that the hard way) stirring occasionally.

After the hour, take a fork and shred the chicken, then add chard and fish sauce and simmer for 10-15 more minutes until chard is wilted but not turning brown.

Salt and pepper to taste and serve with cilantro and crushed peanut on top as a garnish.

Wine pairing: 2009 Anne Amie Cuvee A Amrita

And as always, I was in the throws of this food challenge with the most amazing, creative, lauded food bloggers.  You’ll be missing out BIG TIME if you don’t visit their blogs and see their recipe swap dishes.

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