Category Archives: Cooking

Post-Yoga Dinner — Salad and Involtini di Melanzana

I’ve had some long days lately, specifically Wednesdays. Each Wednesday, I work from 8-5 then have yoga class from 5:30-7, meaning I leave the house around 7:30 a.m. and get home close to 7:30 p.m. It makes for a long day.

To help me out, sweet Husband has been cooking dinner while I’m at yoga and serving me when I get home. It’s been heavenly!

This week, he prepared a delicious meal mostly with veggies from our local market.

We had a simple salad of romaine lettuce, purple onion, banana peppers, and cherry tomatoes with a lemon, capers, and olive oil vinaigrette (I made the dressing because I like to help).

To accompany the salad, Edmond prepared Involtini di Melanzana (eggplant rollups is my loose translation). He used this recipe from his hero, Mario Batali. It was delicious and ever so sweet of him to think of me. A perfect post-yoga, vegetarian meal full of local ingredients.

Local Ingredients Used:

  • onion
  • banana peppers
  • cherry tomatoes
  • eggplant
  • eggs
  • rosemary (Edmond added this to the frittata because it’s my favorite–see, so sweet)

Dinner is served

If you’re an eggplant fan, give it a whirl.

Or, try my vinaigrette:
Juice of one lemon
1 tbsp capers, chopped
olive oil to taste (less for tart dressing, more for not-so-tart dressing)
salt and pepper to taste
Whisk all ingredients together and toss with salad. Easy peasy.

Candles Are for Romance?

As everyone knows, yesterday was devastating for those of us living in The Deep South. Tornadoes ravaged parts of Mississippi and Alabama, destroying homes, businesses, and lives, and many other states were damaged as well.

Edmond and I were fortunate that nothing bad happened in our hometown, but we did lose power for several hours. In the beginning, we enjoyed reading, but then it got dark. It was much too early for bed, so we decided to cook dinner. That’s right, we cooked dinner without power.

We lit a bunch of candles and set to work. Edmond went outside and put a pot of water to boil on the outdoor burner he uses for homebrewing, and I set to work chopping vegetables in the kitchen.

Cooking by candlelight is so much more fun

At the end of a half hour or so, we had a delicious pasta salad. This is one of our favorite things to make because we can add pretty much anything we have on hand. We had these items either in the freezer (corn) or pantry (everything else), but we’ve made many other combinations in the past. It’s perfect for any family gathering, an easy lunch, or, apparently, tornadoes and power outages if you have the right equipment.

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Eating Local in the Summer Is Easy

Despite the sweltering, miserable, suffocating heat of Mississippi in the summer, I still adore this time of year because I am able to grow a lot of my own food, watch hummingbirds (from a distance though because they’re a little too much like big bees for my taste), and have daylight until after 8pm.  I also enjoy buying vegetables from an old man on the side of the road and going to the farmers’ market.  Side note: This year, my husband and I are even running a booth at the market.  We bake and sell fresh bread.  It’s tasty.  Read about it here.  End side note.

My most favorite thing about summer, though, is the amount of fresh and local produce I am able to eat.  Case and point, this meal, in which nearly everything was either locally made or locally grown.  For dinner, we had hamburgers and grilled corn.  I shall take you through the ingredients, so you can see just how easy it is to eat locally, especially in summer.  I like to use the word “shall”; it’s far too under-used.

First, the ingredients: bread, mustard, tomato, lettuce, onion, pickles, cheese, burger, smoked jalapenos, corn, olive oil, salt, pepper.

Now, the local ingredients:
Bread–fresh rolls/buns made by the husband (they were awesome, by the way.  Best yet, I think.)
Tomato, onion, corn–bought from local farmers at the local market
Burger–made of venison; from a deer killed by our friend this spring
Jalapenos–grown in a friend’s container garden, smoked on our grill
Pickles–cucumbers grown in my garden and pickled myself

And the non-local ingredients:
Mustard, cheese, lettuce, salt, and pepper–from Kroger
Olive oil–from Whole Foods

Quite frankly, I’m pretty proud of our home-grown, home-made meal.  I would love to declare the whole thing local, but can anyone really live without olive oil, mustard, salt, and pepper?  I can’t.  I also cannot live without cheese.  At least not for now.  I could have lived without the lettuce this time, though.  Although a burger with lettuce is better than one without, I could have lived without it.  Lesson learned there.

I encourge you to seek out your local farmers’ market (or road-side stand).  I think you’ll be surprised just how much you can find there and how tasty and ripe it is.  It might just get you out of a food rut and force you to try new foods and recipes–reason enough for me.

Check out how awesome that bun looks.  It tasted even better.  Yay for spouses who bake.

Look how pretty corn is when the husk is still there.



Soup for a Sore Throat

I was sick a few weeks ago.  Really sick.  Ed’s band had a show out of town, so I was home alone for the weekend and wanted to cook something that would last until I was well.  My option: thaw out some chicken stock, throw some vegetables in a pot, and sit on the couch while it cooked.  It was pretty good, so I’m now (several weeks later) going to share the recipe.

You will need:
3-4 carrots
1 onion
3-4 garlic cloves
1 turnip
2-3 stalks of celery
herbs of choice
6-8 cups of chicken stock (homemade is best)

Directions: Chop it all to desired size (I like big pieces) and cook until tender.  Salt to taste.  Add lots of black pepper.

If you are sick, I recommend you do what I did–throw it all in a pot and then go sit on the couch for a few hours and wait.  If you want the soup quickly, you should cook the carrots first, then add the rest until almost tender.  Then add stock and cook for 30 min. or so until all is tender.

I had some leftover chicken we had baked ealier in the week, so I chopped that up and threw it in too, but normally I would have just had veggies.  The soup was a nice, light meal that warmed me up and soothed my throat.  On a regular day, I might have called it bland because I’m normally one for lots of flavor and spice, but on this day, it was perfect.  I even mustered the energy to take a picture for the blog.

I love my pretty dishes.




Boardtown Organics: My Solution for Local, Free-range Chicken and Eggs

As you all know, I have sworn off non-local meat, and, although Sanderson Farms is a Mississippi company, that’s not quite what I was going for with “local.”  So far this year, my meals have been mostly meatless until recently when I got a deer, just about as local as you can get.  But I was looking around on Local Harvest and discovered a family farm just outside my door.  Boardtown Organics (Boardtown, by the way, is what Starkville was before it was Starkville) is a small operation just outside the city limits, but I don’t even have to go there to pick up the food.  I just order a day ahead and go to Main Street and pick up my order.  How easy is that?

Living in the city limits, I cannot raise my own chickens, so this place is perfect for that.  I ordered one whole chicken and a dozen eggs.  Both were fantastic!  If you haven’t had farm-fresh eggs, then you simply must find the nearest person who has laying hens and ask for some.  They are wonderful.  Or contact Boardtown Organics if you’re in the area, only $2.50/dozen.  That’s a good dollar cheaper than “free-range” varieties at Kroger.  And so much better, I might add.  Orangey center that doesn’t run all over the place when you break the egg in the skillet.

We should have weighed it, but we didn’t.  Suffice to say that the chicken was huge.  It fed my husband and me for over a week.  We grilled the legs, wings, and thighs.  Pan fried one-half of the breast (which fed us both) and topped it with olives.  Halved the other half of the breast and used one half to top a salad and the other half to make chicken fried rice.  Of course we had leftovers, and those were mostly mixed together for sandwiches, salad, etc.  We also made chicken stock for the first time by using the bones and meat that clings to the bones.  Considering the entire chicken only cost $10, we ate some pretty cheap meals, and all were absolutely delicious.  I have read that truly free-range, happy chickens (I think this makes them happy) that are allowed to roam about and eat bugs taste more “chickenier,” and I can now say that I agree.  May sound crazy, but, somehow, I could taste the chicken more.  It didn’t just taste like whatever I seasoned it with.  It tasted like chicken.

Their Web site advertises a CSA (community supported agriculture) effort this year, but I plan to grow pretty much all I’ll need on my own.  As for chicken, they are almost out of the last batch processed, but I’m told they should have more ready in May.


This is in the biggest bowl we own.

Lessons learned:
1.  Local, responsibly-raised food tastes better.
2.  Local, responsibly-raised food, despite all expectations, is cheaper than factory food from somewhere else.
3.  Owners of local, family farms are kind and honest.

Take a look at that half a breast. Huge. I know.