Sunday, 18 May 2014

Food blogger raids the fridge

Even a food blogger gets tired of cooking sometimes.

At 26, I figure that "board studying" will be my last legitimate opportunity to move home and have my parents take care of me, so here I am. My dad has been doing all the cooking, while my skills have been relegated to dessert. And what better time to apply my creativity to leftovers?

The routine is I come down, raid the fridge, then retreat to my room with the spoils. On Friday night my dad made buttermilk fried chicken from scratch; underneath the batter, the leftover chicken is juicy and briny. Leftover chicken is perfect for Asian-style salads: served cold with sesame noodles or over spinach with a simple dressing.


Leftover chicken salad:
  • piece of cold chicken, skin and bones removed, cut into bite-size pieces
  • chopped fresh spinach
  • chopped radishes
  • toasted sesame seeds
  • dash or few drops each of rice wine vinegar, sesame oil, and soy sauce

Toss and enjoy!

Study set-up

Tuesday, 6 May 2014

Protein for boards

Ever notice how food blogs (see links to the right, along with the NY Times Recipes for Health column) feature vegetarian dishes heavy on grains and legumes, while restaurant cookbooks (like Mario Batali's, which I have in my kitchen) have you do as little as possible to more expensive ingredients: cheese, roasted fish, meat, etc.? (The more you can spend on ingredients, the less you need to do to them.) Some of this is motivated by health, no doubt, but I also suspect that it's financial. Bloggers have themselves and their audience in mind: poor, busy young adults like myself. Grains and legumes are way cheaper than meat and cheese.

As someone who has bought into the mostly vegetarian, high fiber, lowish salt and lowish fat way of cooking, I occasionally wonder if it always makes sense. I've been running longer distances again lately and came home the other night craving some solid protein. I switched over to turkey burgers for the week: nothing fancy, no seasoning, not blog-worthy, but satisfying and delicious (with some cheese, freshly ground black pepper, and spinach). No doubt some Americans eat too much protein, but trying to get your day's protein entirely from sources less dense in protein per calorie can be a challenge.

Mix it up.

Microwaveable turkey burger kit (school lunch):

Pre-cooked turkey burger, cheddar cheese, black pepper, 
homemade whole-wheat English muffin/bun, tomato slices, bed of spinach.