Thursday, October 29, 2015

Stuffed Sweet Potatoes #1


With an absurdly busy day ahead of me I have to take my food with me- otherwise I would starve.  And I do mean that since my mindset wouldn't allow me to eat something off of my scheduled diet.

With the leftovers from yesterdays Cuban beef roast and an addition of the pickled red onion recipe here,  I have a quick meal from a previously baked then frozen sweet potato.

This may be the end photo from dinner tonight, but in truth, I re-stuff the potato with said ingredients, wrap in tinfoil and place on the engine block to cook while I am driving.  Lunch is ready when I am done with my appointment:)  Just don't forget to keep a fork in your purse!

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Cuban Beef over Cauliflower rice




This is not a detailed photo of the dinner I made last night.  In fact it is of my second plate with spaghetti squash after I ran out of "rice" :)

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1 eye of round beef roast- yes- grass fed and organic- no grain finish
4 yellow onions- sliced in rings
10 cloves of garlic- or one very large head- peeled and smashed flat
3 large oranges- zested and segments quartered
4 C OJ
4 limes- 3 zested and juiced (divided) 1 reserved in wedges for final dishing
1 bunch of cilantro divided and diced
2T cumin (If not AIP)
1 head of cauliflower shredded
3 green onions diced small
2T salt divided

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Take your roast and rub it with 1T salt- get your grill piping hot and sear the meat on every available side- hot and fast.  Get a good brown/charred coating over it without cooking it.  Carcinogens- yum-   Then place in a heavy bottomed pot with half of the juice and enough water to make sure the roast is submerged about 1/3 of the way (don't let there be too much room on the bottom).  Sprinkle in the garlic cloves, onions and about half of the bunch of cilantro- cover with a tight fitting lid and place on a low BTU burner on low and let simmer for about 1 1/2- 1hr 45 mins.

Add the remaining juices, cilantro and cumin (if AIP, skip the cumin) into a sauce pot over medium- medium low and allow to simmer until reduced and thickened enough to spoon over finished dish.   Once prepared remove from heat and let rest until you can add the sauce to the original pot that the roast began in.  Mix both liquids thoroughly.


Remove the lid and pull out the roast on a plate.  Use a fork to shred apart the meat separating along the grains- feel free to use a meat mallet and beat it if you wish.  On a skillet (cast iron is my method, but you might want to use a heavy bottomed stainless pan- no teflon!)  heat over medium high with NO oil in the bottom- once the pan is hot- begin adding your beef and cook until a good portion becomes crispy on the edges but is still incredibly tender.  This process reminds me of making hash-browns.

 As you are cooking the beef- Heat on high a separate pan or wok and toss in the green onion and then the shredded cauliflower- flash cook for about 90-120 seconds stirring all the while.
Pull off the heat and serve immediately- topping with the pulled beef and a healthy plash of the reduction (juice).  Garnish with cilantro, fresh squeeze of lime, zest and a sprinkle of finishing salt.

Once leftovers are established- I set aside the meat for the next three days of snacks and lunches- first post to come tomorrow.

Monday, October 26, 2015

AIP Breakfast no-oat-meal


AIP "oat"meal
"NOatmeal"





Since going 100% dedicated AIP in January I have come a long way with developing taste within such limited cooking material.  For those of you who know me and have eaten with me, I l.o.v.e. my food and flavor.  I often say I was a much better cook when I ate everything:) but now I feel better and have seen changes I can't even begin to share unless you have gone AIP yourself.  As it stands I will always dance with the rules of AIP.

  I see a lot of varying options for this kind of no oat oatmeal, but I figured the fruits and the cream would be what pulled it together for this time of year.... AND once again I lead off the directions with the same photo of spaghetti squash as I did yesterday.  I batch cook in large quantities because I like to do the work once and have leftovers for the week and the freezer.  Breakfast is no different.  Living AIP means you can often wind up eating lunch for breakfast....and it is a terribly hard thing to practice.
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12 cups cooked spaghetti squash
3 3/4 cups shredded non sweetened coconut
7 cups unsweetened coconut milk
3 mashed bananas
3 large granny smith apples- peeled and diced- save the peel for your smoothies
1/3 Cup dried cranberries
Salt to taste (Start with 1t)
Cinnamon to taste (Start with 1T)
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Cook your spaghetti squash and the shred out with a fork until you have 12 cups in total.  Package up any remainder for another meal or place in a ziplock and freeze.
Put the 12 cups of squash in a dish and take an emulsion blender to it until about 1/2 -3/4 of it is cut down.  You don't want to completely eliminate the texture but you definitely want to get it more smoothed out.





Once your squash is to the texture you like, add in at least 1t of salt, about 1T cinnamon and the coconut and begin to fold together.  Once again- hit it with the emulsion blender until the consistency is much more like a cooked oatmeal.  I left the shredded coconut whole this time because I wanted to experiment with the texture.  Being AIP you tend to get over coconut fast but find a lack of texture is what suffers in your meals- This was a decent compromise for me.



 As you are mixing, begin to cook over medium heat and add in your coconut milk.  Once hot- begin tasting and adding in more salt and cinnamon as desired.




Once hot and with a slight simmer, add in your apples 





Then fold in your cranberries



Simmer for a short while longer- until the thickness resembles a loose oatmeal.  

As your noatmeal cools- take a can (or 2) of coconut milk out of the fridge, open the lid and collect the cream that has separated from the coconut water into a mixing bowl.  Whip until it becomes fairly firm and -poof- you have whipped coconut cream for your noatmeal.  It does not firm up quite like cow cream, but it will begin to be what looks like whipped cream and at this point I put it in the fridge to keep fluffy.



I can eat a lot of food in one sitting- this is shockingly filling- this bowl is quite small and I was stuffed after breakfast!


I did the caloric breakdown for the oatmeal itself- per 1 cup

Calories- 104.8g
Sugar- 6.42g
Fat- 5.8g
Carb- 9.9g
Protein- 0.9g

I add in about 2T whipped, non sweetened coconut cream and 1/4 of a banana.  The caloric increase takes the totals to:

Calories- 156.06g
Sugar- 9.92g
Fat- 8.43g
Carbohydrates- 16.9g
Protein- 0.9g




Sunday, October 25, 2015

Spaghetti -Squash, "cream" & bacon bake

Spaghetti-squash, "cream" and bacon bake
AIP friendly


As we dig further into the fall season- I have procured an abundance of spaghetti squash.  Luckily for me, it is my favorite. So comes the endless supply of healthy bases of all foreseeable meals:) 
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Enough cooked squash to almost fill your baking dish
4 C (1 small head) of red cabbage quartered, cored and sliced
Up to 1# butcher cut bacon
5 large garlic cloves diced
2 large yellow onion
1 large sweet potato
1 can coconut milk
salt to taste

Bake *350 until heated through

***I never cook with exact measurements, I use what is on hand and adapt to taste.  If you love cabbage, use more cabbage and less squash.  If you only have one onion- so be it.  Most of my recipes do not require exact measurements unless asked for caloric values.
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Take and half what will be enough squash to fill your roasting dish almost full.  Hollow out each one and then cook your preferred way.  Mine is to quarter the entire squash after hollowing and then lay within a large cooking pot with a bit of water in the bottom.  I also add one very large whole sweet potato for the sauce.  Secure a tight fitting lid and steam away over low heat until finished.


While the squash and s. potato are cooking go ahead and cook your bacon.  I use almost a full pound for the average 9x13 baking dish.  I also eat a high fat diet due to my lifestyle.  You add what works for you.  Between 5 and 6 pieces would be sufficient.   Once cooked and cooled, place on a heavy cutting board and dice into chunks and crumbles and divide.
                                              

After cooking all the bacon you desire for the dish- render off the fat into another container and put your onions on to caramelize in an estimated 1T rendered bacon fat- cook on just above low.  Below is a photo of what the onions should look like when done.



Once the onions are well caramelized, remove and add another 1T rendered bacon fat onto the skillet and add in your cabbage and salt as to sweat it- then wilt/brown for 3-5 minutes on med/low heat.  Once the cabbage has begun to show signs of browning add in the diced garlic.  Be careful not to burn the garlic- there is no coming back from that- there is only starting over the cabbage.






Once the cabbage has cooked down and the garlic browned, remove from skillet and place into another dish until needed. Once your squash has cooled enough to handle, shred along squash shell with the grain into a bowl/vessel large enough to accommodate stirring in your other ingredients.                 (I don't have a photo of what all the ingredients look like mixed together:/)                                                             Once all ingredients and half of the bacon are together check your salt needs (you may taste and add accordingly by folding in more)




After the sweet potato has cooled enough to handle, scoop out and put into a bowl with 1 can of coconut milk.  Either use an emulsion blender or a fork/whisk and blend thoroughly.







Pack your quash mixture into your baking dish then pour the sauce over the entire surface.  If your portion is smaller and you have reserve, the sauce may be frozen for a few months or added to your next smoothie.  Take the remaining bacon crumbles and top the sauce with it.  Once baked it takes on a cheddar cheese color.  This is one of those meals where the bacon and the coconut milk/sweet potato begin permeation after a day- so as the meals get reheated, the flavor tends to grow into a sweeter and smokier version of its start.