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Phew. . . feels good to have the Monday after a holiday over with, doesn’t it? I had a great day! It started with a good workout and ended up being a quiet work day listening to Christmas music and getting a lot done. I am grateful for good work days. After work, the weather was raw and rainy, and I wanted something warm and comforting. Polenta was the perfect choice. I decided to make it with toasted walnuts, gorgonzola cheese, and roasted garlic. Ingredients 1 tube of organic polenta 1/2 cup to 1 cup crumbled gorgonzola 5 cloves of roasted garlic (roast in skins at 400 until soft and easily squeezed from skin) 1/2 cup chopped walnuts, toasted in a dry skillet image image image image image gorgonzola I cut the polenta into discs and placed them in a pan of sizzling olive oil, then seasoned with ground black pepper.

polenta

My plan was to neatly top each disc with crumbled cheese, sliced roasted garlic, and walnuts, but that fell apart quickly. It didn’t look very pretty, but it tasted good!

polenta with cheese

I served this over a bed of romaine lettuce which, though I bought it only yesterday, is rapidly going bad. I don’t know if the lettuce was the perfect pairing for the polenta, but I hate wasting and wanted to use it up. It ended up tasting good and providing a nice crunch.

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The mix of polenta, lettuce, and walnuts makes for a constant change in textures, and the gorgonzola and roasted garlic provide strong but complementary flavors. Polenta is another one of those ingredients that is extremely versatile and it sort of feels like a luxurious treat but only costs $2.99 for the entire tube. Next up, making my own polenta. . . but maybe not this week.

Tags: cheese, dinner, polenta, recipe

Happy Monday! Over the past few months, I have done a lot of thinking about blogging and realized that, while I consider myself a food and wine blogger much more than a healthy living blogger, there is still plenty of room for health and fitness in my blog. As you probably know, I am running the 2010 Boston Marathon for The ALLY Foundation. I haven’t written about running much at all lately, and that is because I am barely running! After a hip injury this fall, I am staying completely committed to a more holistic training approach than I have used in the past. It is my hope that this way of training will help me to avoid injury and mental/emotional burnout that comes with marathon training. The plan I am using is 100% my own, so I really won’t know how effective it is until I am doing my longer runs in February and March. I will report that I am feeling great right now and in surprisingly good shape at the moment! In case you are interested in my plan, I have included a full week’s workout plan below:

Sunday- 1.5 hours of dog walking, a mix of sprinting and standing around throwing a ball,  2.5 mile speed walk (11 minute miles), 20 minutes of Dave Farmar power yoga

 Monday- 2.5 mile walk to gym, 35 minute bike ride with low level hills   

Tuesday- 45 minutes on the elliptical at 8:30/ mile pace

Wednesday- 60 minute massage! (just this week, not every week)

Thursday- 2.5 mile walk  to work 40 minutes of power yoga

Friday- Rest

Saturday- 6 mile run,  20 minutes power yoga

 

For the next couple of weeks, I am only running one or two times a week! Hopefully this type of training will make my entire body strong and will give me endurance without overuse on any one muscle or muscle group.

How do you train for big runs/hikes/bikes/swims? Do you follow a recommended training plan, make your own, or a mix of both?

Tags: fitness, marathon, running

I am so glad to be home in Boston. Today was super productive, full of dog walking at the MSPCA, a major grocery shopping trip to Trader Joe’s where I may have gone a little overboard (Note to self, only get the hand baskets, not a wheeled cart. If I can’t carry it, I can’t buy it!), a 2.5 mile walk and 20 minutes of power yoga, and a trip to Bin Ends for their monthly fine wine flea market. I’ll get to that later in the week, but seriously just when you think you got a good bargain last month, you go to the flea market again and bam! more incredible savings. We are in the market for a wine fridge and new wine rack, and if you have any suggestions I would love to hear them. We have also talked about turning our 1/3 of the basement in our condo building into a wine cellar. Too bad I am afraid to go down there. Our neighborhood has had some trouble with long-tailed squeaky little friends which terrify me, but who knows, a personal wine cellar sounds pretty sweet.

Anyway, I love being home to cook again. My brother in law pointed out this weekend that I have never cooked for him, and its true. When I get home to NJ I usually sit back and eat what everyone else is making which is nice, but I really should cook next time. I miss cooking when I am traveling.

Tonight’s dinner was a protein filled one. Part of my marathon training mandate for myself is eating more protein, and while I have a hard time finding protein sources that I like, salmon and shrimp are two that I do not get tired of. Salmon is delicious and easy to change up just by adding a different sauce and side. The sauce of the day was a beautiful Irish whiskey and brown sugar rub that melted over the top of the fish and hardened ever so slightly once out of the oven.

I started with some frozen Coho salmon that we had from Trader Joe’s. I actually made two giant filets, one for dinner tonight and one to serve over salad for lunch tomorrow. Cook once, eat twice!

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The rub for the salmon is easy. You can make it by thoroughly blending the following ingredients. I simply mashed them with a fork.

3 TSP dark brown sugar

2 TSP Jameson Irish Whiskey

1 shake crushed red pepper flakes

1 TSP extra virgin olive oil

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The salmon is prepared in a few easy steps:

1) Cook the salmon halfway through, skin side down, in a hot skillet. This is important because the brown sugar rub will burn if cooked for too long. You want the salmon to be a few minutes from done when the rub is put on.

2) Once the salmon is cooked halfway through, use a spoon to really get the rub into the fish. Keep it on the heat while doing this. As much as you try to keep it on the fish, the sugar will start melting over the sides. I did my best to use a spoon to scrape it back up onto the fish to avoid burning as much as possible.

3) Place the entire skillet (Make sure there is not plastic on it!) into the oven at 375. Let it cook for about 3 minutes or until it is done enough for you. We tend to eat it rare, so I put it in and within a minute turned the oven off, leaving the fish inside for a couple more minutes. Bubbling brown sugar is a good sign.

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I served the salmon with roasted baby potatoes and zucchini fries. Later this week I will be posting about veggie fries and other fun veggie recipes on the Plummelo blog. Plummelo is a great site for recipe collecting and meal planning, and I am going to be periodically writing for their blog. I will let you know when the post is up, but check out the site before then if you get the chance!

I hope you are all feeling well rested after the holiday weekend. I definitely am, and I have been doing a lot of yoga which really makes a difference in everything from sleep to running to work.

Have a great Monday everyone! I will be posting more regularly now that I am home for a few weeks, so please check in for lots of recipes, workouts, and product reviews.

Goodnight ;)!

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