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Fall seems to officially be here, and we have definitely started to make a shift in our eating habits. Gone are the heirloom tomatoes (I had some AWFUL ones earlier in the week!). Brussels sprouts are back with a vengeance, and I have been loving pears, apples, and butternut squash. Fall can be the best time of year to make salads, mixing it up from those tomatoes, cucumbers, and corn and adding a little sweetness from pears, apples, and beets, and that’s just what I did the other night.

pear

I started with three blushing pears and three large, earthy beets.

beets

While I got the beets cooking in a pot of boiling water, I cracked open a bottle of wine for the dressing, a Zinfandel from our visit to Amista. The dressing for the salad? A simple Zinfandel reduction, made by bringing the Zinfandel up to a boil, then reducing it and keeping an eye on it so that it doesn’t reduce too much. You want it slightly syrupy, but not completely stuck to the pan. The smell of simmering wine is pretty darn delicious!

Amista Zinfandel

clearly fresh bags

The salad base was a wasabi arugula which promised to have a kick. Sadly, it did not. However, I did try a new product I received to review, Clearly Fresh BreatheWay bags, and they made a HUGE difference in how my greens kept throughout the week. I tend to buy a ton of greens like kale, spinach, lettuce, and arugula, and since I can’t eat them all immediately, they often get black and rotten very quickly. I transferred each group of greens into its own Clearly Fresh bag, pushed out the air, and sealed them up. A few days later, the leaves were dry and perfect. I am pretty excited about these bags and being able to preserve expensive produce a little bit longer.

bag

 

arugula

Once the Zinfandel was reduced and the beets were peeled and cooled, I just tossed everything together and topped with crumbled honey goat cheese.

autumn salad

I love how a simple, easy-to-make salad can make a meal feel special. Even with just a few ingredients, this delicious combination was kind of spectacular. The fact that it was a healthy addition to our main course, an AMAZING chicken tortilla soup, made it even better.

I guess I can say that I am starting to get into the whole change of seasons thing. The food, and of course three new pairs of boots (Have you tried ShoeDazzle yet?! The shoes I got definitely aren’t the best quality ever, but they are so inexpensive, making it a fun place to shop for trends or short-term use/seasonal shoes and boots. ) make it a little more appealing!

How do you keep your diet healthy and full of veggies and fruits once the summer starts to wane?

Tags: Amista Vineyards, arugula, beets, fall, pears, salad, Vegetarian, wine

One of my favorite parts of traveling is meeting new people and getting the inside scoop from them on where they like to go in their hometowns. It’s easy when we visit Ireland; we have friends and family who always have great recommendations, and I think it makes for a more memorable trip.

That’s why I was delighted to meet some Napa-area natives in the downtown Napa Ceja Vineyards tasting room. Over a glass of Bella Flor Rosé, our new friends shared their wine and restaurant favorites for Napa and then actually walked us to the restaurant we decided on, Zuzu. We were definitely not in Boston anymore. . . and it was really nice.

We chose Zuzu out of the many Napa recommendations we were given because a tapas dinner sounded perfect after a day of wine tasting and eating Mexican food.

Zuzu Napa menu

We were lucky to snag the lone empty table in the festive and bustling dining room. In keeping with the festive mood, I had a glass of Gloria Ferrer Blanc de Noir.

Then we chowed down on a variety of tapas.

Roasted Red Beets with Frisee, Walnuts, Pt. Reyes Blue Cheese, Blood Orange Vinaigrette

You can’t go wrong with beets, and this salad was great. Adding more beet salads is definitely one of the small changes I will be making toward better health this spring!

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Queso Frito: Pan Fried Manchego with Roasted Poblanos and Guajillo Sauce

Fried cheese, check!

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Tunisian Brik Pastry with Dungeness Crab, Organic Eggs, and Spring Garlic

I’ve had the pleasure of eating Brik in Tunisia, and this was one of my favorite dishes at Zuzu. The soft outer pastry enveloped sweet crab and rich eggs.

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Traditional Tortilla Espanola

You also can’t go wrong with a classic tortilla. I love to make them, order them when I go out, and most of all eat tortillas. They are the quintessential, must-order tapa for me.

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Zuzu ended up being a great recommendation. Small plates meant that we got to share a few different tastes, and on the plus side, the meal was pretty quick which was perfect, considering we were still on East Coast time. I would definitely recommend Zuzu if you are visiting Napa, and I will definitely return, as soon as possible Smile

If you met people traveling from another city, what would be your top restaurant recommendations for your area?

P.S. You have one more day to enter the giveaway to win a $30 gift card to CSN stores and/or to enter to win some gift cards to Boston area restaurants.

Zuzu on Urbanspoon

Tags: beets, cheese, Food, Napa, Restaurants, salad, Tapas, tortilla, wine, Zuzu

When it is this cold out, the only food I want is hot or at the very least warm. We can live on raw salads all summer long, but for the most part, in the winter salads make me feel cold and hungry, wanting more.

As my official entry in the Olivia’s Organics Healthier Holiday Recipe Contest, I decided to make a beet and spinach salad with some fun toppings, wheat berries, toasted, spiced walnuts, and an orange-yogurt dressing.

Ingredients (serves 2)

4 cups Olivia’s Organics baby spinach

2 large beets, boiled, peeled, and chopped into half moons

1 cup shelled walnuts

1 cup wheat berries, prepared according to package directions

3/4 cup European style plain yogurt

juice of 1 orange

1 tsp each brown sugar and cayenne pepper

red beets

I started by boiling, peeling, cutting, and setting aside the beets. Next, I toasted the walnuts in a frying pan on low heat for a few minutes, tossing them at the end with a drizzle of olive oil, brown sugar, and cayenne.

walnuts

While the nuts and beets cooled, I mixed up a simple but flavorful dressing made of plain yogurt and freshly squeeze orange juice. This idea was based on a dressing we had at The Citizen Public House last weekend, and it is now definitely a favorite of mine. So easy!

plain yogurt

navel orange

I had my wheat berries soaking in hot water for the entire day, so I actually didn’t even cook them. I like them to be very chewy, but if you prefer to cook them, the package directions should do the trick.

wheat berries

Once everything else was prepped, I simply wilted the baby spinach in a frying pan with about 1/4 cup of water. I wilted it down for quite awhile, but you can obviously feel free to cook the spinach as little or as much as you would like.  Smile

winter salad

When it was time to plate, I made a mound of baby spinach and carefully laid the beets across the top, followed by a sprinkling of wheat berries. Around the edges of the plate, I sprinkled toasted walnuts and drizzled the orange-yogurt dressing.

winter salad

This is a salad that stands up to the cold, tastes great, and offers quite the nutritional punch with lots of fiber, vitamins, and some protein as well. Beets and spinach together really make this a super salad that is made more lively by the creamy orange dressing. If you need a little more flavor, add some honey! This recipe could easily be increased and served on a big white serving platter to be passed around as a starter to a holiday meal, or like we did, eaten as a meal on its own.

I hope you like my entry for the contest! What are some of your healthier holiday secrets or recipe ideas?

Tags: beets, Food, healthy, Olivia's Organics, oranges, salad, spinach, vegetables, Vegetarian, walnuts, wheat berries, winter salad, yogurt

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